Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. N. Luo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. N. Luo.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Impact of resonator geometry and its coupling with ground plane on ultrathin metamaterial perfect absorbers

Li Huang; Dibakar Roy Chowdhury; Suchitra Ramani; Matthew T. Reiten; S. N. Luo; Abul K. Azad; Antoinette J. Taylor; Hou-Tong Chen

We investigate the impact of resonator geometry and its coupling with ground plane on the performance of metamaterial perfect absorbers. Using a cross-resonator as an example structure, we find that the absorber thickness can be further reduced through modifying the geometric dimensions of the resonators. Numerical simulations and theoretical calculations reveal that destructive interference of multiple reflections is responsible for the near-unity absorption. The near-field coupling between the resonator array and ground plane can be significant. When this coupling is taken into account, the theoretical results calculated using the interference model are in excellent agreement with experiments and numerical simulations.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

High speed synchrotron x-ray phase contrast imaging of dynamic material response to split Hopkinson bar loading

Matthew Hudspeth; Benjamin Claus; S. Dubelman; J. Black; A. Mondal; Niranjan D. Parab; C. Funnell; F. Hai; M. L. Qi; Kamel Fezzaa; S. N. Luo; W. Chen

The successful process of amalgamating both the time-resolved imaging capabilities present at the Advanced Photon Source beamline 32ID-B and the proficiency of high-rate loading offered by the split Hopkinson or Kolsky compression/tension bar apparatus is discussed and verification of system effectiveness is expressed via dynamic experiments on various material systems. Single particle sand interaction along with glass cracking during dynamic compression, and fiber-epoxy interfacial failure, ligament-bone debonding, and single-crystal silicon fragmentation due to dynamic tension, were imaged with 0.5 μs temporal resolution and μm-level spatial resolution. Synchrotron x-ray phase contrast imaging of said material systems being loaded with the Kolsky bar apparatus demonstratively depicts the effectiveness of the novel union between these two powerful techniques, thereby allowing for in situ analysis of the interior of the material system during high-rate loading for a variety of applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Synthesis of single-component metallic glasses by thermal spray of nanodroplets on amorphous substrates

Qi An; S. N. Luo; William A. Goddard; W. Z. Han; B. Arman; William L. Johnson

We show that single component metallic glasses can be synthesized by thermal spray coating of nanodroplets onto an amorphous substrate. We demonstrate this using molecular dynamics simulations of nanodroplets up to 30 nm that the spreading of the nanodroplets during impact on a substrate leads to sufficiently rapid cooling (1012–1013 K/s) sustained by the large temperature gradients between the thinned nanodroplets and the bulk substrate. However, even under these conditions, in order to ensure that the glass transition outruns crystal nucleation, it is essential that the substrate be amorphous (eliminating sites for heterogeneous nucleation of crystallization).


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Macrodeformation Twins in Single-Crystal Aluminum.

F. P. Zhao; L. Wang; D. Fan; B.X. Bie; Xin Zhou; Tao Suo; Yulong Li; Mingwei Chen; Congzhi Liu; M. L. Qi; M.H. Zhu; S. N. Luo

Deformation twinning in pure aluminum has been considered to be a unique property of nanostructured aluminum. A lingering mystery is whether deformation twinning occurs in coarse-grained or single-crystal aluminum at scales beyond nanotwins. Here, we present the first experimental demonstration of macrodeformation twins in single-crystal aluminum formed under an ultrahigh strain rate (∼10^{6}  s^{-1}) and large shear strain (200%) via dynamic equal channel angular pressing. Large-scale molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the frustration of subsonic dislocation motion leads to transonic deformation twinning. Deformation twinning is rooted in the rate dependences of dislocation motion and twinning, which are coupled, complementary processes during severe plastic deformation under ultrahigh strain rates.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Note: Dynamic strain field mapping with synchrotron X-ray digital image correlation.

L. Lu; D. Fan; B.X. Bie; X. X. Ran; M. L. Qi; Niranjan D. Parab; J. Z. Sun; H. J. Liao; Matthew Hudspeth; Benjamin Claus; Kamel Fezzaa; Tao Sun; W. Chen; Xinglong Gong; S. N. Luo

We present a dynamic strain field mapping method based on synchrotron X-ray digital image correlation (XDIC). Synchrotron X-ray sources are advantageous for imaging with exceptional spatial and temporal resolutions, and X-ray speckles can be produced either from surface roughness or internal inhomogeneities. Combining speckled X-ray imaging with DIC allows one to map strain fields with high resolutions. Based on experiments on void growth in Al and deformation of a granular material during Kolsky bar/gas gun loading at the Advanced Photon Source beamline 32ID, we demonstrate the feasibility of dynamic XDIC. XDIC is particularly useful for dynamic, in-volume, measurements on opaque materials under high strain-rate, large, deformation.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Transient x-ray diffraction with simultaneous imaging under high strain-rate loading

