摘要

Thermal effects on the vibrational behaviors and dynamic Young%26apos;s modulus of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are investigated through both constant temperature molecular dynamics (MD) simulation and modified molecular structural mechanics (MMSM) modeling. The MD simulation incorporates a modified Nose-Hoover thermostat model to control the system temperature. In the MMSM modeling, the covalent and nonbonded interactions between carbon atom pairs are modeled with the second generation force field and the Lennard-Jones potential, respectively, where the covalent bonds are treated as Euler-Bernoulli beam and the temperature-dependent bond length and angle are determined through the Badger%26apos;s rule and MD simulation. The results derived from these two approaches are compared with each other and the published theoretical and experimental data. Results show that the dynamic Young%26apos;s modulus of the SWCNTs tends to be smaller than the published static one obtained from uniaxial tensile tests, and their natural frequency and dynamic Young%26apos;s modulus would decrease with increasing temperature. Moreover, a comparable frequency ratio of the first two flexural modes is achieved by these two approaches. The frequency ratio is highly dependent on their aspect ratio but independent of temperature, and would converge to the literature experimental data (about 6.1-6.2) as the aspect ratio becomes very large.