Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yao Liu is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yao Liu.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Preparation of ferrite MFe2O4 (M = Co, Ni) ribbons with nanoporous structure and their magnetic properties.

Zhongli Wang; Xiaojuan Liu; Minfeng Lv; Ping Chai; Yao Liu; Jian Meng

Spinel ferrite, MFe 2O 4 (M = Co, Ni), ribbons with nanoporous structure were prepared by electrospinning combined with sol-gel technology. The ribbons were formed through the agglomeration of magnetic nanoparticles with PVP as the structure directing template. The length of the polycrystalline ribbons can reach millimeters, and the width of the ribbons can be tuned from several micrometers to several hundred nanometers by changing the concentration of precursor. The nanoporous structure was formed during the decomposition of PVP and inorganic salts. The ribbons exhibited weak saturation magnetizations and low coercivities at room temperature, but at low temperature, saturation magnetizations and coercivities increased a lot, especially for CoFe 2O 4 ribbons, reaching 72 emu/g and 1.45 T at 2 k, respectively. These novel magnetic ribbons can potentially be used in micro/nano electronic devices, gas-sensors, and catalysts.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Giant negative thermal expansion in bonded MnCoGe-based compounds with Ni2In-type hexagonal structure.

Y. Y. Zhao; F. X. Hu; Lifu Bao; Jing Wang; Hui Wu; Qingzhen Huang; Rong-Rong Wu; Yao Liu; F. Shen; H. Kuang; Ming Zhang; Wen-Liang Zuo; X. Q. Zheng; Ji-Rong Sun; Bao-gen Shen

MnCoGe-based compounds undergo a giant negative thermal expansion (NTE) during the martensitic structural transition from Ni2In-type hexagonal to TiNiSi-type orthorhombic structure. High-resolution neutron diffraction experiments revealed that the expansion of unit cell volume can be as large as ΔV/V ∼ 3.9%. The optimized compositions with concurrent magnetic and structural transitions have been studied for magnetocaloric effect. However, these materials have not been considered as NTE materials partially due to the limited temperature window of phase transition. The as-prepared MnCoGe-based compounds are quite brittle and naturally collapse into powders. By using a few percents (3-4%) of epoxy to bond the powders, we introduced residual stress in the bonded samples and thus realized the broadening of structural transition by utilizing the specific characteristics of lattice softening enforced by the stress. As a result, giant NTE (not only the linear NTE coefficient α but also the operation-temperature window) has been achieved. For example, the average α̅ as much as -51.5 × 10(-6)/K with an operating temperature window as wide as 210 K from 122 to 332 K has been observed in a bonded MnCo0.98Cr0.02Ge compound. Moreover, in the region between 250 and 305 K near room temperature, the α value (-119 × 10(-6)/K) remains nearly independent of temperature. Such an excellent performance exceeds that of most other materials reported previously, suggesting it can potentially be used as a NTE material, particularly for compensating the materials with large positive thermal expansions.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Giant barocaloric effect in hexagonal Ni2In-type Mn-Co-Ge-In compounds around room temperature.

Rong-Rong Wu; Lifu Bao; F. X. Hu; Hui Wu; Qingzhen Huang; Jing Wang; Xiao-Li Dong; Guan-Nan Li; Ji-Rong Sun; F. Shen; Tong-Yun Zhao; X. Q. Zheng; Li-Chen Wang; Yao Liu; Wen-Liang Zuo; Y. Y. Zhao; Ming Zhang; Xiancheng Wang; Changqing Jin; Guanghui Rao; Xiu-Feng Han; Bao-gen Shen

The most widespread cooling techniques based on gas compression/expansion encounter environmental problems. Thus, tremendous effort has been dedicated to develop alternative cooling technique and search for solid state materials that show large caloric effects. An application of pressure to a material can cause a change in temperature, which is called the barocaloric effect. Here we report the giant barocaloric effect in a hexagonal Ni2In-type MnCoGe0.99In0.01 compound involving magnetostructural transformation, Tmstr, which is accompanied with a big difference in the internal energy due to a great negative lattice expansion(ΔV/Vu2009~u20093.9%). High resolution neutron diffraction experiments reveal that the hydrostatic pressure can push the Tmstr to a lower temperature at a rate of 7.7u2009K/kbar, resulting in a giant barocaloric effect. The entropy change under a moderate pressure of 3u2009kbar reaches 52u2009Jkg−1K−1, which exceeds that of most materials, including the reported giant magnetocaloric effect driven by 5u2009T magnetic field that is available only by superconducting magnets.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Abnormal percolative transport and colossal electroresistance induced by anisotropic strain in (011)-Pr 0.7 (Ca 0.6 Sr 0.4 ) 0.3 MnO 3 / PMN-PT heterostructure

