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Dive into the research topics where Travis E. Jones is active.

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Featured researches published by Travis E. Jones.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Molecular Insight in Structure and Activity of Highly Efficient, Low-Ir Ir-Ni Oxide Catalysts for Electrochemical Water Splitting (OER).

Tobias Reier; Zarina Pawolek; Serhiy Cherevko; Michael Bruns; Travis E. Jones; Detre Teschner; Sören Selve; Arno Bergmann; Hong Nhan Nong; Robert Schlögl; Karl Johann Jakob Mayrhofer; Peter Strasser

Mixed bimetallic oxides offer great opportunities for a systematic tuning of electrocatalytic activity and stability. Here, we demonstrate the power of this strategy using well-defined thermally prepared Ir-Ni mixed oxide thin film catalysts for the electrochemical oxygen evolution reaction (OER) under highly corrosive conditions such as in acidic proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzers and photoelectrochemical cells (PEC). Variation of the Ir to Ni ratio resulted in a volcano type OER activity curve with an unprecedented 20-fold improvement in Ir mass-based activity over pure Ir oxide. In situ spectroscopic probing of metal dissolution indicated that, against common views, activity and stability are not directly anticorrelated. To uncover activity and stability controlling parameters, the Ir-Ni mixed thin oxide film catalysts were characterized by a wide array of spectroscopic, microscopic, scattering, and electrochemical techniques in conjunction with DFT theoretical computations. By means of an intuitive model for the formation of the catalytically active state of the bimetallic Ir-Ni oxide surface, we identify the coverage of reactive surface hydroxyl groups as a suitable descriptor for the OER activity and relate it to controllable synthetic parameters. Overall, our study highlights a novel, highly active oxygen evolution catalyst; moreover, it provides novel important insights into the structure and performance of bimetallic oxide OER electrocatalysts in corrosive acidic environments.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009

The irreducible bundle: further structure in the kinetic energy distribution.

Travis E. Jones; Mark E. Eberhart

Modern molecular sciences are often concerned with the properties and dynamics of chemical bonds. With the ability to experimentally measure charge density, there is a pressing need to find the relationships between charge density and the properties of chemical bonds. Here we show molecules can be partitioned into unique bond volumes characterized by well defined properties. Moreover, this partitioning recovers unrecognized structure in the kinetic energy distribution.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Topology of the Spin-Polarized Charge Density in bcc and fcc Iron

Travis E. Jones; Mark E. Eberhart; Dennis P. Clougherty

We report the first investigation of the topology of spin-polarized charge density, specifically in bcc and fcc iron. While the total spin-density is found to possess the topology of the non-magnetic prototypical structures, the spin-polarized charge densities of bcc and high-spin fcc iron are atypical. In these cases, the two spin densities are correlated: the spin-minority electrons have directional bond paths and deep minima, while the spin-majority electrons fill these holes, reducing bond directionality. The presence of distinct spin topologies allows us to show that the two phase changes seen in fcc iron (paramagnetic to low-spin and low-spin to high-spin) are different. The former follows the Landau symmetry-breaking paradigm and proceeds without a topological transformation, while the latter involves a topological catastrophe.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

Bond bundles and the origins of functionality.

Travis E. Jones; Mark E. Eberhart; Scott T. Imlay; Craig Mackey

We briefly review the method by which the electron charge density of atomic systems is decomposed into unique volumes called bond bundles, which are characterized by well-defined and additive properties. We then show that boundaries of bond bundles topologically constrain their chemical reactivity. To illustrate this fact, we model the response of the bond bundles of ethane and ethene to electrophilic attack and from the results of these models posit that functional group properties can be inferred from the shapes of their bond bundles. By relating functionality to bond bundle shape, it is possible to see subtle changes in chemical reactivity that are otherwise difficult to explain, as is illustrated by comparing bond bundles through a series of impact sensitive polynitroaromatic molecules.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Nucleophilic Substitution: A Charge Density Perspective

