Thermal expansion in 2D honeycomb structures: Role of transverse phonon modes
Sarita Mann, V.K. Jindal

TL;DR
This study investigates the negative thermal expansion in 2D honeycomb structures like graphene and h-BN, highlighting the dominant role of transverse phonon modes, especially the ZA mode, in this unusual behavior.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed analysis of phonon mode contributions to thermal expansion in 2D honeycomb materials using first-principles calculations, emphasizing the role of transverse modes.
Findings
Graphene exhibits negative LTEC across 0-1000K, with -3.51×10⁻⁶K⁻¹ at room temperature.
B/N doping makes the LTEC more negative in graphene and h-BN.
The ZA transverse acoustic mode is primarily responsible for negative thermal expansion.
Abstract
Graphene and its derivatives including hexagonal BN are notorious for their large negative thermal expansion over a wide range of temperature which is quite unusual. We attempt to analyze this unusual behavior on the basis of character of the phonon modes. The linear thermal expansion coefficients (LTEC) of two-dimensional honeycomb structured pure graphene, h-BN and B/N doped graphene are studied using density functional perturbation theory (DFPT) under quasi harmonic approximation. The dynamical matrix and the phonon frequencies were calculated using VASP code in interface with phonopy code. The approach is first applied to pure graphene to calculate thermal expansion. The results agree with earlier calculations using similar approach. Thereafter we have studied the effect of B/N doping on LTEC and also compared it with LTEC of h-BN sheet. The LTEC of graphene is negative in the whole…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Expansion and Ionic Conductivity · Thermal properties of materials · Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies
