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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38752682

ABSTRACT

Understanding wear, a critical factor impacting the reliability of mechanical systems, is vital for nano-, meso-, and macroscale applications. Due to the complex nature of nanoscale wear, the behavior of nanomaterials such as two-dimensional materials under cyclic wear and their surface damage mechanism is yet unexplored. In this study, we used atomic force microscopy coupled with molecular dynamic simulations to statistically examine the cyclic wear behavior of monolayer graphene, MoS2, and WSe2. We show that graphene displays exceptional durability and lasts over 3000 cycles at 85% of the applied critical normal load before failure, while MoS2 and WSe2 last only 500 cycles on average. Moreover, graphene undergoes catastrophic failure as a result of stress concentration induced by local out-of-plane deformation. In contrast, MoS2 and WSe2 exhibit intermittent failure, characterized by damage initiation at the edge of the wear track and subsequent propagation throughout the entire contact area. In addition to direct implications for MEMS and NEMS industries, this work can also enable the optimization of the use of 2D materials as lubricant additives on a macroscopic level.

2.
J Mol Model ; 30(3): 86, 2024 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38413404

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: In this study, we investigated the mechanical responses of molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2) using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Our key focus was on the tensile behavior of MoTe2 with trigonal prismatic phase (2H-MoTe2) which was investigated under uniaxial tensile stress for both armchair and zigzag directions. Crack formation and propagation were examined to understand the fracture behavior of such material for varying temperatures. Additionally, the study also assesses the impact of temperature on Young's modulus and fracture stress-strain of a monolayer of 2H-MoTe2. METHOD: The investigation was done using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations using Stillinger-Weber (SW) potentials. The tensile behavior was simulated for temperature for 10 K and then from 100 to 600 K with a 100-K interval. The crack propagation and formation of 10 K and 300 K 2H-MoTe2 for both directions at different strain rates was analyzed using Ovito visualizer. All the simulations were conducted using a strain rate of 10-4 ps-1. The results show that the fracture strength of 2H-MoTe2 in the armchair and zigzag direction at 10 K is 16.33 GPa (11.43 N/m) and 13.71429 GPa (9.46 N/m) under a 24% and 18% fracture strain, respectively. The fracture strength of 2H-MoTe2 in the armchair and zigzag direction at 600 K is 10.81 GPa (7.56 N/m) and 10.13 GPa (7.09 N/m) under a 12.5% and 12.47% fracture strain, respectively.

3.
Adv Mater ; 30(30): e1800200, 2018 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29904962

ABSTRACT

2D nanomaterials are finding numerous applications in next-generation electronics, consumer goods, energy generation and storage, and healthcare. The rapid rise of utility and applications for 2D nanomaterials necessitates developing means for their mass production. This study details a new compressible flow exfoliation method for producing 2D nanomaterials using a multiphase flow of 2D layered materials suspended in a high-pressure gas undergoing expansion. The expanded gas-solid mixture is sprayed in a suitable solvent, where a significant portion (up to 10% yield) of the initial hexagonal boron nitride material is found to be exfoliated with a mean thickness of 4.2 nm. The exfoliation is attributed to the high shear rates (γ˙ > 105 s-1 ) generated by supersonic flow of compressible gases inside narrow orifices and converging-diverging channels. This method has significant advantages over current 2D material exfoliation methods, such as chemical intercalation and exfoliation, as well as liquid phase shear exfoliation, with the most obvious benefit being the fast, continuous nature of the process. Other advantages include environmentally friendly processing, reduced occurrence of defects, and the versatility to be applied to any 2D layered material using any gaseous medium. Scaling this process to industrial production has a strong possibility of reducing the cost of creating 2D nanomaterials.

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