Rippling, buckling and melting of single- and multi-layer MoS$_2$
Sandeep Kumar Singh, M. Neek-Amal, S. Costamagna, and F. M. Peeters

TL;DR
This study uses atomistic simulations to explore the thermal and mechanical behaviors of single- and multi-layer MoS$_2$, revealing differences from graphene and effects of vacancies on melting and stiffness.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into rippling, buckling, and melting phenomena in MoS$_2$, highlighting the impact of layer number and defects on its properties.
Findings
SL-MoS$_2$ ripples are smaller than graphene
ML-MoS$_2$ fluctuations decrease with layers
Melting temperature of SL-MoS$_2$ is about 3700 K
Abstract
Large-scale atomistic simulations using the reactive empirical bond order force field approach is implemented to investigate thermal and mechanical properties of single-layer (SL) and multi-layer (ML) molybdenum disulfide (MoS). The amplitude of the intrinsic ripples of SL-MoS are found to be smaller than those exhibited by graphene (GE). Furthermore, because of the van der Waals interaction between layers, the out-of-plane thermal fluctuations of ML-MoS decreases rapidly with increasing number of layers. This trend is confirmed by the buckling transition due to uniaxial stress which occurs for a significantly larger applied tension as compared to graphene. For SL-MoS, the melting temperature is estimated to be 3700~K which occurs through dimerization followed by the formation of small molecules consisting of 2 to 5 atoms. When different types of vacancies are inserted…
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