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Main Authors: Bastos, Carlos M. O., Santos, Emanuel J. A. dos, Laranjeira, José A. dos S., Lima, Kleuton A. L., Dias, Alexandre C., Galvão, Douglas S., Ribeiro Jr, Luiz A.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.14850
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author Bastos, Carlos M. O.
Santos, Emanuel J. A. dos
Laranjeira, José A. dos S.
Lima, Kleuton A. L.
Dias, Alexandre C.
Galvão, Douglas S.
Ribeiro Jr, Luiz A.
author_facet Bastos, Carlos M. O.
Santos, Emanuel J. A. dos
Laranjeira, José A. dos S.
Lima, Kleuton A. L.
Dias, Alexandre C.
Galvão, Douglas S.
Ribeiro Jr, Luiz A.
contents Two-dimensional (2D) metallic lattices with kagome topology provide a unique platform for exploring the interplay between geometric frustration, reduced coordination, and lattice stability in elemental systems. Motivated by the recent experimental realization of atomically thin gold layers and kagome goldene, we present a first-principles investigation of free-standing kagome monolayers of Cu, Ag, and Au. Using density functional theory combined with lattice dynamics and ab initio molecular dynamics, we systematically assess their structural, mechanical, dynamical, and thermal stability. All kagome monolayers satisfy the 2D Born criteria and exhibit relatively low in-plane stiffness compared to graphene and hexagonal goldene, reflecting the porous nature of the kagome lattice and its metallic bonding. Among the three systems, the Au-based lattice displays the highest in-plane Young's modulus. Phonon calculations reveal that the unstrained kagome phase is dynamically unstable for all metals. However, a moderate biaxial tensile strain of 5% stabilizes the Ag and Au monolayers, while Cu retains residual unstable modes. Finite-temperature simulations further show that Cu rapidly reconstructs toward a trigonal lattice, Ag remains metastable at low temperature but collapses at room temperature, and Au exhibits competing kagome and trigonal motifs at 300 K, indicating near-degeneracy between these phases. These results establish that strain engineering and atomic size are key determinants of the stability of metallic kagome monolayers and provide guidance for future substrate-supported realizations.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_14850
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Kagome Topology in Two-Dimensional Noble-Metal Monolayers
Bastos, Carlos M. O.
Santos, Emanuel J. A. dos
Laranjeira, José A. dos S.
Lima, Kleuton A. L.
Dias, Alexandre C.
Galvão, Douglas S.
Ribeiro Jr, Luiz A.
Materials Science
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Chemical Physics
00-XX
I.2; J.6
Two-dimensional (2D) metallic lattices with kagome topology provide a unique platform for exploring the interplay between geometric frustration, reduced coordination, and lattice stability in elemental systems. Motivated by the recent experimental realization of atomically thin gold layers and kagome goldene, we present a first-principles investigation of free-standing kagome monolayers of Cu, Ag, and Au. Using density functional theory combined with lattice dynamics and ab initio molecular dynamics, we systematically assess their structural, mechanical, dynamical, and thermal stability. All kagome monolayers satisfy the 2D Born criteria and exhibit relatively low in-plane stiffness compared to graphene and hexagonal goldene, reflecting the porous nature of the kagome lattice and its metallic bonding. Among the three systems, the Au-based lattice displays the highest in-plane Young's modulus. Phonon calculations reveal that the unstrained kagome phase is dynamically unstable for all metals. However, a moderate biaxial tensile strain of 5% stabilizes the Ag and Au monolayers, while Cu retains residual unstable modes. Finite-temperature simulations further show that Cu rapidly reconstructs toward a trigonal lattice, Ag remains metastable at low temperature but collapses at room temperature, and Au exhibits competing kagome and trigonal motifs at 300 K, indicating near-degeneracy between these phases. These results establish that strain engineering and atomic size are key determinants of the stability of metallic kagome monolayers and provide guidance for future substrate-supported realizations.
title Kagome Topology in Two-Dimensional Noble-Metal Monolayers
topic Materials Science
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Chemical Physics
00-XX
I.2; J.6
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.14850