Xiaoliang Zhong
Argonne National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Xiaoliang Zhong.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Anouar Benali; Luke Shulenburger; Jaron T. Krogel; Xiaoliang Zhong; Paul R. C. Kent; Olle Heinonen
The Magnéli phase Ti4O7 is an important transition metal oxide with a wide range of applications because of its interplay between charge, spin, and lattice degrees of freedom. At low temperatures, it has non-trivial magnetic states very close in energy, driven by electronic exchange and correlation interactions. We have examined three low-lying states, one ferromagnetic and two antiferromagnetic, and calculated their energies as well as Ti spin moment distributions using highly accurate quantum Monte Carlo methods. We compare our results to those obtained from density functional theory-based methods that include approximate corrections for exchange and correlation. Our results confirm the nature of the states and their ordering in energy, as compared with density-functional theory methods. However, the energy differences and spin distributions differ. A detailed analysis suggests that non-local exchange-correlation functionals, in addition to other approximations such as LDA+U to account for correlations, are needed to simultaneously obtain better estimates for spin moments, distributions, energy differences and energy gaps.
Physical Review B | 2016
Xiaoliang Zhong; Ivan Rungger; Peter Zapol; Olle Heinonen
Memristive switching devices, candidates for resistive random access memory technology, have been shown to switch off through a progression of states with quantized conductance and subsequent noninteger conductance (in terms of conductance quantum G0). We have performed calculations based on density functional theory to model the switching process for a Pt-HfO2-Pt structure, involving the movement of one or two oxygen atoms. Oxygen atoms moving within a conductive oxygen vacancy filament act as tunneling barriers, and partition the filament into weakly coupled quantum wells. We show that the low-bias conductance decreases exponentially when one oxygen atom moves away from interface. In conclusion, our results demonstrate the high sensitivity of the device conductance to the position of oxygen atoms.
international conference on e-science | 2015
Ketan Maheshwari; Justin M. Wozniak; Timothy G. Armstrong; Daniel S. Katz; T. Andrew Binkowski; Xiaoliang Zhong; Olle Heinonen; Dmitry Karpeyev; Michael Wilde
Efficiently porting ordinary applications to Blue Gene/Q supercomputers is a significant challenge. Codes are often originally developed without considering advanced architectures and related tool chains. Science needs frequently lead users to want to run large numbers of relatively small jobs (often called many-task computing, an ensemble, or a workflow), which can conflict with supercomputer configurations. In this paper, we discuss techniques developed to execute ordinary applications over leadership class supercomputers. We use the high-performance Swift parallel scripting framework and build two workflow execution techniques -- sub-jobs and main-wrap. The sub-jobs technique, built on top of the IBM Blue Gene/Q resource manager Cobalts sub-block jobs, lets users submit multiple, independent, repeated smaller jobs within a single larger resource block. The main-wrap technique is a scheme that enables C/C++ programs to be defined as functions that are wrapped by a high-performance Swift wrapper and that are invoked as a Swift script. We discuss the needs, benefits, technicalities, and current limitations of these techniques. We further discuss the real-world science enabled by these techniques and the results obtained.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Zhun Liu; Xiaoliang Zhong; Hui Yan; Ru-Zhi Wang
Hybridized two-dimensional materials incorporating domains from the hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) and graphene is an interesting branch of materials science due to their highly tunable electronic properties. In the present study, we investigate the hydrogenated two-dimensional (2D) h-BN/C superlattices (SLs) with zigzag edges using first-principles calculations. We found that the domain width, the phase ratio, and the vertical dipole orientation all have significant influence on the stability of SLs. The electronic reconstruction is associated with the lateral polar discontinuities at the zigzag edges and the vertically polarized (B2N2H4)(m) domains, which modifies the electronic structures and the spatial potential of the SLs significantly. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the hydrogenated 2D h-BN/C SLs can be applied in engineering the electronic structure of graphene: laterally-varying doping can be achieved by taking advantage of the spatial variation of the surface potential of the SLs. By applying an external vertical electric field on these novel bidirectional heterostructures, graphene doping levels and band offsets can be tuned to a wide range, such that the graphene doping profile can be switched from the bipolar (p-n junction) to unipolar (n(+)-n junction) mode. It is expected that such bidirectional heterostructures provide an effective approach for developing novel nanoscale electronic devices and improving our understanding of the fundamentals of low-dimensional materials.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Xiaoliang Zhong; Ivan Rungger; Peter Zapol; Hisao Nakamura; Yoshihiro Asai; Olle Heinonen
Physical Review B | 2015
Xiaoliang Zhong; Ivan Rungger; Peter Zapol; Olle Heinonen
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Peter Zapol; Dmitry Karpeyev; Ketan Maheshwari; Xiaoliang Zhong; Badri Narayanan; Subramanian K. R. S. Sankaranarayanan; Michael Wilde; Olle Heinonen; Ivan Rungger
Journal of Computational Electronics | 2017
Xiaoliang Zhong; Ivan Rungger; Peter Zapol; Olle Heinonen
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Xiaoliang Zhong; Ivan Rungger; Peter Zapol; Hisao Nakamura; Yoshihiro Asai; Olle Heinonen
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Anouar Benali; Luke Shulenburger; Jaron T. Krogel; Xiaoliang Zhong; Paul R. C. Kent; Olle Heinonen