D. Fan; L. Lu; Bo Li; M. L. Qi; F. P. Zhao; Tao Sun; Kamel Fezzaa; W. Chen; S. N. Luo

Real time, in situ, multiframe, diffraction, and imaging measurements on bulk samples under high and ultrahigh strain-rate loading are highly desirable for micro- and mesoscale sciences. We present an experimental demonstration of multiframe transient x-ray diffraction (TXD) along with simultaneous imaging under high strain-rate loading at the Advanced Photon Source beamline 32ID. The feasibility study utilizes high strain-rate Hopkinson bar loading on a Mg alloy. The exposure time in TXD is 2-3 μs, and the frame interval is 26.7-62.5 μs. Various dynamic deformation mechanisms are revealed by TXD, including lattice expansion or compression, crystal plasticity, grain or lattice rotation, and likely grain refinement, as well as considerable anisotropy in deformation. Dynamic strain fields are mapped via x-ray digital image correlation, and are consistent with the diffraction measurements and loading histories.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2014

In situ damage assessment using synchrotron X-rays in materials loaded by a Hopkinson bar

Weinong Chen; Matthew Hudspeth; Ben Claus; Niranjan D. Parab; John T. Black; Kamel Fezzaa; S. N. Luo

Split Hopkinson or Kolsky bars are common high-rate characterization tools for dynamic mechanical behaviour of materials. Stress–strain responses averaged over specimen volume are obtained as a function of strain rate. Specimen deformation histories can be monitored by high-speed imaging on the surface. It has not been possible to track the damage initiation and evolution during the dynamic deformation inside specimens except for a few transparent materials. In this study, we integrated Hopkinson compression/tension bars with high-speed X-ray imaging capabilities. The damage history in a dynamically deforming specimen was monitored in situ using synchrotron radiation via X-ray phase contrast imaging. The effectiveness of the novel union between these two powerful techniques, which opens a new angle for data acquisition in dynamic experiments, is demonstrated by a series of dynamic experiments on a variety of material systems, including particle interaction in granular materials, glass impact cracking, single crystal silicon tensile failure and ligament–bone junction damage.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Unraveling Photoinduced Spin Dynamics in the Topological Insulator Bi 2 Se 3

M. C. Wang; Shan Qiao; Zhigang Jiang; S. N. Luo; J. Qi

We report on a time-resolved ultrafast optical spectroscopy study of the topological insulator Bi_{2}Se_{3}. We unravel that a net spin polarization cannot only be generated using circularly polarized light via interband transitions between topological surface states (SSs), but also via transitions between SSs and bulk states. Our experiment demonstrates that tuning photon energy or temperature can essentially allow for photoexcitation of spin-polarized electrons to unoccupied topological SSs with two distinct spin relaxation times (∼25 and ∼300  fs), depending on the coupling between SSs and bulk states. The intrinsic mechanism leading to such distinctive spin dynamics is the scattering in SSs and bulk states which is dominated by E_{g}^{2} and A_{1g}^{1} phonon modes, respectively. These findings are suggestive of novel ways to manipulate the photoinduced coherent spins in topological insulators.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Crystallization in supercooled liquid Cu: Homogeneous nucleation and growth

L. Wang; Y. Cai; HengAn Wu; S. N. Luo

Homogeneous nucleation and growth during crystallization of supercooled liquid Cu are investigated with molecular dynamics simulations, and the microstructure is characterized with one- and two-dimensional x-ray diffraction. The resulting solids are single-crystal or nanocrystalline, containing various defects such as stacking faults, twins, fivefold twins, and grain boundaries; the microstructure is subject to thermal fluctuations and extent of supercooling. Fivefold twins form via sequential twinning from the solid-liquid interfaces. Critical nucleus size and nucleation rate at 31% supercooling are obtained from statistical runs with the mean first-passage time and survival probability methods, and are about 14 atoms and 10(32) m(-3)s(-1), respectively. The bulk growth dynamics are analyzed with the Johnson-Mehl-Avrami law and manifest three stages; the Avrami exponent varies in the range of 1-19, which also depends on thermal fluctuations and supercooling.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

Microstructure effects on shock-induced surface jetting

B. Li; F. P. Zhao; HengAn Wu; S. N. Luo

We investigate with large-scale molecular dynamics simulations shock-induced surface jetting from grooved Cu as regards microstructure effects, including jetting mass/velocity ratios, directionality, jetting phase diagram, secondary jetting, and underlying mechanisms. The grooves are of wedged, cylindrical, and rectangular shapes. Other microstructure features explored are half angles, crystal structure asymmetry as represented by grain boundaries, geometrical asymmetry, and deformation heterogeneity. The common fundamental mechanism is that jetting is driven by stress gradients due to transverse mass collision. For symmetrical wedged grooves, the velocity ratio (maximum jet head velocity/free surface velocity of flat surface) increases linearly with decreasing half angle, with a slope similar for different materials and at nano- to macroscales, as indicated by our simulations and previous experiments. However, the jetting factor or mass ratio reaches the maximum at certain intermediate half angle. An imp...

Collaboration


Dive into the S. N. Luo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kamel Fezzaa

Argonne National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tao Sun

Argonne National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Fan

Southwest Jiaotong University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Y. Cai

University of Science and Technology of China

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. P. Zhao

Southwest Jiaotong University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

L. Lu

University of Science and Technology of China

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B.X. Bie

Wuhan University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

HengAn Wu

University of Science and Technology of China

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

L. Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. L. Qi

Wuhan University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge