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Creators/Authors contains: "Peng, Yi"

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  1. Abstract Large shear deformations can induce structural changes within crystals, yet the microscopic kinetics underlying these transformations are difficult for experimental observation and theoretical understanding. Here, we drive shear-induced structural transitions from square ( ) lattices to triangular ( ) lattices in thin-film colloidal crystals and directly observe the accompanying kinetics with single-particle resolution inside the bulk crystal. When the oscillatory shear strain amplitude 0.1 γ m < 0.4 , -lattice nuclei are surrounded by a liquid layer throughout their growth due to localized shear strain at the interface. Such virtual melting at crystalline interface has been predicted in theory and simulation, but have not been observed in experiment. The mean liquid layer thickness is proportional to the shear which can be explained by the Lindemann melting criterion. This provides an alternative explanation on virtual melting. 
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  2. Novel diluted magnetic semiconductors derived from BaZn2As2 are of considerable importance owing to their elevated Curie temperature of 260 K, the diversity of magnetic states they exhibit, and their prospective applications in multilayer heterojunctions. However, the transition from the intrinsic semiconductor BaZn2As2 (BZA) to its doped compounds has not been extensively explored, especially in relation to the significant intermediate compound Ba(Zn,Mn)2As2 (BZMA). This study aims to address this gap by performing susceptibility and magnetization measurements, in addition to electronic transport analyses, on these compounds in their single crystal form. Key findings include the following: (1) carriers can significantly modulate the magnetism, transitioning from a non-magnetic BZA to a weak magnetic BZMA, and subsequently to a hard ferromagnet (Ba,K)(Zn,Mn)2As2 with potassium (K) doping to BZMA; (2) two distinct sets of metal-insulator transitions were identified, which can be elucidated by the involvement of carriers and the emergence of various magnetic states, respectively; and (3) BZMA exhibits colossal negative magnetoresistance, and by lanthanum (La) doping, a potential n-type (Ba,La)(Zn,Mn)2As2 single crystal was synthesized, demonstrating promising prospects for p-n junction applications. This study enhances our understanding of the magnetic interactions and evolutions among these compounds, particularly in the low-doping regime, thereby providing a comprehensive physical framework that complements previous findings related to the high-doping region. 
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  3. Vision language models can now generate long-form answers to questions about images -- long-form visual question answers (LFVQA). We contribute VizWiz-LF, a dataset of long-form answers to visual questions posed by blind and low vision (BLV) users. VizWiz-LF contains 4.2k long-form answers to 600 visual questions, collected from human expert describers and six VQA models. We develop and annotate functional roles of sentences of LFVQA and demonstrate that long-form answers contain information beyond the question answer such as explanations and suggestions. We further conduct automatic and human evaluations with BLV and sighted people to evaluate long-form answers. BLV people perceive both human-written and generated long-form answers to be plausible, but generated answers often hallucinate incorrect visual details, especially for unanswerable visual questions (e.g., blurry or irrelevant images). To reduce hallucinations, we evaluate the ability of VQA models to abstain from answering unanswerable questions across multiple prompting strategies. 
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  4. Diluted magnetic semiconductors (DMSs) represent a significant area of interest for research and applications in spintronics. Recently, DMSs derived from BaZn2As2 have garnered significant interest due to the record Curie temperature (TC) of 260 K. However, the influence of doping on their magnetic evolution and transport characteristics has not been thoroughly investigated. This study aims to fill this gap through susceptibility and magnetization measurements, electric transport analysis, and muon spin relaxation and rotation (µSR) measurements on (Ba1−xRbx)(Zn1−yMny)2As2 (0.1 ≤ x, y ≤ 0.25, BRZMA). Key findings include the following: (1) BRZMA showed a maximum TC of 138 K, much lower than (Ba,K)(Zn,Mn)2As, because of a reduced carrier concentration. (2) A substantial electromagnetic coupling is evidenced by a negative magnetoresistance of up to 34% observed in optimally doped BRZMA. (3) A 100% static magnetic ordered volume fraction is achieved in the low-temperature region, indicating a homogeneous magnet. (4) Furthermore, a systematic and innovative methodology has been initially proposed, characterized by clear step-by-step instructions aimed at enhancing TC, grounded in robust experimental findings. The findings presented provide valuable insights into the spin–charge interplay concerning magnetic and electronic transport properties. Furthermore, they offer clear direction for the investigation of higher TC DMSs. 
