71 research outputs found

    Phase Transitions and Their Interaction with Dislocations in Silicon

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    In this paper, phase transformations (PTs) in silicon were investigated through molecular dynamics (MD) using Tersoff potential. In the first step, simulations of PTs in single crystal silicon under various stress-controlled loading were carried out. Results shows that all instability points under various stress states are described by criteria, which are linear in the space of normal stresses. There is a region in the stress space in which conditions for direct and reverse PTs coincide and a unique homogeneous phase transition (without nucleation) can be realized. Finally, phase transition in bi-crystalline silicon with a dislocation pileup along the grain boundary (GB) was carried out. Results showed that the phase transition pressure first decreases linearly with the number of dislocation pileups and then reaches a plateau with the accumulation of dislocations in the pileup. The maximum reduction of phase transition pressure is 30% compared to that for perfect single crystalline silicon

    Prefigurative politics between ethical practice and absent promise

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    'Prefigurative politics' has become a popular term for social movements' ethos of unity between means and ends, but its conceptual genealogy has escaped attention. This article disentangles two components: an ethical revolutionary practice, chiefly indebted to the anarchist tradition, which fights domination while directly constructing alternatives; and prefiguration as a recursive temporal framing, unknowingly drawn from Christianity, in which a future radiates backwards on its past. Tracing prefiguration from the Church Fathers to politicised re-surfacings in the Diggers and the New Left, I associate it with Koselleck's 'process of reassurance' in a pre-ordained historical path. Contrasted to recursive prefiguration are the generative temporal framings couching defences of means-ends unity in the anarchist tradition. These emphasised the path dependency of revolutionary social transformation and the ethical underpinnings of anti-authoritarian politics. Misplaced recursive terminology, I argue, today conveniently distracts from the generative framing of means-ends unity, as the promise of revolution is replaced by that of environmental and industrial collapse. Instead of prefiguration, I suggest conceiving of means-ends unity in terms of Bloch's 'concrete utopia', and associating it with 'anxious' and 'catastrophic' forms of hope

    Generation of subnanometric platinum with high stability during transformation of a 2D zeolite into 3D

