1,693 research outputs found
From isomorphism to polymorphism: connecting interzeolite transformations to structural and graph similarity
Zeolites are nanoporous crystalline materials with abundant industrial
applications. Despite sustained research, only 235 different zeolite frameworks
have been realized out of millions of hypothetical ones predicted by
computational enumeration. Structure-property relationships in zeolite
synthesis are very complex and only marginally understood. Here, we apply
structure and graph-based unsupervised machine learning to gain insight on
zeolite frameworks and how they relate to experimentally observed polymorphism
and phase transformations. We begin by describing zeolite structures using the
Smooth Overlap of Atomic Positions method, which clusters crystals with similar
cages and density in a way consistent with traditional hand-selected composite
building units. To also account for topological differences, zeolite crystals
are represented as multigraphs and compared by isomorphism tests. We find that
fourteen different pairs and one trio of known frameworks are graph isomorphic.
Based on experimental interzeolite conversions and occurrence of competing
phases, we propose that the availability of kinetic-controlled transformations
between metastable zeolite frameworks is related to their similarity in the
graph space. When this description is applied to enumerated structures, over
3,400 hypothetical structures are found to be isomorphic to known frameworks,
and thus might be realized from their experimental counterparts. Using a
continuous similarity metric, the space of known zeolites shows additional
overlaps with experimentally observed phase transformations. Hence, graph-based
similarity approaches suggest a venue for realizing novel zeolites from
existing ones by providing a relationship between pairwise structure similarity
and experimental transformations.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Report of the Workshop on Sustainable Rural Telecentres in Africa
This workshop aims to contribute to the identification of key factors of success for sustainable rural Telecentres in Africa
Magnetic ground state of pyrochlore oxides close to metal-insulator boundary probed by muon spin rotation
Magnetism of ruthernium pyrochlore oxides A2Ru2O7 (A = Hg, Cd, Ca), whose
electronic properties within a localized ion picture are characterized by
non-degenerate t2g orbitals (Ru5+, 4d3) and thereby subject to geometrical
frustration, has been investigated by muon spin rotation/relaxation (muSR)
technique. The A cation (mostly divalent) was varied to examine the effect of
covalency (Hg > Cd > Ca) on their electronic property. In a sample with A = Hg
that exhibits a clear metal-insulator (MI) transition below >> 100 K (which is
associated with a weak structural transition), a nearly commensurate magnetic
order is observed to develop in accordance with the MI transition. Meanwhile,
in the case of A = Cd where the MI transition is suppressed to the level of
small anomaly in the resistivity, the local field distribution probed by muon
indicates emergence of a certain magnetic inhomogeneity below {\guillemotright}
30 K. Moreover, in Ca2Ru2O7 that remains metallic, we find a highly
inhomogeneous local magnetism below >>25 K that comes from randomly oriented Ru
moments and thus described as a "frozen spin liquid" state. The systematic
trend of increasing randomness and itinerant character with decreasing
covalency suggests close relationship between these two characters. As a
reference for the effect of orbital degeneracy and associated Jahn-Teller
instability, we examine a tetravalent ruthernium pyrochlore, Tl2Ru2O7 (Ru4+,
4d4), where the result of muSR indicates a non-magnetic ground state that is
consistent with the formation of the Haldane chains suggested by neutron
diffraction experiment.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure
Equation of State for Parallel Rigid Spherocylinders
The pair distribution function of monodisperse rigid spherocylinders is
calculated by Shinomoto's method, which was originally proposed for hard
spheres. The equation of state is derived by two different routes: Shinomoto's
original route, in which a hard wall is introduced to estimate the pressure
exerted on it, and the virial route. The pressure from Shinomoto's original
route is valid only when the length-to-width ratio is less than or equal to
0.25 (i.e., when the spherocylinders are nearly spherical). The virial equation
of state is shown to agree very well with the results of numerical simulations
of spherocylinders with length-to-width ratio greater than or equal to 2
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