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Dive into the research topics where Luke L. Daemen is active.

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Featured researches published by Luke L. Daemen.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Hydrogen Adsorption in a Highly Stable Porous Rare-Earth Metal-Organic Framework: Sorption Properties and Neutron Diffraction Studies

Junhua Luo; Hongwu Xu; Yun Liu; Yusheng Zhao; Luke L. Daemen; Craig M. Brown; Tatiana V. Timofeeva; Shengqian Ma; Hong-Cai Zhou

A highly stable porous lanthanide metal-organic framework, Y(BTC)(H2O).4.3H2O (BTC = 1,3,5-benzenetricarboxylate), with pore size of 5.8 A has been constructed and investigated for hydrogen storage. Gas sorption measurements show that this porous MOF exhibits highly selective sorption behaviors of hydrogen over nitrogen gas molecules and can take up hydrogen of about 2.1 wt % at 77 K and 10 bar. Difference Fourier analysis of neutron powder diffraction data revealed four distinct D2 sites that are progressively filled within the nanoporous framework. Interestingly, the strongest adsorption sites identified are associated with the aromatic organic linkers rather than the open metal sites, as occurred in previously reported MOFs. Our results provide for the first time direct structural evidence demonstrating that optimal pore size (around 6 A, twice the kinetic diameter of hydrogen) strengthens the interactions between H2 molecules and pore walls and increases the heat of adsorption, which thus allows for enhancing hydrogen adsorption from the interaction between hydrogen molecules with the pore walls rather than with the normally stronger adsorption sites (the open metal sites) within the framework. At high concentration H2 loadings (5.5 H2 molecules (3.7 wt %) per Y(BTC) formula), H2 molecules form highly symmetric novel nanoclusters with relatively short H2-H2 distances compared to solid H2. These observations are important and hold the key to optimizing this new class of rare metal-organic framework (RMOF) materials for practical hydrogen storage applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2002

Boron suboxide: As hard as cubic boron nitride

Duanwei He; Yusheng Zhao; Luke L. Daemen; Jiang Qian; T.D. Shen; T. W. Zerda

The Vickers hardness of boron suboxide single crystals was measured using a diamond indentation method. Under a loading force of 0.98 N, our test gave an average Vickers hardness of 45 GPa. The average fracture toughness was measured as 4.5 MPa m1/2. We also measured the hardness of the cubic boron nitride and sapphire single crystals for comparison. The average measured hardness for boron suboxide was found to be very close to that of cubic boron nitride under the same loading force. Our results suggest that the boron suboxide could be a new superhard material for industrial applications, surpassed in hardness only by diamond and cubic boron nitride.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Superionic conductivity in lithium-rich anti-perovskites.

Yusheng Zhao; Luke L. Daemen

Lithium ion batteries have shown great promise in electrical energy storage with enhanced energy density, power capacity, charge-discharge rates, and cycling lifetimes. However common fluid electrolytes consisting of lithium salts dissolved in solvents are toxic, corrosive, or flammable. Solid electrolytes with superionic conductivity can avoid those shortcomings and work with a metallic lithium anode, thereby allowing much higher energy densities. Here we present a novel class of solid electrolytes with three-dimensional conducting pathways based on lithium-rich anti-perovskites (LiRAP) with ionic conductivity of σ > 10(-3) S/cm at room temperature and activation energy of 0.2-0.3 eV. As temperature approaches the melting point, the ionic conductivity of the anti-perovskites increases to advanced superionic conductivity of σ > 10(-2) S/cm and beyond. The new crystalline materials can be readily manipulated via chemical, electronic, and structural means to boost ionic transport and serve as high-performance solid electrolytes for superionic Li(+) conduction in electrochemistry applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2004

Enhancement of fracture toughness in nanostructured diamond–SiC composites

Yusheng Zhao; Jiang Qian; Luke L. Daemen; Cristian Pantea; Jianzhong Zhang; Georgiy A. Voronin; T. Waldek Zerda

We synthesized diamond–SiC nanocomposites with superhardness and greatly enhanced fracture toughness through a synthetic approach based on high-energy ball milling to form amorphous Si precursors followed by rapid reactive sintering at high pressure (P) and high temperature (T). We show how the simultaneous P–T application allows for better control of the reactive sintering of a nanocrystalline SiC matrix in which diamond crystals are embedded. The measured fracture toughness KIC of the synthesized composites has been enhanced greatly, as much as 50% from 8.2 to 12.0 MPa m1/2, as the crystal size of the SiC matrix decreases from 10 μm to 20 nm. Our result contradicts a commonly held belief of an inverse correlation between hardness and fracture toughness. We demonstrate the importance of nanostructure for the enhancement of mechanical properties of the composite materials.


