PhD ThesisGraphene’s exceptional physical and mechanical properties make it an excellent
nanomaterial for MEMS/NEMS devices with wide reaching applications. This
thesis explores graphene as a nanomaterial, its use in mass sensing applications
and the suitability of existing theoretical models to describe its behaviour as a
rectangular resonator. Several local and nonlocal continuum models have been
proposed in literature for the vibration analysis of graphene resonators. But with
very little experimental data to validate these theoretical models, most of the
solutions employed to solve these models compare their results with results from
other theoretical models, leading to doubts about their validity and accuracy. In
addition to providing a guide for determining the suitable theoretical model for
different sized rectangular graphene resonators, this work establishes that a
small-scale parameter 0 of any value between 0 and 2 needs to be
incorporated in any local continuum modelled applied to micro-sized graphene
sheets to avoid overestimation of the frequency of the sheets. A fabrication route
for NEMS and MEMS devices with rectangular graphene resonators up to 32
by 7 is also developed with the provision for magnetomotive actuation via
Lorentz force with possible capacitive readout capabilities. This is important as
the use of graphene in MEMS/NEMS is being hurriedly transitioned from the
Research space to the marketplace
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