29,662 research outputs found
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance in Low-Symmetry Superconductors
We consider the nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate, in
superconductors with accidental nodes. We show that a Hebel-Slichter-like peak
occurs even in the absence of an isotropic component of the superconducting
gap. The logarithmic divergence found in clean, non-interacting models is
controlled by both disorder and electron-electron interactions. However, for
reasonable parameters, neither of these effects removes the peak altogether.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Detection of nanoparticles by means of reflection electron energy loss spectroscopy depth profiling
The various studies of nanoparticles are of great importance because of the wide application of nanotechnology. The shape and structure of the nanoparticles can be determined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and their chemistry by electron energy loss spectroscopy. TEM sample preparation is an expensive and difficult procedure, however. Surface sensitive, analytical techniques, such as Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) are well applicable to detect the atoms that make up the nanoparticles, but cannot determine whether particle formation occurred. On the other hand, reflection electron energy loss spectroscopy (REELS) probes the electronic structures of atoms, which are strongly different for the atoms being in solution or in precipitated form. If the particle size is in the nm range, plasmon resonance can be excited in it, which appears as a loss feature in REELS spectrum. Thus, by measuring AES (XPS) spectra parallel with those of REELS, besides the atomic concentrations the presence of the nanoparticles can also be identified. As an example, the appearance of nanoparticles during ion beam induced mixing of C/Si layer will be shown
Unified explanation of the Kadowaki-Woods ratio in strongly correlated materials
Discoveries of ratios whose values are constant within broad classes of
materials have led to many deep physical insights. The Kadowaki-Woods ratio
(KWR) compares the temperature dependence of a metal's resistivity to that of
its heat capacity; thereby probing the relationship between the
electron-electron scattering rate and the renormalisation of the electron mass.
However, the KWR takes very different values in different materials. Here we
introduce a ratio, closely related to the KWR, that includes the effects of
carrier density and spatial dimensionality and takes the same (predicted) value
in organic charge transfer salts, transition metal oxides, heavy fermions and
transition metals - despite the numerator and denominator varying by ten orders
of magnitude. Hence, in these materials, the same emergent physics is
responsible for the mass enhancement and the quadratic temperature dependence
of the resistivity and no exotic explanations of their KWRs are required.Comment: Final version accepted by Nature Phy
Growth and characterization of materials for tunable lasers in the near infrared spectral region
During this reporting period, work proceeded in two directions. The first was the development of crystal growth procedures for rare earth doped LiYF4 crystals. The procedures for growth and pre-growth treatment of starting materials for undoped LiYF4 crystals were established and good optical quality materials were grown. A significant amount of time was spent trying to establish the optimum growth parameters for Yb(3+)-doped crystals. Unfortunately, it has proven difficult to obtain large size boules of high optical quality crystals of LiYF4 with doping concentrations of Yb(3+) of several percent. Because of these problems, this research is to be changed to attempt doping with other trivalent rare earth ions such as Ho, Er, and Tm. The second research area was investigating the potential of LiNbO3:Mg,Cr and LiNbO3:Mg,Cr,Yb as possible laser materials. The results are summarized
High temperature electronic requirements in aeropropulsion systems
The needs for high temperature electronic and electro-optic devices as they would be used on aircraft engines in either research and development applications, or operational applications are discussed. The conclusion reached is that the temperature at which the devices must be able to function is in the neighborhood of 500 to 600 C either for R&D or for operational applications. In R&D applications the devices must function in this temperature range when in the engine but only for a moderate period of time. On an operational engine, the reliability requirements dictate that the devices be able to be burned-in at temperatures significantly higher than those at which they will function on the engine. The major point made is that semiconductor technology must be pushed well beyond the level at which silicon will be able to function
Emergence of quasi-one-dimensional physics in MoS(dmit), a nearly-isotropic three-dimensional molecular crystal
We report density functional theory calculations for MoS(dmit).
We derive an ab initio tight-binding model from overlaps of Wannier orbitals;
finding a layered model with interlayer hopping terms the size of the
in-plane terms. The in-plane Hamiltonian interpolates the kagom\'e and
honeycomb lattices. It supports states localized to dodecahedral rings within
the plane, which populate one-dimensional (1D) bands and lead to a quasi-1D
spin-one model on a layered honeycomb lattice once interactions are included.
Two lines of Dirac cones also cross the Fermi energy.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Growth and characterization of tunable solid state lasers in the near infrared spectral region
This research resulted in the publication of two major papers. The major results include the development of improved crystal growth techniques for rare earth-doped LiYF4 crystals and the determination of laser-pumped laser characteristics of Tm:Ho:Y3Al5O12 crystals
Fabrication and test of a space power boiler feed electromagnetic pump. 3: Endurance and final performance tests
A three-phase helical induction electromagnetic pump designed for the boiler feed pump of a potassium Rankine cycle space power system was developed and built. It was mounted in a liquid metal test loop and successfully tested over a range of potassium temperatures from 900 to 1400 F, flow rates from 0.75 to 4.85 lb/sec, developed pressures up to 340 psi, net positive suction head from 1 to 22 psi, and NaK coolant temperatures from 800 to 950 F. Maximum efficiency at design point conditions of 3.25 lb/sec flow rate, 240 psi developed head, 1000 F potassium inlet temperature, and 800 F NaK coolant inlet temperature was 16.3 percent. After the performance tests the pump was operated without any difficulty at design point for 10,000 hours, and then a limited number of repeat performance tests were made. There was no appreciable change in pump performance after 10,000 hours of operation. A supplementary series of tests using the quasi-square wave power output of a dc to three-phase ac inverter showed that the pump would operate without difficulty at a frequency as low as 25 Hz, with little loss in efficiency
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