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Silver-mordenite for radiologic gas capture from complex streams: Dual catalytic CH3I decomposition and I confinement

Microporous and Mesoporous Materials

Nenoff, T.M.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Soelberg, Nick R.; Chapman, Karena W.

The selective capture of radiological iodine (129I) is a persistent concern for safe nuclear energy. In nuclear fuel reprocessing scenarios, the gas streams to be treated are extremely complex, containing several distinct iodine-containing molecules amongst a large variety of other species. Silver-containing mordenite (MOR) is a longstanding benchmark for radioiodine capture, reacting with molecular iodine (I2) to form AgI. However the mechanisms for organoiodine capture is not well understood. Here we investigate the capture of methyl iodide from complex mixed gas streams by combining chemical analysis of the effluent gas stream with in depth characterization of the recovered sorbent. Tools applied include infrared spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis with mass spectrometry, micro X-ray fluorescence, powder X-ray diffraction analysis, and pair distribution function analysis. The MOR zeolite catalyzes decomposition of the methyl iodide through formation of surface methoxy species (SMS), which subsequently reacts with water in the mixed gas stream to form methanol, and with methanol to form dimethyl ether, which are both detected downstream in the effluent. The liberated iodine reacts with Ag in the MOR pore to the form subnanometer AgI clusters, smaller than the MOR pores, suggesting that the iodine is both physically and chemically confined within the zeolite.

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Role of Cu-Ion doping in Cu-α-MnO2 nanowire electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction

Journal of Physical Chemistry C

Davis, Danae J.; Lambert, Timothy N.; Vigil, Julian A.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Brumbach, Michael T.; Coker, Eric N.; Limmer, Steven J.

The role of Cu-ion doping in α-MnO2 electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction in alkaline electrolyte was investigated. Cu-doped α-MnO2 nanowires (Cu-α-MnO2) were prepared with varying amounts (up to ∼3%) of Cu2+ using a hydrothermal method. The electrocatalytic data indicate that Cu-α-MnO2 nanowires have up to 74% higher terminal current densities, 2.5 times enhanced kinetic rate constants, and 66% lower charge transfer resistances that trend with Cu content, exceeding values attained by α-MnO2 alone. The observed improvement in catalytic behavior correlates with an increase in Mn3+ content at the surface of the Cu-α-MnO2 nanowires. The Mn3+/Mn4+ couple is the mediator for the rate-limiting redox-driven O2/OH- exchange. O2 adsorbs via an axial site (the eg orbital on the Mn3+ d4 ion) at the surface or at edge defects of the nanowire, and the increase in covalent nature of the nanowire with Cu-ion doping leads to stabilization of O2 adsorbates and faster rates of reduction. A smaller crystallite size (roughly half) for Cu-α-MnO2 leading to a higher density of (catalytic) edge defect sites was also observed. This work is applicable to other manganese oxide electrocatalysts and shows for the first time there is a correlation for manganese oxides between electrocatalytic activity for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in alkaline electrolyte and an increase in Mn3+ character at the surface of the oxide. © 2014 American Chemical Society.

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Determine Minimum Silver Flake Addition to GCM for Iodine Loaded AgZ

Garino, Terry J.; Nenoff, T.M.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

The minimum amount of silver flake required to prevent loss of I{sub 2} during sintering in air for a SNL Glass Composite Material (GCM) Waste Form containing AgI-MOR (ORNL, 8.7 wt%) was determined to be 1.1 wt% Ag. The final GCM composition prior to sintering was 20 wt% AgI-MOR, 1.1 wt% Ag, and 80 wt% Bi-Si oxide glass. The amount of silver flake needed to suppress iodine loss was determined using thermo gravimetric analysis with mass spectroscopic off-gas analysis. These studies found that the ratio of silver to AgI-MOR required is lower in the presence of the glass than without it. Therefore an additional benefit of the GCM is that it serves to inhibit some iodine loss during processing. Alternatively, heating the AgI-MOR in inert atmosphere instead of air allowed for densified GCM formation without I{sub 2} loss, and no necessity for the addition of Ag. The cause of this behavior is found to be related to the oxidation of the metallic Ag to Ag{sup +} when heated to above ~300{degrees}C in air. Heating rate, iodine loading levels and atmosphere are the important variables that determine AgI migration and results suggest that AgI may be completely incorporated into the mordenite structure by the 550{degrees}C sintering temperature.

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In-situ monitoring of vanadium dioxide formation using high-temperature XRD

Powder Diffraction

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Bell, Nelson S.; Griego, James J.M.; Edney, Cynthia E.; Clem, Paul G.

The monoclinic-to-tetragonal phase transition (∼70 °C) in vanadium dioxide (VO2) strongly impacts the infrared properties, which enables its use in applications such as smart window devices. Synthesis of VO 2 can be challenging due to the variability of vanadium oxide phases that may be formed. We have employed high-temperature X-ray diffraction (HTXRD) to monitor the reaction process of vanadium oxide precursor powders to form the desired tetragonal VO2 phase. Single-phase tetragonal VO2 was formed within 30 min at 420 °C in flowing N2 gas (∼50 ppm O2). The monoclinic-to-tetragonal phase transformation was observed via HTXRD at ∼70 °C with the typical ∼10 °C hysteresis (i.e. approached from above or below the transition). © International Centre for Diffraction Data 2014.

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Crystal Growth and Scintillation Properties of ${\rm Cs}_{2}{\rm NaGdBr}_{6}{:}{\rm Ce}^{3+}$

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Doty, Fred P.; Zhou, Xiaowang Z.; Deng, Haoran D.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

Single crystals of Cs2NaGdBr6 with different Ce+3 activator concentrations were grown by a two-zone Bridgman method. This new compound belongs to a large elpasolite halide (A2BLnX6) family. Many of these elpasolite compounds have shown high luminosity, good energy resolution and excellent proportionality in comparison to traditional scintillators such as CsI and NaI; therefore, they are particularly attractive for gamma-ray spectroscopy applications. This study investigated the scintillator properties of Cs2NaGdBr6:Ce+3 crystals as a new material for radiation detection. Special focus has been placed on the effects of activator concentration (0 to 50 mol.%) on the photoluminescence responses. Results of structural refinement, photoluminescence, radioluminescence, lifetime and proportionality measurements for this new compound are reported.

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Petrologic and petrophysical evaluation of the Dallas Center Structure, Iowa, for compressed air energy storage in the Mount Simon Sandstone

Heath, Jason; Bauer, Stephen J.; Broome, Scott T.; Dewers, Thomas D.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

The Iowa Stored Energy Plant Agency selected a geologic structure at Dallas Center, Iowa, for evaluation of subsurface compressed air energy storage. The site was rejected due to lower-than-expected and heterogeneous permeability of the target reservoir, lower-than-desired porosity, and small reservoir volume. In an initial feasibility study, permeability and porosity distributions of flow units for the nearby Redfield gas storage field were applied as analogue values for numerical modeling of the Dallas Center Structure. These reservoir data, coupled with an optimistic reservoir volume, produced favorable results. However, it was determined that the Dallas Center Structure cannot be simplified to four zones of high, uniform permeabilities. Updated modeling using field and core data for the site provided unfavorable results for air fill-up. This report presents Sandia National Laboratories petrologic and petrophysical analysis of the Dallas Center Structure that aids in understanding why the site was not suitable for gas storage.

