47 results match your criteria: "and Chemical Sciences Center[Affiliation]"

Quantifying chemomechanical weakening in muscovite mica with a simple micromechanical model.

Nat Commun

November 2024

Department of Physics and Anthony J. Leggett Institute for Condensed Matter Theory, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1110 West Green Street, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.

In response to gradual nanoindentation, the surface of muscovite mica deforms by sudden stochastic nanometer-scale displacement bursts. Here, the statistics of these displacement events are interpreted using a statistical model previously used to model earthquakes to understand how chemically reactive environments alter the surface properties of this material. We show that the statistics of nanoindentation displacement bursts in muscovite mica are tuned by chemomechanical weakening in a manner similar to how the statistics of model events are tuned by a mechanical weakening parameter that describes how easily system-spanning cracks can be nucleated.

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Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics Investigation of Water and Butanone Adsorption on UiO-66 with Defects.

Langmuir

November 2024

Material, Physical, and Chemical Sciences Center, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87123, United States.

Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are harmful chemicals that are found in minute quantities in the atmosphere and are emitted from a variety of industrial and biological processes. They can be harmful to breathe or serve as biomarkers for disease detection. Therefore, capture and detection of VOCs is important.

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Recent reports on machine learning and machine vision (MV) devices have demonstrated the potential of two-dimensional (2D) materials and devices. Yet, scalable 2D devices are being challenged by contact resistance and Fermi level pinning (FLP), power consumption, and low-cost CMOS compatible lithography processes. To enable CMOS + 2D, it is essential to find a proper lithography strategy that can fulfill these requirements.

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The ability of cells to organize into tissues with proper structure and function requires the effective coordination of proliferation, migration, polarization, and differentiation across length scales. Skeletal muscle is innately anisotropic; however, few biomaterials can emulate mechanical anisotropy to determine its influence on tissue patterning without introducing confounding topography. Here, we demonstrate that substrate stiffness anisotropy coordinates contractility-driven collective cellular dynamics resulting in C2C12 myotube alignment over millimeter-scale distances.

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Durable interest in developing a framework for the detailed structure of glassy materials has produced numerous structural descriptors that trade off between general applicability and interpretability. However, none approach the combination of simplicity and wide-ranging predictive power of the lattice-grain-defect framework for crystalline materials. Working from the hypothesis that the local atomic environments of a glassy material are constrained by enthalpy minimization to a low-dimensional manifold in atomic coordinate space, we develop a generalized distance function, the Gaussian Integral Inner Product (GIIP) distance, in connection with agglomerative clustering and diffusion maps, to parameterize that manifold.

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Alkali-Ion-Assisted Activation of ε-VOPO as a Cathode Material for Mg-Ion Batteries.

Adv Sci (Weinh)

July 2024

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Berkeley, 94720, USA.

Rechargeable multivalent-ion batteries are attractive alternatives to Li-ion batteries to mitigate their issues with metal resources and metal anodes. However, many challenges remain before they can be practically used due to the low solid-state mobility of multivalent ions. In this study, a promising material identified by high-throughput computational screening is investigated, ε-VOPO, as a Mg cathode.

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Multivalent battery chemistries have been explored in response to the increasing demand for high-energy rechargeable batteries utilizing sustainable resources. Solvation structures of working cations have been recognized as a key component in the design of electrolytes; however, most structure-property correlations of metal ions in organic electrolytes usually build upon favorable static solvation structures, often overlooking solvent exchange dynamics. We here report the ion solvation structures and solvent exchange rates of magnesium electrolytes in various solvents by using multimodal nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis and molecular dynamics/density functional theory (MD/DFT) calculations.

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Design Principles and Routes for Calcium Alkoxyaluminate Electrolytes.

J Phys Chem Lett

May 2024

Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, Illinois 60439, United States.

Multivalent-ion battery technologies are increasingly attractive options for meeting diverse energy storage needs. Calcium ion batteries (CIB) are particularly appealing candidates for their earthly abundance, high theoretical volumetric energy density, and relative safety advantages. At present, only a few Ca-ion electrolyte systems are reported to reversibly plate at room temperature: for example, aluminates and borates, including Ca[TPFA], where [TPFA] = [Al(OC(CF))] and Ca[B(hfip)], [B(hfip)] = [B(OCH(CF))].

