E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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James
King
,
Linda
Zhang
,
Szymon
Doszczeczko
,
Olga
Sambalova
,
Hui
Luo
,
Fadli
Rohman
,
Omotoyosi
Phillips
,
Andreas
Borgschulte
,
Michael
Hirscher
,
Matthew
Addicoat
,
Petra Agota
Szilagyi
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[20116]
Abstract: We report on the development and verification of an enhanced computational model capable of robust predictions and yielding a single descriptor to the successful embedding of guest nanoclusters into the pores of functionalised metal–organic frameworks. Using the predictions of this model, we have been able to embed Pd nanoclusters in the pores of Br-UiO-66 and show that the embedding of Pd nanoclusters in both (OH)2-UiO-66 and (Cl)2-UiO-66 is not successful. Also, using various independent methods, we identified the strong host–guest interactions that anchor the guest nanoclusters inside the Br-UiO-66 framework which result in the surface modification of said nanoclusters. We demonstrated that the level of this surface modification is a direct function of the framework functional groups. This new approach for the rational design of nanocluster–metal–organic framework systems, and a demonstrated tool box for their characterisation, will promote the exploitation of surface modification of nanoclusters via their embedding into functionalised metal–organic framework pores.
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Feb 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[21980]
Abstract: Advances in the production of two-dimensional (2D) materials such as graphene and MoS2 during the past two decades have spurred the search for other van der Waals materials with distinct functional properties. However, reducing the dimensionality of bulk van der Waals materials can lead to structural rearrangement and chemical degradation, especially in the presence of air. These challenges have slowed the progress of the discovery and analysis of chemically diverse 2D materials. Here, we provide a case study on the shear exfoliation of a class of wide band gap van der Waals materials termed II–VI layered hybrids (II–VI LHs) and show how reducing their dimension influences their structural and chemical stabilities. ZnSe(butylamine) and ZnSe(octylamine) are exfoliated, yielding shear-thinned material whose resistance toward degradation via oxidation is studied in depth by a variety of macro- and microscopic characterization techniques. Mechanical energy input, solvent–ligand interaction, and exposure to ambient conditions all play important roles in the stability of these materials. Our findings suggest that moderately coordinating alkylamine layers stabilize 2D materials that would otherwise degrade during exfoliation and exposure to air.
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Mar 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[20431, 22317]
Abstract: We report the application of focused probe ptychography using binary 4D datasets obtained using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). Modern fast pixelated detectors have enabled imaging of individual convergent beam electron diffraction patterns in a STEM raster scan at frame rates in the range of 1000–8000 Hz using conventional counting modes. Changing the bit depth of a counting detector, such that only values of 0 or 1 can be recorded at each pixel, allows one to decrease the dwell time and increase the frame rate to 12.5 kHz, reducing the electron exposure of the sample for a given beam current. Atomically resolved phase contrast of an aluminosilicate zeolite (ZSM-5) is observed from sparse diffraction patterns with isolated individual electrons, demonstrating the potential of binary ptychography as a low-dose 4D STEM technique.
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Mar 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
I14-Hard X-ray Nanoprobe
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Tiarnan A. S.
Doherty
,
Andrew J.
Winchester
,
Stuart
Macpherson
,
Duncan N.
Johnstone
,
Vivek
Pareek
,
Elizabeth M.
Tennyson
,
Sofiia
Kosar
,
Felix U.
Kosasih
,
Miguel
Anaya
,
Mojtaba
Abdi-jalebi
,
Zahra
Andaji-garmaroudi
,
E. Laine
Wong
,
Julien
Madéo
,
Yu-hsien
Chiang
,
Ji-sang
Park
,
Young-kwang
Jung
,
Christopher E.
Petoukhoff
,
Giorgio
Divitini
,
Michael K. l.
Man
,
Caterina
Ducati
,
Aron
Walsh
,
Paul A.
Midgley
,
Keshav M.
Dani
,
Samuel D.
