Metastable phases can exist within local minima in the potential energy landscape when they are kinetically "trapped" by various processing routes, such as thermal treatment, grain size reduction, chemical doping, interfacial stress, or irradiation. Despite the importance of metastable materials for many technological applications, little is known about the underlying structural mechanisms of the stabilization process and atomic-scale nature of the resulting defective metastable phase. Investigating ion-irradiated and nanocrystalline zirconia with neutron total scattering experiments, we show that metastable tetragonal ZrO consists of an underlying structure of ferroelastic, orthorhombic nanoscale domains stabilized by a network of domain walls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComplex oxides that adopt the isometric spinel structure (ABO) are important for numerous technological applications and are relevant for certain geological processes, which involve exposure to extreme environments such as high pressures and temperatures. Recent studies have shown that the changes to the spinel structure caused by these environments are complex and depend on the material length scale under consideration. In this study, we have expanded this approach to the behavior of spinels under high temperatures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFluorite-structured oxides constitute an important class of materials for energy technologies. Despite their high level of structural symmetry and simplicity, these materials can accommodate atomic disorder without losing crystallinity, making them indispensable for uses in environments with high temperature, changing chemical compositions, or intense radiation fields. In this contribution, we present a set of simple rules that predict whether a compound may adopt a disordered fluorite structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPyrochlore (ABO) is an important, isometric structure-type because of its large variety of compositions and structural derivatives that are generally related to different disordering mechanisms at various spatial scales. The disordering is key to understanding variations in properties, such as magnetic behavior or ionic conduction. Neutron and X-ray total scattering methods were used to investigate the degree of structural disorder in the HoTi Zr O ( = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDisordered crystalline materials are used in a wide variety of energy-related technologies. Recent results from neutron total scattering experiments have shown that the atomic arrangements of many disordered crystalline materials are not random nor are they represented by the long-range structure observed from diffraction experiments. Despite the importance of disordered materials and the impact of disorder on the expression of physical properties, the underlying fundamental atomic-scale rules of disordering are not currently well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA wide variety of compositions adopt the isometric spinel structure (ABO), in which the atomic-scale ordering is conventionally described according to only three structural degrees of freedom. One, the inversion parameter, is traditionally defined as the degree of cation exchange between the A- and B-sites. This exchange, a measure of intrinsic disorder, is fundamental to understanding the variation in the physical properties of different spinel compositions.
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