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Description
Dealloying, the selective dissolution of an elemental component from an alloy, is an important corrosion mechanism and a technological significant means to fabricate nanoporous structures for a variety of applications. In noble metal alloys, dealloying proceeds above a composition dependent critical potential, and bi-continuous structure evolves "simultaneously" as a result

Dealloying, the selective dissolution of an elemental component from an alloy, is an important corrosion mechanism and a technological significant means to fabricate nanoporous structures for a variety of applications. In noble metal alloys, dealloying proceeds above a composition dependent critical potential, and bi-continuous structure evolves "simultaneously" as a result of the interplay between percolation dissolution and surface diffusion. In contrast, dealloying in alloys that show considerable solid-state mass transport at ambient temperature is largely unexplored despite its relevance to nanoparticle catalysts and Li-ion anodes. In my dissertation, I discuss the behaviors of two alloy systems in order to elucidate the role of bulk lattice diffusion in dealloying. First, Mg-Cd alloys are chosen to show that when the dealloying is controlled by bulk diffusion, a new type of porosity - negative void dendrites will form, and the process mirrors electrodeposition. Then, Li-Sn alloys are studied with respect to the composition, particle size and dealloying rate effects on the morphology evolution. Under the right condition, dealloying of Li-Sn supported by percolation dissolution results in the same bi-continuous structure as nanoporous noble metals; whereas lattice diffusion through the otherwise "passivated" surface allows for dealloying with no porosity evolution. The interactions between bulk diffusion, surface diffusion and dissolution are revealed by chronopotentiometry and linear sweep voltammetry technics. The better understanding of dealloying from these experiments enables me to construct a brief review summarizing the electrochemistry and morphology aspects of dealloying as well as offering interpretations to new observations such as critical size effect and encased voids in nanoporous gold. At the end of the dissertation, I will describe a preliminary attempt to generalize the morphology evolution "rules of dealloying" to all solid-to-solid interfacial controlled phase transition process, demonstrating that bi-continuous morphologies can evolve regardless of the nature of parent phase.
ContributorsChen, Qing (Author) / Sieradzki, Karl (Thesis advisor) / Friesen, Cody (Committee member) / Buttry, Daniel (Committee member) / Chan, Candace (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
ContributorsSpring, Robert (Performer) / Gardner, Joshua (Performer) / Buck, Elizabeth (Performer) / Schuring, Martin (Performer) / Micklich, Albie (Performer) / Ericson, John Q. (John Quincy), 1962- (Performer) / Smith, J. B., 1957- (Performer) / Ryan, Russell (Contributor) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2018-09-16
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Description
Solid-state lithium-ion batteries are a major area of research due to their increased safety characteristics over conventional liquid electrolyte batteries. Lithium lanthanum zirconate (LLZO) is a promising garnet-type ceramic for use as a solid-state electrolyte due to its high ionic conductivity. The material exists in two dierent phases, one that

Solid-state lithium-ion batteries are a major area of research due to their increased safety characteristics over conventional liquid electrolyte batteries. Lithium lanthanum zirconate (LLZO) is a promising garnet-type ceramic for use as a solid-state electrolyte due to its high ionic conductivity. The material exists in two dierent phases, one that is cubic in structure and one that is tetragonal. One potential synthesis method that results in LLZO in the more useful, cubic phase, is electrospinning, where a mat of nanowires is spun and then calcined into LLZO. A phase containing lanthanum zirconate (LZO) and amorphous lithium occursas an intermediate during the calcination process. LZO has been shown to be a sintering aid for LLZO, allowing for lower sintering temperatures. Here it is shown the eects of internal LZO on the sintered pellets. This is done by varying the 700C calcination time to transform diering amounts of LZO and LLZO in electrospun nanowires, and then using the same sintering parameters for each sample. X-ray diraction was used to get structural and compositional analysis of both the calcined powders and sintered pellets. Pellets formed from wires calcined at 1 hour or longer contained only LLZO even if the calcined powder had only undergone the rst phase transformation. The relative density of the pellet with no initial LLZO of 61.0% was higher than that of the pellet with no LZO, which had a relative density of 57.7%. This allows for the same, or slightly higher, quality material to be synthesized with a shorter amount of processing time.
ContributorsLondon, Nathan Harry (Author) / Chan, Candace (Thesis director) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Committee member) / Department of Physics (Contributor) / Materials Science and Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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Description
Topological insulators with conducting surface states yet insulating bulk states have generated a lot of interest amongst the physics community due to their varied characteristics and possible applications. Doped topological insulators have presented newer physical states of matter where topological order co&ndashexists; with other physical properties (like magnetic order). The

