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Dive into the research topics where Jacob Shamblin is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacob Shamblin.


Nature Materials | 2016

Probing disorder in isometric pyrochlore and related complex oxides

Jacob Shamblin; Mikhail Feygenson; Joerg C. Neuefeind; Cameron L. Tracy; Fuxiang Zhang; Sarah Finkeldei; Dirk Bosbach; Haidong Zhou; Rodney C. Ewing; Maik Lang

There has been an increased focus on understanding the energetics of structures with unconventional ordering (for example, correlated disorder that is heterogeneous across different length scales). In particular, compounds with the isometric pyrochlore structure, A2B2O7, can adopt a disordered, isometric fluorite-type structure, (A, B)4O7, under extreme conditions. Despite the importance of the disordering process there exists only a limited understanding of the role of local ordering on the energy landscape. We have used neutron total scattering to show that disordered fluorite (induced intrinsically by composition/stoichiometry or at far-from-equilibrium conditions produced by high-energy radiation) consists of a local orthorhombic structural unit that is repeated by a pseudo-translational symmetry, such that orthorhombic and isometric arrays coexist at different length scales. We also show that inversion in isometric spinel occurs by a similar process. This insight provides a new basis for understanding order-to-disorder transformations important for applications such as plutonium immobilization, fast ion conduction, and thermal barrier coatings.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Structure and Reactivity of X-ray Amorphous Uranyl Peroxide, U2O7

Samuel O. Odoh; Jacob Shamblin; Christopher A. Colla; Sarah Hickam; Haylie L. Lobeck; Rachel A.K. Lopez; Travis A. Olds; Jennifer E. S. Szymanowski; Ginger E. Sigmon; Joerg C. Neuefeind; William H. Casey; Maik Lang; Laura Gagliardi; Peter C. Burns

Recent accidents resulting in worker injury and radioactive contamination occurred due to pressurization of uranium yellowcake drums produced in the western U.S.A. The drums contained an X-ray amorphous reactive form of uranium oxide that may have contributed to the pressurization. Heating hydrated uranyl peroxides produced during in situ mining can produce an amorphous compound, as shown by X-ray powder diffraction of material from impacted drums. Subsequently, studtite, [(UO2)(O2)(H2O)2](H2O)2, was heated in the laboratory. Its thermal decomposition produced a hygroscopic anhydrous uranyl peroxide that reacts with water to release O2 gas and form metaschoepite, a uranyl-oxide hydrate. Quantum chemical calculations indicate that the most stable U2O7 conformer consists of two bent (UO2)(2+) uranyl ions bridged by a peroxide group bidentate and parallel to each uranyl ion, and a μ2-O atom, resulting in charge neutrality. A pair distribution function from neutron total scattering supports this structural model, as do (1)H- and (17)O-nuclear magnetic resonance spectra. The reactivity of U2O7 in water and with water in air is higher than that of other uranium oxides, and this can be both hazardous and potentially advantageous in the nuclear fuel cycle.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2017

Defect accumulation in swift heavy ion-irradiated CeO2 and ThO2

Raul I. Palomares; Jacob Shamblin; Cameron L. Tracy; Joerg C. Neuefeind; Rodney C. Ewing; C. Trautmann; Maik Lang

Neutron total scattering was used to investigate defect accumulation mechanisms in CeO2 and ThO2 irradiated with 2.2 GeV Au ions. Pair distribution function (PDF) analysis was applied to characterize the local structural evolution and irradiation-induced defects as a function of irradiation fluence. CeO2 exhibits a greater amount of disorder than ThO2 under the same irradiation conditions. The local structures of the two materials evolve differently as a function of ion fluence, even if similar defects are produced. The PDF analysis indicates that oxygen dimer and/or peroxide defects with 〈O–O〉 distances of ∼1.45 A are formed in CeO2, while irradiation-induced defects in ThO2 result in a change in the mean O–Th–O bond angle and a distortion of local ThO8 polyhedra. Understanding how bound oxygen defects, such as peroxide, affect bulk oxygen transport in CeO2 will aid in better predicting and improving properties of fluorite structure materials for fast ion conductor applications.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Inversion in Mg1–xNixAl2O4 Spinel: New Insight into Local Structure

Eric C. O’Quinn; Jacob Shamblin; Brandon Perlov; Rodney C. Ewing; Joerg C. Neuefeind; Mikhail Feygenson; Igor Gussev; Maik Lang

