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Phase stability and magnetic and electronic properties of a spark plasma sintered CoFe – P soft magnetic alloy

Journal of Alloys and Compounds

Belcher, Calvin B.; Zheng, baolong Z.; Dickens, Sara D.; Domrzalski, Jessica N.; Langlois, Eric D.; Lehman, Benjamin L.; Pearce, Charles J.; Delany, Robert E.; MacDonald, Benjamin M.; Apelian, Diran A.; Lavernia, Enrique L.; Monson, Todd M.

More efficient power conversion devices are able to transmit greater electrical power across larger distances to satisfy growing global electrical needs. A critical requirement to achieve more efficient power conversion are the soft magnetic materials used as core materials in transformers, inductors, and motors. To that effect it is well known that the use of non-equilibrium microstructures, which are, for example, nanocrystalline or consist of single phase solid solutions, can yield high saturation magnetic polarization and high electrical resistivity necessary for more efficient soft magnetic materials. In this work, we synthesized CoFe – P soft magnetic alloys containing nanocrystalline, single phase solid solution microstructures and studied the effect of a secondary intermetallic phase on the saturation magnetic polarization and electrical resistivity of the consolidated alloy. Single phase solid solution CoFe – P alloys were prepared through mechanically alloying metal powders and phase decomposition was observed after subsequent consolidation via spark plasma sintering (SPS) at various temperatures. The secondary intermetallic phase was identified as the orthorhombic (CoxFe1-x)2P phase and the magnetic properties of the (CoxFe1-x)2P intermetallic phase were found to be detrimental to the soft magnetic properties of the targeted CoFe – P alloy.

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Surface Functionalized Barium Titanate Nanoparticles: A Combined Experimental and Computational Study

ECS Journal of Solid State Science and Technology

Domrzalski, Jessica N.; Stevens, Tyler E.; Van Ginhoven, Renee M.; Fritzsching, Keith F.; Walder, Brennan W.; johnson, Emily j.; Lewis, Riley E.; Vreeland, Erika C.; Pearce, Charles J.; Vargas, David A.; Coker, Eric N.; Grey, John K.; Monson, Todd M.

Barium titanate (BTO) nanoparticles show great potential for use in electrostatic capacitors with high energy density. This includes both polymer composite and sintered capacitors. However, questions about the nanoparticles' size distribution, amount of agglomeration, and surface ligand effect on performance properties remain. Reducing particle agglomeration is a crucial step to understanding the properties of nanoscale particles, as agglomeration has significant effects on the composite dielectric constant. BTO surface functionalization using phosphonic acids is known reduce BTO nanoparticle agglomeration. We explore solution synthesized 10 nm BTO particles with tert-butylphosphonic acid ligands. Recent methods to quantifying agglomeration using an epoxy matrix before imaging shows that tert-butylphosphonic acid ligands reduce BTO agglomeration by 33%. Thermometric, spectroscopic, and computational methods provide confirmation of ligand binding and provide evidence of multiple ligand binding modes on the BTO particle surface.

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Programmable Photoluminescence via Intrinsic and DNA-Fluorophore Association in a Mixed Cluster Heterometallic MOF

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Sava Gallis, Dorina F.; Butler, Kimberly B.; Pearce, Charles J.; Valdez, Nichole R.; Rodriguez, Mark A.

A rapid and facile design strategy to create a highly complex optical tag with programmable, multimodal photoluminescent properties is described. This was achieved via intrinsic and DNA-fluorophore hidden signatures. As a first covert feature of the tag, an intricate novel heterometallic near-infrared (NIR)-emitting mesoporous metal-organic framework (MOF) was designed and synthesized. The material is constructed from two chemically distinct, homometallic hexanuclear clusters based on Nd and Yb. Uniquely, the Nd-based cluster is observed here for the first time in a MOF and consists of two staggered Nd μ3-oxo trimers. To generate controlled, multimodal, and tailorable emission with difficult to counterfeit features, the NIR-emissive MOF was post-synthetically modified via a fluorescent DNA oligo labeling design strategy. The surface attachment of several distinct fluorophores, including the simultaneous attachment of up to three distinct fluorescently labeled oligos was achieved, with excitation and emission properties across the visible spectrum (480-800 nm). The DNA inclusion as a secondary covert element in the tag was demonstrated via the detection of SYBR Gold dye association. Importantly, the approach implemented here serves as a rapid and tailorable way to encrypt distinct information in a facile and modular fashion and provides an innovative technology in the quest toward complex optical tags.

