The underlying atomistic mechanism of deformation is a central problem in mechanics and materials science. Whereas deformation of crystalline metals is fundamentally understood, the understanding of deformation of amorphous metals lacks behind, particularly identifying the involved temporal and spatial scales. Here, we reveal that at small scales the size-dependent deformation behavior of amorphous metals significantly deviates from homogeneous flow, exhibiting increasing deformation rate with reducing size and gradually shifted composition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe viscosity and its temperature dependence, the fragility, are key properties of a liquid. A low fragility is believed to promote the formation of metallic glasses. Yet, the fragility remains poorly understood, since experimental data of its compositional dependence are scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe importance of singlet oxygen (O) in the environmental and biomedical fields has motivated research for effective O production. Electrocatalytic processes hold great potential for highly-automated and scalable O synthesis, but they are energy- and chemical-intensive. Herein, we present a Janus electrocatalytic membrane realizing ultra-efficient O production (6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
November 2020
With its ease of implementation, low cost, high throughput, and excellent feature replication accuracy, nanoimprinting is used to fabricate structures for electrical, optical, and biological applications or to modify surface properties. If ultraprecise and/or subnanometer-sized patterns are desired, nanoimprinting has shown only limited success with polymers, silica glasses, or crystalline materials. In contrast, the absence of an intrinsic length scale that would interfere with imprinting resolution enables bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) to replicate structures down to the atomic scale through thermoplastic forming (TPF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunctionalization is a widely-used strategy to modulate and optimize the properties of materials towards various applications, including sensing, catalysis, and energy generation. While the influence of sulfur-functionalization of carbon materials and oxides like ZnO and TiO has been studied, far less research has been devoted to analyzing sulfur-functionalization of CuO and other transition metal oxide nanomaterials. Here, we report sulfur-functionalization of copper(ii) oxide nanosheets synthesized by using a soft-templating procedure, with sulfur-addition based on hydrogen sulfide gas as a source.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAluminum-based quasicrystals typically form across narrow composition ranges within binary to quaternary alloys, which makes their fabrication and characterization challenging. Here, we use combinatorial approaches together with fast characterization techniques to study a wide compositional range including known quasicrystal forming compositions. Specifically, we use magnetron co-sputtering to fabricate libraries of ~140 Al-Cu-Fe and ~300 Al-Cu-Fe-Cr alloys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe glass forming ability (GFA) of metallic glasses (MGs) is quantified by the critical cooling rate (R ). Despite its key role in MG research, experimental challenges have limited measured R to a minute fraction of known glass formers. We present a combinatorial approach to directly measure R for large compositional ranges.
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