Complexions at the Iron-Magnetite Interface
Xuyang Zhou, Baptiste Bienvenu, Yuxiang Wu, Alisson, Kwiatkowski da Silva, Colin Ophus, Dierk Raabe

TL;DR
This paper combines thermodynamic and kinetic theories into defect phase diagrams to understand and characterize interface-stabilized phases, or complexions, at the Fe/Fe3O4 interface, revealing their impact on material properties.
Contribution
It introduces a holistic approach to defect phase diagrams, combining equilibrium thermodynamics with nonequilibrium kinetics, and applies advanced imaging and DFT to characterize complexions at metal-oxide interfaces.
Findings
Identified a well-ordered two-layer complexion at Fe/Fe3O4 interface.
Demonstrated complexion formation increases interface adhesion by 20%.
Showed complexion affects charge transfer and transport properties.
Abstract
Synthesizing distinct phases and controlling the crystalline defects in them are key concepts in materials and process design. These approaches are usually described by decoupled theories, with the former resting on equilibrium thermodynamics and the latter on nonequilibrium kinetics. By combining them into a holistic form of defect phase diagrams, we can apply phase equilibrium models to the thermodynamic evaluation of defects such as vacancies, dislocations, surfaces, grain boundaries, and phase boundaries, placing the understanding of material imperfections and their role on properties on solid thermodynamic and theoretical grounds. In this study, we characterize an interface-stabilized phase between Fe and Fe3O4 (magnetite) with differential phase contrast (DPC) imaging in scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). This method uniquely enables the simultaneous imaging of both…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMinerals Flotation and Separation Techniques · Iron and Steelmaking Processes
