New Materials from High Pressure and Beyond
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Chemistry
Abstract
The discovery of new materials for electronic, magnetic and energy techmology applications motivates much of modern chemistry, physics and materials science. High pressure methods are important for materials synthesis and for inducing new electronic states. This project will explore exciting new materials and also new ideas for materials discovery that go beyond standard high pressure synthesis approaches.
In our high pressure materials syntheses, a chemical reaction is carried out at pressures up to 150,000 atmospheres pressure and temperatures up to 1500C. Afterwards the sample is cooled and then decompressed to ambient conditions. In successful cases, a novel material with a new chemical composition or structure is found to have been 'recovered' from the high pressure and temperature reaction conditions. This is a successful discovery strategy for dense, oxide-based, inorganic materials and will be applied to several specific cases.
Magnetite is the original magnetic material and remains of fundamental interest and of practical importance in new technologies such as spintronic devices. We have recently solved a long-running problem (first identified in 1939) concerning the low temperature electronic structure of magnetite and we discovered unexpected 'orbital molecule' states where electrons are spread over three adjacent iron atoms. In this project we will use high pressure synthesis to recover new chemically-substituted analogues that preserve the essential electronic features of magnetite, in order to discover new 'orbital molecule' states or arrangements. Ruthenium also forms important magnetic oxides such strontium ruthenate which is used in spintronic and silicon thin-film electronics devices. We have recently discovered a new familty of ruthenium oxides, and high pressure will be used to explore their chemical composition range and electronic and magnetic properties.
Oxynitride (oxide-nitride) materials are important for energy technologies as photocatalyts that split water to generate hydrogen, and as phosphors for WLED white-light emitting semiconductor devices. WLED devices are an excellent example of how device innovation (discovery of GaN-based blue LEDs) and materials chemistry (discovery of nitride phosphors) have led to real energy savings on a global scale. We will use a direct high pressure synthesis route to generate new oxynitrides and explore their propeties through collaboration.
The successful preparation of a material is usually the chemical end point for high pressure synthesis, but we will also explore new approaches where a synthesised high pressure material is the starting point for chemical investigations. This can be described as a 'hard-soft' method to generate novel materials by relieving the instability of a dense precursor made under 'hard' high pressure and temperature conditions through 'soft' post-synthesis modification. Recent proof-of-concept results have shown that 'hard-soft' chemistry can generate new transition metal oxides beyond high pressure synthesis. We will also perform high pressure measurements of electronic and magnetic properties of recovered materials to discover electronic properties beyond those at ambient pressure, including very low temperature regimes where quantum mechanical variations are important.
In our high pressure materials syntheses, a chemical reaction is carried out at pressures up to 150,000 atmospheres pressure and temperatures up to 1500C. Afterwards the sample is cooled and then decompressed to ambient conditions. In successful cases, a novel material with a new chemical composition or structure is found to have been 'recovered' from the high pressure and temperature reaction conditions. This is a successful discovery strategy for dense, oxide-based, inorganic materials and will be applied to several specific cases.
Magnetite is the original magnetic material and remains of fundamental interest and of practical importance in new technologies such as spintronic devices. We have recently solved a long-running problem (first identified in 1939) concerning the low temperature electronic structure of magnetite and we discovered unexpected 'orbital molecule' states where electrons are spread over three adjacent iron atoms. In this project we will use high pressure synthesis to recover new chemically-substituted analogues that preserve the essential electronic features of magnetite, in order to discover new 'orbital molecule' states or arrangements. Ruthenium also forms important magnetic oxides such strontium ruthenate which is used in spintronic and silicon thin-film electronics devices. We have recently discovered a new familty of ruthenium oxides, and high pressure will be used to explore their chemical composition range and electronic and magnetic properties.
Oxynitride (oxide-nitride) materials are important for energy technologies as photocatalyts that split water to generate hydrogen, and as phosphors for WLED white-light emitting semiconductor devices. WLED devices are an excellent example of how device innovation (discovery of GaN-based blue LEDs) and materials chemistry (discovery of nitride phosphors) have led to real energy savings on a global scale. We will use a direct high pressure synthesis route to generate new oxynitrides and explore their propeties through collaboration.
