Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Naixie Zhou is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Naixie Zhou.


Scientific Reports | 2016

High-Entropy Metal Diborides: A New Class of High-Entropy Materials and a New Type of Ultrahigh Temperature Ceramics

Joshua Gild; Yuanyao Zhang; Tyler Harrington; Sicong Jiang; Tao Hu; Matthew C. Quinn; William. M Mellor; Naixie Zhou; Kenneth S. Vecchio; Jian Luo

Seven equimolar, five-component, metal diborides were fabricated via high-energy ball milling and spark plasma sintering. Six of them, including (Hf0.2Zr0.2Ta0.2Nb0.2Ti0.2)B2, (Hf0.2Zr0.2Ta0.2Mo0.2Ti0.2)B2, (Hf0.2Zr0.2Mo0.2Nb0.2Ti0.2)B2, (Hf0.2Mo0.2Ta0.2Nb0.2Ti0.2)B2, (Mo0.2Zr0.2Ta0.2Nb0.2Ti0.2)B2, and (Hf0.2Zr0.2Ta0.2Cr0.2Ti0.2)B2, possess virtually one solid-solution boride phase of the hexagonal AlB2 structure. Revised Hume-Rothery size-difference factors are used to rationalize the formation of high-entropy solid solutions in these metal diborides. Greater than 92% of the theoretical densities have been generally achieved with largely uniform compositions from nanoscale to microscale. Aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (AC STEM), with high-angle annular dark-field and annular bright-field (HAADF and ABF) imaging and nanoscale compositional mapping, has been conducted to confirm the formation of 2-D high-entropy metal layers, separated by rigid 2-D boron nets, without any detectable layered segregation along the c-axis. These materials represent a new type of ultra-high temperature ceramics (UHTCs) as well as a new class of high-entropy materials, which not only exemplify the first high-entropy non-oxide ceramics (borides) fabricated but also possess a unique non-cubic (hexagonal) and layered (quasi-2D) high-entropy crystal structure that markedly differs from all those reported in prior studies. Initial property assessments show that both the hardness and the oxidation resistance of these high-entropy metal diborides are generally higher/better than the average performances of five individual metal diborides made by identical fabrication processing.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Enhancing the Ion Transport in LiMn1.5Ni0.5O4 by Altering the Particle Wulff Shape via Anisotropic Surface Segregation

Jiajia Huang; Haodong Liu; Naixie Zhou; Ke An; Ying Shirley Meng; Jian Luo

Spontaneous and anisotropic surface segregation of W cations in LiMn1.5Ni0.5O4 particles can alter the Wulff shape and improve surface stability, thereby significantly improving the electrochemical performance. An Auger electron nanoprobe was employed to identify the anisotropic surface segregation, whereby W cations prefer to segregate to {110} surface facets to decrease its relative surface energy according to Gibbs adsorption theory and subsequently increase its surface area according to Wulff theory. Consequently, the rate performance is improved (e.g., by ∼5-fold at a high rate of 25C) because the {110} facets have more open channels for fast lithium ion diffusion. Furthermore, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) depth profiling suggested that the surface segregation and partial reduction of W cation inhibit the formation of Mn3+ on surfaces to improve cycling stability via enhancing the cathode electrolyte interphase (CEI) stability at high charging voltages. This is the first report of using anisotropic surface segregation to thermodynamically control the particle morphology as well as enhancing CEI stability as a facile, and potentially general, method to significantly improve the electrochemical performance of battery electrodes. Combining neutron diffraction, an Auger electron nanoprobe, XPS, and other characterizations, we depict the underlying mechanisms of improved ionic transport and CEI stability in high-voltage LiMn1.5Ni0.5O4 spinel materials.


Nature Communications | 2018

Role of disordered bipolar complexions on the sulfur embrittlement of nickel general grain boundaries

Tao Hu; Shengfeng Yang; Naixie Zhou; Yuanyao Zhang; Jian Luo

Minor impurities can cause catastrophic fracture of normally ductile metals. Here, a classic example is represented by the sulfur embrittlement of nickel, whose atomic-level mechanism has puzzled researchers for nearly a century. In this study, coupled aberration-corrected electron microscopy and semi-grand-canonical-ensemble atomistic simulation reveal, unexpectedly, the universal formation of amorphous-like and bilayer-like facets at the same general grain boundaries. Challenging the traditional view, the orientation of the lower-Miller-index grain surface, instead of the misorientation, dictates the interfacial structure. We also find partial bipolar structural orders in both amorphous-like and bilayer-like complexions (a.k.a. thermodynamically two-dimensional interfacial phases), which cause brittle intergranular fracture. Such bipolar, yet largely disordered, complexions can exist in and affect the properties of various other materials. Beyond the embrittlement mechanism, this study provides deeper insight to better understand abnormal grain growth in sulfur-doped Ni, and generally enriches our fundamental understanding of performance-limiting and more disordered interfaces.Sulfur at nickel grain boundaries can cause catastrophic failure, but the mechanisms behind that embrittlement remain poorly understood. Here, the authors image and model bipolar sulfur–nickel structures at amorphous-like and bilayer-like facets of general grain boundaries that cause embrittlement.


Acta Materialia | 2015

Developing grain boundary diagrams for multicomponent alloys

Naixie Zhou; Jian Luo


Materials Letters | 2014

Developing thermodynamic stability diagrams for equilibrium-grain-size binary alloys

Naixie Zhou; Jian Luo


Scripta Materialia | 2016

Stabilization of nanocrystalline alloys at high temperatures via utilizing high-entropy grain boundary complexions

Naixie Zhou; Tao Hu; Jiajia Huang; Jian Luo


Scripta Materialia | 2018

A new class of high-entropy perovskite oxides

Sicong Jiang; Tao Hu; Joshua Gild; Naixie Zhou; Jiuyuan Nie; Mingde Qin; Tyler Harrington; Kenneth S. Vecchio; Jian Luo


Acta Materialia | 2016

Computational study of metallic dopant segregation and embrittlement at molybdenum grain boundaries

Richard Tran; Zihan Xu; Naixie Zhou; Balachandran Radhakrishnan; Jian Luo; Shyue Ping Ong


Current Opinion in Solid State & Materials Science | 2016

Grain boundary complexions in multicomponent alloys: Challenges and opportunities

Naixie Zhou; Tao Hu; Jian Luo


Acta Materialia | 2017

Liquid-like grain boundary complexion and sub-eutectic activated sintering in CuO-doped TiO2

Jiuyuan Nie; Jonathan M. Chan; Mingde Qin; Naixie Zhou; Jian Luo

Collaboration


Dive into the Naixie Zhou's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jian Luo

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tao Hu

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiajia Huang

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yuanyao Zhang

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiuyuan Nie

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joshua Gild

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mingde Qin

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shyue Ping Ong

University of California

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge