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High temperature phase behavior of 2D transition metal carbides
The technological drive of humanity to explore the cosmos, travel at hypersonic speeds, and pursue clean energy solutions requires ceramic scientists and engineers to constantly push materials to their functional, behavioral, and chemical extremes. Ultra-high temperature ceramics, and particularly transition metal carbides, are promising materials to meet the demands of extreme environment materials with their >4000 °C melting temperature and impressive thermomechanical behaviors in extreme conditions. The advent of the 2D version of these transition metal carbides, known as MXenes, added a new direction to design transition metal carbides for energy, catalysis, flexible electronics, and other applications. Toward extreme conditions, although MXenes remain yet unexplored, we believe that the ~1 nm flakes of MXenes gives ceramics scientists and engineers the ability to truly engineer transition metal carbides layer-by-layer at the nanoscale to endure the extreme conditions required by future harsh environment technology. Although MXenes have this inherent promise, fundamental study of their behavior in high-temperature environments is necessary to understand how their chemistry and 2D nature affects the high-temperature stability and phase behavior of MXenes toward application in extreme environments.
In this dissertation, we investigate the high-temperature phase behavior of 2D MXenes in high temperature inert environments to understand the stability and phase transition behavior of MXenes. In this work, we demonstrate that 1) MXenes’ transition at high-temperatures is to highly textured transition metal carbides is due to the homoepitaxial growth of these phases onto ~1-nm-thick MXenes’ highly exposed basal plane, 2) the MXene to MXene interface plays a major role in the phase behavior of MXenes, particularly toward building layered transition metal carbides using MXenes as ~1-nm-thick building blocks, and 3) Defects are the primary site at which atomic migration begins during phase transition of MXenes into these highly textured transition metal carbides, and these defects can be engineered for different phase stability of MXenes. To do so, we investigate the phase behavior of Ti3C2Tx, Ta4C3Tx, Mo2TiC2Tx, and other MXenes using a combination of in situ x-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy and other ex situ methods, such as secondary ion mass spectrometry and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, with other methods. By investigating the fundamentals of the high-temperature phase behavior of MXenes, we hope to establish the basic principles behind use of MXenes as the ideal material for application in future extreme environments.
History
Degree Type
- Doctor of Philosophy
Department
- Mechanical Engineering
Campus location
- Indianapolis