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    Suitability of binary oxides for molecular-beam epitaxy source materials: A comprehensive thermodynamic analysis
    (Melville, NY : AIP Publ., 2020) Adkison, Kate M.; Shang, Shun-Li; Bocklund, Brandon J.; Klimm, Detlef; Schlom, Darrell G.; Liu, Zi-Kui
    We have conducted a comprehensive thermodynamic analysis of the volatility of 128 binary oxides to evaluate their suitability as source materials for oxide molecular-beam epitaxy (MBE). 16 solid or liquid oxides are identified that evaporate nearly congruently from stable oxide sources to gas species: As2O3, B2O3, BaO, MoO3, OsO4, P2O5, PbO, PuO2, Rb2O, Re2O7, Sb2O3, SeO2, SnO, ThO2, Tl2O, and WO3. An additional 24 oxides could provide molecular beams with dominant gas species of CeO, Cs2O, DyO, ErO, Ga2O, GdO, GeO, HfO, HoO, In2O, LaO, LuO, NdO, PmO, PrO, PuO, ScO, SiO, SmO, TbO, Te2O2, U2O6, VO2, and YO2. The present findings are in close accord with available experimental results in the literature. For example, As2O3, B2O3, BaO, MoO3, PbO, Sb2O3, and WO3 are the only oxides in the ideal category that have been used in MBE. The remaining oxides deemed ideal for MBE awaiting experimental verification. We also consider two-phase mixtures as a route to achieve the desired congruent evaporation characteristic of an ideal MBE source. These include (Ga2O3 + Ga) to produce a molecular beam of Ga2O(g), (GeO2 + Ge) to produce GeO(g), (SiO2 + Si) to produce SiO(g), (SnO2 + Sn) to produce SnO(g), etc.; these suboxide sources enable suboxide MBE. Our analysis provides the vapor pressures of the gas species over the condensed phases of 128 binary oxides, which may be either solid or liquid depending on the melting temperature. © 2020 Author(s).
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    AlF3-assisted flux growth of mullite whiskers and their application in fabrication of porous mullite-alumina monoliths
    (Amsterdam : Elsevier, 2021) Abdullayev, Amanmyrat; Klimm, Detlef; Kamutzki, Franz; Gurlo, Aleksander; Bekheet, Maged F.
    Mullite is a promising material with its competitive thermochemical and mechanical properties. Although mullite could be obtained by several synthesis methods, the flux method emerges with its advantages over other methods. However, obtaining mullite whiskers with a high aspect ratio and length for ceramic reinforcements is still challenging. In this work, mullite whiskers were grown from AlF3-assisted flux. The addition of AlF3 to flux salt not only decreases the formation temperature of mullite to as low as 700 ​°C and suppresses the formation of corundum side phase, but also increases the length and aspect ratio of the whiskers. The obtained mullite whiskers were used as reinforcement for porous alumina monoliths prepared by the freeze casting route and subsequent sintering at 1500 ​°C. The fabricated mullite-alumina monoliths show competitive compressive strength of 25.7 ​MPa while having as high as 70.6% porosity, which makes them a potential candidate for membrane applications.