Nature Communications | 2016

An ultra-tunable platform for molecular engineering of high-performance crystalline porous materials

Quan-Guo Zhai; Xianhui Bu; Chengyu Mao; Xiang Zhao; Luke L. Daemen; Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta; Pingyun Feng

Metal-organic frameworks are a class of crystalline porous materials with potential applications in catalysis, gas separation and storage, and so on. Of great importance is the development of innovative synthetic strategies to optimize porosity, composition and functionality to target specific applications. Here we show a platform for the development of metal-organic materials and control of their gas sorption properties. This platform can accommodate a large variety of organic ligands and homo- or hetero-metallic clusters, which allows for extraordinary tunability in gas sorption properties. Even without any strong binding sites, most members of this platform exhibit high gas uptake capacity. The high capacity is accomplished with an isosteric heat of adsorption as low as 20 kJ mol−1 for carbon dioxide, which could bring a distinct economic advantage because of the significantly reduced energy consumption for activation and regeneration of adsorbents.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Charge Transfer via the Dative N-B Bond and Dihydrogen Contacts. Experimental and Theoretical Electron Density Studies of Small Lewis Acid-Base Adducts

Stefan Mebs; Simon Grabowsky; Diana Förster; Rainer Kickbusch; Monika Hartl; Luke L. Daemen; Wolfgang Morgenroth; Peter Luger; Beate Paulus; Dieter Lentz

The electronic characteristics of the dative N−B bond in three Lewis acid−base adducts, hydrazine borane, hydrazine bisborane, and ammonia trifluoroborane, are analyzed by an approach combining experimental electron density determination with a broad variety of theoretical calculations. Special focus is directed to the weak dihydrogen contacts in hydrazine borane. The Atoms In Molecules partitioning scheme is complemented by additional methods like the Source Function, and the Electron Localizability Indicator. For the multipole-free theoretical models of hydrazine borane and hydrazine bisborane, a weak charge donation from Lewis base to acid of about 0.05 e is found, whereas multipole refinement of theoretical and experimental structure factors resulted in opposite signs for the Lewis acid and base fragments. For ammonia trifluoroborane, the donation from Lewis base to acid is slightly larger (about 0.13 e) in the multipole-free models, and the charges obtained by multipole refinement retain the direction of the charge donation but show quite large variations. The natural population analysis charges predict larger charge donations (0.35 e) from the Lewis bases to the acids for the three title complexes. Although the three compounds exhibit intermolecular interactions of different types and strengths, including classical hydrogen bonds, F···H contacts and the already mentioned dihydrogen bonds, almost no charge transfer is detected between different molecules within the crystal environment. The main electronic effect of the formation of the Lewis acid-base adducts and of the crystallization is an increase in the charge separation within the ammonia/hydrazine fragments, which is supported by all investigated bond and atomic properties. The nature of the dative N-B bond is found to be mainly electrostatic, but with a substantial contribution of covalency. The F-B bonds show similarities and differences from the N-B bonds, which makes a distinction of coordinative (or dative) bonds from polar covalent interactions possible.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Early stages of oxidative stress-induced membrane permeabilization: a neutron reflectometry study.

Hillary L. Smith; Michael C. Howland; Alan W. Szmodis; Qijuan Li; Luke L. Daemen; Atul N. Parikh; Jaroslaw Majewski

Neutron reflectometry was used to probe in situ the structure of supported lipid bilayers at the solid-liquid interface during the early stages of UV-induced oxidative degradation. Single-component supported lipid bilayers composed of gel phase, dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), and fluid phase, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), phospholipids were exposed to low-dose oxidative stress generated by UV light and their structures were examined by neutron reflectometry. An interrupted illumination mode, involving exposures in 15 min increments with 2 h intervals between subsequent exposures, and a continuous mode involving a single 60 (or 90) min exposure period were employed. In both cases, pronounced differences in the structure of the lipid bilayer after exposure were observed. Interrupted exposure led to a substantial decrease in membrane coverage but preserved its total thickness at reduced scattering length densities. These results indicate that the initial phase during UV-induced membrane degradation involves the formation of hydrophilic channels within the membrane. This is consistent with the loss of some lipid molecules we observe and attendant reorganization of residual lipids forming hemimicellar edges of the hydrophilic channels. In contrast, continuous illumination produced a graded interface of continuously varied scattering length density (and hence hydrocarbon density) extending 100-150 A into the liquid phase. Exposure of a DPPC bilayer to UV light in the presence of a reservoir of unfused vesicles showed low net membrane disintegration during oxidative stress, presumably because of surface back-filling from the bulk reservoir. Chemical evidence for membrane degradation was obtained by mass spectrometry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Further evidence for the formation of hydrophilic channels was furnished by fluorescence microscopy and imaging ellipsometry data.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Nanoconfined Water in Magnesium-Rich 2:1 Phyllosilicates

Nathan W. Ockwig; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Justin S. Durkin; Randall T. Cygan; Luke L. Daemen; Tina M. Nenoff