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  5. The investigation of novel diluted magnetic semiconductors (DMSs) provides a promising platform for studying magnetism and transport characteristics, with significant implications for spintronics. DMSs based on BaZn2As2 are particularly noteworthy due to their high Curie temperature (TC) of 260 K, diverse magnetic states, and potential for multilayer heterojunctions. This study investigates the magnetic evolution of carrier doping and spin dynamics in the asperomagnet (Ba,Na)(Zn,Mn)2As2, utilizing a combination of magnetization measurements, ac susceptibility, and muon spin rotation (µSR). Key findings include the following: (1) lower transition temperatures and coercive forces in (Ba,Na)(Zn,Mn)2As2 compared to the ferromagnet (Ba,K)(Zn,Mn)2As2; (2) a dynamic fluctuation peak around the transition temperature observed in both the ac susceptibility and longitudinal field (LF) µSR; and (3) the coexistence of static and dynamic states at low temperatures, exhibiting spin-glass-like characteristics. This study, to the best of our knowledge, may represent the first investigation of asperomagnetic order utilizing µSR techniques. It enhances the understanding of magnetic interactions in BaZn2As2-based systems and provides valuable insights into the exploration of high TC DMSs. 
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  6. Abstract Coalescence of nuclei in phase transitions significantly influences the transition rate and the properties of product materials, but these processes occur rapidly and are difficult to observe at the microscopic scale. Here, we directly image the coalescence of nuclei with single particle resolution during the crystal-crystal transition from a multilayer square to triangular lattices. The coalescence process exhibits three similar stages across a variety of scenarios: coupled growth of two nuclei, their attachment, and relaxation of the coalesced nucleus. The kinetics vary with nucleus size, interface, and lattice orientation; the kinetics include acceleration of nucleus growth, small nucleus liquefaction, and generation/annihilation of defects. Related mechanisms, such as strain induced by nucleus growth and the lower energy of liquid-crystal versus crystal-crystal interfaces, appear to be common to both atomic and colloidal crystals. 
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  7. null (Ed.)
    We experimentally study the emergence of collective bacterial swimming, a phenomenon often referred to as bacterial turbulence. A phase diagram of the flow of 3D Escherichia coli suspensions spanned by bacterial concentration, the swimming speed of bacteria, and the number fraction of active swimmers is systematically mapped, which shows quantitative agreement with kinetic theories and demonstrates the dominant role of hydrodynamic interactions in bacterial collective swimming. We trigger bacterial turbulence by suddenly increasing the swimming speed of light-powered bacteria and image the transition to the turbulence in real time. Our experiments identify two unusual kinetic pathways, i.e., the one-step transition with long incubation periods near the phase boundary and the two-step transition driven by long-wavelength instabilities deep inside the turbulent phase. Our study provides not only a quantitative verification of existing theories but also insights into interparticle interactions and transition kinetics of bacterial turbulence. 
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  8. null (Ed.)
    Grain growth under shear annealing is crucial for controlling the properties of polycrystalline materials. However, their microscopic kinetics are not well understood because individual atomic trajectories are difficult to track. Here, we study grain growth with single-particle kinetics in colloidal polycrystals using video microscopy. Rich grain-growth phenomena are revealed in three shear regimes, including the normal grain growth (NGG) in weak shear melting–recrystallization process in strong shear. For intermediate shear, early stage NGG is arrested by built-up stress and eventually gives way to dynamic abnormal grain growth (DAGG). We find that DAGG occurs via a melting–recrystallization process, which naturally explains the puzzling stress drop at the onset of DAGG in metals. Moreover, we visualize that grain boundary (GB) migration is coupled with shear via disconnection gliding. The disconnection-gliding dynamics and the collective motions of ambient particles are resolved. We also observed that grain rotation can violate the conventional relation R × θ = c o n s t a n t (R is the grain radius, and θ is the misorientation angle between two grains) by emission and annihilation of dislocations across the grain, resulting in a step-by-step rotation. Besides grain growth, we discover a result in shear-induced melting: The melting volume fraction varies sinusoidally on the angle mismatch between the triangular lattice orientation of the grain and the shear direction. These discoveries hold potential to inform microstructure engineering of polycrystalline materials. 
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