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Creators/Authors contains: "Yang, Judith C"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 26, 2026
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  4. Surface segregation is a common phenomenon in alloys exposed to reactive atmospheres, yet the atomic mechanisms underlying surface structure and composition dynamics remains largely unexplored. Using a combination of environmental transmission electron microscopy observations and atomistic modeling, here we report the surface segregation process of Pt atoms in a dilute Pt(Cu) alloy and determine the distribution of Pt atoms at both atomically flat and stepped surfaces of the Pt(Cu) alloy at elevated temperature and in a hydrogen gas atmosphere. Through directly probing Pt segregation, we find that Pt atoms segregated on the (100) surface exhibit a p(2×2) ordering, with ~25% Pt occupancy. In contrast, on the stepped (410) surface, hydrogen adsorption induces Pt segregation, initially occurring at the step edges, which then expands to the terrace sites upon increased hydrogen coverage, resulting in an ordered distribution of segregated Pt atoms with ~22% occupancy. These observations offer mechanistic insights into the structure and composition dynamics of the topmost atomic layer of the alloy in response to environmental stimuli and hold practical implications for the design and optimization of catalysts based on Pt group metals. 
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  5. Abstract Accurate control and measurement of real-time sample temperature are critical for the understanding and interpretation of the experimental results from in situ heating experiments inside environmental transmission electron microscope (ETEM). However, quantifying the real-time sample temperature remains a challenging task for commercial in situ TEM heating devices, especially under gas conditions. In this work, we developed a home-made micro-electrical-mechanical-system (MEMS) heater with unprecedented small temperature gradient and thermal drift, which not only enables the temperature evolution caused by gas injection to be measured in real-time but also makes the key heat dissipation path easier to model to theoretically understand and predict the temperature decrease. A new parameter termed as “gas cooling ability ( H )”, determined purely by the physical properties of the gas, can be used to compare and predict the gas-induced temperature decrease by different gases. Our findings can act as a reference for predicting the real temperature for in situ heating experiments without closed-loop temperature sensing capabilities in the gas environment, as well as all gas-related heating systems. 
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