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Revealing the Unusual Boron-Pinned Layered Substructure in Superconducting Hard Molybdenum Semiboride.

Yufei GeKuo BaoTeng MaJinmeng ZhangChao ZhouShuailing MaQiang TaoPinwen ZhuTian Cui
Published in: ACS omega (2021)
Improving the poor electrical conductivity of hard materials is important, as it will benefit their application. High-hardness metallic Mo2B was synthesized by high-pressure and high-temperature methods. Temperature-dependent resistivity measurements suggested that Mo2B has excellent metallic conductivity properties and is a weakly coupled superconductor with a T c of 6.0 K. The Vickers hardness of the metal-rich molybdenum semiboride reaches 16.5 GPa, exceeding the hardness of MoB and MoB2. The results showed that a proper boron concentration can improve the mechanical properties, not necessarily a high boron concentration. First-principles calculations revealed that the pinning effect of light elements is related to hardness. The high hardness of boron-pinned layered Mo2B demonstrated that the design of high-hardness conductive materials should be based on the structure formed by light elements rather than high-concentration light elements.
Keyphrases
  • high temperature
  • molecular dynamics simulations