4.4 Article

Strain-engineering of graphene's electronic structure beyond continuum elasticity

Journal

SOLID STATE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 166, Issue -, Pages 70-75

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssc.2013.05.002

Keywords

Graphene membranes; Electronic structure; Elasticity theory

Funding

  1. HPC at Arkansas (RazorII)
  2. XSEDE [TG-PHY090002]
  3. Serbian Ministry of Science [171027]

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We present a new first-order approach to strain-engineering of graphene's electronic structure where no continuous displacement field u(x,y) is required. The approach is valid for negligible curvature. The theory is directly expressed in terms of atomic displacements under mechanical load, such that one can determine if mechanical strain is varying smoothly at each unit cell, and the extent to which sublattice symmetry holds. Since strain deforms lattice vectors at each unit cell, orthogonality between lattice and reciprocal lattice vectors leads to renormalization of the reciprocal lattice vectors as well, making the K and K' points shift in opposite directions. From this observation we conclude that no K-dependent gauges enter on a first-order theory. In this formulation of the theory the deformation potential and pseudomagnetic field take discrete values at each graphene unit cell. We illustrate the formalism by providing strain-generated fields and local density of electronic states on graphene membranes with large numbers of atoms. The present method complements and goes beyond the prevalent approach, where strain engineering in graphene is based upon first-order continuum elasticity. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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