Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 39
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 132(26): 264101, 2024 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38996295

ABSTRACT

Proton tunneling is believed to be nonlocal in ice, but its range has been shown to be limited to only a few molecules. Here, we measured the thermal conductivity of ice under pressure up to 50 GPa and found it increases with pressure until 20 GPa but decreases at higher pressures. We attribute this nonmonotonic thermal conductivity to the collective tunneling of protons at high pressures, supported by large-scale quantum molecular dynamics simulations. The collective tunneling loops span several picoseconds in time and are as large as nanometers in space, which match the phonon periods and wavelengths, leading to strong phonon scattering at high pressures. Our results show direct evidence of global quantum motion existing in high-pressure ice and provide a new perspective to understanding the coupling between phonon propagation and atomic tunneling.

2.
Natl Sci Rev ; 11(8): nwae107, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39007011

ABSTRACT

The magnetic correlations at the superconductor/ferromagnet (S/F) interfaces play a crucial role in realizing dissipation-less spin-based logic and memory technologies, such as triplet-supercurrent spin-valves and 'π' Josephson junctions. Here we report the observation of an induced large magnetic moment at high-quality nitride S/F interfaces. Using polarized neutron reflectometry and DC SQUID measurements, we quantitatively determined the magnetization profile of the S/F bilayer and confirmed that the induced magnetic moment in the adjacent superconductor only exists below T C. Interestingly, the direction of the induced moment in the superconductors was unexpectedly parallel to that in the ferromagnet, which contrasts with earlier findings in S/F heterostructures based on metals or oxides. First-principles calculations verified that the unusual interfacial spin texture observed in our study was caused by the Heisenberg direct exchange coupling with constant J∼4.28 meV through d-orbital overlapping and severe charge transfer across the interfaces. Our work establishes an incisive experimental probe for understanding the magnetic proximity behavior at S/F interfaces and provides a prototype epitaxial 'building block' for superconducting spintronics.

3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(21): e2322270121, 2024 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38753515

ABSTRACT

The kagome metal CsV[Formula: see text]Sb[Formula: see text] is an ideal platform to study the interplay between topology and electron correlation. To understand the fermiology of CsV[Formula: see text]Sb[Formula: see text], intensive quantum oscillation (QO) studies at ambient pressure have been conducted. However, due to the Fermi surface reconstruction by the complicated charge density wave (CDW) order, the QO spectrum is exceedingly complex, hindering a complete understanding of the fermiology. Here, we directly map the Fermi surface of the pristine CsV[Formula: see text]Sb[Formula: see text] by measuring Shubnikov-de Haas QOs up to 29 T under pressure, where the CDW order is completely suppressed. The QO spectrum of the pristine CsV[Formula: see text]Sb[Formula: see text] is significantly simpler than the one in the CDW phase, and the detected oscillation frequencies agree well with our density functional theory calculations. In particular, a frequency as large as 8,200 T is detected. Pressure-dependent QO studies further reveal a weak but noticeable enhancement of the quasiparticle effective masses on approaching the critical pressure where the CDW order disappears, hinting at the presence of quantum fluctuations. Our high-pressure QO results reveal the large, unreconstructed Fermi surface of CsV[Formula: see text]Sb[Formula: see text], paving the way to understanding the parent state of this intriguing metal in which the electrons can be organized into different ordered states.

4.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 4301, 2023 Jul 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37463932

ABSTRACT

CuInP2S6 with robust room-temperature ferroelectricity has recently attracted much attention due to the spatial instability of its Cu cations and the van der Waals (vdW) layered structure. Herein, we report a significant enhancement of its remanent polarization by more than 50% from 4.06 to 6.36 µC cm-2 under a small pressure between 0.26 to 1.40 GPa. Comprehensive analysis suggests that even though the hydrostatic pressure suppresses the crystal distortion, it initially forces Cu cations to largely occupy the interlayer sites, causing the spontaneous polarization to increase. Under intermediate pressure, the condensation of Cu cations to the ground state and the polarization increase due cell volume reduction compensate each other, resulting in a constant polarization. Under high pressure, the migration of Cu cations to the center of the S octahedron dominates the polarization decrease. These findings improve our understanding of this fascinating vdW ferroelectric material, and suggest new ways to improve its properties.

