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High-throughput multimodal exploration of a nanocrystalline Cu-Ag library

Thin Solid Films

Dorman, Kyle R.; Bianco, Nathan R.; Kothari, Rishabh S.; Sobczak, Catherine E.; Desai, Saaketh; Custer, Joyce O.; Addamane, Sadhvikas J.; Jain, Manish; Harris, Christian A.; Kotula, Paul G.; Hinojos, Alejandro E.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Boyce, Brad L.; Dingreville, Remi P.M.; Adams, David P.

Sputter-deposited, nanocrystalline Cu-Ag thin films produced across a broad compositional and deposition-parameter space were evaluated to unravel the process-structure-property relationships important for creating hard, conductive electrical contacts and coatings. Combinatorial deposition involving pulsed direct current magnetron sputtering of elemental targets enabled swift examination of nearly the full range of alloy compositions and a relevant portion of deposition atomistics. Several high-throughput characterization modalities were employed to evaluate the chemistry, structure, and properties of the films. The resultant hardness, modulus, film density, crystal texture, and resistivity were analyzed in terms of key deposition characteristics (incident atom kinetic energy and incidence angle) predicted by binary-collision, kinematic Monte Carlo simulations. The study revealed improved hardness, parabolic resistivity dependence on composition, and compositional and process dependencies of film tarnishing. The results are discussed in the context of variations in microstructure and film density. Transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction demonstrate several forms of compositional variation including solute segregation to grain boundaries as well as periodic, intragranular compositional modulations. Annealing of a Cu-rich alloy film exhibiting grain boundary segregation showed that this as-deposited, compositional variation is not stable above 100 °C. Finally, the Cu-Ag system is shown to have potential for hard, conductive, tarnish-resistant and room temperature-stable nanocrystalline thin films across the composition space.

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X-ray diffraction characterization of magnetostriction in Terfenol-D

Powder Diffraction

Rodriguez, Mark A.; Faltas, Mina; Valdez, Nichole R.; Lowry, Daniel R.

The magnetostrictive response of a Terfenol-D pellet was measured via a laboratory-based X-ray diffractometer. X-ray diffraction patterns were collected from the pellet sample with and without the presence of an applied magnetic field (~30 mT) generated by placing a large magnet under the pellet. A standard reference material, Silicon 640c, was employed as an internal standard. Magnetostriction values of 323 and 227 ppm Δl/l were determined for the (104) and (110) indexed peaks, respectively, assuming a rhombohedral structure for Terfenol-D. A threshold noise level value of ~20 to 30 ppm Δl/l was suggested based on before/after measurements in the absence of the applied field. No clear evidence of domain wall rotation was detected via changes in relative intensities of diffraction peaks in the presence of the applied magnetic field.

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Machinable, high-conductivity NaSICON through mitigation of humidity effects during solid-state synthesis

Journal of the American Ceramic Society

Peretti, Amanda; Spoerke, Eric; Urena, Michael E.; Salinas, Perla A.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Mantos, Philip S.; Williard, John N.; Small, Leo J.

The Na+ super ion conductor (NaSICON, Na1+xZr2SixP3-xO12) is a solid electrolyte well-known for fast, selective Na+ transport at low temperatures, uniquely enabling sodium-based batteries. Producing high-quality NaSICON from solid-state methods, especially when cost-effective, potentially hygroscopic precursors are used, is not trivial. To understand and eliminate the influence of humidity during processing, a scheme was developed to reproducibly yield a high Na+ conductivity (3.75 mS/cm at 25°C, 81.7 mS/cm at 150°C), high density (97%), and machinable NaSICON without the use of binders, sintering aids, or dopants. Controlled humidity studies over 20%–50% RH coupled with thermal, structural, and electrical analysis reveal that calcination temperatures < 1000°C leave NaSICON processing susceptible to water absorption at > 20% RH due to the presence of hygroscopic Na3PO4 and Na2CO3 during shaping, pressing, and sintering. Water absorption results in NaSICON with lower densities, machinability, and Na+ conductivity, due to impaired intergranular Na+ transport. At the other extreme, fully converting precursor to the NaSICON phase at 1230°C before pressing and sintering leads to poor conductivity and density. By calcining at 1000°C, excellent quality NaSICON may be produced under a range of laboratory environments, enabling low-cost production of high-conductivity, machinable NaSICON necessary the ever-growing energy storage market.

