Robust structural superlubricity of twisted graphene bilayer and domain walls between commensurate moir\'e pattern domains from first-principles calculations
Irina V. Lebedeva, Andrey M. Popov, Yulia G. Polynskaya, Andrey A. Knizhnik, Sergey A. Vyrko, Nikolai A. Poklonski

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to analyze the potential energy surface of twisted graphene bilayers, revealing conditions for robust superlubricity and domain wall properties between commensurate moiré pattern domains.
Contribution
It provides detailed first-principles insights into the energy landscape and mechanical properties of twisted graphene bilayers, highlighting mechanisms for stable superlubricity and domain wall characteristics.
Findings
PES corrugation amplitudes are extremely low, on the order of microelectronvolts per atom.
Structural relaxation can double the PES amplitude for certain moiré patterns.
Domain walls separating large commensurate domains are observable and characterized.
Abstract
Twisted graphene layers exhibit extremely low friction for relative sliding. Nevertheless, previous studies suggest that the area contribution to friction for commensurate moir\'e systems is finite and might restrict macroscopic superlubricity for large layer overlaps. In this paper, we investigate the potential energy surface (PES) for relative displacement of the layers forming moir\'e patterns (2,1) and (3,1) by accurate density functional theory calculations using the vdW-DF3 functional. The amplitudes of PES corrugations on the order of 0.4 and 0.03 eV per atom of one layer, respectively, are obtained. The account of structural relaxation doubles this value for the (2,1) pattern, while causing only minimal changes for the (3,1) pattern. We show that different from aligned graphene layers, for moir\'e patterns, PES minima and maxima can switch their positions upon changing the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Chemical and Physical Properties of Materials
