Rippling and crumpling in disordered free-standing graphene
I. V. Gornyi, V. Yu. Kachorovskii, and A. D. Mirlin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how static disorder influences rippling and crumpling phenomena in free-standing graphene, revealing critical behaviors, phase transitions, and fractal properties through renormalization group analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled RG framework for membrane rigidity and disorder, identifying a phase boundary and novel scaling laws for ripples in disordered graphene.
Findings
Disorder can alter the scaling of bending rigidity with system size.
A critical curve separates flat and crumpled phases of graphene.
In the flat phase, disorder decays as a power law, setting a characteristic ripple size.
Abstract
Graphene is a famous realization of elastic crystalline 2D membrane. Thermal fluctuations of a 2D membrane tend to destroy the long-range order in the system. Such fluctuations are stabilized by strong anharmonicity effects, which preserve thermodynamic stability. The anharmonic effects demonstrate critical behaviour on scales larger than the Ginzburg scale. In particular, clean suspended flake of graphene shows a power-law increase of the bending rigidity with the system size, due to anharmonic interaction between in-plane and out-of-plane (flexural) phonon modes. We demonstrate that random fluctuations of membrane curvature caused by static disorder may change dramatically the scaling of the bending rigidity and lead to a non-monotonous dependence of on We derive coupled RG describing combined flow of and effective disorder…
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