43,634 research outputs found
Crystal Structure of the ZrO Phase at Zirconium/Zirconium Oxide Interfaces
Zirconium-based alloys are used in water-cooled nuclear reactors for both nuclear fuel cladding and structural components. Under this harsh environment, the main factor limiting the service life of zirconium cladding, and hence fuel burn-up efficiency, is water corrosion. This oxidation process has recently been linked to the presence of a sub-oxide phase with well-defined composition but unknown structure at the metal–oxide interface. In this paper, the combination of first-principles materials modeling and high-resolution electron microscopy is used to identify the structure of this sub-oxide phase, bringing us a step closer to developing strategies to mitigate aqueous oxidation in Zr alloys and prolong the operational lifetime of commercial fuel cladding alloys
Plasmonic Rainbow Trapping Structures for Light Localization and Spectrum Splitting
“Rainbow trapping” has been proposed as a scheme for localized storage of broadband electromagnetic radiation in metamaterials and plasmonic heterostructures. Here, we articulate the dispersion and power flow characteristics of rainbow trapping structures, and show that tapered waveguide structures composed of dielectric core and metal cladding are best suited for light trapping. A metal-insulator-metal taper acts as a cascade of optical cavities with different resonant frequencies, exhibiting a large quality factor and small effective volume comparable to conventional plasmonic resonators
Stretching Micro Metal Particles into Uniformly Dispersed and Sized Nanoparticles in Polymer.
There is a longstanding challenge to disperse metal nanoparticles uniformly in bulk polymers for widespread applications. Conventional scale-down techniques often are only able to shrink larger elements (such as microparticles and microfibers) into micro/nano-elements (i.e. nanoparticles and nanofibers) without much altering their relative spatial and size distributions. Here we show an unusual phenomenon that tin (Sn) microparticles with both poor size distribution and spatial dispersion were stretched into uniformly dispersed and sized Sn nanoparticles in polyethersulfone (PES) through a stack and draw technique in thermal drawing. It is believed that the capillary instability plays a crucial role during thermal drawing. This novel, inexpensive, and scalable method overcomes the longstanding challenge to produce bulk polymer-metal nanocomposites (PMNCs) with a uniform dispersion of metallic nano-elements
Negative refractive index in coaxial plasmon waveguides
We theoretically show that coaxial waveguides composed of a metallic core, surrounded by a dielectric cylinder and clad by a metal outer layer exhibit negative refractive index modes over a broad spectral range in the visible. For narrow dielectric gaps (10 nm GaP embedded in Ag) a figure-of-merit of 18 can be achieved at λ_0 = 460 nm. For larger dielectric gaps the negative index spectral range extends well below the surface plasmon resonance frequency. By fine-tuning the coaxial geometry the special case of n = −1 at a figure-of-merit of 5, or n = 0 for a decay length of 500 nm can be achieved
Hollow-core infrared fiber incorporating metal-wire metamaterial
Infrared (IR) light is considered important for short-range wireless
communication, thermal sensing, spectroscopy, material processing, medical
surgery, astronomy etc. However, IR light is in general much harder to
transport than optical light or microwave radiation. Existing hollow-core IR
waveguides usually use a layer of metallic coating on the inner wall of the
waveguide. Such a metallic layer, though reflective, still absorbs guided light
significantly due to its finite Ohmic loss, especially for transverse-magnetic
(TM) light. In this paper, we show that metal-wire based metamaterials may
serve as an efficient TM reflector, reducing propagation loss of the TM mode by
two orders of magnitude. By further imposing a conventional metal cladding
layer, which reflects specifically transverse-electric (TE) light, we can
potentially obtain a low-loss hollow-core fiber. Simulations confirm that loss
values for several low-order modes are comparable to the best results reported
so far.Comment: REVTeX, just over 9 page
Modal analysis of Bragg onion resonators
From analysis of the high Q modes in a Bragg onion resonator with an omnidirectional reflector cladding, we establish a close analogy between such a resonator and a spherical hollow cavity in perfect metal. We demonstrate that onion resonators are ideal for applications that require a large spontaneous-emission factor ß, such as thresholdless lasers and single-photon devices
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