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Computational Study of Carbon Nanotubes under Compressive Loading Quasi-static reduced-order general continuum method with barycentric Interpolation. Yang Yang, William W. Liou Computational Engineering Physics Lab Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan.
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Computational Study of Carbon Nanotubes under Compressive Loading • Quasi-static reduced-order general continuum method with • barycentric Interpolation Yang Yang, William W. Liou Computational Engineering Physics Lab Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan 36th Dayton-Cincinnati Aerospace Sciences Symposium 03/01/2011
Outline Introduction Properties of carbon nanotubes Applications of carbon nanotubes Definition of carbon nanotubes Numerical method Overview Reduced-order general continuum method Simulation results Model setup Buckling patterns Buckling patterns after barycentric conversion Loading-unloading stress-strain curves for CNTs of different types Conclusions
Outline Introduction Properties of carbon nanotubes Applications of carbon nanotubes Definition of carbon nanotubes Numerical method Overview Reduced-order general continuum method Simulation results Model setup Buckling patterns Buckling patterns after barycentric conversion Loading-unloading stress-strain curves for CNTs of different types Conclusions
Introduction Properties of carbon nanotubes • Average diameter of SWNT • Carbon bond length • Density • Thermal conductivity • Young’s modulus of SWNT • Max. tensile strength
Introduction Properties of carbon nanotubes • Composed of all-carbon molecules in shell-like cylindrical • structure formed by strong covalent bonding of atoms • Tend to undergo buckling with compression or bending loads • One of the strongest materials known, both in terms of tensile • strength and elastic modulus
Introduction Applications of carbon nanotubes • Carbon nanotubes enhanced composite materials • Efficient heat remover composed of aligned structures and ribbons of CNTs • Drug delivery to prevent medicine from damaging healthy cells • Intrinsic tubule character of CNTs attributing to their very high surface area leads to the applications in energy storage material • Used as electrical conducting additives to producing conductive plastics • Flat panel CNT field emission display
Introduction Definition of carbon nanotubes
Outline Introduction Properties of carbon nanotubes Applications of carbon nanotubes Definition of carbon nanotubes Numerical method Overview Reduced-order general continuum method Simulation results Model setup Buckling patterns Buckling patterns after barycentric conversion Loading-unloading stress-strain curves for CNTs of different types Conclusions
Numerical method Overview • Classical molecular dynamics (MD) Excels in modeling structural details of an atomic system by tracking each atom Computationally prohibitive for large systems; generally modeling a system with the size up to a few hundred nanometers • Reduced-order general continuum method Constitutive law is built based on an atomistic energy function by intrinsic geometric quantities describing a deformation No need for tracking individual atoms thus appropriate for modeling a large system
Numerical method Reduced-order general continuum method • General idea Every point in the continuum body is described by a representative atom embedded in a crystallite of radius Finite elements discretizing the continuum body
Numerical method Reduced-order general continuum method • Cauchy-Born rule • Exponential map
Numerical method Reduced-order general continuum method • REBO potential function for CNT The repulsive pair: The attractive pair: The bond order term:
Numerical method Reduced-order general continuum method • Lennard-Jones potential for long-range interaction
Numerical method Reduced-order general continuum method • Atomic potential energies expressed in continuum variables Interatomic energy density Total interatomic energy over the CNT surface Long-range Lennard-Jones energy for the CNT • Total energy of the CNT • Equilibrium state of the CNT correspondsMin ( )
Outline Introduction Properties of carbon nanotubes Applications of carbon nanotubes Definition of carbon nanotubes Numerical method Overview Reduced-order general continuum method Simulation results Model setup Buckling patterns Buckling patterns after barycentric conversion Loading-unloading stress-strain curves for CNTs of different types Conclusions
Simulation results Model setup Fixed end Displacement control B.C. • Buckling of different types of CNT under compressive loading CNT cases studied • Displacement control method is used to apply the loading
Simulation Results Buckling patterns • Van der Waals energy vs. strain Case 1 • Total energy vs. strain Case 1 buckling
Simulation Results Buckling patterns Case 1 Case 2 Case 3 Case 4 before after
Simulation Results Buckling patterns
Simulation Results Buckling patterns after barycentric conversion • Buckled state for Case 1 • Incipient state for Case 1 • Buckling events for Case 1
Simulation Results Buckling patterns after barycentric conversion • Representative cells on the buckling surface of CNTs with different chiral angles. (14, 0) CNT Case 1 (8, 8) CNT Case 4 (12, 3) CNT Case 2 (10, 5) CNT Case 3 • The number of bonds that receives compressive load increases from Case 1 to Case 4 • The bonds are compressed more uniformly in Case 4 than in Case 2 or Case 3
Outline Introduction Properties of carbon nanotubes Applications of carbon nanotubes Definition of carbon nanotubes Numerical method Overview Reduced-order general continuum method Simulation results Model setup Buckling patterns Buckling patterns after barycentric conversion Loading-unloading stress-strain curves for CNTs of different types Conclusions
Conclusions • The reduced order general continuum method was used to study the behaviors of CNTs under compressive loading conditions. • Reverse mapping of the finite element results to the associated CNT lattice deformation using barycentric interpolation. • Different buckled configurations will be assumed by CNTs with different chiral angles. • The zigzag CNT has the most apparent buckling pattern. • The buckling strain increases with the increasing chiral angle. • The armchair CNT has the strongest resistance to the compressive loading.