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Guided combinatorial synthesis and automated characterization expedites the discovery of hard, electrically conductive PtxAu1-x films

Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A

Adams, David P.; Kothari, Rishabh; Addamane, Sadhvikas J.; Jain, Manish; Dorman, Kyle R.; Desai, Saaketh; Sobczak, Catherine E.; Kalaswad, Matias; Bianco, Nathan R.; Delrio, Frank W.; Custer, Joyce O.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Boro, Joseph R.; Dingreville, Remi P.M.; Boyce, Brad L.

Sputter-deposited Pt-Au thin films have been reported to develop a hard, stable, nanocrystalline structure, yet little is known about how these characteristics vary with PtxAu1-x composition and process conditions. Toward this end, this document describes an extensive, combinatorial Pt-Au thin film library including characterized film compositions, structure, and properties. Complemented by kinematic Monte Carlo simulations of codeposition, a broad range of PtxAu1-x compositions (from x ~ 0.02 to 0.93) was first established by sputtering with varied magnetron powers and gun tilt angles. Further, the produced films were subsequently interrogated using automated nanoindentation, x-ray reflectivity, x-ray diffraction, atomic force microscopy, surface profilometry, four-point probe sheet resistance techniques, and wavelength dispersive spectroscopy in order to determine how hardness, modulus, density, surface roughness, structure, and resistivity vary with film stoichiometry and process parameters. Combinatorial films displayed an assortment of properties with the hardness of some films exceeding values reported previously for this material system. High hardness, high modulus, and low resistivity were generally attained when using increased deposition energy and reduced angle-of-incidence processes. Overall, the research identified promising, new PtxAu1-x compositions for future study and pinpointed strategies for improved deposition.

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Refining Microstructures in Additively Manufactured Al/Cu Gradients Through TiB2 Inclusions

JOM

Abere, Michael J.; Choi, Hyein; Van Bastian, Levi; Jauregui, Luis; Babuska, Tomas F.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Delrio, Frank W.; Whetten, Shaun R.; Kustas, Andrew B.

The additive manufacture of compositionally graded Al/Cu parts by laser engineered net shaping (LENS) is demonstrated. The use of a blue light build laser enabled deposition on a Cu substrate. The thermal gradient and rapid solidification inherent to selective laser melting enabled mass transport of Cu up to 4 mm from a Cu substrate through a pure Al deposition, providing a means of producing gradients with finer step sizes than the printed layer thicknesses. Divorcing gradient continuity from layer or particle size makes LENS a potentially enabling technology for the manufacture of graded density impactors for ramp compression experiments. Printing graded structures with pure Al, however, was prevented by the growth of Al2Cu3 dendrites and acicular grains amid a matrix of Al2Cu. A combination of adding TiB2 grain refining powder and actively varying print layer composition suppressed the dendritic growth mode and produced an equiaxed microstructure in a compositionally graded part. Material phase was characterized for crystal structure and nanoindentation hardness to enable a discussion of phase evolution in the rapidly solidifying melt pool of a LENS print.

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Normally closed thermally activated irreversible solid state erbium hydrides switches

Micro and Nano Engineering

Abere, Michael J.; Gallegos, Richard J.; Moorman, Matthew W.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Kotula, Paul G.; Kellogg, Rick A.; Adams, David P.

A thermally driven, micrometer-scale switch technology has been created that utilizes the ErH3/Er2O3 materials system. The technology is comprised of novel thin film switches, interconnects, on-board micro-scale heaters for passive thermal environment sensing, and on-board micro-scale heaters for individualized switch actuation. Switches undergo a thermodynamically stable reduction/oxidation reaction leading to a multi-decade (>11 orders) change in resistance. The resistance contrast remains after cooling to room temperature, making them suitable as thermal fuses. An activation energy of 290 kJ/mol was calculated for the switch reaction, and a thermos-kinetic model was employed to determine switch times of 120 ms at 560 °C with the potential to scale to 1 ms at 680 °C.

