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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Proffen is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Proffen.


Science | 2010

Entropically Stabilized Local Dipole Formation in Lead Chalcogenides

Emil S. Božin; Christos D. Malliakas; Petros Souvatzis; Thomas Proffen; Nicola A. Spaldin; Mercouri G. Kanatzidis; Simon J. L. Billinge

A Hot Dipole In a ferroelectric material, there is an alignment of local electric dipole moments that produces a net overall electric polarization. This state is accompanied by a decrease in symmetry, which can be restored by heating above a critical temperature. In contrast, through a combination of theory and experiments, Božin et al. (p. 1660) now show that with increasing temperature, rock-salt–structured lead telluride and lead sulfide go through a phase transition from a high symmetry phase to a low symmetry phase with an associated dipole moment. Paradoxically, the dipoles are stabilized in the disordered state at high temperature, even though the undistorted structure has lower internal energy. Upon heating, lead telluride and lead sulfide show the formation of a less symmetric, dipolar structure. We report the observation of local structural dipoles that emerge from an undistorted ground state on warming, in contrast to conventional structural phase transitions in which distortions emerge on cooling. Using experimental and theoretical probes of the local structure, we demonstrate this behavior in binary lead chalcogenides, which were believed to adopt the ideal, undistorted rock-salt structure at all temperatures. The behavior is consistent with a simple thermodynamic model in which the emerging dipoles are stabilized in the disordered state at high temperature due to the extra configurational entropy despite the fact that the undistorted structure has lower internal energy. Our findings shed light on the anomalous electronic and thermoelectric properties of the lead chalcogenides. Similar searches may show that the phenomenon is more widespread.


Zeitschrift Fur Kristallographie | 2007

The Samson phase, β-Mg2Al3, revisited

M. Feuerbacher; Carsten Thomas; Julien P. A. Makongo; Stefan Hoffmann; Wilder Carrillo-Cabrera; Raul Cardoso; Yuri Grin; Guido Kreiner; Jean-Marc Joubert; Thomas Schenk; J. Gastaldi; Henri Nguyen-Thi; N. Mangelinck-Noël; B. Billia; P. Donnadieu; Aleksandra Czyrska-Filemonowicz; Anna Zielińska-Lipiec; Beata Dubiel; Thomas Weber; Philippe Schaub; Günter Krauss; Volker Gramlich; Jeppe Christensen; Sven Lidin; Daniel C. Fredrickson; Marek Mihalkovic; Wieslawa Sikora; Janusz Malinowski; Stephan Brühne; Thomas Proffen

Co-Authors: Michael Feuerbacher, Carsten Thomas, Julien P. A. Makongo, Stefan Hoffmann, Wilder Carrillo-Cabrera, Raul Cardoso, Yuri Grin, Guido Kreiner, Jean-Marc Joubert, Thomas Schenk, Joseph Gastaldi, Henri Nguyen-Thi, Nathalie Mangelinck-Noël, Bernard Billia, Patricia Donnadieu, Aleksandra Czyrska-Filemonowicz, Anna Zielinska-Lipiec, Beata Dubiel, Thomas Weber, Philippe Schaub, Günter Krauss, Volker Gramlich, Jeppe Christensen, Sven Lidin, Daniel Fredrickson, Marek Mihalkovic, Wieslawa Sikora, Janusz Malinowski, Stefan Brühne, Thomas Proffen, Wolf Assmus, Marc de Boissieu, Francoise Bley, Jean-Luis Chemin, Jürgen Schreuer Abstract. The Al−Mg phase diagram has been reinvestigated in the vicinity of the stability range of the Samson phase, β-Mg2Al3 (cF1168). For the composition Mg 38.5 Al 61.5, this cubic phase, space group Fd-3m (no 227), a = 28.242(1) Å, V = 22526(2) Å3, undergoes at 214 °C a first-order phase transition to rhombohedral β′-Mg2Al3(hR293), a = 19.968(1) Å, c = 48.9114(8) Å, V = 16889(2) Å3, (i.e. 22519 Å3 for the equivalent cubic unit cell) space group R3m (no 160), a subgroup of index four of Fd-3m. The structure of the β-phase has been redetermined at ambient temperature as well as in situ at 400 °C. It essentially agrees with Samsons model, even in most of the many partially occupied and split positions. The structure of β′-Mg2Al3is closely related to that of the β-phase. Its atomic sites can be derived from those of the β-phase by group-theoretical considerations. The main difference between the two structures is that all atomic sites are fully occupied in case of the β′-phase. The reciprocal space, Bragg as well as diffuse scattering, has been explored as function of temperature and the β- to β′-phase transition was studied in detail. The microstructures of both phases have been analyzed by electron microscopy and X-ray topography showing them highly defective. Finally, the thermal expansion coefficients and elastic parameters have been determined. Their values are somewhere in between those of Al and Mg.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Determination of Structure and Phase Transition of Light Element Nanocomposites in Mesoporous Silica: Case study of NH3BH3 in MCM-41