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Molybdenum disulfide (MoS) is a 2D material widely used as a dry lubricant. However, exposure to water and oxygen is known to reduce its effectiveness, and therefore an understanding of the uptake of water is important information for mitigating these effects. Here we use grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations to rigorously study water adsorption on MoS surfaces and edges with different concentrations of defects under realistic atmospheric conditions ( various temperatures and humidity levels).

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Aqueous electrolytes composed of 0.1 M zinc bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (Zn(TFSI)) and acetonitrile (ACN) were studied using combined experimental and simulation techniques. The electrolyte was found to be electrochemically stable when the ACN V% is higher than 74.

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In skeletal muscle tissue, injury-related changes in stiffness activate muscle stem cells through mechanosensitive signaling pathways. Functional muscle tissue regeneration also requires the effective coordination of myoblast proliferation, migration, polarization, differentiation, and fusion across multiple length scales. Here, we demonstrate that substrate stiffness anisotropy coordinates contractility-driven collective cellular dynamics resulting in C2C12 myotube alignment over millimeter-scale distances.

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Molybdenum disulfide (MoS) coatings have attracted widespread industrial interest owing to their excellent lubricating properties under vacuum and inert conditions. Unfortunately, the increase in MoS interfacial shear strength following prolonged exposure to ambient conditions (a process referred to as "aging") has resulted in reliability issues when MoS is employed as solid lubricant. While aging of MoS is generally attributed to physical and chemical changes caused by adsorbed water and/or oxygen, a mechanistic understanding of the relative role of these two gaseous species in the evolution of the surface chemistry of MoS is still elusive.

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Chemical Reaction Networks Explain Gas Evolution Mechanisms in Mg-Ion Batteries.

J Am Chem Soc

June 2023

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, 210 Hearst Memorial Mining Building, Berkeley, California 94720, United States.

Out-of-equilibrium electrochemical reaction mechanisms are notoriously difficult to characterize. However, such reactions are critical for a range of technological applications. For instance, in metal-ion batteries, spontaneous electrolyte degradation controls electrode passivation and battery cycle life.

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For decades, density has been attributed as a critical aspect of the structure of sputter-deposited nanocrystalline molybdenum disulfide (MoS) coatings impacting oxidation resistance and wear resistance. Despite its importance, there are few examples in the literature that explicitly investigate the relationship between the density and oxidation behaviors of MoS coatings. Aging and oxidation are primary considerations for the use of MoS coatings in aerospace applications as they inevitably experience prolonged storage in water and oxygen-rich environments prior to use.

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Energy storage concepts based on multivalent ions, such as calcium, have great potential to become next-generation batteries due to their low cost and comparable cell voltage and energy density to Li-ion batteries. However, the development of Ca batteries is still hindered by the lack of suitable materials that grant a long cycle life. Specific to electrolyte materials, developing a calcium salt that is chemically stable under ambient conditions and enables reversible electrodeposition of Ca is critical.

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Reversible electrochemical magnesium plating/stripping processes are important for the development of high-energy-density Mg batteries based on Mg anodes. Ether glyme solutions such as monoglyme (G1), diglyme (G2), and triglyme (G3) with the MgTFSI salt are one of the conventional and commonly used electrolytes that can obtain the reversible behavior of Mg electrodes. However, the electrolyte cathodic efficiency is argued to be limited due to the enormous parasitic reductive decomposition and passivation, which is governed by impurities.

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Interactions of Water with Pristine and Defective MoS.

Langmuir

August 2022

Material, Physical, and Chemical Sciences Center, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87123, United States.

Molybdenum disulfide (MoS) is a lamellar solid lubricant often used in aerospace applications because of its extremely low friction coefficient (∼0.01) in inert environments. The lubrication performance of MoS is significantly impaired by exposure to even small amounts of water and oxygen, and the mechanisms behind this remain poorly understood.

