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Temperature-dependent critical buckling strains and elastic constants in thermalized nanoribbons

ORAL

Abstract

Studies of buckling and instabilities of thin plates date back more than two centuries. However, stability predictions, such as for the critical buckling load, can be dramatically altered for nanomembranes (e.g., graphene) when thermal fluctuations become important. We study, using theory and simulations, thin ribbons under longitudinal compressions and an out-of-plane perturbing field at a wide variety of temperatures. We find that the buckling behavior, obtained via molecular dynamics, can be described by a mean-field theory with renormalized elastic constants when the ribbon length is shorter than the persistence length. The ribbon mechanics become temperature dependent with Young’s modulus Y Tu/2, bending rigidity κ T η/2, and critical strain εc T (η+ηu)/2 where η = 0.67(18) and ηu = 0.41(10). These buckling exponents are close to theoretical predictions and numerical simulations normally obtained via Fourier analysis of height fluctuations of a stress-free membrane.

Presenters

  • David Yllanes

    Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, Universidad de Saragoza, Instituto de Biocomputacion y fisica de sistemas complejos, Theory, Chan Zuckerberg Biohub

Authors

  • David Yllanes

    Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, Universidad de Saragoza, Instituto de Biocomputacion y fisica de sistemas complejos, Theory, Chan Zuckerberg Biohub

  • Paul Hanakata

    Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University

  • Sourav Bhabesh

    Department of Physics and Soft and Living Matter Program, Syracuse University

  • Mark J Bowick

    University of California, Santa Barbara, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, KITP, University of California, Santa Barbara, University of California Santa Barbara

  • David R. Nelson

    Physics, Harvard University, Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University