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    [EN] Single metal atoms and metal clusters have attracted much attention thanks to their advantageous capabilities as heterogeneous catalysts. However, the generation of stable single atoms and clusters on a solid support is still challenging. Herein, we report a new strategy for the generation of single Pt atoms and Pt clusters with exceptionally high thermal stability, formed within purely siliceous MCM-22 during the growth of a two-dimensional zeolite into three dimensions. These subnanometric Pt species are stabilized by MCM-22, even after treatment in air up to 540 degrees C. Furthermore, these stable Pt species confined within internal framework cavities show size-selective catalysis for the hydrogenation of alkenes. High-temperature oxidation-reduction treatments result in the growth of encapsulated Pt species to small nanoparticles in the approximate size range of 1 to 2 nm. The stability and catalytic activity of encapsulated Pt species is also reflected in the dehydrogenation of propane to propylene.This work was funded by the Spanish Government (Consolider Ingenio 2010-MULTICAT (CSD2009-00050) and MAT2014-52085-C2-1-P) and by the Generalitat Valenciana (Prometeo). The Severo Ochoa Program (SEV-2012-0267) is gratefully acknowledged. L.L. thanks ITQ for a contract. The authors also thank the Microscopy Service of UPV for the TEM and STEM measurements. The HAADF-HRSTEM works were conducted in the Laboratorio de Microscopias Avanzadas (LMA) at the Instituto de Nanociencia de Aragon (INA)-Universidad de Zaragoza (Spain), a Spanish ICTS National Facility. Some of the research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Program under Grant Agreement 312483-ESTEEM2 (Integrated Infrastructure Initiative-I3). R.A. also acknowledges funding from the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (FIS2013-46159-C3-3-P) and the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sldodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 642742.Liu, L.; Díaz Morales, UM.; Arenal, R.; Agostini, G.; Concepción Heydorn, P.; Corma Canós, A. (2017). Generation of subnanometric platinum with high stability during transformation of a 2D zeolite into 3D. Nature Materials. 16(1):132-138. https://doi.org/10.1038/NMAT4757S132138161Boronat, M., Leyva-Perez, A. & Corma, A. Theoretical and experimental insights into the origin of the catalytic activity of subnanometric gold clusters: attempts to predict reactivity with clusters and nanoparticles of gold. Acc. Chem. Res. 47, 834–844 (2014).Flytzani-Stephanopoulos, M. & Gates, B. C. Atomically dispersed supported metal catalysts. Ann. Rev. Chem. Bio. Eng. 3, 545–574 (2012).Gates, B. C. Supported metal clusters: synthesis, structure, and catalysis. Chem. Rev. 95, 511–522 (1995).Corma, A. et al. Exceptional oxidation activity with size-controlled supported gold clusters of low atomicity. Nat. Chem. 5, 775–781 (2013).Yang, M. et al. Catalytically active Au-O(OH)x-species stabilized by alkali ions on zeolites and mesoporous oxides. Science 346, 1498–1501 (2014).Rivallan, M. et al. Platinum sintering on H-ZSM-5 followed by chemometrics of CO adsorption and 2D pressure-jump IR spectroscopy of adsorbed species. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 49, 785–789 (2010).Zecevic, J., van der Eerden, A. M., Friedrich, H., de Jongh, P. E. & de Jong, K. P. Heterogeneities of the nanostructure of platinum/zeolite Y catalysts revealed by electron tomography. ACS Nano 7, 3698–3705 (2013).Philippaerts, A. et al. Unprecedented shape selectivity in hydrogenation of triacylglycerol molecules with Pt/ZSM-5 zeolite. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 50, 3947–3949 (2011).Kim, J., Kim, W., Seo, Y., Kim, J.-C. & Ryoo, R. n-Heptane hydroisomerization over Pt/MFI zeolite nanosheets: effects of zeolite crystal thickness and platinum location. J. Catalys. 301, 187–197 (2013).Goel, S., Wu, Z., Zones, S. I. & Iglesia, E. Synthesis and catalytic properties of metal clusters encapsulated within small-pore (SOD, GIS, ANA) zeolites. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 134, 17688–17695 (2012).Choi, M., Wu, Z. & Iglesia, E. Mercaptosilane-assisted synthesis of metal clusters within zeolites and catalytic consequences of encapsulation. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 132, 9129–9137 (2010).Choi, M., Yook, S. & Kim, H. Hydrogen spillover in encapsulated metal catalysts: new opportunities for designing advanced hydroprocessing catalysts. ChemCatChem 7, 1048–1057 (2015).Kulkarni, A., Lobo-Lapidus, R. J. & Gates, B. C. Metal clusters on supports: synthesis, structure, reactivity, and catalytic properties. Chem. Commun. 46, 5997–6015 (2010).Guzman, J. & Gates, B. C. Supported molecular catalysts: metal complexes and clusters on oxides and zeolites. Dalton Trans. 1, 3303–3318 (2003).Leonowicz, M. E., Lawton, J. A., Lawton, S. L. & Rubin, M. K. MCM-22: a molecular sieve with two independent multidimensional channel systems. Science 264, 1910–1913 (1994).Camblor, M. A. et al. A new microporous polymorph of silica isomorphous to zeolite MCM-22. Chem. Mater. 8, 2415–2417 (1996).Hyotanishi, M., Isomura, Y., Yamamoto, H., Kawasaki, H. & Obora, Y. Surfactant-free synthesis of palladium nanoclusters for their use in catalytic cross-coupling reactions. Chem. Commun. 47, 5750–5752 (2011).Duchesne, P. N. & Zhang, P. Local structure of fluorescent platinum nanoclusters. Nanoscale 4, 4199–4205 (2012).Lu, J., Aydin, C., Browning, N. D. & Gates, B. C. Imaging isolated gold atom catalytic sites in zeolite NaY. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 51, 5842–5846 (2012).Yacamán, M. 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    Phase-field modeling of eutectic structures on the nanoscale: the effect of anisotropy

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    This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Journal of Materials Science. The final authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10853-017-0853-8A simple phase-field model is used to address anisotropic eutectic freezing on the nanoscale in two (2D) and three dimensions (3D). Comparing parameter-free simulations with experiments, it is demonstrated that the employed model can be made quantitative for Ag-Cu. Next, we explore the effect of material properties, and the conditions of freezing on the eutectic pattern. We find that the anisotropies of kinetic coefficient and the interfacial free energies (solid-liquid and solid-solid), the crystal misorientation relative to pulling, the lateral temperature gradient, play essential roles in determining the eutectic pattern. Finally, we explore eutectic morphologies, which form when one of the solid phases are faceted, and investigate cases, in which the kinetic anisotropy for the two solid phases are drastically different

    Surface plasticity: theory and computation

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    Surfaces of solids behave differently from the bulk due to different atomic rearrangements and processes such as oxidation or aging. Such behavior can become markedly dominant at the nanoscale due to the large ratio of surface area to bulk volume. The surface elasticity theory (Gurtin and Murdoch in Arch Ration Mech Anal 57(4):291–323, 1975) has proven to be a powerful strategy to capture the size-dependent response of nano-materials. While the surface elasticity theory is well-established to date, surface plasticity still remains elusive and poorly understood. The objective of this contribution is to establish a thermodynamically consistent surface elastoplasticity theory for finite deformations. A phenomenological isotropic plasticity model for the surface is developed based on the postulated elastoplastic multiplicative decomposition of the surface superficial deformation gradient. The non-linear governing equations and the weak forms thereof are derived. The numerical implementation is carried out using the finite element method and the consistent elastoplastic tangent of the surface contribution is derived. Finally, a series of numerical examples provide further insight into the problem and elucidate the key features of the proposed theory. © 2017 Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Natur

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