Issue 6, 2018

Semimetallic carbon honeycombs: new three-dimensional graphene allotropes with Dirac cones

Abstract

Classic two-dimensional (2D) graphene possesses outstanding properties due to Dirac cone structures. When scaling up to three-dimensional (3D) structures, their high porosity and large surface-area-to-volume ratio made them have more promising engineering perspectives. However, the currently synthesized and density-functional-theory-predicted 3D graphene structures, termed as carbon honeycombs (CHCs), are metallic. Herein, we propose new families of stable semimetallic CHC structures, which have lower energies than the previous experimentally reported structure and they would be realized experimentally. Results from density functional theory (DFT) and tight binding (TB) model showed that multiple Dirac cones with massless Dirac Fermions are present in both pristine and strained CHCs. Dirac cones in pristine CHCs originated from interactions between sp2-hybridized carbon atoms along the zigzag direction (denoted as CZi, i = α, β,…), while strain-induced direction-dependent Dirac cones primarily stemmed from interactions (i) between the two CZα atoms bonded to a selected sp3-hybridized carbon atom or (ii) between CZi and CAα (α carbon atoms at the armchair direction) atoms. The largest Fermi velocity achieved is 1.204 × 106 m s−1, which is approximately 44.7% larger than that of graphene. These results open up a new direction in carbon-based 3D porous materials and these findings provide significant insights on numerous applications, ranging from nanoelectronics and nanomechanics to gas and liquid separations.

Graphical abstract: Semimetallic carbon honeycombs: new three-dimensional graphene allotropes with Dirac cones

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Oct 2017
Accepted
22 Dec 2017
First published
26 Dec 2017

Nanoscale, 2018,10, 2748-2754

Semimetallic carbon honeycombs: new three-dimensional graphene allotropes with Dirac cones

S. Wang, D. Wu, B. Yang, E. Ruckenstein and H. Chen, Nanoscale, 2018, 10, 2748 DOI: 10.1039/C7NR07824B

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