Graphene as a Prototype Crystalline Membrane
Mikhail I. Katsnelson, Annalisa Fasolino

TL;DR
This paper reviews the microscopic understanding of graphene as a prototype 2D membrane, comparing theoretical models with experimental results, and explores its thermal properties and melting behavior at high temperatures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed microscopic analysis of graphene's structural and thermal properties, highlighting agreements and discrepancies with phenomenological theories.
Findings
Good agreement with phenomenological theories for correlation functions
Phenomenological models cannot fully explain temperature-dependent bending rigidity
Graphene melts into entangled carbon chains at high temperature
Abstract
The understanding of the structural and thermal properties of membranes, low-dimensional flexible systems in a space of higher dimension, is pursued in many fields from string theory to chemistry and biology. The case of a two-dimensional (2D) membrane in three dimensions is the relevant one for dealing with real materials. Traditionally, membranes are primarily discussed in the context of biological membranes and soft matter in general. The complexity of these systems hindered a realistic description of their interatomic structures based on a truly microscopic approach. Therefore, theories of membranes were developed mostly within phenomenological models. From the point of view of statistical mechanics, membranes at finite temperature are systems governed by interacting long-range fluctuations. Graphene, the first truly two-dimensional system consisting of just one layer of carbon…
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