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LYNM PE1 Pre-Experiment A Site Characterization Report

Bodmer, Miles; Townsend, Margaret J.; Roberts, Barry L.; Wilson, Jennifer E.; Bays, Nathan R.; Smith, Devon; Downs, Nicholas M.; Feldman, Joshua D.; Choens, Robert C.; Heath, Jason E.; Holland, Austin A.; Barrow, Perry C.; Bartlett, Tara; Boukhalfa, Hakim; Broome, Scott T.; Dietel, Matthew; Downs, Christine; Ezzedine, Souheil M.; Freimuth, Clayton R.; Griego, James J.M.; Ingraham, Mathew; Jaramillo, Johnny L.; Jones, Kyle R.; Kibikas, William; Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Larotonda, Jennifer M.; Miller, Andrew J.; Otto, Shawn J.; Powell, Matthew D.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Tafoya, Joshua J.; Valdez, Nichole R.; Xu, Guangping; Lyons, Stephanie M.; Stauffer, Philip H.

Underground chemical explosive experiments such as LYNM PE1 generate large multiphenomenological datasets, require complex site preparation and build out, and utilize cutting edge models and analysis techniques to analyze and simulate the explosion-induced signals. This wide range of outcomes makes it a necessity to thoroughly characterize the testbed in advance of experiments in a way that complements the wide suite of data being generated. Here, we present a broad overview of the site characterization work and data collection that was conducted before Experiment A, which is the first in a series of three PE1 experiments. This work includes, but is not limited to, geologic mapping, physical sample collection, analysis of material properties, geophysical borehole logging, and in-situ measurements. This information was collected by a large, dedicated team and was used to inform site construction, finalize instrumentation placement, generate Geologic Framework Models, feed pre-experiment predictions, and facilitate post-experiment data analysis

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PE1 Site Characterization: Data Documentation on Geologic and Hydrologic Lab Testing

Wilson, Jennifer E.; Heath, Jason E.; Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Xu, Guangping; Bodmer, Miles; Broome, Scott T.; Jaramillo, Johnny L.; Barrow, Perry C.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Griego, James J.M.; Valdez, Nichole R.

This data documentation report describes geologic and hydrologic laboratory analysis and data collected in support of site characterization of the Physical Experiment 1 (PE1) testbed, Aqueduct Mesa, Nevada. The documentation includes a summary of laboratory tests performed, discussion of sample selection for assessing heterogeneity of various testbed properties, methods, and results per data type.

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Synthesis and crystal structure of 2,9-diamino-5,6,11,12-tetrahydrodibenzo[a,e]cyclooctene

Acta Crystallographica Section E: Crystallographic Communications

Valdez, Nichole R.; Nagel, Eric M.; Redline, Erica M.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Staiger, Chad L.; Dugger, Jason; Foster, Jeffrey

The cis- form of diaminodibenzocyclooctane (DADBCO, C16H18N2) is of interest as a negative coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) material. The crystal structure was determined through single-crystal X-ray diffraction at 100 K and is presented herein.

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Electrical Shock During Phone Assisted Troubleshooting of Laboratory Equipment

ACS Chemical Health and Safety

Wright, Emily D.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Fernandez, Matthew; Clark, Blythe C.; Chavez, William R.; Peters, Vanessa; Mulcahy, Mary M.

Researchers have the potential to be exposed to a wide variety of hazards inherent to the equipment they use and maintain. When equipment does not function as expected, researchers sometimes reach out to their vendors for assistance. Early diagnostic or troubleshooting interactions between researcher and vendor are often conducted over the telephone and can lead to researchers performing work outside of their area of expertise and exposure to unknown hazards. This type of interaction significantly contributed to an incident where during diagnostic activities a researcher accidentally contacted, and discharged, a capacitor in an X-ray diffraction instrument. While this incident did not produce a serious injury, if the capacitor discharge path had occurred hand-to-hand across the heart, a serious injury may have been possible.

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Evaluating the pressure dependence of PZT structures using a virtual reality environment

Powder Diffraction

Rodriguez, Mark A.; Krukar, John; Valdez, Nichole R.; Harris, James Z.; Perkins, Kathryn A.; Diantonio, Christopher; Yang, Pin

Pb-Zr-Ti-O (PZT) perovskites span a large solid-solution range and have found widespread use due to their piezoelectric and ferroelectric properties that also span a large range. Crystal structure analysis via Rietveld refinement facilitates materials analysis via the extraction of the structural parameters. These parameters, often obtained as a function of an additional dimension (e.g., pressure), can help to diagnose materials response within a use environment. Often referred to as in-situ studies, these experiments provide an abundance of data. Viewing structural changes due to applied pressure conditions can give much-needed insight into materials performance. However, challenges exist for viewing/presenting results when the details are inherently three-dimensional (3D) in nature. For PZT perovskites, the use of polyhedra (e.g., Zr/Ti-O6 octahedra) to view bonding/connectivity is beneficial; however, the visualization of the octahedra behavior with pressure dependence is less easily demonstrated due to the complexity of the added pressure dimension. We present a more intuitive visualization by projecting structural data into virtual reality (VR). We employ previously published structural data for Pb0.99(Zr0.95Ti0.05)0.98Nb0.02O3 as an exemplar for VR visualization of the PZT R3c crystal structure between ambient and 0.62 GPa pressure. This is accomplished via our in-house CAD2VR™ software platform and the new CrystalVR plugin. The use of the VR environment enables a more intuitive viewing experience, while enabling on-the-fly evaluation of crystal data, to form a detailed and comprehensive understanding of in-situ datasets. Discussion of methodology and tools for viewing are given, along with how recording results in video form can enable the viewing experience.

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Improved quantum yield in geometrically constrained tetraphenylethylene-based metal-organic frameworks

CrystEngComm

Sava Gallis, Dorina F.; Deneff, Jacob I.; Reyes, Raphael A.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Valdez, Nichole R.; Rohwer, Lauren E.S.; Stawiasz, Katherine J.; Woods, Toby J.; Lawal, Abdul; Moore, Jeffrey S.

Herein, we report the synthesis of a novel, tetraphenylethylene-based ligand for metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). Incorporation of this ligand into a Zn- or Eu-based MOF increased the quantum yield (QY) by almost 2.5× compared to the linker alone. Furthermore, the choice of guest solvent impacted the QY and solvatochromatic response. These shifts are consistent with solvent dielectric constant as well as molecular polarizability.

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Fabrication and characterization of net-shaped iron nitride-amine-epoxy soft magnetic composites

Frontiers in Materials

Hoyt, Melinda R.; Falcon, Gillian I.; Pearce, Charles J.; Stevens, Tyler E.; Johnson, Emily M.; Szenderski, Thomas M.; Sorenson, Nathan R.; Fultz-Waters, Sydney F.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Whalen, Lisa J.; Monson, Todd; Delaney, Robert E.

Soft magnetic composites (SMCs) offer a promising alternative to electrical steels and soft ferrites in high performance motors and power electronics. They are ideal for incorporation into passive electronic components such as inductors and transformers, which require a non-permanent magnetic core to rapidly switch magnetization. As a result, there is a need for materials with the right combination of low coercivity, low magnetic remanence, high relative permeability, and high saturation magnetization to achieve these goals. Iron nitride is an attractive soft magnetic material for incorporation into an amine/epoxy resin matrix. This permits the synthesis of net-shaped SMCs using a “bottom-up” approach for overcoming the limitations of current state-of-the-art SMCs made via conventional powder metal processing techniques. In this work we present the fabrication of various net-shaped, iron nitride-based SMCs using two different amine/epoxy resin systems and their magnetic characterization. The maximum volume loading of iron nitride reached was ∼77% via hot pressing, which produced SMCs with a saturation magnetic polarization (Js) of ∼0.9 T, roughly 2–3 times the Js of soft ferrites.

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Results 1–25 of 242
Results 1–25 of 242
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