- Browse by Title
Purdue University in Indianapolis
Permanent URI for this community
Browse
Browsing Purdue University in Indianapolis by Title
Now showing 1 - 10 of 1461
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item The 1st International Joint Mini-Symposium on Advanced Coatings between Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and Changwon National University: Preface(2014) Zhang, Jing; Jung, Yeon-GilThe 1st international joint mini-symposium on advanced coatings between Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) and Changwon National University (CNU) was held on March 18-20, 2014 in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. Research papers presented in the symposium are included in this proceeding. The symposium covered recent development in advanced coatings and related functional materials. The symposium offered the students and researchers from both universities a valuable opportunity to share a wide spectrum of new knowledge of advanced coatings and related functional materials. The research topics presented in the symposium included thermal barrier coatings, bio-related coatings, nano-materials and materials for energy conversion. The symposium enabled face-to-face discussions and developed genuine friendship, which promoted international collaboration and exchange program for researcher as well as students to carry out science work together. J.Z. would like to thank the support provided by the US Department of Energy (Grant No. DE-FE0008868, program manager Richard Dunst) and International Development Fund by the IUPUI Office of Vice Chancellor for Research. Y.G.J. acknowledges the support provided by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korean Government (MSIP) (No. 2011-0030058) and the Human Resources Development Program (No. 20134030200220) of the Korea Institute of Energy Technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP) grant funded by the Korean Government Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy.Item 2D metal carbides and nitrides (MXenes) for energy storage(Nature Publishing Group, 2017-01-17) Anasori, Babak; Lukatskaya, Maria R.; Gogotsi, Yury; Mechanical Engineering and Energy, School of Engineering and TechnologyThe family of 2D transition metal carbides, carbonitrides and nitrides (collectively referred to as MXenes) has expanded rapidly since the discovery of Ti3C2 in 2011. The materials reported so far always have surface terminations, such as hydroxyl, oxygen or fluorine, which impart hydrophilicity to their surfaces. About 20 different MXenes have been synthesized, and the structures and properties of dozens more have been theoretically predicted. The availability of solid solutions, the control of surface terminations and a recent discovery of multi-transition-metal layered MXenes offer the potential for synthesis of many new structures. The versatile chemistry of MXenes allows the tuning of properties for applications including energy storage, electromagnetic interference shielding, reinforcement for composites, water purification, gas- and biosensors, lubrication, and photo-, electro- and chemical catalysis. Attractive electronic, optical, plasmonic and thermoelectric properties have also been shown. In this Review, we present the synthesis, structure and properties of MXenes, as well as their energy storage and related applications, and an outlook for future research.Item 2D MXenes: Tunable Mechanical and Tribological Properties(Wiley, 2021-04-28) Wyatt, Brian C.; Rosenkranz, Andreas; Anasori, Babak; Mechanical and Energy Engineering, School of Engineering and Technology2D transition metal carbides, nitrides, and carbonitrides, known as MXenes, were discovered in 2011 and have grown to prominence in energy storage, catalysis, electromagnetic interference shielding, wireless communications, electronic, sensors, and environmental and biomedical applications. In addition to their high electrical conductivity and electrochemically active behavior, MXenes' mechanical properties, flexibility, and strong adhesion properties play crucial roles in almost all of these growing applications. Although these properties prove to be critical in MXenes' impressive performance, the mechanical and tribological understanding of MXenes, as well as their relation to the synthesis process, is yet to be fully explored. Here, a fundamental overview of MXenes' mechanical and tribological properties is provided and the effects of MXenes' compositions, synthesis, and processing steps on these properties are discussed. Additionally, a critical perspective of the compositional control of MXenes for innovative structural, low-friction, and low-wear performance in current and upcoming applications of MXenes is provided. It