Hyunjeong Kim; Abhi Karkamkar; Tom Autrey; Peter Chupas; Thomas Proffen

Nanocomposition of molecular crystal ammonia borane (AB) by embedding it in mesoporous silica leads to a remarkable enhancement of the hydrogen storage properties. To investigate the nature of a nanophase AB, we used atomic pair distribution function (PDF) analysis of synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data to follow the structural evolution of AB embedded within MCM-41 at temperatures ranging from 80 to 300 K. We found that the nanophase AB residing within the mesoporous scaffold does not undergo the structural phase transition at 225 K that was observed in the neat molecular crystal. Rather, it stays in the tetragonal phase over a wide temperature range of 110 to 240 K and starts to lose structural correlation above 240 K. This finding strongly suggests that nanoconfinement of AB within mesoporous scaffolds stabilizes the high-temperature disordered tetragonal phase at a much lower temperature. PDF analyses of composite materials composed of excess AB (i.e., AB:MCM-41 > 1:1) indicates that the excess AB forms aggregates outside the mesoporous scaffold and that these aggregates have structural properties similar to neat AB, that is, the orthorhombic-to-tetragonal structural phase transition is observed at 225 K upon warming. These results may provide important insight into the mechanism behind the enhanced hydrogen storage properties of this system.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2003

Improved measures of quality for the atomic pair distribution function

P. F. Peterson; Emil S. Božin; Thomas Proffen; Simon J. L. Billinge

The introduction of neutron spallation-source instruments, such as the General Materials Diffractometer (GEM) at ISIS, allows measurement of pair distribution function (PDF) data at significantly higher rates than previously possible. As a result of the increased rate, a single experiment can produce over a hundred individual runs. Manual processing of all these data using traditional methods becomes inconvenient and inefficient. This article presents quality criteria that help produce automated direct Fourier transformed PDFs of quality similar to hand-processed data, and compares optimization methods.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Density functional modeling of the local structure of kaolinite subjected to thermal dehydroxylation.

Claire E. White; John L. Provis; Thomas Proffen; Daniel P. Riley; Jannie S. J. van Deventer

Understanding the atomic-level changes that occur as kaolinite is converted (thermally dehydroxylated) to metakaolin is critical to the optimization of this large-scale industrial process. Metakaolin is X-ray amorphous; therefore, conventional crystallographic techniques do not reveal the changes in local structure during its formation. Local structure-based experimental techniques are useful in understanding the atomic structure but do not provide the thermodynamic information which is necessary to ensure plausibility of refined structures. Here, kaolinite dehydroxylation is modeled using density functional theory, and a stepwise methodology, where several water molecules are removed from the structure, geometry optimization is carried out, and then the process is repeated. Hence, the structure remains in an energetically and thermodynamically feasible state while transitioning from kaolinite to metakaolin. The structures generated during the dehydroxylation process are validated by comparison with X-ray and neutron pair distribution function data. Thus, this study illustrates one possible route by which dehydroxylation of kaolinite can take place, revealing a chemically, energetically, and experimentally plausible structure of metakaolin. This methodology of density functional modeling of the stepwise changes in a material is not limited in application to kaolinite or other aluminosilicates and provides an accurate representation of the local structural changes occurring in materials used in industrially important processes.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2004