Inelastic neutron scattering, density functional theory, ab initio molecular dynamics, and classical molecular dynamics were used to examine the behavior of nanoconfined water in palygorskite and sepiolite. These complementary methods provide a strong basis to illustrate and correlate the significant differences observed in the spectroscopic signatures of water in two unique clay minerals. Distortions of silicate tetrahedra in the smaller-pore palygorskite exhibit a limited number of hydrogen bonds having relatively short bond lengths. However, without the distorted silicate tetrahedra, an increased number of hydrogen bonds are observed in the larger-pore sepiolite with corresponding longer bond distances. Because there is more hydrogen bonding at the pore interface in sepiolite than in palygorskite, we expect librational modes to have higher overall frequencies (i.e., more restricted rotational motions); experimental neutron scattering data clearly illustrates this shift in spectroscopic signatures. It follows that distortions of the silicate tetrahedra in these minerals effectively disrupt hydrogen-bonding patterns at the silicate-water interface, and this has a greater impact on the dynamical behavior of nanoconfined water than the actual size of the pore or the presence of coordinatively unsaturated magnesium edge sites.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2009

Neutron powder diffraction and molecular simulation study of the structural evolution of ammonia borane from 15 to 340 K.

Nancy J. Hess; Gregory K. Schenter; Michael R. Hartman; Luke L. Daemen; Thomas Proffen; Shawn M. Kathmann; Christopher J. Mundy; Monika Hartl; David J. Heldebrant; Ashley C. Stowe; Thomas Autrey

The structural behavior of (11)B-, (2)H-enriched ammonia borane, ND(3)(11)BD(3), over the temperature range from 15 to 340 K was investigated using a combination of neutron powder diffraction and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. In the low temperature orthorhombic phase, the progressive displacement of the borane group under the amine group was observed leading to the alignment of the B-N bond near parallel to the c-axis. The orthorhombic to tetragonal structural phase transition at 225 K is marked by dramatic change in the dynamics of both the amine and borane group. The resulting hydrogen disorder is problematic to extract from the metrics provided by Rietveld refinement but is readily apparent in molecular dynamics simulation and in difference Fourier transform maps. At the phase transition, Rietveld refinement does indicate a disruption of one of two dihydrogen bonds that link adjacent ammonia borane molecules. Metrics determined by Rietveld refinement are in excellent agreement with those determined from molecular simulation. This study highlights the valuable insights added by coupled experimental and computational studies.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

Hexagonal Molybdenum Trioxide : Known for 100 Years and Still a Fount of New Discoveries

Hans-Joachim Lunk; Hans Hartl; Monika Hartl; Martin Fait; Ilya G. Shenderovich; Michael Feist; Timothy A. Frisk; Luke L. Daemen; Daniel Mauder; Reinhard Eckelt; Andrey A. Gurinov

In 1906, the preparation of “molybdic acid hydrate” was published by Arthur Rosenheim. Over the past 40 years, a multitude of isostructural compounds, which exist within a wide phase range of the system MoO3−NH3−H2O, have been published. The reported molecular formulas of “hexagonal molybdenum oxide” varied from MoO3 to MoO3·0.33NH3 to MoO3·nH2O (0.09 ≤ n ≤ 0.69) to MoO3·mNH3·nH2O (0.09 ≤ m ≤ 0.20; 0.18 ≤ n ≤ 0.60). Samples, prepared by the acidification route were investigated using thermal analysis coupled online to a mass spectrometer for evolved gas analysis, X-ray powder diffraction, Fourier transform infrared, Raman, magic-angle-spinning 1H- and 15N NMR spectroscopy, and incoherent inelastic neutron scattering. A comprehensive characterization of these samples will lead to a better understanding of their structure and physical properties as well as uncover the underlying relationship between the various compositions. The synthesized polymeric parent samples can be represented by the structural formula (NH4)(x∞)(3)[Mo(y square 1−y)O(3y)(OH)(x)(H2O)(m−n)]·nH2O with 0.10 ≤ x ≤ 0.14, 0.84 ≤ y ≤ 0.88, and m + n ≥ 3 − x − 3y. The X-ray study of a selected monocrystal confirmed the presence of the well-known 3D framework of edge- and corner-sharing MoO6 octahedra. The colorless monocrystal crystallizes in the hexagonal system with space group P6(3)/m, Z = 6, and unit cell parameters of a = 10.527(1) Å, c = 3.7245(7) Å, V = 357.44(8) Å3, and ρ = 3.73 g·cm(−3). The structure of the prepared monocrystal can best be described by the structural formula (NH4)(0.13∞)(3)[Mo(0.86 square 0.14)O2.58(OH)0.13(H2O)(0.29−n)]·nH2O, which is consistent with the existence of one vacancy (square) for six molybdenum sites. The sample MoO3·0.326NH3·0.343H2O, prepared by the ammoniation of a partially dehydrated MoO3·0.170NH3·0.153H2O with dry gaseous ammonia, accommodates NH3 in the hexagonal tunnels, in addition to [NH4]+ cations and H2O. The “chimie douce” reaction of MoO3·0.155NH3·0.440H2O with a 1:1 mixture of NO/NO2 at 100 °C resulted in the synthesis of MoO3·0.539H2O. This material is of great interest as a host of various molecules and cations.

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Monika Hartl

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Jianzhong Zhang

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Sven C. Vogel

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Hongwu Xu

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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H. Nakotte

New Mexico State University

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Darrick J. Williams

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Sourav Adak

New Mexico State University

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Alice Acatrinei

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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