In situ tensile fracturing of multilayer graphene nanosheets for their in-plane mechanical properties

Peifeng Li, Ke Cao, Chenchen Jiang, Shang Xu, Libo Gao, Xufen Xiao, Yang Lu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

33 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The excellent mechanical properties of single- and few-layer graphene have been well-quantified and evidenced by computational methods and local indentation measurements. However, there are less experimental reports on the in-plane mechanical properties of multilayer graphene sheets, despite many practical applications in flexible electronic and energy devices (e.g. graphene flexible electronic display, battery, and storage devices) are actually based on these thicker nanosheets. Here, in-plane fracture behaviors of multilayer graphene nanosheets with thicknesses between ∼10 and 300 nm (∼10–1000 layers) are characterized and quantified by in situ scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy under tensile loading. We found that, generally, the fracture strengths of graphene nanosheets decrease as the thickness (or layers) increases; however, the fracture strain of thinner graphene sheets is less than that of thicker sheets. The fracture process of the thicker nanosheets includes the initial flattened stage, the stable elastic stage, and the rapid fracture with brittle characteristics, while the thinner nanosheets show obvious delamination between the atomic layers at fracture. This work provides critical experimental insights into the tensile fracture behavior of multilayer two-dimensional materials and a better understanding on their realistic mechanical performance for potential flexible device and composite applications.
Original languageEnglish
Article number475708
JournalNanotechnology
Volume30
Issue number47
Online published10 Sept 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Nov 2019

Research Keywords

  • in-plane mechanical properties
  • fracture behavior
  • 2D materials
  • multilayer graphene
  • in situ SEM/TEM testing

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