Stranks
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[19023, 19793]
Abstract: Halide perovskite materials have promising performance characteristics for low-cost optoelectronic applications. Photovoltaic devices fabricated from perovskite absorbers have reached power conversion efficiencies above 25 per cent in single-junction devices and 28 per cent in tandem devices. This strong performance (albeit below the practical limits of about 30 per cent and 35 per cent, respectively) is surprising in thin films processed from solution at low-temperature, a method that generally produces abundant crystalline defects. Although point defects often induce only shallow electronic states in the perovskite bandgap that do not affect performance, perovskite devices still have many states deep within the bandgap that trap charge carriers and cause them to recombine non-radiatively. These deep trap states thus induce local variations in photoluminescence and limit the device performance. The origin and distribution of these trap states are unknown, but they have been associated with light-induced halide segregation in mixed-halide perovskite compositions and with local strain, both of which make devices less stable. Here we use photoemission electron microscopy to image the trap distribution in state-of-the-art halide perovskite films. Instead of a relatively uniform distribution within regions of poor photoluminescence efficiency, we observe discrete, nanoscale trap clusters. By correlating microscopy measurements with scanning electron analytical techniques, we find that these trap clusters appear at the interfaces between crystallographically and compositionally distinct entities. Finally, by generating time-resolved photoemission sequences of the photo-excited carrier trapping process, we reveal a hole-trapping character with the kinetics limited by diffusion of holes to the local trap clusters. Our approach shows that managing structure and composition on the nanoscale will be essential for optimal performance of halide perovskite devices.
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Apr 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Jonas
Bekaert
,
Ekaterina
Khestanova
,
David G.
Hopkinson
,
John
Birkbeck
,
Nick
Clark
,
Mengjian
Zhu
,
Denis
Bandurin
,
Roman
Gorbachev
,
Simon
Fairclough
,
Yichao
Zou
,
Matthew
Hamer
,
Daniel J.
Terry
,
Jonathan J. P.
Peters
,
Ana M.
Sanchez
,
Bart
Partoens
,
Sarah
Haigh
,
Milorad
Milosevic
,
Irina V.
Grigorieva
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[19315, 21597]
Abstract: When approaching the atomically thin limit, defects and disorder play an increasingly important role in the properties of two-dimensional materials. While defects are generally thought to negatively affect superconductivity in 2D materials, here we demonstrate the contrary in the case of oxygenation of ultrathin tantalum disulfide (TaS2). Our first-principles calculations show that incorporation of oxygen into the TaS2 crystal lattice is energetically favourable and effectively heals sulfur vacancies typically present in these crystals, thus restoring the electronic band structure and the carrier density to the intrinsic characteristics of TaS2. Strikingly, this leads to a strong enhancement of the electron-phonon coupling, by up to 80% in the highly-oxygenated limit. Using transport measurements on fresh and aged (oxygenated) few-layer TaS2, we found a marked increase of the superconducting critical temperature (Tc) upon aging, in agreement with our theory, while concurrent electron microscopy and electron-energy loss spectroscopy confirmed the presence of sulfur vacancies in freshly prepared TaS2 and incorporation of oxygen into the crystal lattice with time. Our work thus reveals the mechanism by which certain atomic-scale defects can be beneficial to superconductivity and opens a new route to engineer Tc in ultrathin materials.
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Apr 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Astrid
Weston
,
Yichao
Zou
,
Vladimir
Enaldiev
,
Alex
Summerfield
,
Nicholas
Clark
,
Viktor
Zólyomi
,
Abigail
Graham
,
Celal
Yelgel
,
Samuel
Magorrian
,
Mingwei
Zhou
,
Johanna
Zultak
,
David
Hopkinson
,
Alexei
Barinov
,
Thomas H.
Bointon
,
Andrey
Kretinin
,
Neil R.
Wilson
,
Peter H.
Beton
,
Vladimir I.
Fal’ko
,
Sarah J.
Haigh
,
Roman
Gorbachev
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[19315, 21597]
Abstract: Van der Waals heterostructures form a unique class of layered artificial solids in which physical properties can be manipulated through controlled composition, order and relative rotation of adjacent atomic planes. Here we use atomic-resolution transmission electron microscopy to reveal the lattice reconstruction in twisted bilayers of the transition metal dichalcogenides, MoS2 and WS2. For twisted 3R bilayers, a tessellated pattern of mirror-reflected triangular 3R domains emerges, separated by a network of partial dislocations for twist angles θ < 2°. The electronic properties of these 3R domains, featuring layer-polarized conduction-band states caused by lack of both inversion and mirror symmetry, appear to be qualitatively different from those of 2H transition metal dichalcogenides. For twisted 2H bilayers, stable 2H domains dominate, with nuclei of a second metastable phase. This appears as a kagome-like pattern at θ ≈ 2°, transitioning at θ → 0 to a hexagonal array of screw dislocations separating large-area 2H domains. Tunnelling measurements show that such reconstruction creates strong piezoelectric textures, opening a new avenue for engineering of 2D material properties.
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May 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Liqi
Zhou
,
Jingdong
Song
,
Judy S.
