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Stone-Wales graphene: A Two Dimensional Carbon Semi-Metal with Magic Stability
- Source :
- Physical Review B Rapid communication 2019
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- A two-dimensional carbon allotrope, Stone-Wales graphene, is identified in stochastic group and graph constrained searches and systematically investigated by first-principles calculations. Stone-Wales graphene consists of well-arranged Stone-Wales defects, and it can be constructed through a 90$^\circ$ bond-rotation in a $\sqrt{8}$$\times$$\sqrt{8}$ super-cell of graphene. Its calculated energy relative to graphene, +149 meV/atom, makes it more stable than the most competitive previously suggested graphene allotropes. We find that Stone-Wales graphene based on a $\sqrt{8}$ super-cell is more stable than those based on $\sqrt{9} \times \sqrt{9}$, $\sqrt{12} \times \sqrt{12}$ and $\sqrt{13} \times \sqrt{13}$ super-cells, and is a "magic size" that can be further understood through a simple "energy splitting and inversion" model. The calculated vibrational properties and molecular dynamics of SW-graphene confirm that it is dynamically stable. The electronic structure shows SW-graphene is a semimetal with distorted, strongly anisotropic Dirac cones.<br />Comment: Accepted;5 pages;5 figures;53 references and 8 pages of supplementary file
- Subjects :
- Condensed Matter - Materials Science
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Journal :
- Physical Review B Rapid communication 2019
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.1901.02966
- Document Type :
- Working Paper