A wide variety of compositions adopt the isometric spinel structure (AB2O4), in which the atomic-scale ordering is conventionally described according to only three structural degrees of freedom. One, the inversion parameter, is traditionally defined as the degree of cation exchange between the A- and B-sites. This exchange, a measure of intrinsic disorder, is fundamental to understanding the variation in the physical properties of different spinel compositions. Based on neutron total scattering experiments, we have determined that the local structure of Mg1-xNixAl2O4 spinel cannot be understood as simply being due to cation disorder. Rather, cation inversion creates a local tetragonal symmetry that extends over sub-nanometer domains. Consequently, the simple spinel structure is more complicated than previously thought, as more than three parameters are needed to fully describe the structure. This new insight provides a framework by which the behavior of spinel can be more accurately modeled under the extreme environments important for many geophysics and energy-related applications, including prediction of deep seismic activity and immobilization of nuclear waste in oxides.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Chemical ordering in substituted fluorite oxides: a computational investigation of Ho2Zr2O7 and RE2Th2O7 (RE=Ho, Y, Gd, Nd, La)

Jonathan M. Solomon; Jacob Shamblin; Maik Lang; Alexandra Navrotsky; Mark Asta

Fluorite-structured oxides find widespread use for applications spanning nuclear energy and waste containment, energy conversion, and sensing. In such applications the host tetravalent cation is often partially substituted by trivalent cations, with an associated formation of charge-compensating oxygen vacancies. The stability and properties of such materials are known to be influenced strongly by chemical ordering of the cations and vacancies, and the nature of such ordering and associated energetics are thus of considerable interest. Here we employ density-functional theory (DFT) calculations to study the structure and energetics of cation and oxygen-vacancy ordering in Ho2Zr2O7. In a recent neutron total scattering study, solid solutions in this system were reported to feature local chemical ordering based on the fluorite-derivative weberite structure. The calculations show a preferred chemical ordering qualitatively consistent with these findings, and yield values for the ordering energy of 9.5 kJ/mol-cation. Similar DFT calculations are applied to additional RE2Th2O7 fluorite compounds, spanning a range of values for the ratio of the tetravalent and trivalent (RE) cation radii. The results demonstrate that weberite-type order becomes destabilized with increasing values of this size ratio, consistent with an increasing energetic preference for the tetravalent cations to have higher oxygen coordination.


Nature Communications | 2018

Experimental evidence for bipolaron condensation as a mechanism for the metal-insulator transition in rare-earth nickelates

Jacob Shamblin; Maximilian Heres; Haidong Zhou; Joshua Sangoro; Maik Lang; Joerg C. Neuefeind; J. A. Alonso; S. Johnston

Many-body effects produce deviations from the predictions of conventional band theory in quantum materials, leading to strongly correlated phases with insulating or bad metallic behavior. One example is the rare-earth nickelates RNiO3, which undergo metal-to-insulator transitions (MITs) whose origin is debated. Here, we combine total neutron scattering and broadband dielectric spectroscopy experiments to study and compare carrier dynamics and local crystal structure in LaNiO3 and NdNiO3. We find that the local crystal structure of both materials is distorted in the metallic phase, with slow, thermally activated carrier dynamics at high temperature. We further observe a sharp change in conductivity across the MIT in NdNiO3, accompanied by slight differences in the carrier hopping time. These results suggest that changes in carrier concentration drive the MIT through a polaronic mechanism, where the (bi)polaron liquid freezes into the insulating phase across the MIT temperature.Rare-earth nickelates undergo a metal-to-insulator transition accompanied by the formation of ordered lattice distortions, but the role of the lattice in the metallic phase remains unclear. Here the authors provide evidence that the metal is a polaronic liquid that freezes into the insulating state.


RSC Advances | 2016

Pressure-induced phase transitions of β-type pyrochlore CsTaWO6

Fuxiang Zhang; Cameron L. Tracy; Jacob Shamblin; Raul I. Palomares; Maik Lang; Sulgiye Park; Changyong Park; Sergey N. Tkachev; Rodney C. Ewing

The β-type pyrochlore CsTaWO6 was studied by synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Raman scattering methods up to pressures of 43 GPa using a diamond anvil cell (DAC). With increasing pressure, the cubic pyrochlore in space group of Fd-m transforms to an orthorhombic structure (space group: Pnma) at 5.9 GPa and then to a monoclinic structure (space group: P21/c) at ∼18 GPa. The structural evolution in CsTaWO6 is a continuous process and experimental results suggest that the initial cubic phase has a tetragonal distortion at ambient conditions. Both XRD and Raman measurements indicate that the pressure-induced phase transitions in CsTaWO6 are reversible. These results may provide a structural explanation of previous experimental resistivity measurement results for the isostructural superconductor K(Cs)Os2O6 at high pressure conditions.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2018

A2TiO5 (A = Dy, Gd, Er, Yb) at High Pressure

Sulgiye Park; Dylan R. Rittman; Cameron L. Tracy; Karena W. Chapman; Fuxiang Zhang; Changyong Park; Sergey N. Tkachev; Eric C. O’Quinn; Jacob Shamblin; Maik Lang; Wendy L. Mao; Rodney C. Ewing

The structural evolution of lanthanide A2TiO5 (A = Dy, Gd, Yb, Er) at high pressure is investigated using synchrotron X-ray diffraction. The effects of A-site cation size and of the initial structure are systematically examined by varying the composition of the isostructural lanthanide titanates and the structure of dysprosium titanate polymorphs (orthorhombic, hexagonal, and cubic), respectively. All samples undergo irreversible high-pressure phase transformations, but with different onset pressures depending on the initial structure. While each individual phase exhibits different phase transformation histories, all samples commonly experience a sluggish transformation to a defect cotunnite-like (Pnma) phase for a certain pressure range. Orthorhombic Dy2TiO5 and Gd2TiO5 form P21am at pressures below 9 GPa and Pnma above 13 GPa. Pyrochlore-type Dy2TiO5 and Er2TiO5 as well as defect-fluorite-type Yb2TiO5 form Pnma at ∼21 GPa, followed by Im3̅m. Hexagonal Dy2TiO5 forms Pnma directly, although a small amount of remnants of hexagonal Dy2TiO5 is observed even at the highest pressure (∼55 GPa) reached, indicating kinetic limitations in the hexagonal Dy2TiO5 phase transformations at high pressure. Decompression of these materials leads to different metastable phases. Most interestingly, a high-pressure cubic X-type phase (Im3̅m) is confirmed using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy on recovered pyrochlore-type Er2TiO5. The kinetic constraints on this metastable phase yield a mixture of both the X-type phase and amorphous domains upon pressure release. This is the first observation of an X-type phase for an A2BO5 composition at high pressure.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Erratum: Corrigendum: Chemical ordering in substituted fluorite oxides: a computational investigation of Ho2Zr2O7 and RE2Th2O7 (RE = Ho, Y, Gd, Nd, La)

Jonathan M. Solomon; Jacob Shamblin; Maik Lang; Alexandra Navrotsky; Mark Asta

Fluorite-structured oxides find widespread use for applications spanning nuclear energy and waste containment, energy conversion, and sensing. In such applications the host tetravalent cation is often partially substituted by trivalent cations, with an associated formation of charge-compensating oxygen vacancies. The stability and properties of such materials are known to be influenced strongly by chemical ordering of the cations and vacancies, and the nature of such ordering and associated energetics are thus of considerable interest. Here we employ density-functional theory (DFT) calculations to study the structure and energetics of cation and oxygen-vacancy ordering in Ho2Zr2O7. In a recent neutron total scattering study, solid solutions in this system were reported to feature local chemical ordering based on the fluorite-derivative weberite structure. The calculations show a preferred chemical ordering qualitatively consistent with these findings, and yield values for the ordering energy of 9.5 kJ/mol-cation. Similar DFT calculations are applied to additional RE2Th2O7 fluorite compounds, spanning a range of values for the ratio of the tetravalent and trivalent (RE) cation radii. The results demonstrate that weberite-type order becomes destabilized with increasing values of this size ratio, consistent with an increasing energetic preference for the tetravalent cations to have higher oxygen coordination.


Physical Review B | 2016

Role of composition, bond covalency, and short-range order in the disordering of stannate pyrochlores by swift heavy ion irradiation

Cameron L. Tracy; Jacob Shamblin; Sulgiye Park; Fuxiang Zhang; C. Trautmann; Maik Lang; Rodney C. Ewing

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Maik Lang

University of Tennessee

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Joerg C. Neuefeind

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Fuxiang Zhang

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Haidong Zhou

University of Tennessee

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C. Trautmann

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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