Materials which contract on heating
(negative thermal
expansion,
NTE) are of significant interest for advanced applications. Graphene
has shown NTE up to 1000 K, which motivates further improvements in
two-dimensional carbon to attain superior performance. In this Communication,
very large negative thermal expansion coefficients (αT) are reported for tri-graphene (TrG) and T-graphene (TG). Quasi-harmonic
approximation calculations show that αT remains negative
until 4200 K and 2900 K for TrG and TG, respectively. The high NTE
for these systems is understood on the basis of the soft phonon modes,
which induce rotation of the 3-membered and the 4-membered rings in
TrG and TG, respectively, and ab initio molecular
dynamics simulations. The local distortions for the 3–12 rings
(in TrG) and 4–8 rings (in TG) have structural resemblance
with the rigid-unit modes that are usually envisioned for bulk systems