Dynamical thermal activated effects of vacancy molecular and atomic gas adsorption in graphene

POSTER

Abstract

Modern detection technology requires highly sensitive electrochemical materials to temperature, pressure, irradiation flux, thermal conductivity, and other complex properties in industrial applications, and doped graphene represents a major promising material. Here, we present a quantum-classical molecular dynamics (QCMD) study of molecular and atomic Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O), Nitrogen (N), and Boron (B) adsorption, dispersion, and atom substitution mechanisms and effects on the electron transport of a graphene sheet in a range temperature of 300–1200K. The QCMD simulations are performed, based on self–consistent charge tight binding density functional theory (SCC-DFTB) to describe atoms B and N atom substitution processes during irradiation of monoatomic and molecular B and N gas, as close as possible to experiments for saturation rates. We validate our results by comparing the density of states calculations to those obtained by plane wave density functional theory. Finally, the open-boundary nonequilibrium Green’s function method is applied to obtain the conductivity of graphene as a function of H, O, N, and B coverage, as well as B/N-doped for voltages up to 300 mV.

*We acknowledge support from the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement no. 857470 and from the European Regional Development Fund via the Foundation for Polish Science International Research Agenda PLUS program grant No. MAB PLUS/2018/8. We acknowledge the computational resources provided by the High-Performance Cluster at the National Centre for Nuclear Research in Poland.

Publication: B. Hourahine, B. Aradi, V. Blum, F. Bonafe, et al., The Journal of Chemical Physics 2020, 152, 12
124101.

Presenters

  • Amil Aligayev

    • National Cenrtre for Nuclear Research

Authors

  • Amil Aligayev

    • National Cenrtre for Nuclear Research