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Self-repairing high entropy oxides

Authors :
Liu, Zongwen
Huang, Pengru
Sun, Lixian
Liu, Yanping
Qu, Jiangtao
Cairney, Julie
Zheng, Zhong
Wang, Zhiming M.
Khan, Naveed A.
Lai, Zhiping
Fu, Li
Teng, Bing
Zhou, Cuifeng
Zhao, Hong
Xu, Fen
Xiong, Pan
Zhu, Junwu
Yuan, Peng
Tsoutas, Kosta
Akhavan, Behnam
Bilek, Marcela M.
Ringer, Simon P.
Novoselov, Kostya S.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

All biological organisms, from plants to living creatures, can heal minor wounds and damage. The realization of a similar self-healing capacity in inorganic materials has been a design target for many decades. This would represent a breakthrough in materials engineering, enabling many novel technological applications, since such materials would be able to resist damage caused by electromagnetic irradiation and/or mechanical impact. Here we demonstrate that a high-entropy oxide is intrinsically capable of undergoing an autonomous self-repairing process. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that the spinel structure of (AlCoCrCu0.5FeNi)3O4 can regrow and repair itself at the atomic level when damaged. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the extra enthalpy stored in the high entropy material during fabrication can be released to effectively heal macroscopic defects by regrowing into a partially ordered state. This extraordinary self-repairing phenomenon makes this new material highly desirable as a coating, enabling structures used in harsh environments to better withstand damage, such as cosmic irradiation in space, nuclear irradiation in nuclear power facilities, or tribological damage. Most importantly, our results set the general design principles for the synthesis of self-repairing materials.<br />Comment: 12 pages,4 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2112.11747
Document Type :
Working Paper