TY - JOUR
T1 - Large-amplitude coherent phonons and inverse Stone-Wales transitions in graphitic systems with defects interacting with ultrashort laser pulses
AU - Valencia, Felipe
AU - Romero, Aldo H.
AU - Jeschke, Harald O.
AU - Garcia, Martin E.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - The mechanical response of a defective graphene layer to an ultrafast laser pulse is investigated through nonadiabatic molecular dynamics simulations. The defects are pentagon-heptagon pairs introduced by a single Stone-Wales transformation in the simulation cell. We found that when the fraction of excited electrons ξ is below 6%, the layer exhibits strong transversal displacements in the neighborhood of the defect. The amplitude of these movements increases with the amount of energy absorbed until the threshold of ξ=6% is reached. Under this condition the layer undergoes a subpicosecond inverse Stone-Wales transition, healing the defect. The absorbed energy per atom required to induce this mechanism is approximately 1.3 eV, a value that is below the laser damage thresholds for the pristine layers. The transition is lead by the electronic entropy and follows a path with strong out-of-plane contributions; it differs from the predicted path for thermally activated transitions, as calculated using standard transition state approaches. The same phenomenon is observed in defective zig-zag and armchair nanotubes. In contrast, for a defective C60 fullerene the mechanism is hindered by the presence of edge-sharing pentagons.
AB - The mechanical response of a defective graphene layer to an ultrafast laser pulse is investigated through nonadiabatic molecular dynamics simulations. The defects are pentagon-heptagon pairs introduced by a single Stone-Wales transformation in the simulation cell. We found that when the fraction of excited electrons ξ is below 6%, the layer exhibits strong transversal displacements in the neighborhood of the defect. The amplitude of these movements increases with the amount of energy absorbed until the threshold of ξ=6% is reached. Under this condition the layer undergoes a subpicosecond inverse Stone-Wales transition, healing the defect. The absorbed energy per atom required to induce this mechanism is approximately 1.3 eV, a value that is below the laser damage thresholds for the pristine layers. The transition is lead by the electronic entropy and follows a path with strong out-of-plane contributions; it differs from the predicted path for thermally activated transitions, as calculated using standard transition state approaches. The same phenomenon is observed in defective zig-zag and armchair nanotubes. In contrast, for a defective C60 fullerene the mechanism is hindered by the presence of edge-sharing pentagons.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevB.74.075409
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevB.74.075409
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33747071776
SN - 1098-0121
VL - 74
JO - Physical Review B-Condensed Matter
JF - Physical Review B-Condensed Matter
IS - 7
M1 - 075409
ER -