Transformation of a graphene nanoribbon into a hybrid 1D nanoobject with alternating double chains and polycyclic regions
Alexander S. Sinitsa, Irina V. Lebedeva, Yulia G. Polynskaya, Dimas G., de Oteyza, Sergey V. Ratkevich, Andrey A. Knizhnik, Andrey M. Popov, Nikolai, A. Poklonski, Yurii E. Lozovik

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how a graphene nanoribbon can be transformed into a hybrid 1D nanoobject with alternating double chains and polycyclic regions through electron irradiation, supported by simulations and proposed synthesis methods.
Contribution
It introduces a novel atomistic mechanism for transforming graphene nanoribbons into hybrid nanoobjects and proposes a three-stage synthesis strategy using electron irradiation and chemical methods.
Findings
Hydrogen removal by electron impacts initiates bond breaking.
Spontaneous decomposition into double chains occurs during irradiation.
Polycyclic regions grow thermally, affecting electronic properties.
Abstract
Molecular dynamics simulations show that a graphene nanoribbon with alternating regions which are one and three hexagons wide can transform into a hybrid 1D nanoobject with alternating double chains and polycyclic regions under electron irradiation in HRTEM. A scheme of synthesis of such a nanoribbon using Ullmann coupling and dehydrogenation reactions is proposed. The reactive REBO-1990EVC potential is adapted for simulations of carbon-hydrogen systems and is used in combination with the CompuTEM algorithm for modeling of electron irradiation effects. The atomistic mechanism of formation of the new hybrid 1D nanoobject is found to be the following. Firstly hydrogen is removed by electron impacts. Then spontaneous breaking of bonds between carbon atoms leads to decomposition of narrow regions of the graphene nanoribbon into double chains. Simultaneously thermally activated growth of…
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