Reciprocal-space instrumental effects on the real-space neutron atomic pair distribution function

Xiangyun Qiu; Emil S. Božin; Pavol Juhas; Thomas Proffen; Simon J. L. Billinge

An atomic pair distribution function (PDF) neutron powder diffraction round-robin experiment was performed on six diffractometers at three spallation sources. Instrument-specific effects on the real-space PDF were investigated, such as finite measurement range, the instrument resolution and the asymmetric shape of diffraction peaks. Two illustrative samples, a perfectly long-range-ordered element, Pb, and a locally strained alloy ZnSe0.5Te0.5, were measured at low temperatures. Various aspects of the PDF were explored, either qualitatively by direct comparison or quantitatively via structural modelling. Future implementation of modelling codes incorporating some of these instrumental effects are also discussed.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2011

Building and refining complete nanoparticle structures with total scattering data

Katharine Page; Taylor C. Hood; Thomas Proffen; Reinhard B. Neder

High-energy X-ray and spallation neutron total scattering data provide information about each pair of atoms in a nanoparticle sample, allowing for quantitative whole-particle structural modeling based on pair distribution function analysis. The realization of this capability has been hindered by a lack of versatile tools for describing complex finite structures. Here, the implementation of whole-particle refinement for complete nanoparticle systems is described within two programs, DISCUS and DIFFEV, and the diverse capabilities they present are demonstrated. The build-up of internal atomic structure (including defects, chemical ordering and other types of disorder), and nanoparticle size, shape and architecture (including core–shell structures, surface relaxation and ligand capping), are demonstrated using the program DISCUS. The structure refinement of a complete nanoparticle system (4 nm Au particles with organic capping ligands at the surface), based on neutron pair distribution function data, is demonstrated using DIFFEV, a program using a differential evolutionary algorithm to generate parameter values. These methods are a valuable addition to other probes appropriate for nanomaterials, adaptable to a diverse and complex set of materials systems, and extendable to additional data-set types.


Chemical Communications | 2010

The diammoniate of diborane: crystal structure and hydrogen release

Mark E. Bowden; David J. Heldebrant; Abhijeet J. Karkamkar; Thomas Proffen; Gregory K. Schenter; Thomas Autrey

[(NH(3))(2)BH(2)](+)[BH(4)](-) is formed from the room temperature decomposition of NH(4)(+)BH(4)(-), via a NH(3)BH(3) intermediate. Its crystal structure has been determined and contains disordered BH(4)(-) ions in 2 distinct sites. Hydrogen release is similar to that from NH(3)BH(3) but with faster kinetics.


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.


Physical Review B | 2010

Atomic displacements in the charge ice pyrochlore Bi_{2}Ti_{2}O_{6}O^{?} studied by neutron total scattering

Daniel P. Shoemaker; Ram Seshadri; Andrew L. Hector; Anna Llobet; Thomas Proffen; Craig J. Fennie

The oxide pyrochlore Bi2Ti2O6O? is known to be associated with large displacements of Bi and O? atoms from their ideal crystallographic positions. Neutron total scattering, analyzed in both reciprocal and real space, is employed here to understand the nature of these displacements. Rietveld analysis and maximum entropy methods are used to produce an average picture of the structural nonideality. Local structure is modeled via large-box reverse Monte Carlo simulations constrained simultaneously by the Bragg profile and real-space pair distribution function. Direct visualization and statistical analyses of these models show the precise nature of the static Bi and O? displacements. Correlations between neighboring Bi displacements are analyzed using coordinates from the large-box simulations. The framework of continuous symmetry measures has been applied to distributions of O?Bi4 tetrahedra to examine deviations from ideality. Bi displacements from ideal positions appear correlated over local length scales. The results are consistent with the idea that these nonmagnetic lone-pair containing pyrochlore compounds can be regarded as highly structurally frustrated systems.

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Katharine Page

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Ram Seshadri

University of California

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Hyunjeong Kim

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Reinhard B. Neder

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Anna Llobet

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Peter J. Chupas

Argonne National Laboratory

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Jin Nakamura

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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