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The role of microstructural evolution during spark plasma sintering on the soft magnetic and electronic properties of a CoFe–Al2O3 soft magnetic composite

Journal of Materials Science

Belcher, Calvin H.; Zheng, Baolong; MacDonald, Benjamin E.; Langlois, Eric D.; Lehman, Benjamin; Pearce, Charles J.; Delany, Robert E.; Apelian, Diran; Lavernia, Enrique J.; Monson, Todd M.

For transformers and inductors to meet the world’s growing demand for electrical power, more efficient soft magnetic materials with high saturation magnetic polarization and high electrical resistivity are needed. This work aimed at the development of a soft magnetic composite synthesized via spark plasma sintering with both high saturation magnetic polarization and high electrical resistivity for efficient soft magnetic cores. CoFe powder particles coated with an insulating layer of Al2O3 were used as feedstock material to improve the electrical resistivity while retaining high saturation magnetic polarization. By maintaining a continuous non-magnetic Al2O3 phase throughout the material, both a high saturation magnetic polarization, above 1.5 T, and high electrical resistivity, above 100 μΩ·m, were achieved. Through microstructural characterization of samples consolidated at various temperatures, the role of microstructural evolution on the magnetic and electronic properties of the composite was elucidated. Upon consolidation at relatively high temperature, the CoFe was to found plastically deform and flow into the Al2O3 phase at the particle boundaries and this phenomenon was attributed to low resistivity in the composite. In contrast, at lower consolidation temperatures, perforation of the Al2O3 phase was not observed and a high electrical resistivity was achieved, while maintaining a high magnetic polarization, ideal for more efficient soft magnetic materials for transformers and inductors.

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Synthesis and behavior of bulk iron nitride soft magnets via high-pressure spark plasma sintering

Journal of Materials Research

Monson, Todd M.; Zheng, Baolong Z.; Delany, Robert E.; Pearce, Charles J.; Zhou, Yizhang Z.; Atcitty, Stanley A.; Lavernia, Enrique L.

Abstract

In this study, dense bulk iron nitrides (Fe x N) were synthesized for the first time ever using spark plasma sintering (SPS) of Fe x N powders. The Fe 4 N phase of iron nitride in particular has significant potential to serve as a new soft magnetic material in both transformer and inductor cores and electrical machines. The density of SPSed Fe x N increased with SPS temperature and pressure. The microstructure of the consolidated bulk Fe x N was characterized with X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometry. XRD revealed a primary phase of Fe 4 N with secondary phases of Fe 3 N and metallic iron. Finite element analysis (FEA) was also applied to investigate and explain localized heating and temperature distribution during SPS. The effects of processing on interface bonding formation and phase evolution were investigated and discussed in detail to provide insight into fundamental phenomena and microstructural evolution in SPSed Fe x N.

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Encoding Multilayer Complexity in Anti-Counterfeiting Heterometallic MOF-Based Optical Tags

Angewandte Chemie - International Edition

Deneff, Jacob I.; Butler, Kimberly B.; Rohwer, Lauren E.; Pearce, Charles J.; Valdez, Nichole R.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Luk, Ting S.; Sava Gallis, Dorina F.

Optical tags provide a way to quickly and unambiguously identify valuable assets. Current tag fluorophore options lack the tunability to allow combined methods of encoding in a single material. Herein we report a design strategy to encode multilayer complexity in a family of heterometallic rare-earth metal–organic frameworks based on highly connected nonanuclear clusters. To impart both intricacy and security, a synergistic approach was implemented resulting in both overt (visible) and covert (near-infrared, NIR) properties, with concomitant multi-emissive spectra and tunable luminescence lifetimes. Tag authentication is validated with a variety of orthogonal detection methodologies. Importantly, the effect induced by subtle compositional changes on intermetallic energy transfer, and thus on the resulting photophysical properties, is demonstrated. This strategy can be widely implemented to create a large library of highly complex, difficult-to-counterfeit optical tags.

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Insights into the solvent-Assisted degradation of organophosphorus compounds by a Zr-based metal-organic framework

Dalton Transactions

Harvey, Jacob H.; Pearce, Charles J.; Hall, Morgan G.; Bruni, Eric J.; Decoste, Jared B.; Sava Gallis, Dorina F.

The degradation of a chemical warfare agent simulant using a catalytically active Zr-based metal-organic framework (MOF) as a function of different solvent systems was investigated. Complementary molecular modelling studies indicate that the differences in the degradation rates are related to the increasing size in the nucleophile, which hinders the rotation of the product molecule during degradation. Methanol was identified as an appropriate solvent for non-Aqueous degradation applications and demonstrated to support the MOF-based destruction of both sarin and soman.

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Soft Magnetic Multilayered FeSiCrB-Fe x N Metallic Glass Composites Fabricated by Spark Plasma Sintering

IEEE Magnetics Letters

Monson, Todd M.; Zheng, Baolong; Delany, Robert E.; Pearce, Charles J.; Langlois, Eric L.; Lepkowski, Stefan M.; Stevens, Tyler E.; Zhou, Yizhang; Atcitty, Stanley; Lavernia, Enrique J.

