Voraksmy Ban
Université catholique de Louvain
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Publication
Featured researches published by Voraksmy Ban.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Yaroslav Filinchuk; Nikolay Tumanov; Voraksmy Ban; Heng Ji; Jiang Wei; Michael W. Swift; Andriy H. Nevidomskyy; Douglas Natelson
Controlling electronic population through chemical doping is one way to tip the balance between competing phases in materials with strong electronic correlations. Vanadium dioxide exhibits a first-order phase transition at around 338 K between a high-temperature, tetragonal, metallic state (T) and a low-temperature, monoclinic, insulating state (M1), driven by electron-electron and electron-lattice interactions. Intercalation of VO2 with atomic hydrogen has been demonstrated, with evidence that this doping suppresses the transition. However, the detailed effects of intercalated H on the crystal and electronic structure of the resulting hydride have not been previously reported. Here we present synchrotron and neutron diffraction studies of this material system, mapping out the structural phase diagram as a function of temperature and hydrogen content. In addition to the original T and M1 phases, we find two orthorhombic phases, O1 and O2, which are stabilized at higher hydrogen content. We present density functional calculations that confirm the metallicity of these states and discuss the physical basis by which hydrogen stabilizes conducting phases, in the context of the metal-insulator transition.
Physical Review B | 2014
Romain Sibille; Elsa Lhotel; Thomas Mazet; Bernard Malaman; C. Ritter; Voraksmy Ban; M. François
We investigate the magnetism of the CoII4(OH)2(C10H16O4)3 metal-organic framework, which displays complex inorganic chains separated from each other by distances of 1 to 2 nm and orders at 5.4 K. The zero-field magnetic structure is determined using neutron powder diffraction: it is mainly antiferromagnetic but possesses a ferromagnetic component along the c axis. This magnetic structure persists in presence of a magnetic field. Alternating current susceptibility measurements confirm the existence of a single thermally activated regime over seven decades in frequency (E/kB≈64 K), whereas time-dependent relaxation of the magnetization after saturation in an external field leads to a two times smaller energy barrier. These experiments probe the slow dynamics of domain walls within the chains: we propose that the ac measurements are sensitive to the motion of existing domain walls within the chains, while the magnetization measurements are governed by the creation of domain walls.
Physical Review B | 2013
Q. Recour; Voraksmy Ban; Z. Gercsi; Thomas Mazet; Michel François; M. Malaman
We investigate the magnetic structure of Mn3-xFexSn2 using neutron powder diraction experiments and electronic structure calculations. These alloys crystallize in the orthorhombic Ni3Sn2 type of structure (Pnma) and comprise two inequivalent sites for the transition metal atoms (4c and 8d) and two Sn sites (4c and 4c). The neutron data show that the substituting Fe atoms predominantly occupy the 4c transition metal site and carry a lower magnetic moment than Mn atoms. Four kinds of magnetic structures are encountered as a function of temperature and composition: two simple ferromagnetic structures (with the magnetic moments pointing along the b or c axis) and two canted ferromagnetic arrangements (with the ferromagnetic component pointing along the b or c axis). Electronic structure calculations results agree well with the low-temperature experimental magnetic moments and canting angles throughout the series. Comparisons between collinear and non-collinear computations show that the canted state is stabilized by a band mechanism through the opening of a hybridization gap. Synchrotron powder diraction experiments on Mn3Sn2 reveal a weak monoclinic distortion at low temperature (90.08 at 175 K). This lowering of symmetry could explain the stabilization of the c-axis canted ferromagnetic structure, which mixes two orthorhombic magnetic space groups, a circumstance that would otherwise require unusually large high-order terms in the spin Hamiltonian.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2017
Monica Ciomaga Hatnean; Romain Sibille; Martin R. Lees; M. Kenzelmann; Voraksmy Ban; Vladimir Pomjakushin; Geetha Balakrishnan
Large single crystals of pyrochlore [Formula: see text] were successfully grown by the floating zone technique using an optical furnace equipped with high power xenon arc lamps. Structural investigations were carried out via powder synchrotron x-ray and neutron diffraction to establish the crystallographic structure of the materials produced. The magnetic properties of the single crystals were determined for magnetic fields applied along different crystallographic axes. The results revealed that [Formula: see text] is an interesting material for further investigation as a frustrated magnet. The high quality of the crystals produced makes them ideal for detailed investigation, especially using neutron scattering techniques.