Y. Y. Zhao; Jing Wang; H. Kuang; F. X. Hu; Hongrui Zhang; Yao Liu; Ying Zhang; Shuanhu Wang; Rong-Rong Wu; Ming Zhang; Lifu Bao; Ji-Rong Sun; Bao-gen Shen

Abnormal percolative transport in inhomogeneous systems has drawn increasing interests due to its deviation from the conventional percolation picture. However, its nature is still ambiguous partly due to the difficulty in obtaining controllable abnormal percolative transport behaviors. Here, we report the first observation of electric-field-controlled abnormal percolative transport in (011)-Pr0.7(Ca0.6Sr0.4)0.3MnO3/0.7Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3-0.3PbTiO3 heterostructure. By introducing an electric-field-induced in-plane anisotropic strain-field in a phase separated PCSMO film, we stimulate a significant inverse thermal hysteresis (~ -17.5u2005K) and positive colossal electroresistance (~11460%), which is found to be crucially orientation-dependent and completely inconsistent with the well accepted conventional percolation picture. Further investigations reveal that such abnormal inverse hysteresis is strongly related to the preferential formation of ferromagnetic metallic domains caused by in-plane anisotropic strain-field. Meanwhile, it is found that the positive colossal electroresistance should be ascribed to the coactions between the anisotropic strain and the polarization effect from the poling of the substrate which leads to orientation and bias-polarity dependencies for the colossal electroresistance. This work unambiguously evidences the indispensable role of the anisotropic strain-field in driving the abnormal percolative transport and provides a new perspective for well understanding the percolation mechanism in inhomogeneous systems.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Strain control of orbital polarization and correlated metal-insulator transition in La2CoMnO6 from first principles

Shuhui Lv; Hongping Li; Zhongchang Wang; Lin Han; Yao Liu; Xiaojuan Liu; Jian Meng

Transition metal oxides show rich physical properties which are often influenced by external perturbation. Here, we report by first-principles calculations that strain enables switching of orbital occupancy of Co2+ in La2CoMnO6 and hence modifies electronic structure of La2CoMnO6. We find a metal-insulator transition in La2CoMnO6, which originates from the interplay between the strain induced lattice distortion and electron correlations. Such transition is understood upon the orbital polarization of Co2+, which takes on the dxz/yz character under compression, yet switches to the dx2-y2 character under tension. The orbital switching presented should hold promise for many technological applications.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Anisotropic modulation of magnetic properties and the memory effect in a wide-band (011)-Pr 0.7 Sr 0.3 MnO 3 /PMN-PT heterostructure

Y. Y. Zhao; Jing Wang; H. Kuang; F. X. Hu; Yao Liu; Rong-Rong Wu; Xixiang Zhang; Ji-Rong Sun; Bao-gen Shen

Memory effect of electric-field control on magnetic behavior in magnetoelectric composite heterostructures has been a topic of interest for a long time. Although the piezostrain and its transfer across the interface of ferroelectric/ferromagnetic films are known to be important in realizing magnetoelectric coupling, the underlying mechanism for nonvolatile modulation of magnetic behaviors remains a challenge. Here, we report on the electric-field control of magnetic properties in wide-band (011)-Pr0.7Sr0.3MnO3/0.7Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3-0.3PbTiO3 heterostructures. By introducing an electric-field-induced in-plane anisotropic strain field during the cooling process from room temperature, we observe an in-plane anisotropic, nonvolatile modulation of magnetic properties in a wide-band Pr0.7Sr0.3MnO3 film at low temperatures. We attribute this anisotropic memory effect to the preferential seeding and growth of ferromagnetic (FM) domains under the anisotropic strain field. In addition, we find that the anisotropic, nonvolatile modulation of magnetic properties gradually diminishes as the temperature approaches FM transition, indicating that the nonvolatile memory effect is temperature dependent. By taking into account the competition between thermal energy and the potential barrier of the metastable magnetic state induced by the anisotropic strain field, this distinct memory effect is well explained, which provides a promising approach for designing novel electric-writing magnetic memories.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Corrigendum: Critical dependence of magnetostructural coupling and magnetocaloric effect on particle size in Mn-Fe-Ni-Ge compounds.

Rong-Rong Wu; F. Shen; F. X. Hu; Jing Wang; Lifu Bao; Lei Zhang; Yao Liu; Y. Y. Zhao; Feixiang Liang; Wen-Liang Zuo; Ji-Rong Sun; Bao-gen Shen

Magnetostructural coupling, which is the coincidence of crystallographic and magnetic transition, has obtained intense attention for its abundant magnetoresponse effects and promising technological applications, such as solid-state refrigeration, magnetic actuators and sensors. The hexagonal Ni2In-type compounds have attracted much attraction due to the strong magnetostructural coupling and the resulted giant negative thermal expansion and magnetocaloric effect. However, the as-prepared samples are quite brittle and naturally collapse into powders. Here, we report the effect of particle size on the magnetostructural coupling and magnetocaloric effect in the Ni2In-type Mn-Fe-Ni-Ge compound, which undergoes a large lattice change across the transformation from paramagnetic austenite to ferromagnetic martensite. The disappearance of martensitic transformation in a large amount of austenitic phase with reducing particle size, to our best knowledge, has not been reported up to now. The ratio can be as high as 40.6% when the MnNi0.8Fe0.2Ge bulk was broken into particles in the size range of 5~15u2009μm. Meanwhile, the remained magnetostructural transition gets wider and the magnetic hysteresis becomes smaller. As a result, the entropy change drops, but the effective cooling power RCeffe increases and attains to the maximum at particles in the range of 20~40u2009μm. These observations provide constructive information and highly benefit practical applications for this class of novel magnetoresponse materials.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Effect of epitaxial strain on small-polaron hopping conduction in Pr0.7(Ca0.6Sr0.4)0.3MnO3 thin films

Jing Wang; F. X. Hu; Y. Y. Zhao; Yao Liu; Rong-Rong Wu; Ji-Rong Sun; Bao-gen Shen

We investigated the epitaxial strain effect on the small-polaron hopping conduction properties in Pr0.7(Ca,Sr)0.3MnO3 (PCSMO) films. An increase in the carrier localization, as evidenced by the enhancement of the small-polaron activation energy EA in the high temperature region, was obtained by increasing the epitaxial lattice strain in either the tensile or compressive strained film. Furthermore, it was found that the magnitude of EA, and thus the carrier localization, strongly depends on the sign of the lattice strain, which explains the diverse percolative transport behaviors in PCSMO films with different types of strains. Meanwhile, similar dependencies on the strain of the films were also obtained for the electron-phonon interaction, characterized by the calculated small-polaron coupling constant. Our results reveal that the type of lattice strain plays a crucial role in determining the degree of localization of charge carriers and the electron-phonon coupling strength, which is important for underst...


APL Materials | 2017

Ultra-low thermal expansion realized in giant negative thermal expansion materials through self-compensation

F. Shen; H. Kuang; F. X. Hu; Hui Wu; Qingzhen Huang; Feixiang Liang; Kaiming Qiao; Jia Li; Jing Wang; Yao Liu; Lei Zhang; Min He; Ying Zhang; Wen-Liang Zuo; Ji-Rong Sun; Bao-gen Shen

Materials with zero thermal expansion (ZTE) or precisely tailored thermal expansion are in urgent demand of modern industries. However, the overwhelming majority of materials show positive thermal expansion. To develop ZTE or negative thermal expansion (NTE) materials as compensators has become an important challenge. Here, we present the evidence for the realization of ultra-low thermal expansion in Mn–Co–Ge–In particles. The bulk with the Ni2In-type hexagonal structure undergoes giant NTE owing to a martensitic magnetostructural transition. The major finding is that the thermal expansion behavior can be totally controlled by modulating the crystallinity degree and phase transition from atomic scale. Self-compensation effect leads to ultra-low thermal expansion with a linear expansion coefficient as small as +0.68 × 10−6/K over a wide temperature range around room temperature. The present study opens an avenue to reach ZTE particularly from the large class of giant NTE materials based on phase transition.


Chinese Physics B | 2015

Magnetic properties and magnetocaloric effects in HoPd intermetallic

Zhao-Jun Mo; Jun Shen; Xin-Qiang Gao; Yao Liu; Jianfeng Wu; Bao-gen Shen; Ji-Rong Sun

A large reversible magnetocaloric effect accompanied by a second order magnetic phase transition from PM to FM is observed in the HoPd compound. Under the magnetic field change of and the refrigerant capacity RC for the compound are evaluated to be 20xa0J/(kg · K) and 342xa0J/kg, respectively. In particular, large (11.3xa0J/(kg · K)) and RC (142xa0J/kg) are achieved under a low magnetic field change of 0–2xa0T with no thermal hysteresis and magnetic hysteresis loss. The large reversible magnetocaloric effect (both the large -ΔSM and the high RC) indicates that HoPd is a promising material for magnetic refrigeration at low temperature.

Collaboration


Dive into the Yao Liu's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bao-gen Shen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ji-Rong Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. X. Hu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jing Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. Shen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wen-Liang Zuo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Y. Y. Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ming Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rong-Rong Wu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. Kuang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge