Antiferroelectric ceramics, via the electric-field-induced antiferroelectric (AFE)-ferroelectric (FE) phase transitions, show great promise for high-energy-density capacitors. Yet, currently, only 70-80% energy release is found during a charge-discharge cycle. Here, for PbZrO-based oxides, geometric nonlinear theory of martensitic phase transitions is applied (first used to guide supercompatible shape-memory alloys) to predict the reversibility of the AFE-FE transition by using density-functional theory to assess AFE/FE interfacial lattice-mismatch strain that assures ultralow electric hysteresis and extended fatigue lifetime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterstitial electron density ρ_{o} is offered as a direct metric for maximum strength in metals, arising from universal properties derived from an electron gas. ρ_{o} sets the exchange-correlation parameter r_{s} in density-functional theory. It holds also for maximum shear strength τ_{max} in polycrystals [M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-entropy alloys and even medium-entropy alloys are an intriguing class of materials in that structure and property relations can be controlled via alloying and chemical disorder over wide ranges in the composition space. Employing density-functional theory combined with the coherent-potential approximation to average over all chemical configurations, we tune free energies between face-centered-cubic and hexagonal-close-packed phases in Fe_{x}Mn_{80-x}Co_{10}Cr_{10} systems. Within Fe-Mn-based alloys, we show that the martensitic transformation and chemical short-range order directly correlate with the face-centered-cubic and hexagonal-close-packed energy difference and stacking-fault energies, which are in quantitative agreement with recent observation of two phase region (face-centered cubic and hexagonal closed pack) in a polycrystalline high-entropy alloy sample at x=40 at.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces
August 2021
High-entropy alloys (HEAs) have intriguing material properties, but their potential as catalysts has not been widely explored. Based on a concise theoretical model, we predict that the surface of a quaternary HEA of base metals, CoCrFeNi, should go from being nearly fully oxidized except for pure Ni sites when exposed to O to being partially oxidized in an acidic solution under cathodic bias, and that such a partially oxidized surface should be more active for the electrochemical hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) in acidic solutions than all the component metals. These predictions are confirmed by electrochemical and surface science experiments: the Ni in the HEA is found to be most resistant to oxidation, and when deployed in 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe identify compositionally complex alloys (CCAs) that offer exceptional mechanical properties for elevated temperature applications by employing machine learning (ML) in conjunction with rapid synthesis and testing of alloys for validation to accelerate alloy design. The advantages of this approach are scalability, rapidity, and reasonably accurate predictions. ML tools were implemented to predict Young's modulus of refractory-based CCAs by employing different ML models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new family of heterostructured transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) with incommensurate ("misfit") spatial arrangements of well-defined layers was prepared from structurally dissimilar single-phase 2H-MoS and 1T-HfS materials. The experimentally observed heterostructuring is energetically favorable over the formation of homogeneous multi-principle element dichalcogenides observed in related dichalcogenide systems of Mo, W, and Ta. The resulting three-dimensional (3D) heterostructures show semiconducting behavior with an indirect band gap around 1 eV, agreeing with values predicted from density functional theory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-entropy alloys, with N elements and compositions {c} in competing crystal structures, have large design spaces for unique chemical and mechanical properties. Here, to enable computational design, we use a metaheuristic hybrid Cuckoo search (CS) to construct alloy configurational models on the fly that have targeted atomic site and pair probabilities on arbitrary crystal lattices, given by supercell random approximates (SCRAPs) with S sites. Our Hybrid CS permits efficient global solutions for large, discrete combinatorial optimization that scale linearly in a number of parallel processors, and linearly in sites S for SCRAPs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Condens Matter
February 2021
We present a systematic study of the effect of Pd-alloying on phase stability, electronic structure, and elastic properties in L1Fe-Ni using density-functional theory. Being from the same group of the periodic table, Pd is the best candidate for chemical alloying. The Fe-Ni/Fe-Pd/Ni-Pd bond-length increases with increasing Pd-concentration, which weakens the hybridization between low lying energy states below Fermi-level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree-dimensional heterostructures are usually created either by assembling two-dimensional building blocks into hierarchical architectures or using stepwise chemical processes that sequentially deposit individual monolayers. Both approaches suffer from a number of issues, including lack of suitable precursors, limited reproducibility, and poor scalability of the preparation protocols. Therefore, development of alternative methods that enable preparation of heterostructured materials is desired.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHow the crystal structures of ordered transition-metal phosphide catalysts affect the hydrogen-evolution reaction (HER) is investigated by measuring the anisotropic catalytic activities of selected crystallographic facets on large (mm-sized) single crystals of iron-phosphide (FeP) and monoclinic nickel-diphosphide (-NiP). We find that different crystallographic facets exhibit distinct HER activities, in contrast to a commonly held assumption of severe surface restructuring during catalytic activity. Moreover, density-functional-theory-based computational studies show that the observed facet activity correlates well with the H-binding energy to P atoms on specific surface terminations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report results from a fast, efficient, and first-principles full-potential Nth-order muffin-tin orbital (FP-NMTO) method combined with van Leeuwen-Baerends correction to local density exchange-correlation potential. We show that more complete and compact basis set is critical in improving the electronic and structural properties. We exemplify the self-consistent FP-NMTO calculations on group IV and III-V semiconductors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cerium hexaboride (CeB_{6}) f-electron compound displays a rich array of low-temperature magnetic phenomena, including a "magnetically hidden" order, identified as multipolar in origin via advanced x-ray scattering. From first-principles electronic-structure results, we find that the antiferroquadrupolar (AFQ) ordering in CeB_{6} arises from crystal-field splitting and yields a band structure in agreement with experiments. With interactions of p electrons between Ce and B_{6} being small, the electronic state of CeB_{6} is suitably described as Ce(4f^{1})^{3+}(e^{-})(B_{6})^{2-}.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe density functional theory was employed to study the stress-strain behavior and elastic instabilities during the solid-solid phase transformation (PT) when subjected to a general stress tensor, as exemplified for semiconducting Si I and metallic Si II, where metallization precedes the PT, so stressed Si I can be a metal. The hydrostatic PT occurs at 76 GPa, while under uniaxial loading it is 11 GPa (3.7 GPa mean pressure), 21 times lower.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis work constitutes a comprehensive and improved account of electronic-structure and mechanical properties of silicon-nitride ([Formula: see text] [Formula: see text]) polymorphs via van Leeuwen and Baerends (LB) exchange-corrected local density approximation (LDA) that enforces the exact exchange potential asymptotic behavior. The calculated lattice constant, bulk modulus, and electronic band structure of [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] polymorphs are in good agreement with experimental results. We also show that, for a single electron in a hydrogen atom, spherical well, or harmonic oscillator, the LB-corrected LDA reduces the (self-interaction) error to exact total energy to ∼10%, a factor of three to four lower than standard LDA, due to a dramatically improved representation of the exchange-potential.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe characterization of nanometer-scale interactions between carbon-containing substrates and alumina surfaces is of paramount importance to industrial and academic catalysis applications, but it is also very challenging. Here, we demonstrate that dynamic nuclear polarization surface-enhanced NMR spectroscopy (DNP SENS) allows the unambiguous description of the coordination geometries and conformations of the substrates at the alumina surface through high-resolution measurements of C-Al distances. We apply this new technique to elucidate the molecular-level geometry of C-enriched methionine and natural abundance poly(vinyl alcohol) adsorbed on γ-AlO-supported Pd catalysts, and we support these results with element-specific X-ray absorption near-edge measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlane (AlH3 ) is a unique energetic material that has not found a broad practical use for over 70 years because it is difficult to synthesize directly from its elements. Using density functional theory, we examine the defect-mediated formation of alane monomers on Al(111) in a two-step process: (1) dissociative adsorption of H2 and (2) alane formation, which are both endothermic on a clean surface. Only with Ti dopant to facilitate H2 dissociation and vacancies to provide Al adatoms, both processes become exothermic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComputational investigations of structural, chemical, and deformation behavior in high-entropy alloys (HEAs), which possess notable mechanical strength, have been limited due to the absence of applicable force fields. To extend investigations, we propose a set of intermolecular potential parameters for a quinary Al-Cr-Co-Fe-Ni alloy, using the available ternary Embedded Atom Method and Lennard-Jones potential in classical molecular-dynamics simulations. The simulation results are validated by a comparison to first-principles Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker (KKR) - Coherent Potential Approximation (CPA) [KKR-CPA] calculations for the HEA structural properties (lattice constants and bulk moduli), relative stability, pair probabilities, and high-temperature short-range ordering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
August 2016
Caloric cooling and heat pumping rely on reversible thermal effects triggered in solids by magnetic, electric or stress fields. In the recent past, there have been several successful demonstrations of using first-order phase transition materials in laboratory cooling devices based on both the giant magnetocaloric and elastocaloric effects. All such materials exhibit non-equilibrium behaviours when driven through phase transformations by corresponding fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe simulate the adsorption isotherms for alloyed nanoparticles (nanoalloys) with adsorbates to determine cyclic voltammetry (CV) during electrocatalysis. The effect of alloying on nanoparticle adsorption isotherms is provided by a hybrid-ensemble Monte Carlo simulation that uses the cluster expansion method extended to non-exchangeable coupled lattices for nanoalloys with adsorbates. Exemplified here for the hydrogen evolution reaction, a 2-dimensional CV is mapped for Pd-Pt nanoalloys as a function of both electrochemical potential and the global Pt composition, and shows a highly non-linear alloying effect on CV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nudged-elastic band (NEB) method is modified with concomitant two climbing images (C2-NEB) to find a transition state (TS) in complex energy landscapes, such as those with a serpentine minimal energy path (MEP). If a single climbing image (C1-NEB) successfully finds the TS, then C2-NEB finds it too. However, improved stability of C2-NEB makes it suitable for more complex cases, where C1-NEB misses the TS because the MEP and NEB directions near the saddle point are different.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChanges in the chemical configuration of alloyed nanoparticle (NP) catalysts induced by adsorbates under working conditions, such as reversal in core-shell preference, are crucial to understand and design NP functionality. We extend the cluster expansion method to predict the configurational thermodynamics of alloyed NPs with adsorbates based on density functional theory data. Exemplified with PdRh NPs having O-coverage up to a monolayer, we fully detail the core-shell behavior across the entire range of NP composition and O-coverage with quantitative agreement to in situ experimental data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe host-guest interaction between metal ions (Pt(2+) and Cu(2+) ) and a zirconium metal-organic framework (UiO-66-NH2 ) was explored using dynamic nuclear polarization-enhanced (15) N{(1) H} CPMAS NMR spectroscopy supported by X-ray absorption spectroscopy and density functional calculations. The combined experimental results conclude that each Pt(2+) coordinates with two NH2 groups from the MOF and two Cl(-) from the metal precursor, whereas Cu(2+) do not form chemical bonds with the NH2 groups of the MOF framework. Density functional calculations reveal that Pt(2+) prefers a square-planar structure with the four ligands and resides in the octahedral cage of the MOF in either cis or trans configurations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor solid-solution Ba1-xKxFe2As2 Fermi surface evolution is mapped via Bloch spectral functions calculated using density functional theory implemented in Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker multiple scattering theory with the coherent-potential approximation. Spectral functions reveal electronic dispersion, topology, orbital character, and broadening (electron-lifetime effects) due to chemical disorder. Dissolution of electron cylinders occurs near x∼0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe show that the noncrystalline-to-crystalline transition of supported Pt nanoparticles (NPs) in the subnanometer to nanometer size range is statistical in nature, and strongly affected by particle size, support, and adsorbates (here we use H2). Unlike in the bulk, a noncrystalline phase exists and is stable in small NPs, reflecting a general mesoscopic feature. Observations of >3000 particles by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy show a noncrystalline-to-crystalline transition zone that is nonabrupt; there is a size regime where disordered and ordered NPs coexist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe enhanced stability and modified electronic structure of intermetallic compounds provide discovery of superior catalysts for chemical conversions with high activity, selectivity, and stability. We find that the intermetallic NaAu2 is an active catalyst for CO oxidation at low temperatures. From density functional theory calculations, a reaction mechanism is suggested to explain the observed low reaction barrier of CO oxidation by NaAu2, in which a CO molecule reacts directly with an adsorbed O2 to form an OOCO* intermediate.
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