5.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 10(19): e2205479, 2023 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37129311

ABSTRACT

Nitride perovskite LaWN3 has been predicted to be a promising ferroelectric material with unique properties for diverse applications. However, due to the challenging sample preparation at ambient pressure, the crystal structure of this nitride remains unsolved, which results in many ambiguities in its properties. Here, the authors report a comprehensive study of LaWN3 based on high-quality samples synthesized by a high-pressure method, leading to a definitive resolution of its crystal structure involving nitrogen deficiency. Combined with theoretical calculations, these results show that LaWN3 adopts an orthorhombic Pna21 structure with a polar symmetry, possessing a unique atomic polarization along the c-axis. The associated atomic polar distortions in LaWN3 are driven by covalent hybridization of W: 5d and N: 2p orbitals, opening a direct bandgap that explains its semiconducting behaviors. The structural stability and electronic properties of this nitride are also revealed to be closely associated with its nitrogen deficiency. The success in unraveling the structural and electronic ambiguities of LaWN3 would provide important insights into the structures and properties of the family of nitride perovskites.

6.
Nano Lett ; 23(3): 872-879, 2023 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36662599

ABSTRACT

The kagome metal CsV3Sb5 features an unusual competition between the charge-density-wave (CDW) order and superconductivity. Evidence for time reversal symmetry breaking (TRSB) inside the CDW phase has been accumulating. Hence, the superconductivity in CsV3Sb5 emerges from a TRSB normal state, potentially resulting in an exotic superconducting state. To reveal the pairing symmetry, we first investigate the effect of nonmagnetic impurity. Our results show that the superconducting critical temperature is insensitive to disorder, pointing to conventional s-wave superconductivity. Moreover, our measurements of the self-field critical current (Ic,sf), which is related to the London penetration depth, also confirm conventional s-wave superconductivity with strong coupling. Finally, we measure Ic,sf where the CDW order is removed by pressure and superconductivity emerges from the pristine normal state. Our results show that s-wave gap symmetry is retained, providing strong evidence for the presence of conventional s-wave superconductivity in CsV3Sb5 irrespective of the presence of the TRSB.

7.
Adv Mater ; 35(2): e2208221, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36300813

ABSTRACT

Interfacial magnetism stimulates the discovery of giant magnetoresistance (MR) and spin-orbital coupling across the heterointerfaces, facilitating the intimate correlation between spin transport and complex magnetic structures. Over decades, functional heterointerfaces composed of nitrides have seldom been explored due to the difficulty in synthesizing high-quality nitride films with correct compositions. Here, the fabrication of single-crystalline ferromagnetic Fe3 N thin films with precisely controlled thicknesses is reported. As film thickness decreases, the magnetization dramatically deteriorates, and the electronic state changes from metallic to insulating. Strikingly, the high-temperature ferromagnetism is maintained in a Fe3 N layer with a thickness down to 2 u.c. (≈8 Å). The MR exhibits a strong in-plane anisotropy; meanwhile, the anomalous Hall resistivity reverses its sign when the Fe3 N layer thickness exceeds 5 u.c. Furthermore, a sizable exchange bias is observed at the interfaces between a ferromagnetic Fe3 N and an antiferromagnetic CrN. The exchange bias field and saturation moment strongly depend on the controllable bending curvature using the cylinder diameter engineering technique, implying the tunable magnetic states under lattice deformation. This work provides a guideline for exploring functional nitride films and applying their interfacial phenomena for innovative perspectives toward practical applications.

8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(51): e2211193119, 2022 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36520670

ABSTRACT

An interplay of geometrical frustration and strong quantum fluctuations in a spin-1/2 triangular-lattice antiferromagnet (TAF) can lead to exotic quantum states. Here, we report the neutron-scattering, magnetization, specific heat, and magnetocaloric studies of the recently discovered spin-1/2 TAF Na2BaCo(PO4)2, which can be described by a spin-1/2 easy axis XXZ model. The zero-field neutron diffraction experiment reveals an incommensurate antiferromagnetic ground state with a significantly reduced ordered moment of about 0.54(2) µB/Co. Different magnetic phase diagrams with magnetic fields in the ab plane and along the easy c-axis were extracted based on the magnetic susceptibility, specific heat, and elastic neutron-scattering results. In addition, two-dimensional (2D) spin dispersion in the triangular plane was observed in the high-field polarized state, and microscopic exchange parameters of the spin Hamiltonian have been determined through the linear spin wave theory. Consistently, quantum critical behaviors with the universality class of d = 2 and νz = 1 were established in the vicinity of the saturation field, where a Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) of diluted magnons occurs. The newly discovered quantum criticality and fractional magnetization phase in this ideal spin-1/2 TAF present exciting opportunities for exploring exotic quantum phenomena.

