4.8 Article

Shear failure in supported two-dimensional nanosheet van der Waals thin films

Journal

CARBON
Volume 173, Issue -, Pages 410-418

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2020.10.079

Keywords

Two-dimensional materials; Graphene; Thin films; Mechanical properties; Lap shear test

Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Superfund Research Program [P42 ES013660]
  2. Institute at Brown for Environment and Society (IBES)
  3. China Scholarship Council (CSC)

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Liquid-phase deposition of exfoliated 2D nanosheets is the basis for emerging technologies, and recent experiments have shown that shear stress can lead to internal delamination, affecting nanosheet technologies; experimental results demonstrate the crucial role of film thickness in determining critical shear force and dissipated energy.
Liquid-phase deposition of exfoliated 2D nanosheets is the basis for emerging technologies that include writable electronic inks, molecular barriers, selective membranes, and protective coatings against fouling or corrosion. These nanosheet thin films have complex internal structures that are discontinuous assemblies of irregularly tiled micron-scale sheets held together by van der Waals (vdW) forces. On stiff substrates, nanosheet vdW films are stable to many common stresses, but can fail by internal delamination under shear stress associated with handling or abrasion. This re-exfoliation pathway is an intrinsic feature of stacked vdW films and can limit nanosheet-based technologies. Here we investigate the shear stability of graphene oxide and MoSe2 nanosheet vdW films through lap shear experiments on polymer-nanosheet-polymer laminates. These sandwich laminate structures fail in mixed cohesive and interfacial mode with critical shear forces from 40 to 140 kPa and fracture energies ranging from 0.2 to 6 J/m(2). Surprisingly these energies are higher than delamination energies reported for smooth peeling of ordered stacks of continuous 2D sheets, which we propose is due to energy dissipation and chaotic crack motion during nanosheet film disassembly at the crack tip. Experiment results also show that film thickness plays a key role in determining critical shear force (maximum load before failure) and dissipated energy for different nanosheet vdW films. Using a mechanical model with an edge crack in the thin nanosheet film, we propose a shear-to-tensile failure mode transition to explain a maximum in critical shear force for graphene oxide films but not MoSe2 films. This transition reflects a weakening of the substrate confinement effect and increasing rotational deformation near the film edge as the film thickness increases. For graphene oxide, the critical shear force can be increased by electrostatic cross-linking achieved through interlayer incorporation of metal cations. These results have important implications for the stability of functional devices that employ 2D nanosheet coatings. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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