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1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 12788, 2024 Jun 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38834596

ABSTRACT

Most modern catalysts are based on precious metals and rear-earth elements, making some of organic synthesis reactions economically insolvent. Density functional theory calculations are used here to describe several differently oriented surfaces of the higher tungsten boride WB5-x, together with their catalytic activity for the CO oxidation reaction. Based on our findings, WB5-x appears to be an efficient alternative catalyst for CO oxidation. Calculated surface energies allow the use of the Wulff construction to determine the equilibrium shape of WB5-x particles. It is found that the (010) and (101) facets terminated by boron and tungsten, respectively, are the most exposed surfaces for which the adsorption of different gaseous agents (CO, CO2, H2, N2, O2, NO, NO2, H2O, NH3, SO2) is evaluated to reveal promising prospects for applications. CO oxidation on B-rich (010) and W-rich (101) surfaces is further investigated by analyzing the charge redistribution during the adsorption of CO and O2 molecules. It is found that CO oxidation has relatively low energy barriers. The implications of the present results, the effects of WB5-x on CO oxidation and potential application in the automotive, chemical, and mining industries are discussed.

2.
Materials (Basel) ; 17(9)2024 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38730773

ABSTRACT

Two-dimensional superconductors, especially the covalent metals such as borophene, have received significant attention due to their new fundamental physics, as well as potential applications. Furthermore, the bilayer borophene has recently ignited interest due to its high stability and versatile properties. Here, the mechanical and superconducting properties of bilayer-δ6 borophene are explored by means of first-principles computations and anisotropic Migdal-Eliashberg analytics. We find that the coexistence of strong covalent bonds and delocalized metallic bonds endows this structure with remarkable mechanical properties (maximum 2D-Young's modulus of ~570 N/m) and superconductivity with a critical temperature of ~20 K. Moreover, the superconducting critical temperature of this structure can be further boosted to ~46 K by applied strain, which is the highest value known among all borophenes or two-dimensional elemental materials.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 2024 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38805019

ABSTRACT

Flash Joule heating has emerged as an ultrafast, scalable, and versatile synthesis method for nanomaterials, such as graphene. Here, we experimentally and theoretically deconvolute the contributions of thermal and electrical processes to the synthesis of graphene by flash Joule heating. While traditional methods of graphene synthesis involve purely chemical or thermal driving forces, our results show that the presence of charge and the resulting electric field in a graphene precursor catalyze the formation of graphene. Furthermore, modulation of the current or the pulse width affords the ability to control the three-step phase transition of the material from amorphous carbon to turbostratic graphene and finally to ordered (AB and ABC-stacked) graphene and graphite. Finally, density functional theory simulations reveal that the presence of a charge- and current-induced electric field inside the graphene precursor facilitates phase transition by lowering the activation energy of the reaction. These results demonstrate that the passage of electrical current through a solid sample can directly drive nanocrystal nucleation in flash Joule heating, an insight that may inform future Joule heating or other electrical synthesis strategies.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(13): 9318-9325, 2024 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38517068

ABSTRACT

Planar hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) and tubular BN nanotube (BNNT), known for their superior mechanical and thermal properties, as well as wide electronic band gap, hold great potential for nanoelectronic and optoelectronic devices. Chemical vapor deposition has demonstrated the best way to scalable synthesis of high-quality BN nanomaterials. Yet, the atomistic understanding of reactions from precursors to product-material remains elusive, posing challenges for experimental design. Here, performing first-principles calculations and ab initio molecular simulations, we explore pyrolytic decomposition pathways of the most used precursor ammonia borane (H3BNH3, AB) to BN, in gas-phase and on Ni(111) or amorphous boron (for BNNT growth) surfaces, for comparison. It reveals that in the gas phase, a pair of AB molecules cooperate to form intermediate NH3 and ammonia diborane, which further dissociates into H2BNH2, accompanied by critical BH4- and NH4+ ions. These ions act as H scavengers facilitating H2BNH2 dehydrogenation into HBNH. The consequent HBNH directly feeds BN flake growth by reacting with the crystal edge, while the addition of H2BNH2 to the edge is prohibited at 1500 K. In contrast, on Ni and boron surfaces, AB monomer dehydrogenates stepwise, deeper, yielding BNH and BN dimer as the primary building unit. Our study maps out three typical experimental conditions regarding the dissociation of AB-precursor, providing insights into the underlying reaction mechanisms of gas-phase precursors, to help as guidelines for the experimental growth of BN nanomaterials.

