16,580 research outputs found

    Why edge effects are important on the intrinsic loss mechanisms of graphene nanoresonators?

    Full text link
    Molecular dynamics simulations are performed to investigate edge effects on the quality factor of graphene nanoresonators with different edge configurations and of various sizes. If the periodic boundary condition is applied, very high quality factors (3×1053\times10^{5}) are obtained for all kinds of graphene nanoresonators. However, if the free boundary condition is applied, quality factors will be greatly reduced by two effects resulting from free edges: the imaginary edge vibration effect and the artificial effect. Imaginary edge vibrations will flip between a pair of doubly degenerate warping states during the mechanical oscillation of nanoresonators. The flipping process breaks the coherence of the mechanical oscillation of the nanoresonator, which is the dominant mechanism for extremely low quality factors. There is an artificial effect if the mechanical oscillation of the graphene nanoresonator is actuated according to an artificial vibration (non-natural vibration of the system), which slightly reduce the quality factor. The artificial effect can be eliminated by actuating the mechanical oscillation according to a natural vibration of the nanoresonator. Our simulations provide an explanation for the recent experiment, where the measured quality factor is low and varies between identical samples with free edges.Comment: accepted by J. Appl. Phy

    Mechanism of phonon localized edge modes

    Full text link
    The phonon localized edge modes are systematically studied, and two conditions are proposed for the existence of the localized edge modes: (I) coupling between different directions (xx, yy or zz) in the interaction; (II) different boundary conditions in three directions. The generality of these two conditions is illustrated by different lattice structures: one-dimensional (1D) chain, 2D square lattice, 2D graphene, 3D simple cubic lattice, 3D diamond structure, etc; and with different potentials: valence force field model, Brenner potential, etc.Comment: 5 pages, 8 fig

    Graphene-based tortional resonator from molecular dynamics simulation

    Full text link
    Molecular dynamics simulations are performed to study graphene-based torsional mechanical resonators. The quality factor is calculated by QF=ωτ/2πQ_{F}=\omega\tau/2\pi, where the frequency ω\omega and life time τ\tau are obtained from the correlation function of the normal mode coordinate. Our simulations reveal the radius-dependence of the quality factor as QF=2628/(22R1+0.004R2)Q_{F}=2628/(22R^{-1}+0.004R^{2}), which yields a maximum value at some proper radius RR. This maximum point is due to the strong boundary effect in the torsional resonator, as disclosed by the temperature distribution in the resonator. Resulting from the same boundary effect, the quality factor shows a power law temperature-dependence with power factors bellow 1.0. The theoretical results supply some valuable information for the manipulation of the quality factor in future experimental devices based on the torsional mechanical resonator.Comment: (accepted by EPL). New email address for Jin-Wu Jiang after 22/Nov/2011: [email protected]
    corecore