The successful preparation of a material is usually the chemical end point for high pressure synthesis, but we will also explore new approaches where a synthesised high pressure material is the starting point for chemical investigations. This can be described as a 'hard-soft' method to generate novel materials by relieving the instability of a dense precursor made under 'hard' high pressure and temperature conditions through 'soft' post-synthesis modification. Recent proof-of-concept results have shown that 'hard-soft' chemistry can generate new transition metal oxides beyond high pressure synthesis. We will also perform high pressure measurements of electronic and magnetic properties of recovered materials to discover electronic properties beyond those at ambient pressure, including very low temperature regimes where quantum mechanical variations are important.
Planned Impact
Both materials and the extreme conditions technologies used to prepare and study them are important to diverse communities. New electronic and magnetic materials have impact from fundamental physics through chemistry and materials science to applications in thin-film devices. Oxynitride ceramics are notable host materials for white-light LED applications. Trained scientists are valuable to the UK economy particularly in the materials sector. Outreach activities featuring electronic materials and extreme conditions are of interest to the public and can prove inspiring to school children.
Discovery of new materials is important to solid state chemists, condensed matter physicists and materials scientists in academia and industry. Electronic and magnetic materials are essential to modern life but our fundamental understanding of the behaviour of correlated electrons that give rise to useful phenomena is still limited. Hence, their experimental exploration remains a very active field with surprising new discoveries made every few years. The impact of such discoveries is initially in the scientific community, but then spreads into the commercial sector. We will collaborate with leading international groups to explore conducting, magnetic (including magnetoresistance and multiferroic) and photoluminescence properties.
Although equipment development is not directly included in this project, the HP measurement activities will help to test new insert technologies being developed by CSEC colleagues. These new methods will have impact in the academic but also industrial research groups studying electronic properties. CSEC is commercialising these cells, and one direct sale has already taken place.
Potential commercialisation of materials synthesis or properties will be investigated by working closely with CSEC's Knowledge Transfer Officer. IP will be protected through patent applications with ERI (Edinburgh Research and Innovation), the University of Edinburgh's research and commercialisation/technology transfer office.
Research results will be disseminated through publication in peer-reviewed journals. We have a strong track record in this respect. Manuscripts will additionally be posted on a free-access archive website of the University of Edinburgh. The travel resources provided by this grant will also provide important dissemination benefits by enabling the PI and RA's to present results at conferences.
This project will have a strong training impact through support for two PDRA's who bring specialist skills in HP science to the UK. As well as gaining training benefits themselves, they will help to train many PhD and Masters students who will receive hands-on training in a wide range of techniques, use of central facility instruments and materials preparation, providing qualified materials scientists for the UK economy.
Results from this project will contribute to CSEC outreach activities that communicate high pressure science and technology to the public. Outreach from this project will principally be through Dr Jenny Rodgers, RSC Regional Coordinator for Scotland, who is actively involved with CSEC and our group. Previous activities have included talks at international science fairs, demonstration of high pressure experiments on Scottish TV, and a highlight in the 'Scotsman' newspaper. Many of these outreach events are aimed at school age children for whom 'elephants in stilettos' ideas of high pressure and demonstrations of a magnet levitated by a superconductor provide an inspiration for future scientific studies and careers.
Discovery of new materials is important to solid state chemists, condensed matter physicists and materials scientists in academia and industry. Electronic and magnetic materials are essential to modern life but our fundamental understanding of the behaviour of correlated electrons that give rise to useful phenomena is still limited. Hence, their experimental exploration remains a very active field with surprising new discoveries made every few years. The impact of such discoveries is initially in the scientific community, but then spreads into the commercial sector. We will collaborate with leading international groups to explore conducting, magnetic (including magnetoresistance and multiferroic) and photoluminescence properties.
Although equipment development is not directly included in this project, the HP measurement activities will help to test new insert technologies being developed by CSEC colleagues. These new methods will have impact in the academic but also industrial research groups studying electronic properties. CSEC is commercialising these cells, and one direct sale has already taken place.
Potential commercialisation of materials synthesis or properties will be investigated by working closely with CSEC's Knowledge Transfer Officer. IP will be protected through patent applications with ERI (Edinburgh Research and Innovation), the University of Edinburgh's research and commercialisation/technology transfer office.
Research results will be disseminated through publication in peer-reviewed journals. We have a strong track record in this respect. Manuscripts will additionally be posted on a free-access archive website of the University of Edinburgh. The travel resources provided by this grant will also provide important dissemination benefits by enabling the PI and RA's to present results at conferences.
This project will have a strong training impact through support for two PDRA's who bring specialist skills in HP science to the UK. As well as gaining training benefits themselves, they will help to train many PhD and Masters students who will receive hands-on training in a wide range of techniques, use of central facility instruments and materials preparation, providing qualified materials scientists for the UK economy.
Results from this project will contribute to CSEC outreach activities that communicate high pressure science and technology to the public. Outreach from this project will principally be through Dr Jenny Rodgers, RSC Regional Coordinator for Scotland, who is actively involved with CSEC and our group. Previous activities have included talks at international science fairs, demonstration of high pressure experiments on Scottish TV, and a highlight in the 'Scotsman' newspaper. Many of these outreach events are aimed at school age children for whom 'elephants in stilettos' ideas of high pressure and demonstrations of a magnet levitated by a superconductor provide an inspiration for future scientific studies and careers.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
J Attfield (Principal Investigator) |
Publications
Ji K
(2020)
YRuO 3 : A quantum weak ferromagnet
in Physical Review Materials
Arévalo-López A
(2013)
Weak ferromagnetism and domain effects in multiferroic LiNbO 3 -type MnTiO 3 -II
in Physical Review B
Solana-Madruga E
(2020)
Unconventional magnetism in the high pressure 'all transition metal' double perovskite Mn2NiReO6.
in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)
Hong K
(2022)
Synthesis, Structure and Magnetic Properties of NiFe 3 O 5
in ECS Journal of Solid State Science and Technology
Denis Romero F
(2018)
Suppression of Sequential Charge Transitions in Ca 0.5 Bi 0.5 FeO 3 via B-Site Cobalt Substitution
in Chemistry of Materials
Injac S
(2020)
Studies of the 4d and 5d 6H perovskites Ba3BM2O9, B = Ti, Zn, Y; M = Ru, Os, and cubic BaB1/3Ru2/3O3 polymorphs stabilised under high pressure.
in Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003)
Araújo B
(2020)
Spin-phonon coupling in monoclinic BiCrO3
in Journal of Applied Physics
Arevalo-Lopez A
(2018)
Spin order in the charge disproportionated phases of the A -site layer ordered triple perovskite LaC a 2 F e 3 O 9
in Physical Review B
Mazur M
(2018)
Pressure-induced chemistry for the 2D to 3D transformation of zeolites
in Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Kloß S
(2021)
Preparation of iron(IV) nitridoferrate Ca4FeN4 through azide-mediated oxidation under high-pressure conditions
in Nature Communications
Kusmartseva A
(2013)
Possible high-pressure orbital quantum criticality and an emergent resistive phase in PbRuO 3
in Physical Review B
Solana-Madruga E
(2021)
Mn3MnNb2O9: high-pressure triple perovskite with 1 : 2 B-site order and modulated spins.
in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)
Arévalo-López ÁM
(2019)
Magnetic frustration in the high-pressure Mn2MnTeO6 (Mn3TeO6-II) double perovskite.
in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)
Kloß SD
(2021)
Low-dimensional magnetism in calcium nitridonickelate(II) Ca2NiN2.
in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)
De C
(2018)
Isovalent Cation Ordering in the Polar Rhombohedral Perovskite Bi2 FeAlO6.
in Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)
Oka K
(2013)
Intermetallic charge-transfer transition in Bi 1 - x La x NiO 3 as the origin of the colossal negative thermal expansion
in Physical Review B
Cumby J
(2018)
High pressure synthesis, crystal growth and magnetic properties of TiOF
in Solid State Sciences
Arevalo-Lopez A
(2017)
Hard-soft chemistry of Sr 1-x Ca x CrO 3-d solid solutions
in Materials Chemistry Frontiers
Alonso J
(2018)
Gérard Demazeau, 07.06.1943-03.11.2017
in Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B
Saito T
(2017)
G -type antiferromagnetic order in the metallic oxide LaC u 3 C r 4 O 12
in Physical Review B
Perversi G
(2018)
Frustration wave order in iron(II) oxide spinels
in Communications Physics
Solana-Madruga E
(2021)
Ferrimagnetism and spin reorientation in the high-pressure double double perovskites Ca Mn Cr Sb O 6 and Ca Mn Fe Sb O 6
in Physical Review Materials
Solana-Madruga E
(2019)
Ferri- and ferro-magnetism in CaMnMReO6 double double perovskites of late transition metals M = Co and Ni.
in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)
Arévalo-López Á
(2018)
Evolving spin periodicity and lock-in transition in the frustrated ordered ilmenite-type ß - Mn 2 InSbO 6
in Physical Review B
McNally G
(2020)
Evolution of cation and spin orders in the double-double-double perovskite series Ca x Mn 2 - x FeReO 6
in Physical Review Materials
Ji K
(2021)
Double Double to Double Perovskite Transformations in Quaternary Manganese Oxides.
in Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)
Ji K
(2021)
Double Double to Double Perovskite Transformations in Quaternary Manganese Oxides
in Angewandte Chemie
Solana-Madruga E
(2016)
Double Double Cation Order in the High-Pressure Perovskites MnRMnSbO6.
in Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)
Denis Romero F
(2020)
Conversion of a Defect Pyrochlore into a Double Perovskite via High-Pressure, High-Temperature Reduction of Te6.
in Inorganic chemistry
Solana-Madruga E
(2021)
Complex magnetism in Ni3TeO6-type Co3TeO6 and high-pressure polymorphs of Mn3-xCoxTeO6 solid solutions.
in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)
McNally G
(2017)
Complex Ferrimagnetism and Magnetoresistance Switching in Ca-Based Double Double and Triple Double Perovskites
in Chemistry of Materials
Hong KH
(2018)
Complex Cation and Spin Orders in the High-Pressure Ferrite CoFe3O5.
in Inorganic chemistry
Arévalo-López AM
(2016)
Competing antiferromagnetic orders in the double perovskite Mn2MnReO6 (Mn3ReO6).
in Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)
Hallas A
(2019)
Coexistence of metallic and nonmetallic properties in the pyrochlore Lu2Rh2O7
in npj Quantum Materials
Kearins P
(2021)
Cluster Spin Glass Formation in the Double Double Perovskite CaMnFeTaO 6
in The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Xiong P
(2018)
Charge Disproportionation in Sr0.5Bi0.5FeO3 Containing Unusually High Valence Fe3.5.
in Inorganic chemistry
Hosaka Y
(2016)
Charge and spin order in the perovskite CaF e 0.5 M n 0.5 O 3 : Charge disproportionation behavior of randomly arranged F e 4 +
in Physical Review B
Denis Romero F
(2017)
Charge and spin order in C a 0.5 B i 0.5 Fe O 3 : Idle spins and frustration in the charge-disproportionated state
in Physical Review B
Yin C
(2019)
Cation-ordered Pb2-xBixMnO4 solid solutions with magnetic frustration
in Journal of Solid State Chemistry
Arévalo-López A
(2013)
Cation, Vacancy, and Spin Ordered 15R-Superstructures in Sr(Cr 1-x Fe x )O 3-y (0.4 = x = 0.6) Perovskites
in Chemistry of Materials
Hong KH
(2018)
Cation, magnetic, and charge ordering in MnFe3O5.
in Journal of materials chemistry. C
Kusmartseva A
(2017)
Bistability and relaxor ferrimagnetism in off-stoichiometric NiCrO3
in Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials
Solana-Madruga E
(2018)
Anisotropic magnetic structures of the Mn R MnSbO 6 high-pressure doubly ordered perovskites ( R = La , Pr, and Nd)
in Physical Review B
Description | New magnetoresistive double double perovskites have been synthesised using equipment and methods developed under this award. |
Exploitation Route | Spintronics sector |
Sectors | Electronics |
Description | New oxynitrides developed in collaboration with Taiwan scientists are promising materials for white-light LEDs. Discovery of new 'All Transition Metal' oxide double perovskites has influenced others working on spintronic and related perovskite materials. Many more such materials have been reported by us and other groups. Discovery of a new structure type of double double perovskites has also had impact as more such materials are discovered, some with potentially useful multiferroic properties. |
First Year Of Impact | 2017 |
Sector | Electronics,Energy |