Abstract

The discovery of new carbon allotropes with different building blocks and crystal symmetries has long been of great interest to broad materials science fields. Herein, we report several hundred new carbon allotropes predicted by the state-of-the-art RG2 code and first-principles calculations. The types of new carbon allotropes that were identified in this work span pure sp2, hybrid sp2/sp3, and pure sp3 C–C bonding. All structures were globally optimized at the first-principles level. The thermodynamic stability of some selected carbon allotropes was further validated by computing their phonon dispersions. The predicted carbon allotropes possess a broad range of Vickers’ hardness. This wide range of Vickers’ hardness is explained in detail in terms of both atomic descriptors such as density, volume per atom, packing fraction, and local potential energy throughout the unit cell, and global descriptors such as elastic modulus, shear modulus, and bulk modulus, universal anisotropy, Pugh’s ratio, and Poisson’s ratio. For the first time, we found strong correlation between Vickers’ hardness and average local potentials in the unit cell. This work provides deep insight into the identification of novel carbon materials with high Vickers’ hardness for modern applications in which ultrahigh hardness is desired. Moreover, the local potential averaged over the entire unit cell of an atomic structure, an easy-to-evaluate atomic descriptor, could serve as a new atomic descriptor for efficient screening of the mechanical properties of unexplored structures in future high-throughput computing and artificial-intelligence-accelerated materials discovery methods.

Highlights

  • Carbon atoms can form several allotropes with different bond lengths due to their ability to from new and various hybridizations [1,2]

  • In the past few decades, there has been an intense amount of research into the fabrication of naturally existing carbon allotropes and new carbon allotropes with various hybridizations such as graphene, nanotubes, fullerenes, and lonsdaleite

  • The k-mesh in low-resolution density functional theory (DFT) calculations depends on total number of atoms in the cell

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Summary

Introduction

Carbon atoms can form several allotropes with different bond lengths due to their ability to from new and various hybridizations [1,2]. In the past few decades, there has been an intense amount of research into the fabrication of naturally existing carbon allotropes and new carbon allotropes with various hybridizations such as graphene, nanotubes, fullerenes, and lonsdaleite. Those new carbon allotropes can be materials with different dimensions; fullerenes are a zero-dimensional material (0D), carbon nanotubes are one-dimensional (1D), and graphene is a two-dimensional material (2D) [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. Graphite with sp was transformed into a sp2 /sp mixture by cold compression at a pressure of

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