Abstract
Mechanical degradation due to repeated impact is generally considered inevitable in layered materials, posing a critical challenge for their durability in extreme environments. To address this, classical molecular dynamics simulations are employed to investigate the response of multilayer graphene, both pristine and with atomic-scale defects, under high-velocity impact loading. The simulations reveal that impact-induced formation of permanent interlayer sp3 bonds occurs at threshold pressures of approximately 72 GPa in pristine graphene, and 35 GPa and 30 GPa in graphene containing 2% and 3% vacancy defects, respectively. These bonds lead to an enhancement of ultimate strength and strain by up to 20% and 60% in defective bilayers, while a reduction of approximately 30% is observed in pristine samples. Further analysis indicates a non-monotonic relationship between sp3 bond density and thermal conductance, with an initial suppression followed by partial recovery as bond density increases. This behavior suggests that the mechanical reinforcement is closely linked to defect-assisted interlayer coupling and associated phonon transport modulation. The findings establish a defect-sensitive strategy for mechanical enhancement in two-dimensional materials and provide a potential pathway for nondestructive defect detection based on thermal transport signatures.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 164569 |
| Journal | Applied Surface Science |
| Volume | 715 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 15 Jan 2026 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Detection technology
- Graphene film
- Impact response
- Molecular dynamics
- Sp bond
- Thermal conductance