Compressive dynamic scission of carbon nanotubes under sonication: fracture by atomic ejection

Authors
Chew, H. B.Moon, M. -W.Lee, K. -R.Kim, K. -S.
Issue Date
2011-05-08
Publisher
ROYAL SOC
Citation
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, v.467, no.2129, pp.1270 - 1289
Abstract
We report that a graphene sheet has an unusual mode of atomic-scale fracture owing to its structural peculiarity, i.e. single sheet of atoms. Unlike conventional bond-breaking tensile fracture, a graphene sheet can be cut by in-plane compression, which is able to eject a row of atoms out-of-plane. Our scale-bridging molecular dynamics simulations and experiments reveal that this compressive atomic-sheet fracture is the critical precursor mechanism of cutting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) by sonication. The atomic-sheet fracture typically occurs within 200 fs during the dynamic axial buckling of a SWCNT; the nanotube is loaded by local nanoscale flow drag of water molecules caused by the collapse of a microbubble during sonication. This is on the contrary to common speculations that the nanotubes would be cut in tension, or by high-temperature chemical reactions in ultrasonication processes. The compressive fracture mechanism clarifies previously unexplainable diameter-dependent cutting of the SWCNTs under sonication.
Keywords
BUBBLE; CAVITATION; SONOLUMINESCENCE; MECHANISM; ENERGY; LENGTH; BUBBLE; CAVITATION; SONOLUMINESCENCE; MECHANISM; ENERGY; LENGTH; atomic scission; carbon nanotube; buckling; nanofluidics; sonication
ISSN
1364-5021
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/130358
DOI
10.1098/rspa.2010.0495
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2011
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