Stone-Wales (SW) defects, analogous to dislocations in crystals, play an important role in mechanical behavior of sp2-bonded carbon based materials. Here, we show using first-principles calculations that a marked anisotropy in the interaction among the SW defects has interesting consequences when such defects are present near the edges of a graphene nanoribbon: depending on their orientation with respect to edge, they result in compressive or tensile stress, and the former is responsible to depression or warping of the graphene nanoribbon. Such warping results in delocalization of electrons in the defect states
Graphene’s intrinsically corrugated and wrinkled topology fundamentally influences its electronic, m...
Experimental studies show that Stone-Thrower-Wales STW defects generally exist in graphene sheets...
The narrower the width of the graphene, the higher the impact of the atomic edge structure on its el...
Stone-Wales (SW) defects, analogous to dislocations in crystals, play an important role in mechanica...
The tensile properties of graphene with the Stone-Wales (S-W) defect are investigated by first princ...
Density functional theory and quantum Monte Carlo simulations reveal that the structure of the Stone...
In this paper, we study zigzag graphene nanoribbons with edges reconstructed with Stone-Wales defect...
A theory of the Stone-Wales (SW) defect as dipole of dislocation and anti-dislocation is presented i...
Interactions between defects in graphene and the lattice distortion and electronic charge localizati...
Due to its unique sp2/sp3 hybrid electron configuration, diamondene with superior physical propertie...
We present a new semiempirical potential for graphene, which includes also an put-of-plane energy te...
Different types of defects can be introduced into graphene during material synthesis, and significan...
We report a first-principles study on the electronic structures of deformed graphene nanoribbons (GN...
Graphene is a one atom thick layer of carbon atoms arranged in hexagonal lattice in two-dimensions. ...
Graphene is the strongest material ever discovered and has an extremely high Young's modulus (~ 1 GP...
Graphene’s intrinsically corrugated and wrinkled topology fundamentally influences its electronic, m...
Experimental studies show that Stone-Thrower-Wales STW defects generally exist in graphene sheets...
The narrower the width of the graphene, the higher the impact of the atomic edge structure on its el...
Stone-Wales (SW) defects, analogous to dislocations in crystals, play an important role in mechanica...
The tensile properties of graphene with the Stone-Wales (S-W) defect are investigated by first princ...
Density functional theory and quantum Monte Carlo simulations reveal that the structure of the Stone...
In this paper, we study zigzag graphene nanoribbons with edges reconstructed with Stone-Wales defect...
A theory of the Stone-Wales (SW) defect as dipole of dislocation and anti-dislocation is presented i...
Interactions between defects in graphene and the lattice distortion and electronic charge localizati...
Due to its unique sp2/sp3 hybrid electron configuration, diamondene with superior physical propertie...
We present a new semiempirical potential for graphene, which includes also an put-of-plane energy te...
Different types of defects can be introduced into graphene during material synthesis, and significan...
We report a first-principles study on the electronic structures of deformed graphene nanoribbons (GN...
Graphene is a one atom thick layer of carbon atoms arranged in hexagonal lattice in two-dimensions. ...
Graphene is the strongest material ever discovered and has an extremely high Young's modulus (~ 1 GP...
Graphene’s intrinsically corrugated and wrinkled topology fundamentally influences its electronic, m...
Experimental studies show that Stone-Thrower-Wales STW defects generally exist in graphene sheets...
The narrower the width of the graphene, the higher the impact of the atomic edge structure on its el...