Browsing by Author "Zhao, Yufeng"
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Item High-surface-area corundum nanoparticles by resistive hotspot-induced phase transformation(Springer Nature, 2022) Deng, Bing; Advincula, Paul A.; Luong, Duy Xuan; Zhou, Jingan; Zhang, Boyu; Wang, Zhe; McHugh, Emily A.; Chen, Jinhang; Carter, Robert A.; Kittrell, Carter; Lou, Jun; Zhao, Yuji; Yakobson, Boris I.; Zhao, Yufeng; Tour, James M.; Smalley-Curl Institute; NanoCarbon Center; Welch Institute for Advanced MaterialsHigh-surface-area α-Al2O3 nanoparticles are used in high-strength ceramics and stable catalyst supports. The production of α-Al2O3 by phase transformation from γ-Al2O3 is hampered by a high activation energy barrier, which usually requires extended high-temperature annealing (~1500 K, > 10 h) and suffers from aggregation. Here, we report the synthesis of dehydrated α-Al2O3 nanoparticles (phase purity ~100%, particle size ~23 nm, surface area ~65 m2 g−1) by a pulsed direct current Joule heating of γ-Al2O3. The phase transformation is completed at a reduced bulk temperature and duration (~573 K, < 1 s) via an intermediate δʹ-Al2O3 phase. Numerical simulations reveal the resistive hotspot-induced local heating in the pulsed current process enables the rapid transformation. Theoretical calculations show the topotactic transition (from γ- to δʹ- to α-Al2O3) is driven by their surface energy differences. The α-Al2O3 nanoparticles are sintered to nanograined ceramics with hardness superior to commercial alumina and approaching that of sapphire.Item Phase controlled synthesis of transition metal carbide nanocrystals by ultrafast flash Joule heating(Springer Nature, 2022) Deng, Bing; Wang, Zhe; Chen, Weiyin; Li, John Tianci; Luong, Duy Xuan; Carter, Robert A.; Gao, Guanhui; Yakobson, Boris I.; Zhao, Yufeng; Tour, James M.; Smalley-Curl Institute; NanoCarbon Center and the Welch Institute for Advanced MaterialsNanoscale carbides enhance ultra-strong ceramics and show activity as high-performance catalysts. Traditional lengthy carburization methods for carbide syntheses usually result in coked surface, large particle size, and uncontrolled phase. Here, a flash Joule heating process is developed for ultrafast synthesis of carbide nanocrystals within 1 s. Various interstitial transition metal carbides (TiC, ZrC, HfC, VC, NbC, TaC, Cr2C3, MoC, and W2C) and covalent carbides (B4C and SiC) are produced using low-cost precursors. By controlling pulse voltages, phase-pure molybdenum carbides including β-Mo2C and metastable α-MoC1-x and η-MoC1-x are selectively synthesized, demonstrating the excellent phase engineering ability of the flash Joule heating by broadly tunable energy input that can exceed 3000 K coupled with kinetically controlled ultrafast cooling (>104 K s−1). Theoretical calculation reveals carbon vacancies as the driving factor for topotactic transition of carbide phases. The phase-dependent hydrogen evolution capability of molybdenum carbides is investigated with β-Mo2C showing the best performance.