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Dive into the research topics where Evan J. Reed is active.

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Featured researches published by Evan J. Reed.


Nature Communications | 2014

Structural phase transitions in two-dimensional Mo- and W-dichalcogenide monolayers

Karel-Alexander N. Duerloo; Yao Li; Evan J. Reed

Mo- and W-dichalcogenide compounds have a two-dimensional monolayer form that differs from graphene in an important respect: it can potentially have more than one crystal structure. Some of these monolayers exhibit tantalizing hints of a poorly understood structural metal-to-insulator transition with the possibility of long metastable lifetimes. If controllable, such a transition could bring an exciting new application space to monolayer materials beyond graphene. Here we discover that mechanical deformations provide a route to switching thermodynamic stability between a semiconducting and a metallic crystal structure in these monolayer materials. Based on state-of-the-art density functional and hybrid Hartree-Fock/density functional calculations including vibrational energy corrections, we discover that MoTe2 is an excellent candidate phase change material. We identify a range from 0.3 to 3% for the tensile strains required to transform MoTe2 under uniaxial conditions at room temperature. The potential for mechanical phase transitions is predicted for all six studied compounds.


ACS Nano | 2012

Engineered Piezoelectricity in Graphene

Mitchell T. Ong; Evan J. Reed

We discover that piezoelectric effects can be engineered into nonpiezoelectric graphene through the selective surface adsorption of atoms. Our calculations show that doping a single sheet of graphene with atoms on one side results in the generation of piezoelectricity by breaking inversion symmetry. Despite their 2D nature, piezoelectric magnitudes are found to be comparable to those in 3D piezoelectric materials. Our results elucidate a designer piezoelectric phenomenon, unique to the nanoscale, that has potential to bring dynamical control to nanoscale electromechanical devices.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Nitrogen-Rich Heterocycles as Reactivity Retardants in Shocked Insensitive Explosives

M. Riad Manaa; Evan J. Reed; Laurence E. Fried; Nir Goldman

We report the first quantum-based multiscale simulations to study the reactivity of shocked perfect crystals of the insensitive energetic material triaminotrinitrobenzene (TATB). Tracking chemical transformations of TATB experiencing overdriven shock speeds of 9 km/s for up to 0.43 ns and 10 km/s for up to 0.2 ns reveal high concentrations of nitrogen-rich heterocyclic clusters. Further reactivity of TATB toward the final decomposition products of fluid N(2) and solid carbon is inhibited due to the formation of these heterocycles. Our results thus suggest a new mechanism for carbon-rich explosive materials that precedes the slow diffusion-limited process of forming the bulk solid from carbon clusters and provide fundamental insight at the atomistic level into the long reaction zone of shocked TATB.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2004

Early chemistry in hot and dense nitromethane: Molecular dynamics simulations

M. Riad Manaa; Evan J. Reed; Laurence E. Fried; Giulia Galli; Francois Gygi

We report density functional molecular dynamic simulations to determine the early chemical events of hot (T=3000 K) and dense (rho=1.97 g/cm(3), V/V(0)=0.68) nitromethane (CH(3)NO(2)). The first step in the decomposition process is an intermolecular proton abstraction mechanism that leads to the formation of CH(3)NO(2)H(+) and the aci ion H(2)CNO(2) (-). This event is also confirmed to occur in a fast annealing simulation to a final temperature of 4000 K at rho=2.20 g/cm(3). An intramolecular hydrogen transfer that transforms nitromethane into the aci acid form, CH(2)NO(2)H, accompanies this event. To our knowledge, this is the first confirmation of chemical reactivity with bond selectivity for an energetic material near the Chapman-Jouget state of the fully reacted material. We also report the decomposition mechanism followed up to the formation of H(2)O as the first stable product. We note that similarities in the global features of reactants, intermediates, and products of the reacting fluid seem to indicate a threshold for similar chemistry in the range of high densities and temperatures reported herein.


Nature Communications | 2016

Structural semiconductor-to-semimetal phase transition in two-dimensional materials induced by electrostatic gating

Yao Li; Karel-Alexander N. Duerloo; Kerry Wauson; Evan J. Reed

Dynamic control of conductivity and optical properties via atomic structure changes is of technological importance in information storage. Energy consumption considerations provide a driving force towards employing thin materials in devices. Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides are nearly atomically thin materials that can exist in multiple crystal structures, each with distinct electrical properties. By developing new density functional-based methods, we discover that electrostatic gating device configurations have the potential to drive structural semiconductor-to-semimetal phase transitions in some monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides. Here we show that the semiconductor-to-semimetal phase transition in monolayer MoTe2 can be driven by a gate voltage of several volts with appropriate choice of dielectric. We find that the transition gate voltage can be reduced arbitrarily by alloying, for example, for MoxW1−xTe2 monolayers. Our findings identify a new physical mechanism, not existing in bulk materials, to dynamically control structural phase transitions in two-dimensional materials, enabling potential applications in phase-change electronic devices.


Nature Chemistry | 2010

Synthesis of glycine-containing complexes in impacts of comets on early Earth

Nir Goldman; Evan J. Reed; Laurence E. Fried; I.-F. William Kuo; Amitesh Maiti

Delivery of prebiotic compounds to early Earth from an impacting comet is thought to be an unlikely mechanism for the origins of life because of unfavourable chemical conditions on the planet and the high heat from impact. In contrast, we find that impact-induced shock compression of cometary ices followed by expansion to ambient conditions can produce complexes that resemble the amino acid glycine. Our ab initio molecular dynamics simulations show that shock waves drive the synthesis of transient C-N bonded oligomers at extreme pressures and temperatures. On post impact quenching to lower pressures, the oligomers break apart to form a metastable glycine-containing complex. We show that impact from cometary ice could possibly yield amino acids by a synthetic route independent of the pre-existing atmospheric conditions and materials on the planet.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009

Ab initio simulation of the equation of state and kinetics of shocked water

Nir Goldman; Evan J. Reed; I.-F. William Kuo; Laurence E. Fried; Christopher J. Mundy; Alessandro Curioni

We report herein first principles simulations of water under shock loading and the chemical reactivity under these hot, compressed conditions. Using a recently developed simulation technique for shock compression, we observe that water achieves chemical equilibrium in less than 2 ps for all shock conditions studied. We make comparison to the experimental results for the Hugoniot pressure and density final states. Our simulations show that decomposition occurs through the reversible reaction H(2)O <--> H(+) + OH(-), in agreement with experiment. Near the approximate intersection of the Hugoniot and the Neptune isentrope, we observe high concentrations of charged species that contribute electronic states near the band gap.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Ultrafast transformation of graphite to diamond: An ab initio study of graphite under shock compression

Christopher J. Mundy; Alessandro Curioni; Nir Goldman; I.-F. Will Kuo; Evan J. Reed; Laurence E. Fried; Marcella Ianuzzi

We report herein ab initio molecular dynamics simulations of graphite under shock compression in conjunction with the multiscale shock technique. Our simulations reveal that a novel short-lived layered diamond intermediate is formed within a few hundred of femtoseconds upon shock loading at a shock velocity of 12 kms (longitudinal stress>130 GPa), followed by formation of cubic diamond. The layered diamond state differs from the experimentally observed hexagonal diamond intermediate found at lower pressures and previous hydrostatic calculations in that a rapid buckling of the graphitic planes produces a mixture of hexagonal and cubic diamond (layered diamond). Direct calculation of the x-ray absorption spectra in our simulations reveals that the electronic structure of the final state closely resembles that of compressed cubic diamond.


Nature | 2017

Structural phase transition in monolayer MoTe 2 driven by electrostatic doping

Ying Wang; Jun Xiao; Hanyu Zhu; Yao Li; Yousif Alsaid; King Yan Fong; Yao Zhou; Siqi Wang; Wu Shi; Yuan Wang; Alex Zettl; Evan J. Reed; Xiang Zhang

Monolayers of transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) exhibit numerous crystal phases with distinct structures, symmetries and physical properties. Exploring the physics of transitions between these different structural phases in two dimensions may provide a means of switching material properties, with implications for potential applications. Structural phase transitions in TMDs have so far been induced by thermal or chemical means; purely electrostatic control over crystal phases through electrostatic doping was recently proposed as a theoretical possibility, but has not yet been realized. Here we report the experimental demonstration of an electrostatic-doping-driven phase transition between the hexagonal and monoclinic phases of monolayer molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2). We find that the phase transition shows a hysteretic loop in Raman spectra, and can be reversed by increasing or decreasing the gate voltage. We also combine second-harmonic generation spectroscopy with polarization-resolved Raman spectroscopy to show that the induced monoclinic phase preserves the crystal orientation of the original hexagonal phase. Moreover, this structural phase transition occurs simultaneously across the whole sample. This electrostatic-doping control of structural phase transition opens up new possibilities for developing phase-change devices based on atomically thin membranes.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Comparison of ReaxFF, DFTB, and DFT for phenolic pyrolysis. 1. Molecular dynamics simulations.

Tingting Qi; Charles W. Bauschlicher; John W. Lawson; Tapan G. Desai; Evan J. Reed

A systematic comparison of atomistic modeling methods including density functional theory (DFT), the self-consistent charge density-functional tight-binding (SCC-DFTB), and ReaxFF is presented for simulating the initial stages of phenolic polymer pyrolysis. A phenolic polymer system is simulated for several hundred picoseconds within a temperature range of 2500 to 3500 K. The time evolution of major pyrolysis products including small-molecule species and char is examined. Two temperature zones are observed which demark cross-linking versus fragmentation. The dominant chemical products for all methods are similar, but the yields for each product differ. At 3500 K, DFTB overestimates CO production (300-400%) and underestimates free H (~30%) and small C(m)H(n)O molecules (~70%) compared with DFT. At 3500 K, ReaxFF underestimates free H (~60%) and fused carbon rings (~70%) relative to DFT. Heterocyclic oxygen-containing five- and six-membered carbon rings are observed at 2500 K. Formation mechanisms for H2O, CO, and char are discussed. Additional calculations using a semiclassical method for incorporating quantum nuclear energies of molecules were also performed. These results suggest that chemical equilibrium can be affected by quantum nuclear effects at temperatures of 2500 K and below. Pyrolysis reaction mechanisms and energetics are examined in detail in a companion manuscript.

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Laurence E. Fried

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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John D. Joannopoulos

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Marin Soljacic

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Yao Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Michael R. Armstrong

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Nir Goldman

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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M. Riad Manaa

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Yao Li

Stanford University

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Christopher J. Mundy

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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