Universal moiré buckling of freestanding 2D bilayers
Jin Wang, Erio Tosatti
The physics of membranes, a classic subject, acquires new momentum from two-dimensional (2D) materials multilayers. This work reports the surprising results emerged during a theoretical study of equilibrium geometry of bilayers as freestanding membranes. While ordinary membranes are prone to buckle around compressive impurities, we predict that all 2D material freestanding bilayers universally undergo, even if impurity-free, a spontaneous out-of-plane buckling. The moiré network nodes here play the role of
internal
impurities, the dislocations that join them giving rise to a stress pattern, purely shear in homobilayers and mixed compressive/shear in heterobilayers. That intrinsic stress is, theory and simulations show, generally capable to cause all freestanding 2D bilayers to undergo distortive bucklings with large amplitudes and a rich predicted phase transition scenario. Realistic simulations predict quantitative parameters expected for these phenomena as expected in heterobilayers such as graphene/hBN,