9.
Inorg Chem ; 61(45): 18193-18200, 2022 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36322829

ABSTRACT

Boron-rich tungsten borides such as WB2+x and WB3+x have been highly expected to be superhard with many advantages over conventional superhard materials. However, because the formation of boron-rich tungsten borides is thermodynamically unfavorable at ambient pressure, their crystal structures, compositions, and properties are largely unexplored, which have impeded the rational design of functional materials in the W-B family. In this work, using unique high-pressure reactions, we report a systematic synthesis study of challenging compounds of tungsten borides including WB, WB2+x, and WB3+x. The use of pressure, combined with the controllable temperature, heating duration, and ratios of starting reactants, leads to different compositions and structures of final products with largely tunable crystallite size from nanocrystalline to single-crystal forms. In addition, the optimal conditions for the formation of WB3+x are well investigated by tuning the temperature and starting ratio of reactants, as well as by adding a solvent material. Phase diagrams and stabilities of the involved W-B compounds are also well depicted, which would provide an important guidance for future exploratory synthesis and study of the family of transition-metal borides.

10.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 93(8): 083912, 2022 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36050123

ABSTRACT

Quantum materials exhibit intriguing properties with important scientific values and huge technological potential. Electrical transport measurements under hydrostatic pressure have been influential in unraveling the underlying physics of many quantum materials in bulk form. However, such measurements have not been applied widely to samples in the form of thin flakes, in which new phenomena can emerge, due to the difficulty in attaching fine wires to a thin sample suitable for high-pressure devices. Here, we utilize a home-built direct laser writing system to functionalize a diamond anvil to directly integrate the capability of conducting electrical transport measurements of thin flakes with a pressure cell. With our methodology, the culet of a diamond anvil is equipped with a set of custom-designed conducting tracks. We demonstrate the superiority of these tracks as electrodes for the studies of thin flakes by presenting the measurement of pressure-enhanced superconductivity and quantum oscillations in a flake of MoTe2.

11.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 5234, 2022 Sep 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36068224

ABSTRACT

The development of organic solid-state luminescent materials, especially those sensitive to aggregation microenvironment, is critical for their applications in devices such as pressure-sensitive elements, sensors, and photoelectric devices. However, it still faces certain challenges and a deep understanding of the corresponding internal mechanisms is required. Here, we put forward an unconventional strategy to explore the pressure-induced evolution of the aggregation microenvironment, involving changes in molecular conformation, stacking mode, and intermolecular interaction, by monitoring the emission under multiple excitation channels based on a luminogen with aggregation-induced emission characteristics of di(p-methoxylphenyl)dibenzofulvene. Under three excitation wavelengths, the distinct emission behaviors have been interestingly observed to reveal the pressure-induced structural evolution, well consistent with the results from ultraviolet-visible absorption, high-pressure angle-dispersive X-ray diffraction, and infrared studies, which have rarely been reported before. This finding provides important insights into the design of organic solid luminescent materials and greatly promotes the development of stimulus-responsive luminescent materials.

12.
RSC Adv ; 12(19): 11996-12001, 2022 Apr 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35481090

ABSTRACT

Organic solar cells have become an important development direction in solar cell materials because of their low cost, light weight, and good flexibility. However, the size of their bandgap is difficult to continuously regulate, resulting in a low power conversion efficiency. In this work, an organic molecule TPEPA was synthesized, and its luminescence performance and polymerization under high pressure were studied by performing in situ Raman, IR, fluorescence, and UV-vis spectroscopy. The Raman and IR spectroscopic results show that single bonds (C-H, C-Ph) and long chains (C-C[triple bond, length as m-dash]C-C) are more unstable and prone to amorphization under high pressure. At 10 GPa, the TPEPA molecule undergoes a transition of amorphization accompanied by a few polymerizations in the C[triple bond, length as m-dash]C bond structure. After holding pressure at 20 GPa for one day and releasing to ambient pressure, the other peaks almost disappeared, while the new peak of C(sp3)-H from the polymerization of the benzene ring was observed, indicating that the irreversible amorphization and polymerization did occur. UV-vis spectra results show that the bandgap is reduced from 2.9 eV to 1.3 eV, which is just in the maximum conversion efficiency bandgap range (1.3-1.4 eV) of p-n junction solar cell materials. This pressure is within the working pressure range of a large volume press, which is favorable in applications of large-scale synthesis. Our strategy may provide a method for the large-scale synthesis of novel organic solar cell materials.

