40 research outputs found

    Effect of discrete breathers on macroscopic properties of the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam chain

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    The effect of discrete breathers (DBs) on macroscopic properties of the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam chain with symmetric and asymmetric potentials is investigated. The total to kinetic energy ratio (related to specific heat), stress (related to thermal expansion), and Young's modulus are monitored during the development of modulational instability of the zone boundary mode. The instability results in the formation of chaotic DBs followed by the transition to thermal equilibrium when DBs disappear due to energy radiation in the form of small-amplitude phonons. It is found that DBs reduce the specific heat for all the considered chain parameters. They increase the thermal expansion when the potential is asymmetric and, as expected, thermal expansion is not observed in the case of symmetric potential. The Young's modulus in the presence of DBs is smaller than in thermal equilibrium for the symmetric potential and for the potential with a small asymmetry, but it is larger than in thermal equilibrium for the potential with greater asymmetry. Our results can be useful for setting experiments on the identification of DBs in crystals by measuring their macroscopic properties.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures; v3: some changes in the text, references added; matches the published versio

    Delocalized nonlinear vibrational modes in graphene: second harmonic generation and negative pressure

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    With the help of molecular dynamics simulations, delocalized nonlinear vibrational modes (DNVM) in graphene are analyzed. Such modes are dictated by the lattice symmetry, they are exact solutions to the atomic equations of motion, regardless the employed interatomic potential and for any mode amplitude (though for large amplitudes they are typically unstable). In this study, only one‐ and two‐component DNVM are analyzed, they are reducible to the dynamical systems with one and two degrees of freedom, respectively. There exist 4 one‐component and 12 two‐component DNVM with in‐plane atomic displacements. Any two‐component mode includes one of the one‐component modes. If the amplitudes of the modes constituting a two‐component mode are properly chosen, periodic in time vibrations are observed for the two degrees of freedom at frequencies ω and 2ω, that is, second harmonic generation takes place. For particular DNVM, the higher harmonic can have frequency nearly two times larger than the maximal frequency of the phonon spectrum of graphene. Excitation of some of DNVM results in the appearance of negative in‐plane pressure in graphene. This counterintuitive result is explained by the rotational motion of carbon hexagons. Our results contribute to the understanding of nonlinear dynamics of the graphene lattice

    ELASTIC DAMPER BASED ON THE CARBON NANOTUBE BUNDLE

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    Mechanical response of the carbon nanotube bundle to uniaxial and biaxial lateral compression followed by unloading is modeled under plane strain conditions. The chain model with a reduced number of degrees of freedom is employed with high efficiency. During loading, two critical values of strain are detected. Firstly, period doubling is observed as a result of the second order phase transition, and at higher compressive strain, the first order phase transition takes place when carbon nanotubes start to collapse. The loading-unloading stress-strain curves exhibit a hysteresis loop and, upon unloading, the structure returns to its initial form with no residual strain. This behavior of the nanotube bundle can be employed for the design of an elastic damper

    EVOLUTION OF THE CARBON NANOTUBE BUNDLE STRUCTURE UNDER BIAXIAL AND SHEAR STRAINS

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    Close packed carbon nanotube bundles are materials with highly deformable elements, for which unusual deformation mechanisms are expected. Structural evolution of the zigzag carbon nanotube bundle subjected to biaxial lateral compression with the subsequent shear straining is studied under plane strain conditions using the chain model with a reduced number of degrees of freedom. Biaxial compression results in bending of carbon nanotubes walls and formation of the characteristic pattern, when nanotube cross-sections are inclined in the opposite directions alternatively in the parallel close-packed rows. Subsequent shearing up to a certain shear strain leads to an appearance of shear bands and vortex-like displacements. Stress components and potential energy as the functions of shear strain for different values of the biaxial volumetric strain are analyzed in detail. A new mechanism of carbon nanotube bundle shear deformation through cooperative, vortex-like displacements of nanotube cross sections is reported

    Chain Model for Carbon Nanotube Bundle under Plane Strain Conditions

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    Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have record high tensile strength and Young’s modulus, which makes them ideal for making super strong yarns, ropes, fillers for composites, solid lubricants, etc. The mechanical properties of CNT bundles have been addressed in a number of experimental and theoretical studies. The development of efficient computational methods for solving this problem is an important step in the design of new CNT-based materials. In the present study, an atomistic chain model is proposed to analyze the mechanical response of CNT bundles under plane strain conditions. The model takes into account the tensile and bending rigidity of the CNT wall, as well as the van der Waals interactions between walls. Due to the discrete character of the model, it is able to describe large curvature of the CNT wall and the fracture of the walls at very high pressures, where both of these problems are difficult to address in frame of continuum mechanics models. As an example, equilibrium structures of CNT crystal under biaxial, strain controlled loading are obtained and their thermal stability is analyzed. The obtained results agree well with previously reported data. In addition, a new equilibrium structure with four SNTs in a translational cell is reported. The model offered here can be applied with great efficiency to the analysis of the mechanical properties of CNT bundles composed of single-walled or multi-walled CNTs under plane strain conditions due to considerable reduction in the number of degrees of freedom
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