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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(12): 8471-8477, 2017 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28287237

ABSTRACT

To clarify controversial structures and phase stability in the Li-B system, we predicted energetically favorable compounds and crystal structures of the Li-B binary system at ambient pressure, mainly including Li6B5, LiB2, and LiB3, from ab initio evolutionary structure simulations and further investigated physical properties of stable Li-B compounds using first-principles methods. Metallic Li6B5, predicted in our simulations, has trigonal symmetry with space group R32 and contains linear B chains, but its superconducting Tc is low according to the electron-phonon coupling calculations. Orthorhombic LiB2 (Pnma) and tetragonal LiB3 (P4/mbm) are zero-gap semiconductors; LiB2 is a Dirac semimetal, and both LiB2 and LiB3 are promising thermoelectric materials.

3.
Sci Rep ; 5: 18027, 2015 Dec 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26673677

ABSTRACT

The most widespread cooling techniques based on gas compression/expansion encounter environmental problems. Thus, tremendous effort has been dedicated to develop alternative cooling technique and search for solid state materials that show large caloric effects. An application of pressure to a material can cause a change in temperature, which is called the barocaloric effect. Here we report the giant barocaloric effect in a hexagonal Ni2In-type MnCoGe0.99In0.01 compound involving magnetostructural transformation, Tmstr, which is accompanied with a big difference in the internal energy due to a great negative lattice expansion(ΔV/V ~ 3.9%). High resolution neutron diffraction experiments reveal that the hydrostatic pressure can push the Tmstr to a lower temperature at a rate of 7.7 K/kbar, resulting in a giant barocaloric effect. The entropy change under a moderate pressure of 3 kbar reaches 52 J kg(-1) K(-1), which exceeds that of most materials, including the reported giant magnetocaloric effect driven by 5 T magnetic field that is available only by superconducting magnets.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(38): 20780-4, 2014 Oct 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25163859

ABSTRACT

To predict all stable compounds in the Ba-C system, we perform a comprehensive study using first-principles variable-composition evolutionary algorithm USPEX. We find that at 0 K the well-known compound BaC2 is metastable in the whole pressure range 0-40 GPa, while intercalated graphite phase BaC6 is stable at 0-19 GPa. A hitherto unknown layered orthorhombic Pbam phase of BaC has structure consisting of alternating layers of Ba atoms and layers of stoichiometry Ba2C3 containing linear C3 groups and is predicted to be stable in the pressure range 3-32 GPa. From our electron-phonon coupling calculations, the newly found BaC compound is a phonon-mediated superconductor and has a critical superconductivity temperature Tc of 4.32 K at 5 GPa. This compound is dynamically stable at 0 GPa and therefore may be quenchable under normal conditions.

5.
Nanotechnology ; 19(49): 495706, 2008 Dec 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21730686

ABSTRACT

AgI nanowires/anodic aluminum oxide (AgI NWs/AAO) composites have been fabricated by a simple approach, which involves the thermal melting of AgI powders on the surface of the AAO membrane, followed by the infiltration of the molten AgI inside the nanochannels. As-prepared AgI nanowires have corrugated outer surfaces and are polycrystalline according to scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) observations. X-ray diffraction (XRD) shows that a considerable amount of 7H polytype AgI exists in the composites, which is supposed to arise from the interfacial interactions between the embedded AgI and the alumina. AC conductivity measurements for the AgI nanowires/AAO composites exhibit a notable conductivity enhancement by three orders of magnitude at room temperature compared with that of pristine bulk AgI. Furthermore, a large conductivity hysteresis and abnormal conductivity transitions were observed in the temperature-dependent conductivity measurements, from which an ionic conductivity as high as 8.0 × 10(2) Ω(-1) cm(-1) was obtained at around 70 °C upon cooling. The differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) result demonstrates a similar phase transition behavior as that found in the AC conductivity measurements. The enhanced ionic conductivity, as well as the abnormal phase transitions, can be explained in terms of the existence of the highly conducting 7H polytype AgI and the formation of well-defined conduction paths in the composites.

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