13.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(9): 095702, 2022 Mar 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35302822

ABSTRACT

Coupling of charge and lattice degrees of freedom in materials can produce intriguing electronic phenomena, such as conventional superconductivity where the electrons are mediated by lattice for creating supercurrent. The Mott transition, which is a source for many fascinating emergent behaviors, is originally thought to be driven solely by correlated electrons with an Ising criticality. Recent studies on the known Mott systems have shown that the lattice degree of freedom is also at play, giving rise to either Landau or unconventional criticality. However, the underlying coupling mechanism of charge and lattice degrees of freedom around the Mott critical end point remains elusive, leading to difficulties in understanding the associated Mott physics. Here, we report a study of Mott transition in cubic PbCrO_{3} by measuring the lattice parameter, using high-pressure x-ray diffraction techniques. The Mott criticality in this material is revealed with large lattice anomalies, which is governed by giant viscoelasticity that presumably results from a combination of lattice elasticity and electron viscosity. Because of the viscoelastic effect, the lattice of this material behaves peculiarly near the critical end point, inconsistent with any existing university classes. We argue that the viscoelasticity may play as a hidden degree of freedom behind the Mott criticality.

14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(1): 017202, 2022 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35061447

ABSTRACT

Heterointerfaces have led to the discovery of novel electronic and magnetic states because of their strongly entangled electronic degrees of freedom. Single-phase chromium compounds always exhibit antiferromagnetism following the prediction of the Goodenough-Kanamori rules. So far, exchange coupling between chromium ions via heteroanions has not been explored and the associated quantum states are unknown. Here, we report the successful epitaxial synthesis and characterization of chromium oxide (Cr_{2}O_{3})-chromium nitride (CrN) superlattices. Room-temperature ferromagnetic spin ordering is achieved at the interfaces between these two antiferromagnets, and the magnitude of the effect decays with increasing layer thickness. First-principles calculations indicate that robust ferromagnetic spin interaction between Cr^{3+} ions via anion-hybridization across the interface yields the lowest total energy. This work opens the door to fundamental understanding of the unexpected and exceptional properties of oxide-nitride interfaces and provides access to hidden phases at low-dimensional quantum heterostructures.

15.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 13(1): 161-167, 2022 Jan 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34964634

ABSTRACT

Researchers have shown great interest in two-dimensional crystals recently, because of their thickness-dependent electronic and optical properties. We have investigated the Raman and photoluminescence spectra of free-standing monolayer and bilayer MoS2, as a function of pressure. As the enforcement of layer interaction, an electronic and a crystal phase transition were revealed at ∼6 GPa and ∼16 GPa, respectively, in bilayer MoS2, while no phase transition in the monolayer is observed. The electronic phase transition at ∼6 GPa is supposed to be a direct interband changing to an indirect Λ-K interband transition, and the new structure shown at ∼16 GPa is not metallized and supposed to be a transformation from stacking faults due to layer sliding like 2Hc to 2Ha. The different pressure-induced features of monolayer MoS2, compared with bilayer MoS2, can help to get a better understanding about the importance of interlayer interaction on modifying the optical properties of MoS2 and other fundamental understanding of 2D materials.

16.
Nano Lett ; 21(21): 9310-9317, 2021 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34714653

ABSTRACT

The emergence of high transition temperature (Tc) superconductivity in bulk FeSe under pressure is associated with the tuning of nematicity and magnetism. However, sorting out the relative contributions from magnetic and nematic fluctuations to the enhancement of Tc remains challenging. Here, we design and conduct a series of high-pressure experiments on FeSe thin flakes. We find that as the thickness decreases the nematic phase boundary on temperature-pressure phase diagrams remains robust while the magnetic order is significantly weakened. A local maximum of Tc is observed outside the nematic phase region, not far from the extrapolated nematic end point in all samples. However, the maximum Tc value is reduced associated with the weakening of magnetism. No high-Tc phase is observed in the thinnest sample. Our results strongly suggest that nematic fluctuations alone can only have a limited effect while magnetic fluctuations are pivotal on the enhancement of Tc in FeSe.

