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1.
ACS Omega ; 6(20): 13144-13152, 2021 May 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34056464

RESUMO

SrMnO3 has a rich epitaxial strain-dependent ferroic phase diagram, in which a variety of magnetic orderings, even ferroelectricity, and thus multiferroicity, are accessible by gradually modifying the strain. Different relaxation processes, though, including the presence of strain-induced oxygen vacancies, can severely curtail the possibility of stabilizing these ferroic phases. Here, we report on a thorough investigation of the strain relaxation mechanisms in SrMnO3 films grown on several substrates imposing varying degrees of strain from slightly compressive (-0.39%) to largely tensile ≈+3.8%. First, we determine the strain dependency of the critical thickness (t c) below which pseudomorphic growth is obtained. Second, the mechanisms of stress relaxation are elucidated, revealing that misfit dislocations and stacking faults accommodate the strain above t c. Yet, even for films thicker than t c, the atomic monolayers below t c are proved to remain fully coherent. Therefore, multiferroicity may also emerge even in films that appear to be partially relaxed. Last, we demonstrate that fully coherent films with the same thickness present a lower oxygen content for increasing tensile mismatch with the substrate. This behavior proves the coupling between the formation of oxygen vacancies and epitaxial strain, in agreement with first-principles calculations, enabling the strain control of the Mn3+/Mn4+ ratio, which strongly affects the magnetic and electrical properties. However, the presence of oxygen vacancies/Mn3+ cations reduces the effective epitaxial strain in the SrMnO3 films and, thus, the accessibility to the strain-induced multiferroic phase.

2.
Chemistry ; 20(5): 1287-97, 2014 Jan 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24458912

RESUMO

The reactivity of two classes of ruthenium nanoparticles (Ru NPs) of small size, either sterically stabilized by a polymer (polyvinylpyrrolidone, PVP) or electronically stabilized by a ligand (bisdiphenylphosphinobutane, dppb) was tested towards standard reactions, namely CO oxidation, CO2 reduction and styrene hydrogenation. The aim of the work was to identify the sites of reactivity on the nanoparticles and to study how the presence of ancillary ligands can influence the course of these catalytic reactions by using NMR and IR spectroscopies. It was found that CO oxidation proceeds at room temperature (RT) on Ru NPs but that the system deactivates rapidly in the absence of ligands because of the formation of RuO2. In the presence of ligands, the reaction involves exclusively the bridging CO groups and no bulk oxidation is observed at RT under catalytic conditions. The reverse reaction, CO2 reduction, is achieved at 120 °C in the presence of H2 and leads to CO, which coordinates exclusively in a bridging mode, hence evidencing the competition between hydrides and CO for coordination on Ru NPs. The effect of ligands localized on the surface is also evidenced in catalytic reactions. Thus, styrene is slowly hydrogenated at RT by the two systems Ru/PVP and Ru/dppb, first into ethylbenzene and then into ethylcyclohexane. Selectively poisoning the nanoparticles with bridging CO groups leads to catalysts that are only able to reduce the vinyl group of styrene whereas a full poisoning with both terminal and bridging CO groups leads to inactive catalysts. These results are interpreted in terms of location of the ligands on the particles surface, and evidence site selectivity for both CO oxidation and arene hydrogenation.

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