5.
Adv Mater ; 36(15): e2309956, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38305742

ABSTRACT

Nanoscale metallic glasses offer opportunities for investigating fundamental properties of amorphous solids and technological applications in biomedicine, microengineering, and catalysis. However, their top-down fabrication is limited by bulk counterpart availability, and bottom-up synthesis remains underexplored due to strict formation conditions. Here, a kinetically controlled flash carbothermic reaction is developed, featuring ultrafast heating (>105 K s-1) and cooling rates (>104 K s-1), for synthesizing metallic glass nanoparticles within milliseconds. Nine compositional permutations of noble metals, base metals, and metalloid (M1─M2─P, M1 = Pt/Pd, M2 = Cu/Ni/Fe/Co/Sn) are synthesized with widely tunable particle sizes and substrates. Through combinatorial development, a substantially expanded composition space for nanoscale metallic glass is discovered compared to bulk counterpart, revealing that the nanosize effect enhances glass forming ability. Leveraging this, several nanoscale metallic glasses are synthesized with composition that have never, to the knowledge, been synthesized in bulk. The metallic glass nanoparticles exhibit high activity in heterogeneous catalysis, outperforming crystalline metal alloy nanoparticles.

6.
Nat Mater ; 23(3): 316-322, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38388730

ABSTRACT

Structural chirality, defined as the lack of mirror symmetry in materials' atomic structure, is only meaningful in three-dimensional space. Yet two-dimensional (2D) materials, despite their small thickness, can show chirality that enables prominent asymmetric optical, electrical and magnetic properties. In this Perspective, we first discuss the possible definition and mathematical description of '2D chiral materials', and the intriguing physics enabled by structural chirality in van der Waals 2D homobilayers and heterostructures, such as circular dichroism, chiral plasmons and the nonlinear Hall effect. We then summarize the recent experimental progress and approaches to induce and control structural chirality in 2D materials from monolayers to superlattices. Finally, we postulate a few unique opportunities offered by 2D chiral materials, the synthesis and new properties of which can potentially lead to chiral optoelectronic devices and possibly materials for enantioselective photochemistry.

7.
Science ; 382(6671): 698-702, 2023 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37943931

ABSTRACT

Time-reversal symmetry (TRS) is pivotal for materials' optical, magnetic, topological, and transport properties. Chiral phonons, characterized by atoms rotating unidirectionally around their equilibrium positions, generate dynamic lattice structures that break TRS. Here, we report that coherent chiral phonons, driven by circularly polarized terahertz light pulses, polarize the paramagnetic spins in cerium fluoride in a manner similar to that of a quasi-static magnetic field on the order of 1 tesla. Through time-resolved Faraday rotation and Kerr ellipticity, we found that the transient magnetization is only excited by pulses resonant with phonons, proportional to the angular momentum of the phonons, and growing with magnetic susceptibility at cryogenic temperatures. The observation quantitatively agrees with our spin-phonon coupling model and may enable new routes to investigating ultrafast magnetism, energy-efficient spintronics, and nonequilibrium phases of matter with broken TRS.

8.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 7383, 2023 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37968299

ABSTRACT

Regulating electron transport rate and ion concentrations in the local microenvironment of active site can overcome the slow kinetics and unfavorable thermodynamics of CO2 electroreduction. However, simultaneous optimization of both kinetics and thermodynamics is hindered by synthetic constraints and poor mechanistic understanding. Here we leverage laser-assisted manufacturing for synthesizing CuxO bipyramids with controlled tip angles and abundant nanograins, and elucidate the mechanism of the relationship between electron transport/ion concentrations and electrocatalytic performance. Potassium/OH- adsorption tests and finite element simulations corroborate the contributions from strong electric field at the sharp tip. In situ Fourier transform infrared spectrometry and differential electrochemical mass spectrometry unveil the dynamic evolution of critical *CO/*OCCOH intermediates and product profiles, complemented with theoretical calculations that elucidate the thermodynamic contributions from improved coupling at the Cu+/Cu2+ interfaces. Through modulating the electron transport and ion concentrations, we achieve high Faradaic efficiency of 81% at ~900 mA cm-2 for C2+ products via CO2RR. Similar enhancement is also observed for nitrate reduction reaction (NITRR), achieving 81.83 mg h-1 ammonia yield rate per milligram catalyst. Coupling the CO2RR and NITRR systems demonstrates the potential for valorizing flue gases and nitrate wastes, which suggests a practical approach for carbon-nitrogen cycling.

