Strain engineering of the mechanical properties of two-dimensional WS2
YM Jahn and G Alboteanu and D Mordehai and A Ya'akobovitz, NANOSCALE
ADVANCES, 6 (2024).
DOI: 10.1039/d3na00990d
Tuning the physical properties of two-dimensional (2D) materials is
crucial for their successful integration into advanced applications.
While strain engineering demonstrated an efficient means to modulate the
electrical and optical properties of 2D materials, tuning their
mechanical properties has not been carried out. Here we applied
compressive strain through the buckling metrology to 2D tungsten
disulfide (WS2), which demonstrated mechanical softening
manifested by the reduction of its effective Young's modulus. Raman
modes analysis of the strained WS2 also showed strain-
dependent vibrational modes softening and revealed its Gr & uuml;neisen
parameter (gammaE2g = 0.29) and its shear
deformation potential (betaE2g = 0.56) - both are
similar to the values of other 2D materials. In parallel, we conducted a
molecular dynamic simulation that confirmed the validity of continuum
mechanics modeling in the nanoscale and revealed that due to sequential
atomic-scale buckling events in compressed WS2, it shows a
mechanical softening. Therefore, by tuning the mechanical properties of
WS2 we shed light on its fundamental physics, thus making it
an attractive candidate material for high-end applications, such as
tunable sensors and flexible optoelectronic devices.
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