Analytical Chemistry | 2017
Voraksmy Ban; Yolanda Sadikin; Michael Lange; Nikolay Tumanov; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Radovan Černý; N. Casati
The renewed interest of mechanochemistry as an ecofriendly synthetic route has inspired original methodologies to probe reactions, with the aim to rationalize unknown mechanisms. Recently, Friščić et al. ( Nat. Chem. 2013 , 5 , 66 - 73 , DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1505 ) monitored the progress of milling reactions by synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD). For the first time, it was possible to acquire directly information during a mechanochemical process. This new methodology is still in its early stages, and its development will definitively transform the fundamental understanding of mechanochemistry. A new type of in situ ball mill setup has been developed at the Materials Science beamline (Swiss Light Source, Paul Scherrer Institute, Switzerland). Its particular geometry, described here in detail, results in XRPD data displaying significantly lower background and much sharper Bragg peaks, which in turn allow more sophisticated analysis of mechanochemical processes, extending the limits of the technique.
Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2017
Nikolay Tumanov; Voraksmy Ban; Agnieszka Poulain; Yaroslav Filinchuk
Mechanochemistry is flourishing in materials science, but a characterization of the related processes is difficult to achieve. Recently, the use of plastic jars in shaker mills has enabled in situ X-ray powder diffraction studies at high-energy beamlines. This paper describes an easy way to design and manufacture these jars by three-dimensional (3D) printing. A modified wall thickness and the use of a thin-walled sampling groove and a two-chamber design, where the milling and diffraction take place in two communicating volumes, allow for a reduced background/absorption and higher angular resolution, with the prospect for use at lower-energy beamlines. 3D-printed polylactic acid jars show good mechanical strength and they are also more resistant to solvents than jars made of polymethyl methacrylate. The source files for printing the jars are available as supporting information.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2018
Romain Sibille; Daniel G. Mazzone; Voraksmy Ban; Thomas Mazet; Michel François
Coordination networks (CNs), such as, for instance, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), can turn into remarkable magnets, with various topologies of spin carriers and unique opportunities of cross-coupling to other functionalities. Alternatively, distinct inorganic subnetworks that are spatially segregated by organic ligands can lead to coexisting magnetic systems in a single bulk material. Here, we present a system of two CNs of general formula Mn(H2O) x(OOC-(C6H4) y-COO). The compound with two water molecules and one aromatic ring ( x = 2; y = 1) has a single two-dimensional magnetic subnet, while the material with x = 1.5 and y = 2 shows, additionally, another type of magnetic layer. In analogy to magnetic multilayers that are deposited by physical methods, these materials can be regarded as metal-organic magnetic multilayers (MOMMs), where the stacking of different types of magnetic layers is controlled by the choice of an organic ligand during the chemical synthesis. This work further paves the way toward organic-inorganic nanostructures with functional magnetic properties.
CrystEngComm | 2018
Natalia Tumanova; Nikolay Tumanov; Franziska Fischer; Fabrice Morelle; Voraksmy Ban; Koen Robeyns; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Johan Wouters; Franziska Emmerling; Tom Leyssens
We present naproxen/proline cocrystals discovered when combining enantiopure and racemic naproxen and proline. Using liquid-assisted grinding as the main method to explore the variety of crystal forms in this system, we found 17 cocrystals, of which the structures of only four of them were previously known. The naproxen/proline system exhibited multiple polymorphs of 1 : 1 stoichiometry as well as more rare cocrystals with 1 : 2 and 2 : 3 stoichiometries, two cocrystal hydrates and one cocrystal solvate. In situ ball-milling, used to monitor liquid-assisted grinding reactions, revealed that the solvent dictates the reaction intermediates even if the final reaction product stays the same. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction data collected in situ upon heating allowed us to monitor directly the phase changes upon heating and gave access to pure diffraction patterns of several cocrystals, thus enabling their structure determination from powder X-ray diffraction data; this method also confirmed the formation of a conglomerate in the RS-naproxen/DL-proline system. Proline in cocrystals kept its ability to form charge-assisted head-to-tail N–H⋯O hydrogen bonds, typical of pure crystalline amino acids, thus increasing the percentage of strong charge-assisted interactions in the structure and consequently providing some of the cocrystals with higher melting points as compared to pure naproxen. The majority of drugs are chiral, and hence, these data are of importance to the pharmaceutical industry as they provide insight into the challenges of chiral cocrystallization.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014
Iurii Dovgaliuk; Voraksmy Ban; Yolanda Sadikin; Radovan Cerny; Lionel Aranda; N. Casati; Michel Devillers; Yaroslav Filinchuk
The Journal of Physical Chemistry | 2014
Lars H. Jepsen; Voraksmy Ban; Kasper T. Møller; Young-Su Lee; Young Whan Cho; Flemming Besenbacher; Yaroslav Filinchuk; Jørgen Skibsted; Torben R. Jensen