6533b831fe1ef96bd1298570

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Formulation and validation of a reduced order model of 2D materials exhibiting a two-phase microstructure as applied to graphene oxide

Lily MaoJianguo WenHoracio D. EspinosaArman GhasemiWei GaoWei GaoSonbinh T. NguyenIvano BenedettiIvano BenedettiRafael A. Soler-crespoHoang Nguyen

subject

Materials scienceFinite element analysiMembrane deflection02 engineering and technologyCondensed Matter Physic010402 general chemistry01 natural scienceslaw.inventionMolecular dynamicsTight bindingContinuum damage modellawNano-MonolayerMechanics of MaterialComposite materialGraphene oxideContinuum mechanicsGrapheneMechanical Engineering021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter PhysicsMicrostructureRepresentative volume elementFinite element method0104 chemical sciencesMechanics of MaterialsChemical physicsModel development and validation0210 nano-technology

description

Abstract Novel 2D materials, e.g., graphene oxide (GO), are attractive building blocks in the design of advanced materials due to their reactive chemistry, which can enhance interfacial interactions while providing good in-plane mechanical properties. Recent studies have hypothesized that the randomly distributed two-phase microstructure of GO, which arises due to its oxidized chemistry, leads to differences in nano- vs meso‑scale mechanical responses. However, this effect has not been carefully studied using molecular dynamics due to computational limitations. Herein, a continuum mechanics model, formulated based on density functional based tight binding (DFTB) constitutive results for GO nano-flakes, is establish for capturing the effect of oxidation patterns on the material mechanical properties. GO is idealized as a continuum heterogeneous two-phase material, where the mechanical response of each phase, graphitic and oxidized, is informed from DFTB simulations. A finite element implementation of the model is validated via MD simulations and then used to investigate the existence of GO representative volume elements (RVE). We find that for the studied GO, an RVE behavior arises for monolayer sizes in excess to 40 nm. Moreover, we reveal that the response of monolayers with two main different functional chemistries, epoxide-rich and hydroxyl‑rich, present distinct differences in mechanical behavior. In addition, we explored the role of defect density in GO, and validate the applicability of the model to larger length scales by predicting membrane deflection behavior, in close agreement with previous experimental and theoretical observations. As such the work presents a reduced order modeling framework applicable in the study of mechanical properties and deformation mechanisms in 2D multiphase materials.

10.1016/j.jmps.2017.11.012http://hdl.handle.net/10447/250134