Topological insulators with conducting surface states yet insulating bulk states have generated a lot of interest amongst the physics community due to their varied characteristics and possible applications. Doped topological insulators have presented newer physical states of matter where topological order co&ndashexists; with other physical properties (like magnetic order). The electronic states of these materials are very intriguing and pose problems and the possible solutions to understanding their unique behaviors. In this work, we use Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy (EELS) – an analytical TEM tool to study both core&ndashlevel; and valence&ndashlevel; excitations in Bi2Se3 and Cu(doped)Bi2Se3 topological insulators. We use this technique to retrieve information on the valence, bonding nature, co-ordination and lattice site occupancy of the undoped and the doped systems. Using the reference materials Cu(I)Se and Cu(II)Se we try to compare and understand the nature of doping that copper assumes in the lattice. And lastly we utilize the state of the art monochromated Nion UltraSTEM 100 to study electronic/vibrational excitations at a record energy resolution from sub-nm regions in the sample.
ContributorsSubramanian, Ganesh (Author) / Spence, John (Thesis advisor) / Jiang, Nan (Committee member) / Chen, Tingyong (Committee member) / Chan, Candace (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
Recent advancements in the field of light wavefront engineering rely on complex 3D metasurfaces composed of sub-wavelength structures which, for the near infrared range, are challenging to manufacture using contemporary scalable micro- and nanomachining solutions. To address this demand, a novel parallel micromachining method, called metal-assisted electrochemical nanoimprinting (Mac-Imprint) was

Recent advancements in the field of light wavefront engineering rely on complex 3D metasurfaces composed of sub-wavelength structures which, for the near infrared range, are challenging to manufacture using contemporary scalable micro- and nanomachining solutions. To address this demand, a novel parallel micromachining method, called metal-assisted electrochemical nanoimprinting (Mac-Imprint) was developed. Mac-Imprint relies on the catalysis of silicon wet etching by a gold-coated stamp enabled by mass-transport of the reactants to achieve high pattern transfer fidelity. This was realized by (i) using nanoporous catalysts to promote etching solution diffusion and (ii) semiconductor substrate pre-patterning with millimeter-scale pillars to provide etching solution storage. However, both of these approaches obstruct scaling of the process in terms of (i) surface roughness and resolution, and (ii) areal footprint of the fabricated structures. To address the first limitation, this dissertation explores fundamental mechanisms underlying the resolution limit of Mac-Imprint and correlates it to the Debye length (~0.9 nm). By synthesizing nanoporous catalytic stamps with pore size less than 10 nm, the sidewall roughness of Mac-Imprinted patterns is reduced to levels comparable to plasma-based micromachining. This improvement allows for the implementation of Mac-Imprint to fabricate Si rib waveguides with limited levels of light scattering on its sidewall. To address the second limitation, this dissertation focuses on the management of the etching solution storage by developing engineered stamps composed of highly porous polymers coated in gold. In a plate-to-plate configuration, such stamps allow for the uniform patterning of chip-scale Si substrates with hierarchical 3D antireflective and antifouling patterns. The development of a Mac-Imprint system capable of conformal patterning onto non-flat substrates becomes possible due to the flexible and stretchable nature of gold-coated porous polymer stamps. Understanding of their mechanical behavior during conformal contact allows for the first implementation of Mac-Imprint to directly micromachine 3D hierarchical patterns onto plano-convex Si lenses, paving the way towards scalable fabrication of multifunctional 3D metasurfaces for applications in advanced optics.
ContributorsSharstniou, Aliaksandr (Author) / Azeredo, Bruno (Thesis advisor) / Chan, Candace (Committee member) / Rykaczewski, Konrad (Committee member) / Petuskey, William (Committee member) / Chen, Xiangfan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
ContributorsBuck, Elizabeth (Performer) / Landes, Heather (Performer) / Michlich, Albie (Performer) / Novak, Gail (Pianist) (Performer) / Campbell, Andrew (Pianist) (Performer) / Kocour, Michael (Performer) / Thiefain, Vincent (Performer) / McClintock, Matt (Performer) / Libman, Jeff (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2022-09-25
ContributorsAmsler, Eva (Performer) / Ad-El, Shalev (Performer) / Buck, Elizabeth (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2022-11-05
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Description
This work correlates microscopic material changes to short- and long-term performance in modern, Cu-doped, CdTe-based solar cells. Past research on short- and long-term performance emphasized the device-scale impact of Cu, but neglected the microscopic impact of the other chemical species in the system (e.g., Se, Cl, Cu), their distributions, their

This work correlates microscopic material changes to short- and long-term performance in modern, Cu-doped, CdTe-based solar cells. Past research on short- and long-term performance emphasized the device-scale impact of Cu, but neglected the microscopic impact of the other chemical species in the system (e.g., Se, Cl, Cu), their distributions, their local atomic environments, or their interactions/reactions. Additionally, technological limitations precluded nanoscale measurements of the Cu distributions in the cell, and microscale measurements of the material properties (i.e. composition, microstructure, charge transport) as the cell operates. This research aims to answer (1) what is the spatial distribution of Cu in the cell, (2) how does its distribution and local environment correlate with cell performance, and (3) how do local material properties change as the cell operates? This work employs a multi-scale, multi-modal, correlative-measurement approach to elucidate microscopic mechanisms. Several analytical techniques are used – including and especially correlative synchrotron X-ray microscopy – and a unique state-of-the-art instrument was developed to access the dynamics of microscopic mechanisms as they proceed. The work shows Cu segregates around CdTe grain boundaries, and Cu-related acceptor penetration into the CdTe layer is crucial for well-performing cells. After long-term operation, the work presents strong evidence of Se migration into the CdTe layer. This redistribution correlates with microstructural changes in the CdTe layer and limited charge transport around the metal-CdTe interface. Finally, the work correlates changes in microstructure, Cu atomic environment, and charge collection as a cell operates. The results suggest that, as the cell ages, a change to Cu local environment limits charge transport through the metal-CdTe interface, and this change could be influenced by Se migration into the CdTe layer of the cell.
ContributorsWalker, Trumann (Author) / Bertoni, Mariana I (Thesis advisor) / Holman, Zachary (Committee member) / Chan, Candace (Committee member) / Colegrove, Eric (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
ContributorsKoh, Jennifer (Performer) / Compitello, Michael (Performer) / Buck, Elizabeth (Performer) / Gardner, Joshua (Performer) / Edwards, Brad, 1963- (Performer) / Meyer, Jeffery (Conductor) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created2023-01-21
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Description
The current Li-ion batteries with organic liquid electrolytes are limited by their safety and energy density. Therefore, ceramic electrolytes are proposed in developing next-generation, energy-dense Li-metal batteries by replacing organic liquid electrolytes to improve safety and performance. Among numerous ceramic Li-ion conductors, garnet-based solid electrolyte c-Li7La3Zr2O12 (c-LLZO) is considered one

The current Li-ion batteries with organic liquid electrolytes are limited by their safety and energy density. Therefore, ceramic electrolytes are proposed in developing next-generation, energy-dense Li-metal batteries by replacing organic liquid electrolytes to improve safety and performance. Among numerous ceramic Li-ion conductors, garnet-based solid electrolyte c-Li7La3Zr2O12 (c-LLZO) is considered one of the most promising candidates to enable Li metal batteries due to its high ionic conductivity, chemical stability, and wide electrochemical stability window against Li metal. However, synthesis and processing of c-LLZO through conventional solid-sate reaction methods requires long periods of calcination (> 6 h) at high reaction temperatures (> 1000 °C). The need for high reaction temperature results to attain cubic-LLZO phase results in large aggerated LLZO particles and causes Li-loss from the garnet structure, making them unfavorable to process further as bulk pellets or thin films. To overcome processing challenges with solid-state reaction method, two novel facile synthesis approaches molten salt (flux growth method), and solution combustion are employed to produce submicron-sized LLZO powders at low reaction temperatures (< 1000 °C) in a short time. In the first case, molten salt synthesis method with LiCl-KCl eutectic mixture is employed to produce sub-micron sized Ta-doped LLZO (LLZTO) powders at low temperatures (900 °C, 4 h). In addition, a detailed investigation on effect of sintering medium and sintering additives on the structural, microstructural, chemical, and Li-ion transport behavior of the LLZTO pellets are investigated. Sintered LLZTO pellets prepared using molten salt synthesis route exhibited high Li-ion conductivity up to 0.6 mS cm-1 and high relative density (> 95 %) using Pt-crucible. In the second case, a facile solution-combustion technique using an amide-based fuel source CH6N4O is utilized to produce submicron-sized Al-doped LLZO (Al-LLZO) powders at low reaction temperatures 600-800 °C in a short duration of 4 h. In addition, effect of fuel to oxidizer ratio on phase purity, particle growth size, and formation mechanism of conductive Al-LLZO are reported and discussed. The Al-LLZO pellets sintered at 1100 °C/ 6 h exhibited high Li-ion conductivity up to 0.45 mS cm-1 with relative densities (> 90 %).
ContributorsBadami, Pavan Pramod (Author) / Kannan, Arunachalandar Mada (Thesis advisor) / Chan, Candace (Thesis advisor) / Song, Kenan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021