9.
Adv Mater ; : e2308802, 2023 Oct 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37878366

ABSTRACT

Single-crystal graphene (SCG) wafers are needed to enable mass-electronics and optoelectronics owing to their excellent properties and compatibility with silicon-based technology. Controlled synthesis of high-quality SCG wafers can be done exploiting single-crystal Cu(111) substrates as epitaxial growth substrates recently. However, current Cu(111) films prepared by magnetron sputtering on single-crystal sapphire wafers still suffer from in-plane twin boundaries, which degrade the SCG chemical vapor deposition. Here, it is shown how to eliminate twin boundaries on Cu and achieve 4 in. Cu(111) wafers with ≈95% crystallinity. The introduction of a temperature gradient on Cu films with designed texture during annealing drives abnormal grain growth across the whole Cu wafer. In-plane twin boundaries are eliminated via migration of out-of-plane grain boundaries. SCG wafers grown on the resulting single-crystal Cu(111) substrates exhibit improved crystallinity with >97% aligned graphene domains. As-synthesized SCG wafers exhibit an average carrier mobility up to 7284 cm2 V-1 s-1 at room temperature from 103 devices and a uniform sheet resistance with only 5% deviation in 4 in. region.

10.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(40): 9118-9125, 2023 Oct 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37793092

ABSTRACT

We propose the Zn2V(1-x)NbxN3 alloy as a new promising material for optoelectronic applications, in particular for light-emitting diodes (LEDs). We perform accurate electronic-structure calculations of the alloy for several concentrations x using density-functional theory with meta-GGA exchange-correlation functional TB09. The band gap is found to vary between 2.2 and 2.9 eV with varying V/Nb concentration. This range is suitable for developing bright LEDs with tunable band gap as potential replacements for the more expensive Ga(1-x)In(x)N systems. Effects of configurational disorder are taken into account by explicitly considering all possible distributions of the metal ions within the metal sublattice for the chosen supercells. We have evaluated the band gap's nonlinear behavior (bowing) with variation of V/Nb concentration for two possible scenarios: (i) only the structure with the lowest total energy is present at each concentration and (ii) the structure with minimum band gap is present at each concentration, which corresponds to experimental conditions when also metastable structures are presents. We found that the bowing is about twice larger in the latter case. However, in both cases, the bowing parameter is found to be lower than 1 eV, which is about twice smaller than that in the widely used Ga(1-x)In(x)N alloy. Furthermore, we found that both crystal volume changes due to alloying and local effects (atomic relaxation and the V-N/Nb-N bonding difference) have important contributions to the band gap bowing in Zn2V(1-x)NbxN3.

11.
Sci Adv ; 9(39): eadh5131, 2023 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37756404

ABSTRACT

The staggering accumulation of end-of-life lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) and the growing scarcity of battery metal sources have triggered an urgent call for an effective recycling strategy. However, it is challenging to reclaim these metals with both high efficiency and low environmental footprint. We use here a pulsed dc flash Joule heating (FJH) strategy that heats the black mass, the combined anode and cathode, to >2100 kelvin within seconds, leading to ~1000-fold increase in subsequent leaching kinetics. There are high recovery yields of all the battery metals, regardless of their chemistries, using even diluted acids like 0.01 M HCl, thereby lessening the secondary waste stream. The ultrafast high temperature achieves thermal decomposition of the passivated solid electrolyte interphase and valence state reduction of the hard-to-dissolve metal compounds while mitigating diffusional loss of volatile metals. Life cycle analysis versus present recycling methods shows that FJH significantly reduces the environmental footprint of spent LIB processing while turning it into an economically attractive process.

12.
Adv Mater ; 35(48): e2306763, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37694496

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen gas (H2 ) is the primary storable fuel for pollution-free energy production, with over 90 million tonnes used globally per year. More than 95% of H2 is synthesized through metal-catalyzed steam methane reforming that produces 11 tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) per tonne H2 . "Green H2 " from water electrolysis using renewable energy evolves no CO2 , but costs 2-3× more, making it presently economically unviable. Here catalyst-free conversion of waste plastic into clean H2 along with high purity graphene is reported. The scalable procedure evolves no CO2 when deconstructing polyolefins and produces H2 in purities up to 94% at high mass yields. The sale of graphene byproduct at just 5% of its current value yields H2 production at a negative cost. Life-cycle assessment demonstrates a 39-84% reduction in emissions compared to other H2 production methods, suggesting the flash H2 process to be an economically viable, clean H2 production route.