Kim
,
Xudong
Pei
,
Chen
Huang
,
Mark
Boyce
,
Luiza
Mendonca
,
Daniel
Clare
,
Alistair
Siebert
,
Christopher
Allen
,
Emanuela
Liberti
,
David
Stuart
,
Xiaoqing
Pan
,
Peter
Nellist
,
Peijun
Zhang
,
Angus
Kirkland
,
Peng
Wang
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[19243, 20431, 20961, 22317]
Open Access
Abstract: Cryo-electron microscopy is an essential tool for high-resolution structural studies of biological systems. This method relies on the use of phase contrast imaging at high defocus to improve information transfer at low spatial frequencies at the expense of higher spatial frequencies. Here we demonstrate that electron ptychography can recover the phase of the specimen with continuous information transfer across a wide range of the spatial frequency spectrum, with improved transfer at lower spatial frequencies, and as such is more efficient for phase recovery than conventional phase contrast imaging. We further show that the method can be used to study frozen-hydrated specimens of rotavirus double-layered particles and HIV-1 virus-like particles under low-dose conditions (5.7 e/Å2) and heterogeneous objects in an Adenovirus-infected cell over large fields of view (1.14 × 1.14 μm), thus making it suitable for studies of many biologically important structures.
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Jun 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Abstract: We show interlayer stacking shifts occur in transition metal dichalcogenides (TMD) bilayers due to the strain introduced during sample heating, and attributed to rippling of one layer relative to the other. The atomic structure of the interlayer stacking is studied using annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy with an in situ heating holder. Before heating, bilayers show uniform interlayer stacking of AA′ and AB. When heated, contrast change is seen and associated with interlayer stacking changes at the atomic scale due to ripples. When cooled down to room temperature, these contrast features disappear, confirming it is a reversible process that is not related to defects or vacancies. Because the bottom layer is attached to the in situ heating chip made from Si3N4 and the top layer is in contact with the underlying TMD layer with weak van der Waals interaction, the two layers experience different forces during thermal expansion.
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Jun 2020
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E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[20195, 21979, 20198]
Abstract: Defect engineering can enhance key properties of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). Tailoring the distribution of de-fects, for example in correlated nanodomains, requires characterization across length scales. However, a critical na-noscale characterization gap has emerged between the bulk diffraction techniques used to detect defect nanodomains and the sub-nanometer imaging used to observe individual defects. Here, we demonstrate that the emerging technique of scanning electron diffraction (SED) can bridge this gap uniquely enabling both nanoscale crystallographic analysis and the low-dose formation of multiple diffraction contrast images for defect analysis in MOFs. We directly image defect nanodomains in the MOF UiO-66(Hf) over an area of ca. 1 000 nm and with a spatial resolution ca. 5 nm to reveal domain morphology and distribution. Based on these observations, we suggest possible crystal growth processes underpinning synthetic control of defect nanodomains. We also identify likely dislocations and small angle grain boundaries, illustrating that SED could be a key technique in developing the potential for engineering the distribution of defects, or “microstruc-ture”, in functional MOF design.
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Jul 2020
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B18-Core EXAFS
E01-JEM ARM 200CF
E02-JEM ARM 300CF
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Hui
Luo
,
Ying
Liu
,
Stoichko D.
Dimitrov
,
Ludmilla
Steier
,
Shaohui
Guo
,
Xuanhua
Li
,
Jingyu
Feng
,
Fei
Xie
,
Yuanxing
Fang
,
Andrei
Sapelkin
,
Xinchen
Wang
,
Maria-magdalena
Titirici
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22447, 20116]
Abstract: Single-atom catalysis has become the most active new frontier in energy conversion applications due to its remarkable catalytic activity and low material consumption. However, the issue of atom aggregation during the synthesis process or catalytic reaction must be overcome. In this work, we have developed a one-step photo-deposition process to fabricate Pt single-atom catalysts (SACs) on nitrogen doped carbon dots (NCDs). The Pt–NCDs were then hybridized with TiO2 to achieve high hydrogen generation activity and to understand the fundamentals at the Pt/NCD/TiO2 interface. The synergistic effect of Pt SAC and NCDs with maximized atomic efficiency of Pt and improved charge transfer capability provides a new strategy to rationally design a multi-scale photocatalyst structure to achieve high H2 evolution efficiency. The facile synthesis process also holds great potential for various applications such as electrocatalysis, heterogeneous catalysis and drug delivery, providing a promising way to reduce the high cost of noble metals.
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Jul 2020
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