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Elpasolite scintillators

Doty, Fred P.; Yang, Pin Y.; Zhou, Xiaowang Z.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

This work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Nonproliferation Research to develop elpasolite materials, with an emphasis on high-atomic-number rare-earth elpasolites for gamma-ray spectrometer applications. Low-cost, high-performance gamma-ray spectrometers are needed for detection of nuclear proliferation. Cubic materials, such as some members of the elpasolite family (A2BLnX6; Ln-lanthanide and X-halogen), hold promise due to their high light output, proportionality, and potential for scale-up. Using both computational and experimental studies, a systematic investigation of the compositionstructureproperty relationships of these high-atomic-number elpasolite halides was performed. The results reduce the barrier to commercialization of large single crystals or transparent ceramics, and will facilitate economical scale-up of elpasolites for high-sensitivity gamma-ray spectroscopy.

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Cubic erbium trihydride thin films

Thin Solid Films

Adams, D.P.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Romero, Juan A.; Kotula, Paul G.; Banks, J.C.

High-purity, erbium hydride thin films have been deposited onto α-Al 2O 3 and oxidized Si by reactive sputtering methods. Rutherford backscattering spectrometry and elastic recoil detection show that films deposited at temperatures of 35, 150 and 275°C have a composition of 3H:1Er. Erbium trihydride films consist of a face-centered cubic erbium sub-lattice with a lattice parameter in the range of 5.11-5.20 Å. The formation of cubic ErH 3 is intriguing, because previous studies demonstrate a single trihydride phase with a hexagonal metal sub-lattice. The formation of a stable, cubic trihydride phase is attributed to a large, in-plane stress resulting from ion beam sputter deposition. © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Crystallization behavior of vapor-deposited hexanitroazobenzene (HNAB) films

AIP Conference Proceedings

Knepper, Robert; Tappan, Alexander S.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Alam, M.K.; Martin, Laura E.; Marquez, M.P.

Vapor-deposited hexanitroazobenzene (HNAB) has been shown to form an amorphous structure as-deposited that crystallizes over a period ranging from several hours to several weeks, depending on the ambient temperature. Raman spectroscopy and x-ray diffraction were used to identify three distinct phases during the crystallization process: the as-deposited amorphous structure, the HNAB-II crystal structure, and an as-yet unidentified crystal structure. Significant qualitative differences in the nucleation and growth of the crystalline phases were observed between 65°C and 75°C. While the same two polymorphs form in all cases, significant variation in the quantities of each phase was observed as a function of temperature. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.

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Using in-situ techniques to probe high-temperature reactions: Thermochemical cycles for the production of synthetic fuels from CO2 and water

Powder Diffraction

Coker, Eric N.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Ambrosini, Andrea A.; Miller, James E.; Stechel, Ellen B.

Ferrites are promising materials for enabling solar-thermochemical cycles. Such cycles utilize solar-thermal energy to reduce the metal oxide, which is then re-oxidized by H2O or CO2, producing H2 or CO, respectively. Mixing ferrites with zirconia or yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) greatly improves their cyclabilities. In order to understand this system, we have studied the behavior of iron oxide/8YSZ (8 mol-% Y2O3 in ZrO2) using in situ X-ray diffraction and thermogravimetric analyses at temperatures up to 1500 °C and under controlled atmosphere. The solubility of iron oxide in 8YSZ measured by XRD at room temperature was 9.4 mol-% Fe. The solubility increased to at least 10.4 mol-% Fe when heated between 800 and 1000 °C under inert atmosphere. Furthermore iron was found to migrate in and out of the 8YSZ phase as the temperature and oxidation state of the iron changed. In samples containing >9.4 mol-% Fe, stepwise heating to 1400 °C under helium caused reduction of Fe2O3 to Fe3O4 to FeO. Exposure of the FeO-containing material to CO2 at 1100 °C re-oxidized FeO to Fe3O4 with evolution of CO. Thermogravimetric analysis during thermochemical cycling of materials with a range of iron contents showed that samples with mostly dissolved iron utilized a greater proportion of the iron atoms present than did samples possessing a greater fraction of un-dissolved iron oxides.© 2012 JCPDS-ICDD.

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Understanding and predicting metallic whisker growth and its effects on reliability : LDRD final report

Michael, Joseph R.; McKenzie, Bonnie B.; Grant, Richard P.; Yelton, William G.; Pillars, Jamin R.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

Tin (Sn) whiskers are conductive Sn filaments that grow from Sn-plated surfaces, such as surface finishes on electronic packages. The phenomenon of Sn whiskering has become a concern in recent years due to requirements for lead (Pb)-free soldering and surface finishes in commercial electronics. Pure Sn finishes are more prone to whisker growth than their Sn-Pb counterparts and high profile failures due to whisker formation (causing short circuits) in space applications have been documented. At Sandia, Sn whiskers are of interest due to increased use of Pb-free commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) parts and possible future requirements for Pb-free solders and surface finishes in high-reliability microelectronics. Lead-free solders and surface finishes are currently being used or considered for several Sandia applications. Despite the long history of Sn whisker research and the recently renewed interest in this topic, a comprehensive understanding of whisker growth remains elusive. This report describes recent research on characterization of Sn whiskers with the aim of understanding the underlying whisker growth mechanism(s). The report is divided into four sections and an Appendix. In Section 1, the Sn plating process is summarized. Specifically, the Sn plating parameters that were successful in producing samples with whiskers will be reviewed. In Section 2, the scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of Sn whiskers and time-lapse SEM studies of whisker growth will be discussed. This discussion includes the characterization of straight as well as kinked whiskers. In Section 3, a detailed discussion is given of SEM/EBSD (electron backscatter diffraction) techniques developed to determine the crystallography of Sn whiskers. In Section 4, these SEM/EBSD methods are employed to determine the crystallography of Sn whiskers, with a statistically significant number of whiskers analyzed. This is the largest study of Sn whisker crystallography ever reported. This section includes a review of previous literature on Sn whisker crystallography. The overall texture of the Sn films was also analyzed by EBSD. Finally, a short Appendix is included at the end of this report, in which the X-Ray diffraction (XRD) results are discussed and compared to the EBSD analyses of the overall textures of the Sn films. Sections 2, 3, and 4 have been or will be submitted as stand-alone papers in peer-reviewed technical journals. A bibliography of recent Sandia Sn whisker publications and presentations is included at the end of the report.