17.
Inorg Chem ; 60(20): 15215-15222, 2021 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34612630

ABSTRACT

High-quality hafnium disilicide (HfSi2) has been successfully synthesized using a high-pressure and high-temperature (HPHT) method at 3 GPa and 1573 K in a DS6 × 10 MN cubic press. The modest synthesis temperature is aided by significant decreases in both liquidus and solidus temperatures at high pressure for the Si-rich portion of the Hf-Si binary system. The in situ high-pressure X-ray diffraction study yielded a bulk modulus of B0 = 124.4 ± 0.8 GPa with a fixed B0' = 4.0 for HfSi2, which exhibits a dramatically anisotropic compressibility, with a and c axes nearly twice as incompressible as the b axis. The bulk HfSi2 as synthesized has a Vickers hardness of 6.9 ± 0.1 GPa and high thermal stability of 1163 K in air, indicating its hard and refractory ceramic properties. The core-level XPS data of Hf 4f and Si 2p have been collected on the bulk samples of HfSi2, HfSi, and Hf, as well as Si powder to examine the Hf-Si bonding in hafnium silicides. The Hf 4f7/2 binding energies are 15.0 and 14.8 eV for bulk HfSi2 and HfSi, respectively.

18.
Nano Lett ; 21(19): 7946-7952, 2021 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34533027

ABSTRACT

Despite recent advances in layered ferromagnets, ferromagnetic interactions in these materials are rather weak. Here, we report pressure-enhanced ferromagnetism in layered CrSiTe3 flakes revealed by high-pressure magnetic circular dichroism measurements. Below ∼3 GPa, CrSiTe3 undergoes a paramagnetic-to-ferromagnetic phase transition at ∼32 K, and the field-induced spin-flip in the ferromagnetic phase produces nearly zero hysteresis loops, demonstrating soft ferromagnetism. Above ∼4 GPa, a soft-to-hard ferromagnetic transition occurs, signaled by rectangular-shaped hysteresis loops with finite coercivity and remanent magnetization. Interestingly, as pressure increases, the Curie temperature and coercivity dramatically increase up to ∼138 K and 0.17 T at 7.8 GPa, respectively, in contrast to ∼36 K and 0.02 T at 4.6 GPa. It indicates a remarkable influence of pressure on exchange interactions, which is consistent with DFT calculations. The effective interaction between magnetic couplings and external pressure offers new opportunities in pursuit of high-temperature layered ferromagnets.

19.
IEEE Trans Image Process ; 30: 6544-6556, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34224355

ABSTRACT

Facial expression recognition (FER) in the wild received broad concerns in which occlusion and pose variation are two key issues. This paper proposed a global multi-scale and local attention network (MA-Net) for FER in the wild. Specifically, the proposed network consists of three main components: a feature pre-extractor, a multi-scale module, and a local attention module. The feature pre-extractor is utilized to pre-extract middle-level features, the multi-scale module to fuse features with different receptive fields, which reduces the susceptibility of deeper convolution towards occlusion and variant pose, while the local attention module can guide the network to focus on local salient features, which releases the interference of occlusion and non-frontal pose problems on FER in the wild. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed MA-Net achieves the state-of-the-art results on several in-the-wild FER benchmarks: CAER-S, AffectNet-7, AffectNet-8, RAFDB, and SFEW with accuracies of 88.42%, 64.53%, 60.29%, 88.40%, and 59.40% respectively. The codes and training logs are publicly available at https://github.com/zengqunzhao/MA-Net.


Subject(s)
Facial Expression , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Neural Networks, Computer , Humans
20.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 92(3): 033905, 2021 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33819985

ABSTRACT

Pressure calibration for most diamond-anvil cell (DAC) experiments is mainly based on the ruby scale, which is key to implementing this powerful tool for high-pressure study. However, the ruby scale can often hardly be used for programmably controlled DAC devices, especially the piezoelectric-driving cells, where a continuous pressure calibration is required. In this work, we present an effective pressure gauge for DACs made of Manganin metal based on the four-probe resistivity measurements. Pressure dependence of its resistivity is well established and shows excellent linear relations in the 0-30 GPa pressure range with a slope of 23.4 (9) GPa for the first-cycle compression, in contrast to that of multiple-cycle compression and decompression having a nearly identical slope of 33.7 (4) GPa likely due to the strain effect. In addition, the such-established Manganin scale can be used for continuously monitoring the cell pressure of piezoelectric-driving DACs, and the reliability of this method is also verified by the fixed-point method with a Bi pressure standard. Realization of continuous pressure calibration for programmably controlled DACs would offer many opportunities for the study of dynamics, kinetics, and critical behaviors of pressure-induced phase transitions.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...