is established here that the fundamental understanding of MXenes' mechanical and tribological behavior is essential for their quickly growing applications.Item 2D rare-earth metal carbides (MXenes) Mo2NdC2T2 electronic structure and magnetic properties: A DFT + U study(AIP, 2022) Yao, Shukai; Anasori, Babak; Strachan, Alejandro; Mechanical and Energy Engineering, Purdue School of Engineering and Technology2D rare-earth metal carbides (MXenes) are attractive due to their novel electronic and magnetic properties and their potential as scalable 2D magnets. In this study, we used density functional theory with the Hubbard U correction to characterize the structure, termination, and magnetism in an out-of-plane ordered rare-earth containing M3C2Tx MXene, Mo2NdC2T2 (T = O or OH). We investigated the effect of the U parameter on the stability and magnetism of two possible termination sites: the hollow sites aligned with the inner Nd atoms (Nd-hollow sites) and those aligned with the closest C atoms (C-hollow sites). We found that increasing UMo stabilized the Nd hollow sites, which minimized electrostatic repulsion between C and O atoms. Using UMo = 3.0 eV and UNd = 5.6 eV, obtained via the linear response method, we found that the energetically preferred termination site was C-hollow in Mo2NdC2O2 and Nd-hollow in Mo2NdC2(OH)2. Regardless of termination and the Hubbard U value, we found Mo2NdC2O2 and Mo2NdC2(OH)2 to be magnetic. The C-hollow termination resulted in ferromagnetic states for all Hubbard U tested with no magnetic moment in Mo. In the case of Nd-hollow, Mo became magnetic for UMo ≥ 4 eV. The difference of Mo magnetism in Nd-hollow and C-hollow was explained by crystal field splitting of the Mo d orbital caused by a distorted ligand.Item 2D Titanium Carbide (MXene) Based Films: Expanding the Frontier of Functional Film Materials(Wiley, 2021-11) Li, Guohao; Wyatt, Brian C.; Song, Fei; Yu, Changqiang; Wu, Zhenjun; Xie, Xiuqiang; Anasori, Babak; Zhang, Nan; Mechanical and Energy Engineering, School of Engineering and Technology2D titanium carbide (Ti3C2Tx) MXene films, with their well-defined microstructures and chemical functionality, provide a macroscale use of nano-sized Ti3C2Tx flakes. Ti3C2Tx films have attractive physicochemical properties favorable for device design, such as high electrical conductivity (up to 20 000 S cm–1), impressive volumetric capacitance (1500 F cm–3), strong in-plane mechanical strength (up to 570 MPa), and a high degree of flexibility. Here, the appealing features of Ti3C2Tx-based films enabled by the layer-to-layer arrangement of nanosheets are reviewed. We devote attention to the key strategies for actualizing desirable characteristics in Ti3C2Tx-based functional films, such as high and tunable electrical conductivity, outstanding mechanical properties, enhanced oxidation-resistance and shelf life, hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity, adjustable porosity, and convenient processability. This review further discusses fundamental aspects and advances in the applications of Ti3C2Tx-based films with a focus on illuminating the relationship between the structural features and the resulting performances for target applications. Finally, the challenges and opportunities in terms of future research, development, and applications of Ti3C2Tx-based films are suggested. A comprehensive understanding of these competitive features and challenges shall provide guidelines and inspiration for the further development of Ti3C2Tx-based functional films, and contribute to the advances in MXene technology.Item 2D transition metal carbides (MXenes) in metal and ceramic matrix composites(Springer, 2021-06-02) Wyatt, Brian C.; Nemani, Srinivasa Kartik; Anasori, Babak; Mechanical and Energy Engineering, School of Engineering and TechnologyTwo-dimensional transition metal carbides, nitrides, and carbonitrides (known as MXenes) have evolved as competitive materials and fillers for developing composites and hybrids for applications ranging from catalysis, energy storage, selective ion filtration, electromagnetic wave attenuation, and electronic/piezoelectric behavior. MXenes’ incorporation into metal matrix and ceramic matrix composites is a growing field with significant potential due to their impressive mechanical, electrical, and chemical behavior. With about 50 synthesized MXene compositions, the degree of control over their composition and structure paired with their high-temperature stability is unique in the field of 2D materials. As a result, MXenes offer a new avenue for application driven design of functional and structural composites with tailorable mechanical, electrical, and thermochemical properties. In this article, we review recent developments for use of MXenes in metal and ceramic composites and provide an outlook for future research in this field.Item 3-Level Residual Capsule Network for Complex Datasets(IEEE, 2020-02) Bhamidi, Sree Bala Shruthi; El-Sharkawy, Mohamed; Electrical and Computer Engineering, School of Engineering and TechnologyThe Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) have shown a substantial improvement in the field of Machine Learning. But they do come with their own set of drawbacks. Capsule Networks have addressed the limitations of CNNs and have shown a great improvement by calculating the pose and transformation of the image. Deeper networks are more powerful than shallow networks but at the same time, more difficult to train. Residual Networks ease the training and have shown evidence that they can give good accuracy with considerable depth. Residual Capsule Network [15] has put the Residual Network and Capsule Network together. Though it did well on simple dataset such as MNIST, the architecture can be improved to do better on complex datasets like CIFAR-10. This brings us to the idea of 3-Level Residual Capsule which not only decreases the number of parameters when compared to the seven-ensemble model, but also performs better on complex datasets when compared to Residual Capsule Network.Item 3D Centroidnet: Nuclei Centroid Detection with Vector Flow Voting(IEEE, 2022-10) Wu, Liming; Chen, Alain; Salama, Paul; Dunn, Kenneth W.; Delp, Edward J.; Electrical and Computer Engineering, School of Engineering and TechnologyAutomated microscope systems are increasingly used to collect large-scale 3D image volumes of biological tissues. Since cell boundaries are seldom delineated in these images, detection of nuclei is a critical step for identifying and analyzing individual cells. Due to the large intra-class variability in nuclei morphology and the difficulty of generating ground truth annotations, accurate nuclei detection remains a challenging task. We propose a 3D nuclei centroid detection method by estimating the "vector flow" volume where each voxel represents a 3D vector pointing to its nearest nuclei centroid in the corresponding microscopy volume. We then use a voting mechanism to estimate the 3D nuclei centroids from the "vector flow" volume. Our system is trained on synthetic microscopy volumes and tested on real microscopy volumes. The evaluation results indicate our method outperforms other methods both visually and quantitatively.Item A 3D microfluidic device fabrication method using thermopress bonding with multiple layers of polystyrene film(IOP, 2015-05) Cao, Yuanzhi; Bontrager-Singer, Jacob; Zhu, Likun; Department of Mechanical Engineering, School of EngineeringIn this article, we present a fabrication method that is capable of making (3D) microfluidic devices with multiple layers of homogeneous polystyrene (PS) film. PS film was chosen as the primary device material because of its advantageous features for microfluidics applications. Thermopress is used as a bonding method because it provides sufficient bonding strength while requiring no heterogeneous bonding materials. By aligning and sequentially stacking multiple layers (3 to 20) of patterned PS film that were achieved by a craft cutter, complicated 3D structured microfluidic devices can be fabricated by multiple steps of thermopress bonding. The smallest feature that can be achieved with this method is approximately 100 μm, which is limited by the resolution of the cutter (25 μm) as well as the thickness of the PS films. Bonding characteristics of PS films are provided in this article, including a PS film bonding strength test, bonding precision assessment, and PS surface wettability manipulation. To demonstrate the capability of this method, the design, fabrication, and testing results of a 3D interacting L-shaped passive mixer are presented.Item 3D Printed ABS and Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymer Specimens for Engineering Education(Springer, 2016) Golub, Michael; Guo, Xingye; Jung, Mingyo; Zhang, Jing; Department of Mechanical Engineering, School of Engineering and TechnologyThree 3D printed plastic materials, ABS, ABS plus, and CFRP, have been studied for their potential applications in engineering education. Using tensile test, the stress strain curves of the materials have been measured. The Young’s modulus, ultimate strength, and fracture toughness of the materials are calculated from the stress strain curve. The results show that CFRP has the highest stiffness or Young’s modulus. ABS plus has strongest mechanical properties, with highest ultimate strength and fracture toughness. With the measured properties, the 3D printed samples are a viable solution for engineering students to learn mechanical properties of materials.