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Synthesis and characterization of supported ferrites for thermochemical CO 2 splitting using concentrated solar energy

ACS National Meeting Book of Abstracts

Ambrosini, Andrea; Coker, Eric N.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Ohlhausen, J.A.; Miller, James E.; Stechel-Speicher, Ellen B.

The Sunshine to Petrol effort at Sandia National Laboratories aims to convert CO 2 and water to liquid hydrocarbon fuel precursors using concentrated solar energy with redox-active metal oxide systems, such as ferrites: Fe 3O 4→3FeO+ 0.5O 2 (>1350°C) 3FeO + CO 2→Fe 3O 4 + CO (<1200°C). However, the ferrite materials are not repeatedly reactive on their own and require a support, such as yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ). The ferrite-support interaction is not well defined, as there has been little fundamental characterization of these oxides at the high temperatures and conditions present in these cycles. We have investigated the microstructure, structure-property relationships, and the role of the support on redox behavior of the ferrite composites. In-situ capabilities to elucidate chemical reactions under operating conditions have been developed. The synthesis, structural characterization (room and high- temperature x-ray diffraction, secondary ion mass spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy), and thermogravimetric analysis of YSZ-supported ferrites will be discussed.

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Confined cooperative self-assembly and synthesis of optically and electrically active nanostructures : final LDRD report

Coker, Eric N.; Huang, Jian Y.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

In this project, we developed a confined cooperative self-assembly process to synthesize one-dimensional (1D) j-aggregates including nanowires and nanorods with controlled diameters and aspect ratios. The facile and versatile aqueous solution process assimilates photo-active macrocyclic building blocks inside surfactant micelles, forming stable single-crystalline high surface area nanoporous frameworks with well-defined external morphology defined by the building block packing. Characterizations using TEM, SEM, XRD, N{sub 2} and NO sorption isotherms, TGA, UV-vis spectroscopy, and fluorescence imaging and spectroscopy indicate that the j-aggregate nanostructures are monodisperse and may further assemble into hierarchical arrays with multi-modal functional pores. The nanostructures exhibit enhanced and collective optical properties over the individual chromophores. This project was a small footprint research effort which, nonetheless, produced significant progress towards both the stated goal as well as unanticipated research directions.

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Structure-property relationship of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and physisorbed off-gas radionuclides

Sava Gallis, Dorina F.; Garino, Terry J.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

We report on the host-guest interactions between metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with various profiles and highly polarizable molecules (iodine), with emphasis on identifying preferential sorption sites in these systems. Radioactive iodine 129I, along with other volatile radionuclides (3H, 14C, Xe and Kr), represents a relevant component in the off-gas resulted during nuclear fuel reprocessing. Due to its very long half-life, 15.7 x 106 years, and potential health risks in humans, its efficient capture and long-term storage is of great importance. The leading iodine capture technology to date is based on trapping iodine in silver-exchanged mordenite. Our interests are directed towards improving existent capturing technologies, along with developing novel materials and alternative waste forms. Herein we report the first study that systematically monitors iodine loading onto MOFs, an emerging new class of porous solid-state materials. In this context, MOFs are of particular interest as: (i) they serve as ideal high capacity storage media, (ii) they hold potential for the selective adsorption from complex streams, due to their high versatility and tunability. This work highlights studies on both newly developed in our lab, and known highly porous MOFs that all possess distinct characteristics (specific surface area, pore volume, pore size, and dimension of the window access to the pore). The materials were loaded to saturation, where elemental iodine was introduced from solution, as well as from vapor phase. Uptakes in the range of {approx}125-150 wt% I2 sorbed were achieved, indicating that these materials outperform all other solid adsorbents to date in terms of overall capacity. Additionally, the loaded materials can be efficiently encapsulated in stable waste forms, including as low temperature sintering glasses. Ongoing studies are focused on gathering qualitative information with respect to localizing the physisorbed iodine molecules within the frameworks: X-ray single-crystal analyses, in conjunction with high pressure differential pair distribution function (d-PDF) studies aimed to identify preferential sites in the pores, and improve MOFs robustness. Furthermore, durability studies on the iodine loaded MOFs and subsequent waste forms include thermal analyses, SEM/EDS elemental mapping, and leach-durability testing. We anticipate for this in-depth analysis to further aid the design of advanced materials, capable to address major hallmarks: safe capture, stability and durability over extended timeframes.

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Structure-property relations in negative permittivity reststrahlen materials for IR metamaterial applications

Ihlefeld, Jon I.; Ginn, James C.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Kotula, Paul G.; Clem, Paul G.; Sinclair, Michael B.

We will present a study of the structure-property relations in Reststrahlen materials that possess a band of negative permittivities in the infrared. It will be shown that sub-micron defects strongly affect the optical response, resulting in significantly diminished permittivities. This work has implications on the use of ionic materials in IR-metamaterials.

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In-situ observation of ErD2 formation during D2 loading via neutron diffraction

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Snow, Clark S.; Wixom, Ryan R.

In an effort to better understand the structural changes occurring during hydrogen loading of erbium target materials, we have performed in situ D{sub 2} loading of erbium metal (powder) at temperature (450 C) with simultaneous neutron diffraction analysis. This experiment tracked the conversion of Er metal to the {alpha} erbium deuteride (solid-solution) phase and then into the {beta} (fluorite) phase. Complete conversion to ErD{sub 2.0} was accomplished at 10 Torr D{sub 2} pressure with deuterium fully occupying the tetrahedral sites in the fluorite lattice.

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Synthesis and characterization of metal oxide materials for thermochemical CO2 splitting using concentrated solar energy

Stechel-Speicher, Ellen B.; Coker, Eric N.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

The Sunshine to Petrol effort at Sandia aims to convert carbon dioxide and water to precursors for liquid hydrocarbon fuels using concentrated solar power. Significant advances have been made in the field of solar thermochemical CO{sub 2}-splitting technologies utilizing yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ)-supported ferrite composites. Conceptually, such materials work via the basic redox reactions: Fe{sub 3}O{sub 4} {yields} 3FeO + 0.5O{sub 2} (Thermal reduction, >1350 C) and 3FeO + CO{sub 2} {yields} Fe{sub 3}O{sub 4} + CO (CO{sub 2}-splitting oxidation, <1200 C). There has been limited fundamental characterization of the ferrite-based materials at the high temperatures and conditions present in these cycles. A systematic study of these composites is underway in an effort to begin to elucidate microstructure, structure-property relationships, and the role of the support on redox behavior under high-temperature reducing and oxidizing environments. In this paper the synthesis, structural characterization (including scanning electron microscopy and room temperature and in-situ x-ray diffraction), and thermogravimetric analysis of YSZ-supported ferrites will be reported.