13.
ACS Nano ; 17(13): 12216-12224, 2023 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37279100

ABSTRACT

Chemical growth of two-dimensional (2D) materials with controlled morphology is critical to bring their tantalizing properties to fruition. However, the growth must be on a substrate, which involves either intrinsic or intentionally introduced undulation, at a scale significantly larger than the materials thickness. Recent theory and experiments showed that 2D materials grown on a curved feature on substrates can incur a variety of topological defects and grain boundaries. Using a Monte Carlo method, we herein show that 2D materials growing on periodically undulated substrates with nonzero Gaussian curvature of practical relevance follow three distinct modes: defect-free conformal, defect-free suspension and defective conformal modes. The growth on the non-Euclidean surface can accumulate tensile stress that gradually lifts the materials from substrates and progressively turns the conformal mode into a suspension mode with increasing the undulation amplitude. Further enhancing the undulation can trigger Asaro-Tiller-Grinfield growth instability in the materials, manifested as discretely distributed topological defects due to strong stress concentration. We rationalize these results by model analyses and establish a "phase" diagram for guiding the control of growth morphology via substrate patterning. The undulation-induced suspension of 2D materials can help understand the formation of overlapping grain boundaries, spotted quite often in experiments, and guide how to avoid them.

14.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(18): 4266-4272, 2023 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37126735

ABSTRACT

Hydrocarbon conversion to advanced carbon nanomaterials with concurrent hydrogen production holds promise for clean energy technologies. This has been largely enabled by the floating catalyst chemical vapor deposition (FCCVD) growth of carbon nanotubes (CNTs), where commonly catalytic iron nanoparticles are formed from ferrocene decomposition. However, the catalyst formation mechanism and the effect of the chemical environment, especially hydrogen, remain elusive. Here, by employing atomistic simulations, we demonstrate how (i) hydrogen accelerates the ferrocene decomposition and (ii) prevents catalyst encapsulation. A subsequent catalytic dehydrogenation of methane on a liquid Fe nanoparticle showed that carbon dimers tend to be the dominant on-surface species. Such atomistic insights help us better understand the catalyst formation and CNT nucleation in the early stages of the FCCVD growth process and optimize it for potential scaleup.

15.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(12): 16317-16326, 2023 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36926821

ABSTRACT

Ultrathin diamond films, or diamanes, are promising quasi-2D materials that are characterized by high stiffness, extreme wear resistance, high thermal conductivity, and chemical stability. Surface functionalization of multilayer graphene with different stackings of layers could be an interesting opportunity to induce proper electronic properties into diamanes. Combination of these electronic properties together with extraordinary mechanical ones will lead to their applications as field-emission displays substituting original devices with light-emitting diodes or organic light-emitting diodes. In the present study, we focus on the electronic properties of fluorinated and hydrogenated diamanes with (111), (110), (0001), (101̅0), and (2̅110) crystallographic orientations of surfaces of various thicknesses by using first-principles calculations and Bader analysis of electron density. We see that fluorine induces an occupied surface electronic state, while hydrogen modifies the occupied bulk state and also induces unoccupied surface states. Furthermore, a lower number of layers is necessary for hydrogenated diamanes to achieve the convergence of the work function in comparison with fluorinated diamanes, with the exception of fluorinated (110) and (2̅110) films that achieve rapid convergence and have the same behavior as other hydrogenated surfaces. This induces a modification of the work function with an increase of the number of layers that makes hydrogenated (2̅110) diamanes the most suitable surface for field-emission displays, better than the fluorinated counterparts. In addition, a quasi-quantitative descriptor of surface dipole moment based on the Tantardini-Oganov electronegativity scale is introduced as the average of bond dipole moments between the surface atoms. This new fundamental descriptor is capable of predicting a priori the bond dipole moment and may be considered as a new useful feature for crystal structure prediction based on artificial intelligence.

16.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 1804, 2023 Mar 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37002204

ABSTRACT

In chemistry, theory of aromaticity or π bond resonance plays a central role in intuitively understanding the stability and properties of organic molecules. Here we present an analogue theory for σ bond resonance in flat boron materials, which allows us to determine the distribution of two-center two-electron and three-center two-electron bonds without quantum calculations. Based on this theory, three rules are proposed to draw the Kekulé-like bonding configurations for flat boron materials and to explore their properties intuitively. As an application of the theory, a simple explanation of why neutral borophene with ~1/9 hole has the highest stability and the effect of charge doping on borophene's optimal hole concentration is provided with the assumption of σ and π orbital occupation balance. Like the aromaticity theory for carbon materials, this theory greatly deepens our understanding on boron materials and paves the way for the rational design of various boron-based materials.

17.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(13): 3274-3284, 2023 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36977324

ABSTRACT

Single photons, often called flying qubits, have enormous promise to realize scalable quantum technologies ranging from an unhackable communication network to quantum computers. However, finding an ideal single-photon emitter (SPE) is a great challenge. Recently, two-dimensional (2D) materials have shown great potential as hosts for SPEs that are bright and operate under ambient conditions. This Perspective enumerates the metrics required for an SPE source and highlights that 2D materials, because of reduced dimensionality, exhibit interesting physical effects and satisfy several metrics, making them excellent candidates to host SPEs. The performance of SPE candidates discovered in 2D materials, hexagonal boron nitride and transition metal dichalcogenides, will be assessed based on the metrics, and the remaining challenges will be highlighted. Lastly, strategies to mitigate such challenges by developing design rules to deterministically create SPE sources will be presented.

18.
Nano Lett ; 23(5): 2023-2030, 2023 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36797055

ABSTRACT

Topological phonons and magnons potentially enable low-loss, quantum coherent, and chiral transport of information and energy at the atomic scale. Van der Waals magnetic materials are promising to realize such states due to their recently discovered strong interactions among the electronic, spin, and lattice degrees of freedom. Here, we report the first observation of coherent hybridization of magnons and phonons in monolayer antiferromagnet FePSe3 by cavity-enhanced magneto-Raman spectroscopy. The robust magnon-phonon cooperativity in the 2D limit occurs even in zero magnetic field, which enables nontrivial band inversion between longitudinal and transverse optical phonons caused by the strong coupling with magnons. The spin and lattice symmetry theoretically guarantee magnetic-field-controlled topological phase transition, verified by nonzero Chern numbers calculated from the coupled spin-lattice model. The 2D topological magnon-phonon hybridization potentially offers a new route toward quantum phononics and magnonics with an ultrasmall footprint.

19.
ACS Nano ; 17(5): 5121-5128, 2023 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36853621

ABSTRACT

Well recognized mechanical flexibility of two-dimensional (2D) materials is shown to bring about unexpected behaviors to the recently discovered monolayer ferroelectrics, especially those displaying normal, off-plane polarization. A "ferro-flexo" coupling term is introduced into the energy expression, to account for the connection of ferroelectricity and bending (strain gradient) of the layer, to predict and quantify its spontaneous curvature and how it affects the phase transitions. With InP as a chemically specific representative example, the first-principles calculations indeed reveal strong coupling ∼P·Ï° between the ferroelectric polarization (P) and the curvature of the layer (Ï° ≡ 1/r), having profound consequences for both mechanics and ferroelectricity of the material. Due to flexural relaxation, the spontaneous polarization and the transition barrier rise significantly, leading to large changes in the Curie temperature, coercive field, and domain wall width and energy, based on Monte Carlo simulations. On the other hand, the polarization switching, characteristic to ferroelectrics, does induce an overall layer bending, enabling a conversion of electrical signal to movement as an actuator; its possible work-cycles and maximum work-efficiency are briefly discussed.

20.
Adv Mater ; 35(24): e2211856, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36799267

ABSTRACT

Ammonia is an indispensable commodity in the agricultural and pharmaceutical industries. Direct nitrate-to-ammonia electroreduction is a decentralized route yet challenged by competing side reactions. Most catalysts are metal-based, and metal-free catalysts with high nitrate-to-ammonia conversion activity are rarely reported. Herein, it is shown that amorphous graphene synthesized by laser induction and comprising strained and disordered pentagons, hexagons, and heptagons can electrocatalyze the eight-electron reduction of NO3 - to NH3 with a Faradaic efficiency of ≈100% and an ammonia production rate of 2859 µg cm-2 h-1 at -0.93 V versus reversible hydrogen electrode. X-ray pair-distribution function analysis and electron microscopy reveal the unique molecular features of amorphous graphene that facilitate NO3 - reduction. In situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and theoretical calculations establish the critical role of these features in stabilizing the reaction intermediates via structural relaxation. The enhanced catalytic activity enables the implementation of flow electrolysis for the on-demand synthesis and release of ammonia with >70% selectivity, resulting in significantly increased yields and survival rates when applied to plant cultivation. The results of this study show significant promise for remediating nitrate-polluted water and completing the NOx cycle.

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