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Computer Simulations and Experimental Studies on Transition Metal Borides to 390 GPa

ORAL

Abstract


The attainment of near TPa static pressure in the laboratory has led to a renewed interest in phase transformations and shear strength measurements of incompressible transition metals rhenium (Re), osmium (Os), and their superhard diborides (ReB2 and OsB2) We have compressed hexagonal ReB2, OsB2, and Os2B3 to multi-megabar pressures using Focused Ion Beam machined toroidal diamond anvils. The phase transformations and equation of state were studied using micro-beam angle-dispersive x-ray diffraction at HPCAT beamline 16-BM-D. The platinum pressure marker was employed to the highest pressure of 390 GPa. First-principles simulations based on density functional theory (DFT) were utilized to model ReB2 and OsB2 under external pressure. The ambient-pressure lattice parameters computed by the projector augmented-wave method with generalized gradient approximation agree well with the experiment within 1% of error. We will present a comparison of experimental shear strength and equation of state with the elastic constants from DFT calculations up to the highest pressure under study.

Presenters

  • Yogesh Vohra

    Univ of Alabama - Birmingham, Department of Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham, Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham

Authors

  • Yogesh Vohra

    Univ of Alabama - Birmingham, Department of Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham, Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham

  • Kaleb Burrage

    Sandia National Labs, Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham

  • Christopher Perreault

    Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham

  • Gopi K Samudrala

    Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham

  • Chia-Min Lin

    Department of Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham, Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham

  • Cheng-Chien Chen

    Department of Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham, Department of Physics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Physics, Univ of Alabama - Birmingham

  • Nenad Velisavljevic

    HPCAT, Argonne National Laboratory