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Synthesis and characterization of ferrite materials for thermochemical CO2 splitting using concentrated solar energy

Stechel-Speicher, Ellen B.; Coker, Eric N.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

The Sunshine to Petrol effort at Sandia aims to convert carbon dioxide and water to precursors for liquid hydrocarbon fuels using concentrated solar power. Significant advances have been made in the field of solar thermochemical CO{sub 2}-splitting technologies utilizing yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ)-supported ferrite composites. Conceptually, such materials work via the basic redox reactions: Fe{sub 3}O{sub 4} {yields} 3FeO + 0.5O{sub 2} (Thermal reduction, >1350 C) and 3FeO + CO{sub 2} {yields} Fe{sub 3}O{sub 4} + CO (CO{sub 2}-splitting oxidation, <1200 C). There has been limited fundamental characterization of the ferrite-based materials at the high temperatures and conditions present in these cycles. A systematic study of these composites is underway in an effort to begin to elucidate microstructure, structure-property relationships, and the role of the support on redox behavior under high-temperature reducing and oxidizing environments. In this paper the synthesis, structural characterization (including scanning electron microscopy and room temperature and in-situ x-ray diffraction), and thermogravimetric analysis of YSZ-supported ferrites will be reported.

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Crystal coherence length effects on the infrared optical response of MgO thin films

Ginn, James C.; Kotula, Paul G.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Clem, Paul G.; Sinclair, Michael B.

The role of crystal coherence length on the infrared optical response of MgO thin films was investigated with regard to Reststrahlen band photon-phonon coupling. Preferentially (001)-oriented sputtered and evaporated ion-beam assisted deposited thin films were prepared on silicon and annealed to vary film microstructure. Film crystalline coherence was characterized by x-ray diffraction line broadening and transmission electron microscopy. The infrared dielectric response revealed a strong dependence of dielectric resonance magnitude on crystalline coherence. Shifts to lower transverse optical phonon frequencies were observed with increased crystalline coherence. Increased optical phonon damping is attributed to increasing granularity and intergrain misorientation.

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Survey of basic XRD applications

Rodriguez, Marko A.

This 1/2 day workshop will survey various applications of XRD analysis, including in-situ analyses and neutron diffraction. The analyses will include phase ID, crystallite size and microstrain, preferred orientation and texture, lattice parameters and solid solutions, and residual stress. Brief overviews of high-temperature in-situ analysis, neutron diffraction and synchrotron studies will be included.

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In situ analysis of LiFePO4 batteries: Signal extraction by multivariate analysis

Powder Diffraction

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Van Benthem, Mark V.; Ingersoll, David I.; Vogel, Sven C.; Reiche, Helmut M.

The electrochemical reaction behavior of a commercial Li-ion battery (FePO4-based cathode, graphite-based anode) has been measured via in situ neutron diffraction. A multivariate analysis was successfully applied to the neutron diffraction data set facilitating in the determination of Li bearing phases participating in the electrochemical reaction in both the anode and cathode as a function of state-of-charge (SOC). The analysis resulted in quantified phase fraction values for FePO4 and FePO4 cathode compounds as well as the identification of staging behavior of Li6, Li12, Li24, and graphite phases in the anode. An additional Li-graphite phase has also been tentatively identified during electrochemical cycling as LiC48 at conditions of ∼5% to 15% SOC. © 2010 International Centre for Diffraction Data.

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Science at the interface : grain boundaries in nanocrystalline metals

Foiles, Stephen M.; Medlin, Douglas L.; Holm, Elizabeth A.; Brewer, Luke N.; Hattar, Khalid M.; Knapp, J.A.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

Interfaces are a critical determinant of the full range of materials properties, especially at the nanoscale. Computational and experimental methods developed a comprehensive understanding of nanograin evolution based on a fundamental understanding of internal interfaces in nanocrystalline nickel. It has recently been shown that nanocrystals with a bi-modal grain-size distribution possess a unique combination of high-strength, ductility and wear-resistance. We performed a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of the structure and motion of internal interfaces in nanograined metal and the resulting grain evolution. The properties of grain boundaries are computed for an unprecedented range of boundaries. The presence of roughening transitions in grain boundaries is explored and related to dramatic changes in boundary mobility. Experimental observations show that abnormal grain growth in nanograined materials is unlike conventional scale material in both the level of defects and the formation of unfavored phases. Molecular dynamics simulations address the origins of some of these phenomena.

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Determination of activation energy of intermixing in textured metal-metal multilayer films via two-dimensional X-ray diffraction

Powder Diffraction

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Adams, David P.; Tissot, Ralph G.

Activation energies for the intermixing reaction of textured metal-metal multilayer thin films have been determined using X-ray diffraction analysis. Kinetic data were collected utilizing an area detector so as to reduce intensity bias from changes in out-of-plane texture during the intermixing reaction. Activation energies for Al/Pt, Ni/Ti, and Co/Al metal-metal multilayer thin films have been determined as 95.4(2) kJ/mol, 201(13) kJ/mol, and 247(19) kJ/mol, respectively. © 2009 International Centre for Diffraction Data.

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Oxalate co-precipitation synthesis of calcium zirconate and calcium titanate powders

Tuttle, Bruce T.; Sipola, Diana L.; Garino, Terry J.; Mahoney, Patrick M.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Voigt, James A.

Fine powders of calcium zirconate (CaZrO{sub 3}, CZ) and calcium titanate (CaTiO{sub 3}, CT) were synthesized using a nonaqueous oxalate co-precipitation route from Ca(NO{sub 3}){sub 2}{center_dot}4 H{sub 2}O and group(IV) n-butoxides (Ti(OBu{sup n}){sub 4} or Zr(OBu{sup n}){sub 4}). Several reaction conditions and batch sizes (2-35 g) were explored to determine their influence on final particle size, morphology, and phase. Characterization of the as-prepared oxalate precursors, oven dried oxalate precursors (60-90 C), and calcined powders (635-900 C) were analyzed with TGA/DTA, XRD, TEM, and SEM. Densification and sintering studies on pressed CZ pellets at 1375 and 1400 C were also performed. Through the developed oxalate co-precipitation route, densification temperatures for CZ were lowered by 125 C from the 1500 C firing temperature required for conventional mixed oxide powders. Low field electrical tests of the CZ pellets indicated excellent dielectric properties with dielectric constants of {approx}30 and a dissipation factor of 0.0004 were measured at 1 kHz.

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Fundamental Materials Issues for Thermochemical H2O and CO2 Splitting: Final Report (FY08)

Coker, Eric N.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Ambrosini, Andrea A.; Stumpf, Roland R.; Stechel-Speicher, Ellen B.

