Publications by authors named "Yuming Xiao"

Article Synopsis
  • Gas bubbles form during water electrolysis, where hydrogen and oxygen are generated, and they affect the electrode's performance by decreasing its active area.
  • The study uses grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) and optical microscopy to track how the size and coverage of nanobubbles evolve over time during the electrolysis process.
  • It finds that as more charge is passed, the number of nanobubbles increases while their size decreases, and it suggests that reducing dissolved hydrogen could help minimize nanobubble coverage on the surface.
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The deactivation of selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalysts caused by alkali metal poisoning remains an insurmountable challenge. In this study, we examined the impact of Na poisoning on the performance of Fe and Mo co-doped TiO (FeMoTiO) catalysts in the SCR reaction and revealed the related alkali resistance mechanism. On the obtained FeMoTiO catalyst, the synergistic catalytic effect of uniformly dispersed FeO and MoO species leads to remarkable catalytic activity, with over 90% NO conversion achieved in a wide temperature range of 210-410 °C.

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Left-behind children seem to be more sensitive in interpersonal communication, find it more difficult to establish a stable, safe relationship with surrounding people, and have fewer positive coping styles when encountering problems, thus the aim of the present study was to explore the association between left-behind experiences and cyberbullying behavior among Chinese college students through the mediation of sense of security and the moderation of gender. A questionnaire survey comprised 553 college students with left-behind experiences and 526 college students without such experiences. The results showed that, firstly, cyberbullying behavior was significantly higher in college students with left-behind experiences than those without such experiences; secondly, left-behind experiences and cyberbullying behavior in college students was partially mediated by a sense of security; and finally, that gender moderated the mediation of the sense of security between left-behind experiences and cyberbullying behavior.

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Diamond shows unprecedented hardness. Because hardness is a measure of resistance of chemical bonds in a material to external indentation, the electronic bonding nature of diamond beyond several million atmospheres is key to understanding the origin of hardness. However, probing the electronic structures of diamond at such extreme pressure has not been experimentally possible.

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High-Pressure Collaborative Access Team (HPCAT) is a synchrotron-based facility located at the Advanced Photon Source (APS). With four online experimental stations and various offline capabilities, HPCAT is focused on providing synchrotron x-ray capabilities for high pressure and temperature research and supporting a broad user community. Overall, the array of online/offline capabilities is described, including some of the recent developments for remote user support and the concomitant impact of the current pandemic.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Analyzed the unique properties of Eu(FeRu)As, focusing on its coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism to gauge its magnetic phase diagram.
  • - Conducted experiments showed that applying hydrostatic pressure increases the magnetic ordering temperature from 20 K to approximately 49 K at 10.1 GPa, before eventually suppressing the magnetic order.
  • - Findings indicate that high pressure causes Eu ions to shift to a consistent intermediate valence state, potentially leading to the collapse of magnetism, along with a significant structural transition at 5 GPa.
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  • * The study focuses on europium (Eu) and uses advanced techniques to examine its valence and structural transitions under high pressure, specifically up to 160 GPa.
  • * Findings reveal a significant valence transition around 80 GPa that coincides with a structural change, which is important for understanding the properties of Eu, including its magnetism and potential for superconductivity under extreme conditions.
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Noncrystalline oxides under pressure undergo gradual structural modifications, highlighted by the formation of a dense noncrystalline network topology. The nature of the densified networks and their electronic structures at high pressures may account for the mechanical hardening and the anomalous changes in electromagnetic properties. Despite its importance, direct probing of the electronic structures in amorphous oxides under compression above the Mbar pressure (>100 GPa) is currently lacking.

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Volume collapse under high pressure is an intriguing phenomenon involving subtle interplay between lattice, spin, and charge. The two most important causes of volume collapse are lattice collapse (low-density to high-density) and magnetic collapse (high-spin to low-spin). Herein we report the pressure-driven sequential volume collapses in partially intercalated FeNbS ( = 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 2/3).

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We report here pressure induced nanocrystal coalescence of ordered lead chalcogenide nanocrystal arrays into one-dimensional (1D) and 2D nanostructures. In particular, atomic crystal phase transitions and mesoscale coalescence of PbS and PbSe nanocrystals have been observed and monitored in situ respectively by wide- and small-angle synchrotron X-ray scattering techniques. At the atomic scale, both nanocrystals underwent reversible structural transformations from cubic to orthorhombic at significantly higher pressures than those for the corresponding bulk materials.

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Metallization of hydrogen as a key problem in modern physics is the pressure-induced evolution of the hydrogen electronic band from a wide-gap insulator to a closed gap metal. However, due to its remarkably high energy, the electronic band gap of insulating hydrogen has never before been directly observed under pressure. Using high-brilliance, high-energy synchrotron radiation, we developed an inelastic x-ray probe to yield the hydrogen electronic band information in situ under high pressures in a diamond-anvil cell.

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We report a pressure-induced phase transition in the frustrated kagomé material jarosite at ∼45  GPa, which leads to the disappearance of magnetic order. Using a suite of experimental techniques, we characterize the structural, electronic, and magnetic changes in jarosite through this phase transition. Synchrotron powder x-ray diffraction and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy experiments, analyzed in aggregate with the results from density functional theory calculations, indicate that the material changes from a R3[over ¯]m structure to a structure with a R3[over ¯]c space group.

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Understanding structural stability and phase transformation of nanoparticles under high pressure is of great scientific interest, as it is one of the crucial factors for design, synthesis, and application of materials. Even though high-pressure research on nanomaterials has been widely conducted, their shape-dependent phase transition behavior still remains unclear. Examples of phase transitions of CdS nanoparticles are very limited, despite the fact that it is one of the most studied wide band gap semiconductors.

