Imaging Mechanical Vibrations in Suspended Graphene Sheets
Top Cited Papers
- 11 April 2008
- journal article
- letter
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Nano Letters
- Vol. 8 (5), 1399-1403
- https://doi.org/10.1021/nl080201h
Abstract
We carried out measurements on nanoelectromechanical systems based on multilayer graphene sheets suspended over trenches in silicon oxide. The motion of the suspended sheets was electrostatically driven at resonance using applied radio frequency voltages. The mechanical vibrations were detected using a novel form of scanning probe microscopy, which allowed identification and spatial imaging of the shape of the mechanical eigenmodes. In as many as half the resonators measured, we observed a new class of exotic nanoscale vibration eigenmodes not predicted by the elastic beam theory, where the amplitude of vibration is maximum at the free edges. By modeling the suspended sheets with the finite element method, these edge eigenmodes are shown to be the result of nonuniform stress with remarkably large magnitudes (up to 1.5 GPa). This nonuniform stress, which arises from the way graphene is prepared by pressing or rubbing bulk graphite against another surface, should be taken into account in future studies on electronic and mechanical properties of graphene.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intrinsic ripples in grapheneNature Materials, 2007
- Making graphene visibleApplied Physics Letters, 2007
- Macroscopic Tuning of Nanomechanics: Substrate Bending for Reversible Control of Frequency and Quality Factor of Nanostring ResonatorsNano Letters, 2007
- The rise of grapheneNature Materials, 2007
- Electromechanical Resonators from Graphene SheetsScience, 2007
- Measuring more than massNature Nanotechnology, 2007
- Modeling a Suspended Nanotube OscillatorNano Letters, 2005
- Electric Field Effect in Atomically Thin Carbon FilmsScience, 2004
- Stiction, adhesion energy, and the Casimir effect in micromechanical systemsPhysical Review B, 2001
- Band-gap change of carbon nanotubes: Effect of small uniaxial and torsional strainPhysical Review B, 1999