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Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM), sometimes referred to as surface potential microscopy, is the nanoscale version of the venerable scanning Kelvin probe, both of which measure the Volta potential difference (VPD) between an oscillating probe tip and a sample surface by applying a nulling voltage equal in magnitude but opposite in sign to the tip-sample potential difference. By scanning a conductive KPFM probe over a sample surface, nanoscale variations in surface topography and potential can be mapped, identifying likely anodic and cathodic regions, as well as quantifying the inherent material driving force for galvanic corrosion. Subsequent co-localization of KPFM Volta potential maps with advanced scanning electron microscopy (SEM) techniques, including back scattered electron (BSE) images, energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) elemental composition maps, and electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) inverse pole figures can provide further insight into structure-property-performance relationships.

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Highly reversible Zn metal anode enabled by sustainable hydroxyl chemistry.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

June 2022

Battery Science Branch, Energy Science Division, Sensor and Electron Devices Directorate, DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory, Adelphi, MD 20783.

Rechargeable Zn metal batteries (RZMBs) may provide a more sustainable and lower-cost alternative to established battery technologies in meeting energy storage applications of the future. However, the most promising electrolytes for RZMBs are generally aqueous and require high concentrations of salt(s) to bring efficiencies toward commercially viable levels and mitigate water-originated parasitic reactions including hydrogen evolution and corrosion. Electrolytes based on nonaqueous solvents are promising for avoiding these issues, but full cell performance demonstrations with solvents other than water have been very limited.

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Efforts to expand the technological capability of batteries have generated increased interest in divalent cationic systems. Electrolytes used for these electrochemical applications often incorporate cyclic ethers as electrolyte solvents; however, the detailed solvation environments within such systems are not well-understood. To foster insights into the solvation structures of such electrolytes, Ca(TFSI) and Zn(TFSI) dissolved in tetrahydrofuran (THF) and 2-methyl-tetrahydrofuran were investigated through multi-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (O, Ca, and Zn NMR) combined with quantum chemistry modeling of NMR chemical shifts.

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Understanding the mechanisms of charge transport in batteries is important for the rational design of new electrolyte formulations. Persistent questions about ion transport mechanisms in battery electrolytes are often framed in terms of vehicular diffusion by persistent ion-solvent complexes versus structural diffusion through the breaking and reformation of ion-solvent contacts, i.e.

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Nuclear power will continue to provide energy for the foreseeable future, but it can pose significant challenges in terms of the disposal of waste and potential release of untreated radioactive substances. Iodine is a volatile product from uranium fission and is particularly problematic due to its solubility. Different isotopes of iodine present different issues for people and the environment.

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Focused Ion Beam Preparation of Low Melting Point Metals: Lessons Learned From Indium.

Microsc Microanal

March 2022

MESA: Microsystem Engineering, Science, and Applications, Sandia National Laboratory, PO Box 5800, Albuquerque, NM87185-1084, USA.

Indium (In) and other low melting point metals are used as interconnects in a variety of hybridized circuits and a full understanding of the metallurgy of these interconnects is important to the reliability and performance of the devices. This paper shows that room temperature focused ion beam (FIB) preparation of cross-sections, using Ga+ or Xe+ can result in artifacts that obscure the true In microbump structure. The use of modified milling strategies to minimize the increased local sample temperature are shown to produce cross-sections that are representative of the In bump microstructure in some sample configurations.

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This work investigates the role of water and oxygen on the shear-induced structural modifications of molybdenum disulfide (MoS) coatings for space applications and the impact on friction due to oxidation from aging. We observed from transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) that sliding in both an inert environment (i.e.

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Tissue geometry drives deterministic organoid patterning.

Science

January 2022

Laboratory of Stem Cell Bioengineering, Institute of Bioengineering, School of Life Sciences (SV) and School of Engineering (STI), Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.

Epithelial organoids are stem cell–derived tissues that approximate aspects of real organs, and thus they have potential as powerful tools in basic and translational research. By definition, they self-organize, but the structures formed are often heterogeneous and irreproducible, which limits their use in the lab and clinic. We describe methodologies for spatially and temporally controlling organoid formation, thereby rendering a stochastic process more deterministic.

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