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Vibrations and transitions across barrier of strained nanoribbons at finite temperature

Paul Z. Hanakata, Sourav S. Bhabesh, David Yllanes, David R. Nelson, and Mark J. Bowick
Phys. Rev. Materials 8, 016001 – Published 9 January 2024

Abstract

Crystalline sheets (e.g., graphene and transition metal dichalcogenides) liberated from a substrate are a paradigm for materials at criticality, because flexural phonons can fluctuate into the third dimension. Although studies of static critical behaviors (e.g., the scale-dependent elastic constants) are plentiful, investigations of dynamics remain limited. Here, we use molecular dynamics to study the time dependence of the midpoint (the height center of mass) of doubly clamped nanoribbons, as prototypical graphene resonators, under a wide range of temperature and strain conditions. By treating the ribbon midpoint as a Brownian particle confined to a nonlinear potential (which assumes a double-well shape beyond the buckling transition), we formulate an effective theory describing the ribbon's transition rate across the two wells and its oscillations inside a given well. We find that, for nanoribbbons compressed above the Euler buckling point and thermalized above a temperature at which the nonlinear effects due to thermal fluctuations become significant, the exponential term (the ratio between energy barrier and temperature) depends only on the geometry but not the temperature, unlike the usual Arrhenius behavior. Moreover, we find that the natural oscillation time for small strain shows a nontrivial scaling τoL0zTη/4, with L0 being the ribbon length, z=2η/2 being the dynamic critical exponent, η=0.8 being the scaling exponent describing scale-dependent elastic constants, and T being the temperature. These unusual scale- and temperature-dependent dynamics thus exhibit dynamic criticality and could be exploited in the development of graphene-based nanoactuators.

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  • Received 11 May 2023
  • Accepted 21 November 2023

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.8.016001

©2024 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

  1. Research Areas
  1. Physical Systems
Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Paul Z. Hanakata1,*, Sourav S. Bhabesh2, David Yllanes3,4, David R. Nelson1, and Mark J. Bowick5,†

  • 1Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA
  • 2Department of Physics, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244, USA
  • 3Chan Zuckerberg Biohub — San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94158, USA
  • 4Instituto de Biocomputación y Física de Sistemas Complejos (BIFI), 50018 Zaragoza, Spain
  • 5Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA

  • *paul.hanakata@gmail.com
  • markbowick@ucsb.edu

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Vol. 8, Iss. 1 — January 2024

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