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Defects in solid commonly limit mechanical performance of the material. However, recent measurements reported that the extraordinarily high strength of graphene is almost retained with the presence of grain boundaries. We clarify in this work that lattice defects in the grain boundaries and distorted geometry thus induced define the mechanical properties characterized under specific loading conditions. Atomistic simulations and theoretical analysis show that tensile tests measure in-plane strength that is governed by defect-induced stress buildup, while nanoindentation probes local strength under the indenter tip and bears additional geometrical effects from warping. These findings elucidate the failure mechanisms of graphene under realistic loading conditions and assess the feasibility of abovementioned techniques in quantifying the strength of graphene, and suggest that mechanical properties of low-dimensional materials could be tuned by implanting defects and geometrical distortion they leads to.
We perform ab initio calculations that indicate that the relative stability of antiphase boundaries (APB) with armchair and zigzag chiralities in monolayer boron nitride (BN) is determined by the chemical potentials of the boron and nitrogen species
Oscillator-strength sum rule in light-induced transitions is one general form of quantum-mechanical identities. Although this sum rule is well established in equilibrium photo-physics, an experimental corroboration for the validation of the sum rule
We probe the local inhomogeneities of the electronic properties of graphene at the nanoscale using scanning probe microscopy techniques. First, we focus on the study of the electronic inhomogeneities caused by the graphene-substrate interaction in gr
We perform {textit ab initio} calculations for the strain-induced formation of non-hexagonal-ring defects in graphene, graphane (planar CH), and graphenol (planar COH). We find that the simplest of such topological defects, the Stone-Wales defect, ac
Graphene is a model system for the study of electrons confined to a strictly two-dimensional layer1 and a large number of electronic phenomena have been demonstrated in graphene, from the fractional2, 3 quantum Hall effect to superconductivity4. Howe