
Effect of nitrogen or boron impurities on the mechanical and vibrational properties of graphene nanosheets: a molecular dynamics approach
Author(s) -
Mehrabani Mahboube,
Khatibi Mohammad Mahdi,
Ashory Mohammad Reza,
Sadeghzadeh Sadegh
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
micro and nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.25
H-Index - 31
ISSN - 1750-0443
DOI - 10.1049/mnl.2020.0044
Subject(s) - molecular dynamics , materials science , graphene , boron , impurity , modulus , ultimate tensile strength , young's modulus , nanosheet , chemical physics , composite material , nanotechnology , computational chemistry , chemistry , organic chemistry
Investigation of mechanical and vibrational properties of nano‐structures using the analytical methods would be time‐consuming. Therefore, using a semi‐empirical method would reduce the time needed to investigate materials characterisation. One of the semi‐empirical approaches is molecular dynamics. In this Letter, the large‐scale atomic/molecular massively parallel simulator software is used to simulate the mechanical and vibrational behaviour of a nitrogen‐ and boron‐doped 24.04 × 51.13 Å graphene nano‐sheet. The natural frequencies, Young's modulus, and ultimate tensile strength (UTS) are studied. By adding impurity to the nanosheet and increasing its density, Young's modulus, UTS, and natural frequencies were decreased. The decrease in tensile properties was more significant in the case of boron impurity. When the boron (nitrogen) impurity increased to about 20%, Young's modulus and the first natural frequency were decreased 7.1% (9%) and 16.8% (73%), respectively. This illustrates that Young's modulus and natural frequencies are directly related. Therefore, for the same dimensions and boundary conditions, it is obvious that the increase in impurity content has reduced the natural frequencies of the nanostructure.