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As oxygen may occupy a major volume of oxides, a densification of amorphous oxides under extreme compression is dominated by reorganization of oxygen during compression. X-ray Raman scattering (XRS) spectra for SiO_{2} glass up to 1.6 Mbar reveal the evolution of heavily contracted oxygen environments characterized by a decrease in average O-O distance and the potential emergence of quadruply coordinated oxygen (oxygen quadcluster).

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A drastically altered chemistry was recently discovered in the Fe-O-H system under deep Earth conditions, involving the formation of iron superoxide (FeOHx with x = 0 to 1), but the puzzling crystal chemistry of this system at high pressures is largely unknown. Here we present evidence that despite the high O/Fe ratio in FeOHx, iron remains in the ferrous, spin-paired and non-magnetic state at 60-133 GPa, while the presence of hydrogen has minimal effects on the valence of iron. The reduced iron is accompanied by oxidized oxygen due to oxygen-oxygen interactions.

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The discovery of iron-based superconductors (FeSCs), with the highest transition temperature (T) up to 55 K, has attracted worldwide research efforts over the past ten years. So far, all these FeSCs structurally adopt FeSe-type layers with a square iron lattice and superconductivity can be generated by either chemical doping or external pressure. Herein, we report the observation of superconductivity in an iron-based honeycomb lattice via pressure-driven spin-crossover.

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Heterogeneity in Earth's mantle is a record of chemical and dynamic processes over Earth's history. The geophysical signatures of heterogeneity can only be interpreted with quantitative constraints on effects of major elements such as iron on physical properties including density, compressibility, and electrical conductivity. However, deconvolution of the effects of multiple valence and spin states of iron in bridgmanite (Bdg), the most abundant mineral in the lower mantle, has been challenging.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ultralow-velocity zones (ULVZs) at the core-mantle boundary are significant for understanding Earth's chemistry and heat, yet their origin is still unclear.
  • Recent findings suggest that hydrogen-bearing iron peroxide (FeOH) can exist under lowermost mantle conditions and shows properties that align with ULVZ characteristics.
  • A reaction between iron and ocean water could create FeOH without needing an additional mechanism to transport it, thus helping to explain the strange seismic features linked to ULVZs.
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Clay mineral-bearing locations have been targeted for martian exploration as potentially habitable environments and as possible repositories for the preservation of organic matter. Although organic matter has been detected at Gale Crater, Mars, its concentrations are lower than expected from meteoritic and indigenous igneous and hydrothermal reduced carbon. We conducted synthesis experiments motivated by the hypothesis that some clay mineral formation may have occurred under oxidized conditions conducive to the destruction of organics.

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Spin-crossover (SCO) is generally regarded as a spectacular molecular magnetism in 3d-3d metal complexes and holds great promise for various applications such as memory, displays, and sensors. In particular, SCO materials can be multifunctional when a classical light- or temperature-induced SCO occurs along with other cooperative structural and/or electrical transport alterations. However, such a cooperative SCO has rarely been observed in condensed matter under hydrostatic pressure (an alternative external stimulus to light or temperature), probably due to the lack of synergy between metal neighbors under compression.

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Ab initio molecular dynamics, supported by inelastic neutron scattering and nuclear resonant inelastic x-ray scattering, showed an anomalous thermal softening of the M_{5}^{-} phonon mode in B2-ordered FeTi that could not be explained by phonon-phonon interactions or electron-phonon interactions calculated at low temperatures. A computational investigation showed that the Fermi surface undergoes a novel thermally driven electronic topological transition, in which new features of the Fermi surface arise at elevated temperatures. The thermally induced electronic topological transition causes an increased electronic screening for the atom displacements in the M_{5}^{-} phonon mode and an adiabatic electron-phonon interaction with an unusual temperature dependence.

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Materials with an abrupt volume collapse of more than 20 % during a pressure-induced phase transition are rarely reported. In such an intriguing phenomenon, the lattice may be coupled with dramatic changes of orbital and/or the spin-state of the transition metal. A combined in situ crystallography and electron spin-state study to probe the mechanism of the pressure-driven lattice collapse in MnS and MnSe is presented.

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Resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy was used to determine the pressure dependence of the f-electron occupancy in the Kondo insulator SmB_{6}. Applied pressure reduces the f occupancy, but surprisingly, the material maintains a significant divalent character up to a pressure of at least 35 GPa. Thus, the closure of the resistive activation energy gap and onset of magnetic order are not driven by stabilization of an integer valent state.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the high pressure x-ray absorption and single crystal x-ray diffraction of the heavy fermion compound UCd11, focusing on changes at the U L3 edge as pressure increases from 0 to 28.2 GPa.
  • - X-ray absorption results indicate significant delocalization of 5f electrons, with a +4.1 eV shift in the white line at 28.2 GPa, alongside evidence of 6d band broadening.
  • - High pressure diffraction measurements yielded a bulk modulus of K0 = 62 GPa with no signs of structural phase transition within the pressure range studied.
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The crystal structure and the Yb valence of the YbFe2Ge2 heavy fermion compound was measured at room temperature and under high pressures using high-pressure powder X-ray diffraction and X-ray absorption spectroscopy via both partial fluorescence yield and resonant inelastic X-ray emission techniques. The measurements are complemented by first-principles density functional theoretical calculations using the self-interaction corrected local spin density approximation investigating in particular the magnetic structure and the Yb valence. While the ThCr2Si2-type tetragonal (I4/mmm) structure is stable up to 53 GPa, the X-ray emission results show an increase of the Yb valence from v = 2.

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