Mechanical properties and fracture behaviour of defective phosphorene nanotubes under uniaxial tension

Ping Liu, Qing Xiang Pei, Wei Huang, Yong Wei Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

The easy formation of vacancy defects and the asymmetry in the two sublayers of phosphorene nanotubes (PNTs) may result in brand new mechanical properties and failure behaviour. Herein, we investigate the mechanical properties and fracture behaviour of defective PNTs under uniaxial tension using molecular dynamics simulations. Our simulation results show that atomic vacancies cause local stress concentration and thus significantly reduce the fracture strength and fracture strain of PNTs. More specifically, a 1% defect concentration is able to reduce the fracture strength and fracture strain by as much as 50% and 66%, respectively. Interestingly, the reduction in the mechanical properties is found to depend on the defect location: a defect located in the outer sublayer has a stronger effect than one located in the inner layer, especially for PNTs with a small diameter. Temperature is also found to strongly influence the mechanical properties of both defect-free and defective PNTs. When the temperature is increased from 0 K to 400 K, the fracture strength and fracture strain of defective PNTs with a defect concentration of 1% are reduced further by 71% and 61%, respectively. These findings are of great importance for the structural design of PNTs as building blocks in nanodevices.

Original languageEnglish
Article number485303
JournalJournal of Physics D: Applied Physics
Volume50
Issue number48
DOIs
StatePublished - 7 Nov 2017

Keywords

  • defects
  • mechanical properties
  • nanotube
  • phosphorene

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