Travis E. Jones

A general description of nucleophilic reactions is developed using bond bundles, an extension of the quantum theory of atoms in molecules, allowing novel activating groups to be predicted for aromatic rings. Reactivity is found to be related to both the shape of the bond bundle between the substrate and leaving group and the presence of nonbonding regions. Closed bond bundles are shown to be more reactive than open ones, while nonbonding regions also increase reactivity. The advantage of this approach is that it can be employed to investigate all molecular and solid-state systems. By way of example I use this model to rationalize two anomalously reactive systems: strained heterocyclic rings and sulfide-activated aromatic rings.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Electronic Selection Rules Controlling Dislocation Glide in bcc Metals

Travis E. Jones; Mark E. Eberhart; Dennis P. Clougherty; Chris Woodward

The validity of the structure-property relationships governing the low-temperature deformation behavior of many bcc metals was brought into question with recent ab initio density functional studies of isolated screw dislocations in Mo and Ta. These relationships were semiclassical in nature, having grown from atomistic investigations of the deformation properties of the group V and VI transition metals. We find that the correct form for these structure-property relationships is fully quantum mechanical, involving the coupling of electronic states with the strain field at the core of long a/<2111> screw dislocations.


Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2009

The topologies of the charge densities in Zr and Ru

Travis E. Jones; Mark E. Eberhart

We report on the atomic scale phenomena responsible for the variation of oxygen solubility in Zr and Ru. First-principles calculations reveal that the topologies of the charge densities in these hexagonal close-packed metals are distinct. Neither element was found to possess the topology of the prototype, Mg. There are 12 bond paths terminating at each Ru atom. These are the bonds between nearest neighbors. Only five bond paths terminate at each Zr atom and the Zr atoms are not bound to one another. Instead, they are bonded through non-nuclear maxima. As a result, channels of low charge density that can accommodate oxygen anions are present in Zr.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Reactive cluster model of metallic glasses.

Travis E. Jones; Jonathan Miorelli; Mark E. Eberhart

Though discovered more than a half century ago metallic glasses remain a scientific enigma. Unlike crystalline metals, characterized by short, medium, and long-range order, in metallic glasses short and medium-range order persist, though long-range order is absent. This fact has prompted research to develop structural descriptions of metallic glasses. Among these are cluster-based models that attribute amorphous structure to the existence of clusters that are incommensurate with crystalline periodicity. Not addressed, however, are the chemical factors stabilizing these clusters and promoting their interconnections. We have found that glass formers are characterized by a rich cluster chemistry that above the glass transformation temperature promotes exchange as well as static and vibronic sharing of atoms between clusters. The vibronic mechanism induces correlated motions between neighboring clusters and we hypothesize that the distance over which these motions are correlated mediates metallic glass stability and influences critical cooling rates.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Ethylene Epoxidation at the Phase Transition of Copper Oxides

Mark T. Greiner; Travis E. Jones; Alexander Yu. Klyushin; Axel Knop-Gericke; Robert Schlögl

Catalytic materials tend to be metastable. When a material becomes metastable close to a thermodynamic phase transition it can exhibit unique catalytic behavior. Using in situ photoemission spectroscopy and online product analysis, we have found that close to the Cu2O-CuO phase transition there is a boost in activity for a kinetically driven reaction, ethylene epoxidation, giving rise to a 20-fold selectivity enhancement relative to the selectivity observed far from the phase transition. By tuning conditions toward low oxygen chemical potential, this metastable state and the resulting enhanced selectivity can be sustained. Using density functional theory, we find that metastable O precursors to the CuO phase can account for the selectivity enhancements near the phase transition.


Advanced Materials | 2016

In Situ Formation of Crystallographically Oriented Semiconductor Nanowire Arrays via Selective Vaporization for Optoelectronic Applications.

Xing Huang; Yongqiang Yu; Travis E. Jones; Hua Fan; Lei Wang; Jing Xia; Zhu-Jun Wang; Lidong Shao; Xiang-Min Meng; Marc Georg Willinger

Direct transformation of bulk crystals to single-crystalline crystallographically oriented semiconductor nanowire arrays is presented. Real-time imaging during in situ environmental scanning electron microscopy experiment clearly demonstrates that the nanowire arrays form through a selective vaporization process with respect to the crystallography of wurtzite crystals. Due to the high quality of the prepared semiconductor nanowire arrays, photodetectors constructed from them can present superior optoelectronic performances.

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Simone Piccinin

International School for Advanced Studies

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Verena Pfeifer

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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