Hydrogen and carbon monoxide may be produced using solar-thermal energy in two-stage reactions of water and carbon dioxide, respectively, over certain metal oxide materials. The most active materials observed experimentally for these processes are complex mixtures of ferrite and zirconia based solids, and it is not clear how far the ferrites, the zirconia, or a solid solution between the two participate in the change of oxidation state during the cycling. Identification of the key phases in the redox material that enable splitting is of paramount importance to developing a working model of the materials. A three-pronged approach was adopted here: computer modeling to determine thermodynamically favorable materials compositions, bench reactor testing to evaluate materials’ performance, and in-situ characterization of reactive materials to follow phase changes and identify the phases active for splitting. For the characterization and performance evaluation thrusts, cobalt ferrites were prepared by co-precipitation followed by annealing at 1400 °C. An in-situ X-ray diffraction capability was developed and tested, allowing phase monitoring in real time during thermochemical redox cycling. Key observations made for an un-supported cobalt ferrite include: 1) ferrite phases partially reduce to wustite upon heating to 1400 °C in helium; 2) exposing the material to air at 1100 °C causes immediate re-oxidation; 3) the re-oxidized material may be thermally reduced at 1400 °C under inert; 4) exposure of a reduced material to CO2 results in gradual re-oxidation at 1100 °C, but minimization of background O2-levels is essential; 5) even after several redox cycles, the lattice parameters of the ferrites remain constant, indicating that irreversible phase separation does not occur, at least over the first five cycles; 6) substituting chemical (hydrogen) reduction for thermal reduction resulted in formation of a CoFe metallic alloy. Materials were also evaluated for their CO2-splitting performance in bench reactor systems utilizing chemical reduction in place of thermal reduction. These tests lead to the following general conclusions: 1) despite over-reduction of the cobalt ferrite phase to CoFe alloy on chemical reduction, splitting of CO2 still occurs; 2) the kinetics of chemical reduction follow the sequence: un-supported < ZrO2-supported < yttria-stabilized ZrO2 (YSZ)-supported ferrite; 3) ferrite/YSZ re-oxidizes faster than ferrite/ZrO2 under CO2 in the range 400 – 700 °C. The temperature and pressure regimes in which the thermal reduction and water-splitting steps are thermodynamically favorable in terms of the enthalpy and entropy of oxide reduction, were determined. These metrics represent a useful design goal for any proposed water-splitting cycle. Applying this theoretical framework to available thermodynamic data, it was shown that none of the 105 binary oxide redox couples that were screened possess both energetically favorable reduction and oxidation steps. However, several driving forces, including low pressure and a large positive solid-state entropy of reduction of the oxide, have the potential to enable thermodynamically-favored two-step cycles.

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(E)-4-[(4-nitrophenyl)diazenyl]phenyl anthracene-9-carboxylate

Proposed for publication in Acta Crystallographica E.

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Zifer, Thomas Z.; Vance, Andrew L.; Wong, Bryan M.; Leonard, Francois L.

In the title compound, C{sub 27}H{sub 17}N{sub 3}O{sub 4}, the azo group displays a trans conformation and the dihedral angles between the central benzene ring and the pendant anthracene and nitrobenzene rings are 82.94 (7) and 7.30 (9){sup o}, respectively. In the crystal structure, weak C-H...O hydrogen bonds, likely associated with a dipole moment present on the molecule, help to consolidate the packing.

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Cupric siliconiobate. Synthesis and solid-state studies of a pseudosandwich-type heteropolyanion

Inorganic Chemistry

Anderson, Travis M.; Alam, Todd M.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Bixler, Joel N.; Xu, Wenqian; Parise, John B.; Nyman, M.

The Na+ and [Cu(en)2(H2O) 2]2+ (en = ethylenediamine) salt of a pseudosandwich-type heteropolyniobate forms upon prolonged heating of Cu(NO3)2 and hydrated Na14[(SiOH)2Si2Nb 16O54] in a mixed water-en solution. The structure [a = 14.992(2) Å, b = 25.426(4) Å, c = 30.046(4) Å, orthorhombic, Pnn2, R1 = 6.04%, based on 25869 unique reflections] consists of two [Na(SiOH)2Si2Nb16O54]13- units linked by six sodium cations, and this sandwich is charge-balanced by five [Cu(en)2(H2O)2]2+ complexes, seven protons, and three additional sodium atoms (all per a sandwich-type cluster). Diffuse-reflectance UV-vis indicates that there is a λmax at 383 nm for the CuII d-d transition and the 29Si MAS NMR spectrum has two peaks at -78.2 ppm (151 Hz) and -75.5 ppm (257 Hz) for the two pairs of symmetry-equivalent internal [SiO4]4- and external [SiO3(OH)]3- tetrahedra, respectively. Unlike tungsten-based sandwich-type complexes, the [Na(SiOH)2Si 2Nb16O54]13- units are linked exclusively by Na+ instead of one or more d-electron metals. © 2008 American Chemical Society.

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A beryllium dome specimen holder for XRD analysis of air sensitive materials

Powder Diffraction

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Boyle, Timothy J.; Yang, Pin Y.; Harris, Damon L.

A specially designed specimen holder employing a beryllium dome has been fabricated for collection of X-ray diffraction (XRD) data from highly reactive materials. The specimen holder has a robust O-ring type seal (< 10-9 Torr) and no observed intensity artifacts in the 1° to 150° 2θ range. The design also minimizes specimen displacement errors and allows for analysis of both powders and bulk specimens (i.e., pellets). The simple design makes for straightforward assembly of the holder within the confines of a glove box. XRD analysis of hygroscopic LaBr3 powders collected with this holder are suitable for Rietveld structure refinement, yielding unit cell lattice parameters of a=7.9703(6) Å and c=4.5122(6) Å cell volume= 248.44(6) Å3; Rp =7.70%. © 2008 International Centre for Diffraction Data.

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In-situ time-of-flight neutron diffraction of ErD2 (beta phase) formation during D2 loading

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Snow, Clark S.; Wixom, Ryan R.

In an effort to better understand the structural changes occurring during hydrogen loading of erbium target materials, we have performed D{sub 2} loading of erbium metal (powder) with simultaneous neutron diffraction analysis. This experiment tracked the conversion of Er metal to the {alpha} erbium deuteride (solid-solution) phase and then on to the {beta} (fluorite) phase. Complete conversion to ErD{sub 2.0} was accomplished at 10 Torr D{sub 2} pressure with deuterium fully occupying the tetrahedral sites in the fluorite lattice. Increased D{sub 2} pressure (up to 500 Torr at 450 C) revealed {approx}10 % deuterium occupation of the octahedral sites. Subsequent vacuum pumping of the sample at 450 C removed octahedral site occupancy while maintaining tetrahedral deuterium occupancy, thereby yielding stoichiometric ErD{sub 2.0} {beta} phase.

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Summary of Sandia research on metal tritides : FY 2007

Snow, Clark S.; Kammler, Daniel K.; Ferrizz, Robert F.; Espada Castillo, Loren I.; Wixom, Ryan R.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

Sandia National Laboratories has cradle to grave responsibility for all neutron generators in the US nuclear weapons stockpile. As such, much research effort is exerted to develop a comprehensive understanding of all the major components of a neutron generator. One of the key components is the tritium containing target. The target is a thin metal tritide film. Sandia's research into metal tritides began in the early 1960's with a collaboration with the Denver Research Institute (DRI) and continues to this day with a major in house research effort. This document is an attempt to briefly summarize what is known about the aging of erbium tritide and to review the major publications conducted at Sandia in FY 07. First, a review of our knowledge of helium in erbium tritide will be presented. Second, executive summaries of the six major SAND reports regarding neutron tube targets published in FY07 by Department 2735, the Applied Science and Technology Maturation Department, and research partners are presented.

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Helium release and microstructural changes in Er(D,T)2-x3Hex films)

Snow, Clark S.; Brewer, Luke N.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Kotula, Paul G.; Banks, J.C.; Mangan, Michael M.

Er(D,T){sub 2-x} {sup 3}He{sub x}, erbium di-tritide, films of thicknesses 500 nm, 400 nm, 300 nm, 200 nm, and 100 nm were grown and analyzed by Transmission Electron Microscopy, X-Ray Diffraction, and Ion Beam Analysis to determine variations in film microstructure as a function of film thickness and age, due to the time-dependent build-up of {sup 3}He in the film from the radioactive decay of tritium. Several interesting features were observed: One, the amount of helium released as a function of film thickness is relatively constant. This suggests that the helium is being released only from the near surface region and that the helium is not diffusing to the surface from the bulk of the film. Two, lenticular helium bubbles are observed as a result of the radioactive decay of tritium into {sup 3}He. These bubbles grow along the [111] crystallographic direction. Three, a helium bubble free zone, or 'denuded zone' is observed near the surface. The size of this region is independent of film thickness. Four, an analysis of secondary diffraction spots in the Transmission Electron Microscopy study indicate that small erbium oxide precipitates, 5-10 nm in size, exist throughout the film. Further, all of the films had large erbium oxide inclusions, in many cases these inclusions span the depth of the film.

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In situ X-ray diffraction analysis of (CFx)n batteries: signal extraction by multivariate analysis

Journal of Applied Crystallography

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Nagasubramanian, Ganesan N.; Keenan, Michael R.

In this study, (CFx)n cathode reaction during discharge has been investigated using in situ X-ray diffraction (XRD). Mathematical treatment of the in situ XRD data set was performed using multivariate curve resolution with alternating least squares (MCR–ALS), a technique of multivariate analysis. MCR–ALS analysis successfully separated the relatively weak XRD signal intensity due to the chemical reaction from the other inert cell component signals. The resulting dynamic reaction component revealed the loss of (CFx)n cathode signal together with the simultaneous appearance of LiF by-product intensity. Careful examination of the XRD data set revealed an additional dynamic component which may be associated with the formation of an intermediate compound during the discharge process.

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An aqueous route to [Ta6O19]8- and solid-state studies of isostructural niobium and tantalum oxide complexes

Anderson, Travis M.; Alam, Todd M.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

Tantalate materials play a vital role in our high technology society: tantalum capacitors are found in virtually every cell phone. Furthermore, electronic characteristics and the incredibly inert nature of tantalates renders them ideal for applications such as biomedical implants, nuclear waste forms, ferroelectrics, piezoelectrics, photocatalysts and optical coatings. The inert and insoluble nature of tantalates is not fundamentally understood; and furthermore poor solubility renders fabrication of novel or optimized tantalates very difficult. We have developed a soft chemical route to water-soluble tantalum oxide clusters that can serve as both precursors for novel tantalate materials and ideal models for experimental and computational approaches to understanding the unusually inert behavior of tantalates. The water soluble cluster, [Ta6O19]8- is small, highly symmetric, and contains the representative oxygen types of a metal oxide surface, and thus ideally mimics a complex tantalate surface in a simplistic form that can be studied unambiguously. Furthermore; in aqueous solution, these highly charged and super-basic clusters orchestrate surprising acid-base behavior that most likely plays an important role in the inertness of related oxide surfaces. Our unique synthetic approach to the [Ta6O19]8- cluster allowed for unprecedented enrichment with isotopic labels (17O), enabling detailed kinetic and mechanistic studies of the behavior of cluster oxygens, as well as their acid-base behavior. This SAND report is a collection of two publications that resulted from these efforts.

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The effects of composition, temperature and sample size on the sintering of chem-prep high field varistors

Garino, Terry J.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

The sintering behavior of Sandia chem-prep high field varistor materials was studied using techniques including in situ shrinkage measurements, optical and scanning electron microscopy and x-ray diffraction. A thorough literature review of phase behavior, sintering and microstructure in Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3}-ZnO varistor systems is included. The effects of Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3} content (from 0.25 to 0.56 mol%) and of sodium doping level (0 to 600 ppm) on the isothermal densification kinetics was determined between 650 and 825 C. At {ge} 750 C samples with {ge}0.41 mol% Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3} have very similar densification kinetics, whereas samples with {le}0.33 mol% begin to densify only after a period of hours at low temperatures. The effect of the sodium content was greatest at {approx}700 C for standard 0.56 mol% Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3} and was greater in samples with 0.30 mol% Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3} than for those with 0.56 mol%. Sintering experiments on samples of differing size and shape found that densification decreases and mass loss increases with increasing surface area to volume ratio. However, these two effects have different causes: the enhancement in densification as samples increase in size appears to be caused by a low oxygen internal atmosphere that develops whereas the mass loss is due to the evaporation of bismuth oxide. In situ XRD experiments showed that the bismuth is initially present as an oxycarbonate that transforms to metastable {beta}-Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3} by 400 C. At {approx}650 C, coincident with the onset of densification, the cubic binary phase, Bi{sub 38}ZnO{sub 58} forms and remains stable to >800 C, indicating that a eutectic liquid does not form during normal varistor sintering ({approx}730 C). Finally, the formation and morphology of bismuth oxide phase regions that form on the varistors surfaces during slow cooling were studied.

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Alloy depletion and martensite formation during glass-to-metal joining of austenitic stainless steels

Materials Science and Technology Conference and Exhibition, MS and T'07 - "Exploring Structure, Processing, and Applications Across Multiple Materials Systems"

Susan, D.F.; Perricone, M.J.; Robino, C.V.; Michael, Joseph R.; McKenzie, Bonnie B.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

Pre-oxidized and glass-to-metal (GtM) sealed austenitic stainless steels were found to display a ferritic layer near the metal/oxide interface, as determined by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). Electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) showed that this layer was depleted in alloying elements due to the oxidation and sealing process. Characterization of the morphology suggested that it formed through the martensite transformation mechanism. Moreover, this observed layer was correlated to the composition gradient through published empirical relationships for martensite-start (Ms) temperatures. Due to Cr, Mn, and Si depletion during pre-oxidation and glass sealing, Ms temperatures near room temperature are possible in this surface region. Further support for a martensitic transformation was provided by thermochemical modeling. Possible detrimental ramifications of bulk composition, surface depletion, and phase transformations on GtM sealing are discussed. Copyright © 2007 MS&T'07®.

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Structure and properties of Ni/Ti thin films used for brazing

Proceedings of the 3rd International Brazing and Soldering Conference

Adams, D.P.; Bai, M.M.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Moore, J.J.; Brewer, Luke N.; Kelley, J.B.

The properties of energetic thin films considered for alternative braze[1] techniques are investigated. Vapor-deposited Ni/Ti multilayer foils having a net 1:1 stoichiometry exhibit self-propagating, high temperature combustion reactions. The rate of reaction depends on Ni/Ti multilayer design with steady-state propagation speeds of freestanding foils measured from 0.2 to 1.0m/s. Transmission electron microscopy and x-ray diffraction further show that NiTi films reacted in a self-propagating mode have a fine-grain, polycrystalline microstructure. All films are composed of cubic B2 and monoclinic B19' phases with some having NiTi2 or Ni3Ti precipitates. Copyright © 2006 ASM International®.

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Rhombohedral AlPt films formed by self-propagating, high temperature synthesis

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Kotula, Paul G.

High-purity AlPt thin films prepared by self-propagating, high temperature combustion synthesis show evidence for a new rhombohedral phase. Sputter deposited Al/Pt multilayers of various designs are reacted at different rates in air and in vacuum, and each form a new trigonal/hexagonal aluminide phase with unit cell parameters a = 15.571(8) {angstrom}, c = 5.304(1) {angstrom}, space group R-3 (148), and Z, the number of formula units within a unit cell, = 39. The lattice is isostructural to that of the AlPd R-3 lattice as reported by Matkovic and Schubert (Matkovic, 1977). Reacted films have a random in-plane crystallographic texture, a modest out-of-plane (001) texture, and equiaxed grains with dimensions on the order of film thickness.

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Stress creation during Ni-Mn alloy electrodeposition

Proposed for publication in the Journal of Applied Physics.

Hearne, Sean J.; Brewer, Luke N.; Foiles, Stephen M.; Floro, Jerrold A.; Frazer, Colleen S.; Tissot, Ralph G.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Hlava, Paul F.

The stress evolution during electrodeposition of NiMn from a sulfamate-based bath was investigated as a function of Mn concentration and current density. The NiMn stress evolution with film thickness exhibited an initial high transitional stress region followed by a region of steady-state stress with a magnitude that depended on deposition rate, similar to the previously reported stress evolution in electrodeposited Ni [S. J. Hearne and J. A. Floro, J. Appl. Phys. 97, 014901-1 (2005)]. The incorporation of increasing amounts of Mn resulted in a linear increase in the steady-state stress at constant current density. However, no significant changes in the texture or grain size were observed, which indicates that an atomistic process is driving the changes in steady-state stress. Additionally, microstrain measured by ex situ x-ray diffraction increased with increasing Mn content, which was likely the result of localized lattice distortions associated with substitutional incorporation of Mn and/or increased twin density.

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Effects of niobium addition on microstructural and electrical properties of lead zirconate titanate solid solution (PZT 95/5)

Ceramic Engineering and Science Proceedings

Yang, Pin; Voigt, James A.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Moore, Roger H.; Burns, George B.

The impacts of small niobium additions to processing, microstructure, and electrical properties in the Zr-rich lead zirconate titanate ceramics (PZT 95/5) were investigated. The influence of niobium content on dielectric responses and the characteristics of ferroelectric behaviors, as well as the relative phase stability and the hydrostatic pressure induced ferroelectric-to- antiferroelectric phase transformation are reported. Results indicate that increasing the niobium concentration in the solid solutions enhances densification, refines the microstructure, decreases dielectric constant and spontaneous polarization, and stabilizes the ferroelectric phase. The stabilization of ferroelectric phase with respect to the antiferroelectric phase near PZT 95/5 composition dramatically increases the pressure required for the ferroelectric-to-antiferroelectric phase transformation. These observations were correlated to the creation of A-site vacancies and a slight modification of the crystal structure. The importance of these composition-property relationships on device application will be presented.

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X-ray and neutron diffraction of Er-hydride films

Rodriguez, Marko A.

The outline of this report is: (1) structures of hexagonal Er meal, ErH{sub 2} fluorite, and molybdenum; (2) texture issues and processing effects; (3) idea of pole figure integration; and (4) promising neutron diffraction work. Summary of this report are: (1) ErD{sub 2} and ErT{sub 2} film microstructures are strongly effected by processing conditions; (2) both x-ray and neutron diffraction are being pursued to help diagnose structure/property issues regarding ErT{sub 2} films and these correlations to He retention/release; (3) texture issues are great challenges for determination of site occupancy; and (4) work on pole-figure-integration looks to have promise addressing texture issues in ErD{sub 2} and ErT{sub 2} films.

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The effect of lead stoichiometry on the dielectric performance of niobium modified PZT 95/5 ceramics

Ceramic Transactions

Yang, Pin Y.; Voigt, James A.; Lockwood, Steven J.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Burns, George B.; Watson, Chad S.

The electrical properties of lead zirconate titanate ceramics near the 95/5 composition are extremely sensitive to the chemical composition and processing conditions. To precisely control the lead stoichiometry in a solid solution has been a challenge because of lead volatility during high temperature sintering. In this study, we investigated the effect of the amount of lead in the solid solution on crystal structure, dielectric behavior, and phase transformation characteristics for chemically prepared niobium modified PZT 95/5 ceramics. Implications are important for process control and assurance of material performance.

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Analytical investigation of AlCl[3]/SO[2]Cl[2] catholyte materials for secondary fuze reserve batteries

Boyle, Timothy J.; Segall, Judith M.; Cherry, Brian R.; Butler, Paul C.; Alam, Todd M.; Tallant, David T.; Malizia, Louis A.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Ingersoll, David I.; Clark, Nancy H.; Garcia, Manuel J.; Simpson, Regina L.

