Stone-Wales operators interchange four adjacent hexagons with two pentagon-heptagon 517 pairs that, graphically, may be iteratively propagated in the graphene layer, originating a new interesting structural defect called here Stone-Wales wave. By minimization, the Wiener index topological invariant evidences a marked anisotropy of the Stone-Wales defects that, topologically, are in fact preferably generated and propagated along the diagonal of the graphenic fragments, including carbon nanotubes and graphene nanoribbons. This peculiar edge-effect is shown in this paper having a predominant topological origin, leaving to future experimental investigations the task of verifying the occurrence in nature of wave-like defects similar to the ones proposed here. Graph-theoretical tools used in this paper for the generation and the propagation of the Stone-Wales defects waves are applicable to investigate isomeric modifications of chemical structures with various dimensionality like fullerenes, nanotubes, graphenic layers, schwarzites, zeolites. © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
CITATION STYLE
Ori, O., Cataldo, F., & Putz, M. V. (2011). Topological anisotropy of stone-wales waves in graphenic fragments. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 12(11), 7934–7949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms12117934
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