Novel multilayered FeSiCrB-Fe x N (x = 2-4) metallic glass composites were fabricated using spark plasma sintering of FeSiCrB amorphous ribbons (Metglas 2605SA3 alloy) and Fe x N (x = 2-4) powder. Crystalline Fe x N can serve as a high magnetic moment, high electrical resistance binder, and lamination material in the consolidation of amorphous and nanocrystalline ribbons, mitigating eddy currents while boosting magnetic performance and stacking factor in both wound and stacked soft magnetic cores. Stacking factors of nearly 100% can be achieved in an amorphous ribbon/iron nitride composite. FeSiCrB-Fe x N multilayered metallic glass composites prepared by spark plasma sintering have the potential to serve as a next-generation soft magnetic material in power electronics and electrical machines.

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Degradation of superconducting Nb/NbN films by atmospheric oxidation

IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity

Henry, Michael D.; Wolfley, Steven L.; Young, Travis R.; Monson, Todd M.; Pearce, Charles J.; Lewis, Rupert; Clark, Blythe C.; Brunke, Lyle B.; Missert, Nancy A.

Niobium and niobium nitride thin films are transitioning from fundamental research toward wafer scale manufacturing with technology drivers that include superconducting circuits and electronics, optical single photon detectors, logic, and memory. Successful microfabrication requires precise control over the properties of sputtered superconducting films, including oxidation. Previous work has demonstrated the mechanism in oxidation of Nb and how film structure could have deleterious effects upon the superconducting properties. This study provides an examination of atmospheric oxidation of NbN films. By examination of the room temperature sheet resistance of NbN bulk oxidation was identified and confirmed by secondary ion mass spectrometry. As a result, Meissner magnetic measurements confirmed the bulk oxidation not observed with simple cryogenic resistivity measurements.

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Infrared signature of micro-hydration in the organophosphate Sarin: an ab initio study

Journal of Molecular Modeling

Alam, Todd M.; Pearce, Charles J.

The infrared (IR) spectra of micro-hydrated Sarin•(H2O)n clusters containing between one and four explicit waters have been studied using ab initio density functional theory (DFT) methods. The phosphate group P=O bond vibration region (∼1270 to 1290 cm−1) revealed the largest frequency variation with hydration, with a frequency red shift reflecting the direct hydrogen bond formation between the P=O of Sarin and water. Small variations to the P-F stretch (∼810 to 815 cm−1) and the C-O-P vibrational modes (∼995 to 1004 cm−1) showed that the water interactions with these functional groups were minor, and that the structures of Sarin were not extensively perturbed in the hydrated complexes. Increasing the number of explicit hydration waters produced only small vibrational changes in the lowest free energy complexes. These minor changes were consistent with a single water-phosphate hydrogen bond being the dominant structure, though a second water-phosphate hydrogen bond was observed in some complexes and was identified by an additional red shift of the P=O bond vibration. The H2O•H2O vibrational modes (∼3450 to 3660 cm−1) increased in complexity with higher hydration levels and reflect the extended hydrogen bonding networks formed between the explicit waters in the hydrated Sarin clusters. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Electrochemical Solution Growth of Magnetic Nitrides

Monson, Todd M.; Pearce, Charles J.

Magnetic nitrides, if manufactured in bulk form, would provide designers of transformers and inductors with a new class of better performing and affordable soft magnetic materials. According to experimental results from thin films and/or theoretical calculations, magnetic nitrides would have magnetic moments well in excess of current state of the art soft magnets. Furthermore, magnetic nitrides would have higher resistivities than current transformer core materials and therefore not require the use of laminates of inactive material to limit eddy current losses. However, almost all of the magnetic nitrides have been elusive except in difficult to reproduce thin films or as inclusions in another material. Now, through its ability to reduce atmospheric nitrogen, the electrochemical solution growth (ESG) technique can bring highly sought after (and previously inaccessible) new magnetic nitrides into existence in bulk form. This method utilizes a molten salt as a solvent to solubilize metal cations and nitrogen ions produced electrochemically and form nitrogen compounds. Unlike other growth methods, the scalable ESG process can sustain high growth rates (~mm/hr) even under reasonable operating conditions (atmospheric pressure and 500 °C). Ultimately, this translates into a high throughput, low cost, manufacturing process. The ESG process has already been used successfully to grow high quality GaN. Below, the experimental results of an exploratory express LDRD project to access the viability of the ESG technique to grow magnetic nitrides will be presented.

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45 Results
45 Results