Exploration of the fundamental chemical behavior of the AlCl{sub 3}/SO{sub 2}Cl{sub 2} catholyte system for the ARDEC Self-Destruct Fuze Reserve Battery Project under accelerated aging conditions was completed using a variety of analytical tools. Four different molecular species were identified in this solution, three of which are major. The relative concentrations of the molecular species formed were found to depend on aging time, initial concentrations, and storage temperature, with each variable affecting the kinetics and thermodynamics of this complex reaction system. We also evaluated the effect of water on the system, and determined that it does not play a role in dictating the observed molecular species present in solution. The first Al-containing species formed was identified as the dimer [Al({mu}-Cl)Cl{sub 2}]{sub 2}, and was found to be in equilibrium with the monomer, AlCl{sub 3}. The second species formed in the reaction scheme was identified by single crystal X-ray diffraction studies as [Cl{sub 2}Al({mu}-O{sub 2}SCl)]{sub 2} (I), a scrambled AlCl{sub 3}{center_dot}SO{sub 2} adduct. The SO{sub 2}(g) present, as well as CL{sub 2}(g), was formed through decomposition of SO{sub 2}CL{sub 2}. The SO{sub 2}(g) generated was readily consumed by AlCl{sub 3} to form the adduct 1 which was experimentally verified when 1 was also isolated from the reaction of SO{sub 2}(g) and AlCl {sub 3}. The third species found was tentatively identified as a compound having the general formula {l_brace}[Al(O)Cl{sub 2}][OSCl{sub 2}]{r_brace}{sub n}. This was based on {sup 27}Al NMR data that revealed a species with tetrahedrally coordinated Al metal centers with increased oxygen coordination and the fact that the precipitate, or gel, that forms over time was shown by Raman spectroscopic studies to possess a component that is consistent with SOCl{sub 2}. The precursor to the precipitate should have similar constituents, thus the assignment of {l_brace}[Al(O)Cl{sub 2}][OSCl{sub 2}]{r_brace}{sub n}. The precipitate was further identified by solid state {sup 27}Al MAS NMR data to possess predominantly octahedral A1 metal center which implies {l_brace}[Al(O)Cl{sub 2}][OSCl{sub 2}]{r_brace}{sub n} must undergo some internal rearrangements. A reaction sequence has been proposed to account for the various molecular species identified in this complex reaction mixture during the aging process. The metallurgical welds were of high quality. These results were all visually determined there was no mechanical testing performed. However, it is recommended that the end plate geometry and weld be changed. If the present weld strength, based on .003' - .005' penetration, is sufficient for unit performance, the end plate thickness can be reduced to .005' instead of the .020' thickness. This will enable the plug to be stamped so that it can form a cap rather than a plug and solve existing problems and increase the amount of catholyte which may be beneficial to battery performance.

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Simultaneous in Situ Neutron Diffraction Studies of the Anode and Cathode in a Lithium-Ion Cell

Electrochemical and Solid-State Letters

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Ingersoll, David I.; Vogel, Sven C.; Williams, Darrick J.

In situ neutron diffraction analysis was employed to study the behavior of the cathode and anode materials in a commercial Li-ion cell (Saehan Enertech, Inc) using the exact configuration of the commercial product. Accurate lattice parameters were refined for the LiCoO2 type cathode based on measurements collected as a function of the state of charge, Simultaneous structural characterization was possible on the graphitic anode as well. The simultaneous direct correlation of structural information for both the anode and cathode with the electrochemical data provided a highly detailed picture of the behavior of the active cell materials that ultimately underlie the cell performance. © 2003 The Electrochemical Society. All rights reserved.

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In-situ characterization of colloidal soft solution processes

Bell, Nelson S.; Bell, Nelson S.; Tallant, David T.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

The purpose of this program was to investigate methods to characterize the colloidal stability of nanoparticles during the synthesis reaction, and to characterize their organization related to interparticle forces. Studies were attempted using Raman spectroscopy and ultrasonic attenuation to observe the nucleation and growth process with characterization of stability parameters such as the zeta potential. The application of the techniques available showed that the instrumentation requires high sensitivity to the concentration of the system. Optical routes can be complicated by the scattering effects of colloidal suspensions, but dilution can cause a lowering of signal that prevents collection of data. Acoustic methods require a significant particle concentration, preventing the observation of nucleation events. Studies on the dispersion of nanoparticles show that electrostatic routes are unsuccessful with molecular surfactants at high particle concentration due to electrostatic interaction collapse by counterions. The study of molecular surfactants show that steric lengths on the order of 2 nm are successful for dispersion of nanoparticle systems at high particle concentration, similar to dispersion with commercial polyelectrolyte surfactants.

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Synthesis, structure, and molecular modeling of a titanoniobate isopolyanion

Proposed for publication in the Journal of Solid-State Chemistry.

Nyman, M.; Nyman, M.; Criscenti, Louise C.; Bonhomme, F.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Cygan, Randall T.

Polyoxoniobate chemistry, both in the solid state and in solution is dominated by [Nb{sub 6}O{sub 19}]{sup 8-}, the Lindquist ion. Recently, we have expanded this chemistry through use of hydrothermal synthesis. The current publication illustrates how use of heteroatoms is another means of diversifying polyoxoniobate chemistry. Here we report the synthesis of Na{sub 8}[Nb{sub 8}Ti{sub 2}O{sub 28}] {center_dot} 34H{sub 2}O [{bar 1}] and its structural characterization from single-crystal X-ray data. This salt crystallizes in the P-1 space group (a = 11.829(4) {angstrom}, b = 12.205(4) {angstrom}, c = 12.532(4) {angstrom}, {alpha} = 97.666(5){sup o}, {beta} = 113.840(4){sup o}, {gamma} = 110.809(4){sup o}), and the decameric anionic cluster [Nb{sub 8}Ti{sub 2}O{sub 28}]{sup 8-} has the same cluster geometry as the previously reported [Nb{sub 10}O{sub 28}]{sup 6-} and [V{sub 10}O{sub 28}]{sup 6-}. Molecular modeling studies of [Nb{sub 10}O{sub 28}]{sup 6-} and all possible isomers of [Nb{sub 8}Ti{sub 2}O{sub 28}]{sup 8-} suggest that this cluster geometry is stabilized by incorporating the Ti{sup 4+} into cluster positions in which edge-sharing is maximized. In this manner, the overall repulsion between edge-sharing octahedra within the cluster is minimized, as Ti{sup 4+} is both slightly smaller and of lower charge than Nb{sup 5+}. Synthetic studies also show that while the [Nb{sub 10}O{sub 28}]{sup 6-} cluster is difficult to obtain, the [Nb{sub 8}Ti{sub 2}O{sub 28}]{sup 8-} cluster can be synthesized reproducibly and is stable in neutral to basic solutions, as well.

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Combined x-ray/neutron Rietveld refinement of Ln-doped PZT perovskites

Rodriguez, Marko A.; Rodriguez, Marko A.; Boyle, Timothy J.; Tuttle, Bruce T.

Combined XRD/neutron Rietveld refinements were performed on PbZr{sub 0.30}Ti{sub 0.70}O{sub 3} powder samples doped with nominally 4% Ln (where Ln = Ce, Nd, Tb, Y, or Yb). Resulting refined structural parameters indicated that the lattice parameters and volume changes in the tetragonal perovskite unit cell were consistent with A and/or B-site doping of the structure. Ce doping is inconsistent with respect to its rather large atomic radius, but is understood in terms of its oxidation to the Ce{sup +4} oxidation state in the structure. Results of the B-site displacement values for the Ti/Zr site indicate that amphoteric doping of Ln cations in the structure results in superior properties for PLnZT materials.

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Results 1–200 of 220
Results 1–200 of 220