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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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The formation of atomic nanoclusters on graphene sheets.

TL;DR: This systematic study is based on temperature-dependent molecular dynamics simulations of some transition and alkali atoms on suspended graphene sheets and finds that the transition atoms aggregate and make various size nanoclusters distributed randomly on graphene surfaces.
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The buckling of single-walled carbon nanotubes upon bending: The higher order gradient continuum and mesh-free method

TL;DR: In this article, the bending buckling of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is studied in the theoretical scheme of the higher order gradient continuum, where the deformation of the underlying lattice vectors is approximated with an extended Cauchy-Born rule in which the effect of the second order deformation gradient is considered, and the continuum constitutive responses are determined by minimizing the energy of the representative cell.
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A progressive fracture model for carbon nanotubes

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Pinning of size-selected Ag clusters on graphite surfaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the deposition of size-selected AgN+ clusters onto the graphite surface (at room temperature) over the impact energy range of 250-2500 eV, via a combination of scanning tunneling microscopy experiments and molecular dynamics simulations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Empirical potential approach for defect properties in 3C-SiC

TL;DR: In this article, an empirical many-body interatomic potential is developed by fitting to various equilibrium properties and stable defect configurations in bulk SiC, using a lattice relaxation fitting approach.