The melting of fluorographene is very unusual and depends strongly on the
degree of fluorination. For temperatures below 1000 K, fully fluorinated
graphene (FFG) is thermo-mechanically more stable than graphene but at
Tm≈2800 K FFG transits to random coils which is almost twice lower
than the melting temperature of graphene, i.e. 5300 K. For fluorinated graphene
(PFG) up to 30 % ripples causes detachment of individual F-atoms around 2000 K
while for 40-60 % fluorination, large defects are formed beyond 1500 K and
beyond 60% of fluorination F-atoms remain bonded to graphene until melting. The
results agree with recent experiments on the dependence of the reversibility of
the fluorination process on the percentage of fluorination.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure