Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jonathan Li is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jonathan Li.


Nature Communications | 2017

In situ atomic-scale imaging of the metal/oxide interfacial transformation

Lianfeng Zou; Jonathan Li; Dmitri N. Zakharov; Eric A. Stach; Guangwen Zhou

Directly probing structure dynamics at metal/oxide interfaces has been a major challenge due to their buried nature. Using environmental transmission electron microscopy, here we report observations of the in-place formation of Cu2O/Cu interfaces via the oxidation of Cu, and subsequently probe the atomic mechanisms by which interfacial transformation and grain rotation occur at the interfaces during reduction in an H2 gas environment. The Cu2O→Cu transformation is observed to occur initially along the Cu2O/Cu interface in a layer-by-layer manner. The accumulation of oxygen vacancies at the Cu2O/Cu interface drives the collapse of the Cu2O lattice near the interface region, which results in a tilted Cu2O/Cu interface with concomitant Cu2O island rotation. These results provide unprecedented microscopic detail regarding the redox reactions of supported oxides, which differs fundamentally from the reduction of bulk or isolated oxides that requires the formation of new interfaces between the parent oxide and the reduced phase.Metal/oxide interfaces play an important role in heterogeneous catalysis and redox reactions, but their buried nature makes them difficult to study. Here, the authors use environmental transmission electron microscopy to probe the atomic-level transformations at Cu2O/Cu interfaces as they undergo redox reactions.


Nature Materials | 2017

Dislocation nucleation facilitated by atomic segregation

Lianfeng Zou; Chaoming Yang; Yinkai Lei; Dmitri N. Zakharov; J.M.K. Wiezorek; Dong Su; Qiyue Yin; Jonathan Li; Zhenyu Liu; Eric A. Stach; Judith C. Yang; Liang Qi; Guofeng Wang; Guangwen Zhou

Surface segregation-the enrichment of one element at the surface, relative to the bulk-is ubiquitous to multi-component materials. Using the example of a Cu-Au solid solution, we demonstrate that compositional variations induced by surface segregation are accompanied by misfit strain and the formation of dislocations in the subsurface region via a surface diffusion and trapping process. The resulting chemically ordered surface regions acts as an effective barrier that inhibits subsequent dislocation annihilation at free surfaces. Using dynamic, atomic-scale resolution electron microscopy observations and theory modelling, we show that the dislocations are highly active, and we delineate the specific atomic-scale mechanisms associated with their nucleation, glide, climb, and annihilation at elevated temperatures. These observations provide mechanistic detail of how dislocations nucleate and migrate at heterointerfaces in dissimilar-material systems.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

The onset of sub-surface oxidation induced by defects in a chemisorbed oxygen layer

Jonathan Li; Liang Li; Guangwen Zhou

We investigate the onset of internal oxidation of a Cu(110) surface induced by oxygen subsurface adsorption via defects in the Cu(110)-(2 × 1)-O chemisorbed layer. The presence of a boundary formed by merged add-row structure domains due to a mismatch of half unit-cell leads to preferred oxygen adsorption at the subsurface tetrahedral sites. The resulting distorted Cu-O tetrahedra along the domain boundary have comparable bond length and angles to those of the bulk oxide phase of Cu2O. Our results indicate that the presence of defects in the oxygen-chemisorbed adlayer can lead to the internal oxidation via the formation of Cu2O-like tetrahedra in between the topmost and second outermost atomic layers at the oxygen coverage θ = 0.53 and the second and third outermost atomic layers at θ = 0.56. These results show that the internal oxidation of a metal surface can occur in the very beginning of the oxygen chemisorption process enabled by the presence of defects in the oxygen chemisorbed layer.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2016

Hydrogen-induced atomic structure evolution of the oxygen-chemisorbed Cu(110) surface

Weitao Shan; Qianqian Liu; Jonathan Li; Na Cai; Wissam A. Saidi; Guangwen Zhou

Using a combination of scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and density functional theory (DFT) modeling, we determine the mechanism of the atomic structural evolution of the oxygenated Cu(110) surface induced by the reaction of adsorbed hydrogen with chemisorbed oxygen in the Cu(110)-c(6 × 2)-O structure. Our STM observations show that the reconstructed Cu(110)-c(6 × 2)-O surface undergoes a phase transition to the (2 × 1)-O reconstruction in the course of oxygen loss induced by the reaction with H2 gas. Using DFT modeling, we find that the surface phase transition is initiated via the adsorption of molecular hydrogen on the chemisorbed oxygen, which results in the formation of H2O molecules that desorb spontaneously from the surface. The loss of chemisorbed oxygen induces the c(6 × 2) → (2 × 1) transition that involves the diffusion of Cu-O-Cu chains along the ⟨1¯10⟩ direction.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Atomically Visualizing Elemental Segregation-Induced Surface Alloying and Restructuring

Lianfeng Zou; Jonathan Li; Dmitri N. Zakharov; Wissam A. Saidi; Eric A. Stach; Guangwen Zhou

Using in situ transmission electron microscopy that spatially and temporally resolves the evolution of the atomic structure in the surface and subsurface regions, we find that the surface segregation of Au atoms in a Cu(Au) solid solution results in the nucleation and growth of a (2 × 1) missing-row reconstructed, half-unit-cell thick L12 Cu3Au(110) surface alloy. Our in situ electron microscopy observations and atomistic simulations demonstrate that the (2 × 1) reconstruction of the Cu3Au(110) surface alloy remains as a stable surface structure as a result of the favored Cu-Au diatom configuration.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Kinetic Barriers of the Phase Transition in the Oxygen Chemisorbed Cu(110)-(2 × 1)-O as a Function of Oxygen Coverage

Liang Li; Qianqian Liu; Jonathan Li; Wissam A. Saidi; Guangwen Zhou


Surface Science | 2016

Density functional theory study of O–H and C–H bond scission of methanol catalyzed by a chemisorbed oxygen layer on Cu(111)

Jonathan Li; Guangwen Zhou


Surface Science | 2016

Surface segregation phenomena in extended and nanoparticle surfaces of Cu–Au alloys

Jonathan Li; Guofeng Wang; Guangwen Zhou


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017

Atomic-Step-Induced Local Nonequilibrium Effects on Surface Oxidation

Hailang Qin; Xidong Chen; Jonathan Li; Peter Sutter; Guangwen Zhou


Archive | 2018

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Dislocation nucleation facilitated by atomic segregation DOI: 10.1038/NMAT5034

J.M.K. Wiezorek; Lianfeng Zou; Chaoming Yang; Yinkai Lei; Dimitri Zakharov; Dong Su; Qiyue Yin; Jonathan Li; Zhenyu Liu; Eric Stach; Judith C. Yang; Liang Qi; Guofeng Wang; Guangwen Zhou

Collaboration


Dive into the Jonathan Li's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guofeng Wang

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Judith C. Yang

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Liang Li

Binghamton University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yinkai Lei

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zhenyu Liu

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge