Mechanical Behaviors of Nanotwinned Metals and Nanotwinned Covalent Materials
Mechanical Behaviors of Nanotwinned Metals and Nanotwinned Covalent Materials
- Research Article
2
- 10.1088/0256-307x/38/5/056101
- May 2, 2021
- Chinese Physics Letters
Diamond, cubic boron nitride (c-BN), silicon (Si), and germanium (Ge), as examples of typical strong covalent materials, have been extensively investigated in recent decades, owing to their fundamental importance in material science and industry. However, an in-depth analysis of the character of these materials' mechanical behaviors under harsh service environments, such as high pressure, has yet to be conducted. Based on several mechanical criteria, the effect of pressure on the mechanical properties of these materials is comprehensively investigated. It is demonstrated that, with respect to their intrinsic brittleness/ductile nature, all these materials exhibit ubiquitous pressure-enhanced ductility. By analyzing the strength variation under uniform deformation, together with the corresponding electronic structures, we reveal for the first time that the pressure-induced mechanical softening/weakening exhibits distinct characteristics between diamond and c-BN, owing to the differences in their abnormal charge-depletion evolution under applied strain, whereas a monotonous weakening phenomenon is observed in Si and Ge. Further investigation into dislocation-mediated plastic resistance indicates that the pressure-induced shuffle-set plane softening in diamond (c-BN), and weakening in Si (Ge), can be attributed to the reduction of antibonding states below the Fermi level, and an enhanced metallization, corresponding to the weakening of the bonds around the slipped plane with increasing pressure, respectively. These findings not only reveal the physical mechanism of pressure-induced softening/weakening in covalent materials, but also highlights the necessity of exploring strain-tunable electronic structures to emphasize the mechanical response in such covalent materials.
- Research Article
3
- 10.1002/marc.202300223
- Jun 4, 2023
- Macromolecular Rapid Communications
Flexible electrolytes with solid self-supporting properties are highly desired in the fields of energy and electronics. However, traditional flexible electrolytes prepared by doping ionic liquids or salt solutions into a polymer matrix pose a risk of liquid component leakage during device operation. In this work, the development of supramolecular ionic network electrolytes using polyoxometalate nanoclusters as supramolecular crosslinkers to solidify bola-type zwitterionic liquids is reported. The resulting self-supporting electrolytes possess semi-solid features and show a high proton conductivity of 8.2×10-4 S cm-1 at low humidity (RH = 30%). Additionally, the electrolytes exhibit a typical plateau region in rheological tests, indicating that their dynamic network structures can contribute mechanical behavior similar to the entangled networks in covalent polymer materials. This work introduces a new paradigm for designing flexible solid electrolytes and expands the concept of reticular chemistry to noncrystalline systems.
- Research Article
274
- 10.1088/0957-4484/26/31/315706
- Jul 17, 2015
- Nanotechnology
We propose parametrizing the Stillinger–Weber potential for covalent materials starting from the valence force-field model. All geometrical parameters in the Stillinger–Weber potential are determined analytically according to the equilibrium condition for each individual potential term, while the energy parameters are derived from the valence force-field model. This parametrization approach transfers the accuracy of the valence force field model to the Stillinger–Weber potential. Furthermore, the resulting Stilliinger–Weber potential supports stable molecular dynamics simulations, as each potential term is at an energy-minimum state separately at the equilibrium configuration. We employ this procedure to parametrize Stillinger–Weber potentials for single-layer MoS2 and black phosphorous. The obtained Stillinger–Weber potentials predict an accurate phonon spectrum and mechanical behaviors. We also provide input scripts of these Stillinger–Weber potentials used by publicly available simulation packages including GULP and LAMMPS.
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