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Journal ArticleDOI

Empirical potential for hydrocarbons for use in simulating the chemical vapor deposition of diamond films

Donald W. Brenner
- 15 Nov 1990 - 
- Vol. 42, Iss: 15, pp 9458-9471
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TLDR
An empirical many-body potential-energy expression is developed for hydrocarbons that can model intramolecular chemical bonding in a variety of small hydrocarbon molecules as well as graphite and diamond lattices based on Tersoff's covalent-bonding formalism with additional terms that correct for an inherent overbinding of radicals.
Abstract
An empirical many-body potential-energy expression is developed for hydrocarbons that can model intramolecular chemical bonding in a variety of small hydrocarbon molecules as well as graphite and diamond lattices. The potential function is based on Tersoff's covalent-bonding formalism with additional terms that correct for an inherent overbinding of radicals and that include nonlocal effects. Atomization energies for a wide range of hydrocarbon molecules predicted by the potential compare well to experimental values. The potential correctly predicts that the \ensuremath{\pi}-bonded chain reconstruction is the most stable reconstruction on the diamond {111} surface, and that hydrogen adsorption on a bulk-terminated surface is more stable than the reconstruction. Predicted energetics for the dimer reconstructed diamond {100} surface as well as hydrogen abstraction and chemisorption of small molecules on the diamond {111} surface are also given. The potential function is short ranged and quickly evaluated so it should be very useful for large-scale molecular-dynamics simulations of reacting hydrocarbon molecules.

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Local stress and heat flux in atomistic systems involving three-body forces.

TL;DR: Local densities of fundamental physical quantities, including stress and heat flux fields, are formulated for atomistic systems involving three-body forces in consistent with the conservation equations of thermodynamics of continuum.
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Molecular mechanics of polycrystalline graphene with enhanced fracture toughness

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined why polycrystalline graphene has high strength and high fracture toughness, by combining an innovative algorithm with classical molecular dynamics simulation to systematically build well-stitched (99.8% heptagon and pentagon defects without void) polycrystaline graphene models with regular and irregular grain boundaries.
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Static and Dynamic Analysis of Carbon Nanotube-Based Switches

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Journal ArticleDOI

An atomistic-based continuum theory for carbon nanotubes: Analysis of fracture nucleation

TL;DR: In this paper, an atomistic-based continuum theory for carbon nanotubes (CNTs) is proposed. But this method requires no additional parameter fitting beyond those introduced in the interatomic potential.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deformation Mechanisms of Very Long Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes Subject to Compressive Loading

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report atomistic studies of single-wall carbon nanotubes with very large aspect ratios and show that these long tubes display significally different mechani-cal behavior than tubes with smaller aspect ratios.