Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition

Thesis: S.M. in Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 2017. === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (pages 95-104). === In many graphene-based devices graphene is adhere...

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Main Author: Al-Mulla, Talal
Other Authors: Markus J. Buehler.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109645
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topic Civil and Environmental Engineering.
spellingShingle Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Al-Mulla, Talal
Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition
description Thesis: S.M. in Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 2017. === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (pages 95-104). === In many graphene-based devices graphene is adhered to a substrate that influences its performance, rather than being present in a free standing form. The interaction of graphene with these substrates can lead to deformations that give rise to out-of-plane architectures with new properties such as superhydrophobicity, opened electronic band gap, and higher in-plane rigidity. Earlier experiments and simulations with graphene-substrate interfaces demonstrating reversible and repeatable stacking of out-of-plane buckled graphene to create ridges, which are stacked protrusions of graphene, warrant a detailed understanding of the underlying mechanisms of graphene ridge formation, especially for design of tailored nanostructures. Ridges are created through substrate-mediated compression of graphene, therefore, these ridges should be related to the graphene-substrate interface. It is unknown what the direct effect of the substrate on ridge formation is besides the work done studying graphene's mechanical response to compression. It is necessary to understand how the substrate affects graphene deformation in order to fully utilize the range of accessible graphene deformation shapes. To systematically study the formation of ridges in graphene, molecular dynamics simulations are performed to characterize the deformation of graphene on substrate during and after axial compression of graphene nanoribbons, high aspect ratio (10:1) single layer sheets of graphene in this work. This is done to investigate the hypothesis that graphene deformation depends on the underlying substrate in terms of corrugation wavelength and amplitude and graphene-substrate adhesion energy. In the first part of this thesis a quantitative scheme is formulated to characterize and predict these deformations. A critical value of interfacial adhesion energy marks a transition point that separates two deformation regimes of graphene on substrate under uniaxial compression; the deformation regimes are binary featuring the stacking of graphene after buckling in one case and no stacking, otherwise. These ridges are a product of the graphene limit point buckling, where growing out-of-plane folds of graphene stack and self-adhere. In the second part of this thesis, after establishing the role of substrate and key interfacial properties, the atomistic mechanisms underlying the formation, evolution, and localization of graphene ridges are investigated using fracture mechanics theory and molecular dynamics simulations. It is shown that there is no intrinsic characteristic length scale over which to achieve certain graphene shapes or see any repeated shapes as suggested in previous experiments, but instead these shapes can be tuned by substrate selection and design, a novel approach presented in this thesis. Moreover, a major result of this work is that the location and density of surface features in graphene-substrate systems can be controlled by substrate engineering at nanoscale resolutions, which could be used for developing graphene-based devices with a more efficient use of material, or with tailored distribution of surface futures that lead to specific applications. Efficiency gains can be made through use of less material and more controlled spacing of graphene ridges. The immediate impact of this work is most clearly realized in large scale manipulation of graphene where targeted deformations of different regions of the same graphene sheet can be executed using a single rationally designed substrate. Shifting the mindset from using the substrate as a stage, but as a tool, opens up the potential for more intricate graphene deformations at the nanoscale. === by Talal Al-Mulla. === S.M. in Civil and Environmental Engineering
author2 Markus J. Buehler.
author_facet Markus J. Buehler.
Al-Mulla, Talal
author Al-Mulla, Talal
author_sort Al-Mulla, Talal
title Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition
title_short Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition
title_full Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition
title_fullStr Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition
title_full_unstemmed Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition
title_sort rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109645
work_keys_str_mv AT almullatalal rationalmanipulationofsubstratesupportedgraphenebyheterogeneityofsubstratesurfaceandmaterialcomposition
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spelling ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-1096452019-05-02T15:35:22Z Rational manipulation of substrate-supported graphene by heterogeneity of substrate surface and material composition Al-Mulla, Talal Markus J. Buehler. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Civil and Environmental Engineering. Thesis: S.M. in Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 2017. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (pages 95-104). In many graphene-based devices graphene is adhered to a substrate that influences its performance, rather than being present in a free standing form. The interaction of graphene with these substrates can lead to deformations that give rise to out-of-plane architectures with new properties such as superhydrophobicity, opened electronic band gap, and higher in-plane rigidity. Earlier experiments and simulations with graphene-substrate interfaces demonstrating reversible and repeatable stacking of out-of-plane buckled graphene to create ridges, which are stacked protrusions of graphene, warrant a detailed understanding of the underlying mechanisms of graphene ridge formation, especially for design of tailored nanostructures. Ridges are created through substrate-mediated compression of graphene, therefore, these ridges should be related to the graphene-substrate interface. It is unknown what the direct effect of the substrate on ridge formation is besides the work done studying graphene's mechanical response to compression. It is necessary to understand how the substrate affects graphene deformation in order to fully utilize the range of accessible graphene deformation shapes. To systematically study the formation of ridges in graphene, molecular dynamics simulations are performed to characterize the deformation of graphene on substrate during and after axial compression of graphene nanoribbons, high aspect ratio (10:1) single layer sheets of graphene in this work. This is done to investigate the hypothesis that graphene deformation depends on the underlying substrate in terms of corrugation wavelength and amplitude and graphene-substrate adhesion energy. In the first part of this thesis a quantitative scheme is formulated to characterize and predict these deformations. A critical value of interfacial adhesion energy marks a transition point that separates two deformation regimes of graphene on substrate under uniaxial compression; the deformation regimes are binary featuring the stacking of graphene after buckling in one case and no stacking, otherwise. These ridges are a product of the graphene limit point buckling, where growing out-of-plane folds of graphene stack and self-adhere. In the second part of this thesis, after establishing the role of substrate and key interfacial properties, the atomistic mechanisms underlying the formation, evolution, and localization of graphene ridges are investigated using fracture mechanics theory and molecular dynamics simulations. It is shown that there is no intrinsic characteristic length scale over which to achieve certain graphene shapes or see any repeated shapes as suggested in previous experiments, but instead these shapes can be tuned by substrate selection and design, a novel approach presented in this thesis. Moreover, a major result of this work is that the location and density of surface features in graphene-substrate systems can be controlled by substrate engineering at nanoscale resolutions, which could be used for developing graphene-based devices with a more efficient use of material, or with tailored distribution of surface futures that lead to specific applications. Efficiency gains can be made through use of less material and more controlled spacing of graphene ridges. The immediate impact of this work is most clearly realized in large scale manipulation of graphene where targeted deformations of different regions of the same graphene sheet can be executed using a single rationally designed substrate. Shifting the mindset from using the substrate as a stage, but as a tool, opens up the potential for more intricate graphene deformations at the nanoscale. by Talal Al-Mulla. S.M. in Civil and Environmental Engineering 2017-06-06T19:23:14Z 2017-06-06T19:23:14Z 2017 2017 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109645 986790855 eng MIT theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed, downloaded, or printed from this source but further reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 104 pages application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology