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We have developed a new material for neutron shielding applications where space is restricted. W$_2$B is an excellent attenuator of neutrons and gamma-rays, due to the combined gamma attenuation of W and neutron absorption of B. However, its low fracture toughness (~3.5 MPa$cdot$m$^{0.5}$) and high melting point (2670 {deg}C) prevent the fabrication of large fully-dense monolithic parts with adequate mechanical properties. Here we meet these challenges by combining W$_2$B with a minor fraction (43 vol.%) of metallic W. The material was produced by reaction sintering W and BN powders. The mechanical properties under flexural and compressive loading were determined up to 1900 {deg}C. The presence of the ductile metallic W phase enabled a peak flexural strength of ~950 MPa at 1100 {deg}C, which is a factor of 2-3 higher than typical monolithic transition-metal borides. Its ductile-brittle transition temperature of ~1000 {deg}C is typical of W-based composites, which is surprising as the W phase was the minor constituent and did not appear to form a fully continuous network. Compression tests showed hardening below ~1500 {deg}C and significant elongation of the phase domains, which suggest that by forging or rolling, further improvements in ductility may be possible.
Systematic studies of the two high-temperature monolayer oxygen structures that exist on the (110) tungsten surface were performed using low-energy electron microscopy and diffraction measurements. Our work questions the commonly accepted interpretat
Bimetal transition iodides in two-dimensional scale provide an interesting idea to combine a set of single-transition-metal ferromagnetic semiconductors together. Motivated by structural engineering on bilayer CrI$_3$ to tune its magnetism and works
X-ray diffraction and Raman scattering measurements, and first-principles calculations are performed to search for the formation of NaCl-hydrogen compound. When NaCl and H$_{2}$ mixture is laser-heated to above 1500 K at pressures exceeding 40 GPa, w
We investigated low energy nuclear spin excitations in the layered compound CoCl$_2$ by high resolution back-scattering neutron spectroscopy. We detected inelastic peaks at $E = 1.34 pm 0.03$ $mu$eV on both energy loss and energy sides of the central
We report inelastic neutron scattering measurements of the phonon spectra in a pure powder sample of the multiferroic material BiFeO3. A high-temperature range was covered to unravel the changes in the phonon dynamics across the Neel (T_N ~ 650 K) an