1,107 research outputs found

    Observations on the Aging Environment Dependent NO Oxidation Activity of Model Pt/Al2O3 Diesel Oxidation Catalyst

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    The influence of aging environment of model diesel oxidation catalyst Pt/Al2O3 on the NO oxidation activity is studied. The fresh catalyst Pt/Al/F (calcined in air at 500°C) is aged with or without phosphorus (P) poisoning (7.5wt%) at 800°C either in air (P/Pt/Al/O or Pt/Al/O) or in simulated diesel exhaust (P/Pt/Al/R or Pt/Al/R). Catalyst aged under diesel exhaust environment (Pt/Al/R) surprisingly presents the best NO oxidation activity under excess of O2 followed by the fresh (Pt/Al/F) and thermally aged (Pt/Al/O) catalysts. The activity difference between the catalysts is quite large, especially between Pt/Al/R and Pt/Al/O that are aged at the same temperatures but under different environments suggesting the importance of the aging environment for the catalytic activity. The NO oxidation activity of P poisoned catalysts P/Pt/Al/R and P/Pt/Al/O is minute as compared to their P free counter parts indicating that chemical aging is more detrimental for catalytic efficiency than thermal agin

    Reversible control of the electronic density of states at the Fermi level of Ca3Co4O9+δ misfit-layered oxide single crystals through O+/H+ plasma exposure

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    Misfit-layered Ca3Co4O9 crystals were grown and characterized via XRD, SEM, and photo-emission spectroscopy (PES). The evolution of the intensity at the Fermi level (E F) with varying oxygen content was studied by PES. Oxygen species were successfully introduced and removed through O+ and H+ microwave-plasma (2.45GHz, 2-5mbar) treatments, respectively. A 5min O+ plasma exposure was observed to result into a drastic enhancement in the E F intensity, demonstrating the influence of oxygen content to the charge carrier population in layered cobalt-oxide material

    Anomalous transport properties of the halfmetallic ferromagnets Co2TiSi, Co2TiGe, and Co2TiSn

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    In this work the theoretical and experimental investigations of Co2TiZ (Z = Si, Ge, or Sn) compounds are reported. Half-metallic ferromagnetism is predicted for all three compounds with only two bands crossing the Fermi energy in the majority channel. The magnetic moments fulfill the Slater-Pauling rule and the Curie temperatures are well above room temperature. All compounds show a metallic like resistivity for low temperatures up to their Curie temperature, above the resistivity changes to semiconducting like behavior. A large negative magnetoresistance of 55% is observed for Co2TiSn at room temperature in an applied magnetic field of 4T which is comparable to the large negative magnetoresistances of the manganites. The Seebeck coefficients are negative for all three compounds and reach their maximum values at their respective Curie temperatures and stay almost constant up to 950 K. The highest value achieved is -52muV/K m for Co2TiSn which is large for a metal. The combination of half-metallicity and the constant large Seebeck coefficient over a wide temperature range makes these compounds interesting materials for thermoelectric applications and further spincaloric investigations.Comment: 4 pages 4 figure

    Emergence of a Dynamic Super-Structural Order Integrating Antiferroelectric and Antiferrodistortive Competing Instabilities in EuTiO3

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    Microscopic structural instabilities of EuTiO3 single crystal were investigated by synchrotron x-ray diffraction. Antiferrodistortive (AFD) oxygen octahedral rotational order was observed alongside Ti derived antiferroelectric (AFE) distortions. The competition between the two instabilities is reconciled through a cooperatively modulated structure allowing both to coexist. The electric and magnetic field effect on the modulated AFD order shows that the origin of large magnetoelectric coupling is based upon the dynamic equilibrium between the AFD - antiferromagnetic interactions versus the electric polarization - ferromagnetic interactions

    One-step preparation of N-doped strontium titanate films by pulsed laser deposition

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    Perovskite-type oxynitrides exhibit promising electrical and optical properties and can possibly be used in the future as functional materials for electrical, photo-, and electrochemical applications. Continuous heterovalent substitution of oxygen ions by nitrogen ions allows tuning of the desired optical and/or electronic properties to the application specifications. In the present work deposition of SrTiO3:N films by pulsed reactive crossed beam laser ablation was studied in order to examine the influence of different deposition parameters on the film crystallinity and composition. The deposited films exhibit a perovskite-type crystal structure and reveals epitaxial growth on MgO(100) substrates. The unit cell parameters of the deposited SrTiO3:N films range within 3.911<a<3.9193.9\underline{11}<a<3.9\underline{19} , which is slightly larger than for polycrystalline SrTiO3 (a=3.905). The studied films reveal an oxygen content in the range of (2.70-2.98)±0.15. The relative N content (vs. O) can be tuned within the range of 1.0-3.0% by adjusting the deposition parameters. The N:O concentration ratio increases with increasing laser fluence and target-to-substrate distances, while the substrate temperature has a more complex influence on the nitrogen concentration. In the range of 580-650°C the [N]/[O] ratio increases while further heating results in a gradual decrease of the N conten

    Synthesis and Characterization of New Ceramic Thermoelectrics Implemented in a Thermoelectric Oxide Module

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    Novel thermoelectric oxides were developed, produced, and characterized to demonstrate their promising thermoelectric conversion potential in a thermoelectric converter. Four-leg thermoelectric oxide modules were fabricated by combining p- and n-type oxide thermoelements made of pressed polycrystalline GdCo0.95Ni0.05O3 and CaMn0.98Nb0.02O3, respectively. In these modules, the p- and n-type thermoelements were connected electrically in series and thermally in parallel. The materials were joined by electrical contacts consisting of a Ag/CuO composite material. Fairly good thermal contacts were ensured by pressing the thermoelements between alumina substrates. Cross-sections of the alumina/Ag-CuO mixture/thermoelement interface were investigated by scanning electron microscopy. The temperature distribution across the module was monitored using K-type thermocouples and a micro-infrared (IR) camera. The open-circuit voltage and the load voltages of the module were measured up to a temperature difference of ΔT=500K while keeping the temperature of the cold side at 300K. The output power and internal resistance were calculated. The characteristics of the module evaluated from electrical measurements were compared with respective values of the p- and n-type leg materials. An output power of 0.04W at ΔT=500K led to a power density of ~0.125W/cm3, where the volume of thermoelectric material was determined by a cross-section of 4mm×4mm and a leg length of 5m

    Antiferrodistortive phase transition in EuTiO3

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    X-ray diffraction, dynamical mechanical analysis and infrared reflectivity studies revealed an antiferrodistortive phase transition in EuTiO3 ceramics. Near 300K the perovskite structure changes from cubic Pm-3m to tetragonal I4/mcm due to antiphase tilting of oxygen octahedra along the c axis (a0a0c- in Glazer notation). The phase transition is analogous to SrTiO3. However, some ceramics as well as single crystals of EuTiO3 show different infrared reflectivity spectra bringing evidence of a different crystal structure. In such samples electron diffraction revealed an incommensurate tetragonal structure with modulation wavevector q ~ 0.38 a*. Extra phonons in samples with modulated structure are activated in the IR spectra due to folding of the Brillouin zone. We propose that defects like Eu3+ and oxygen vacancies strongly influence the temperature of the phase transition to antiferrodistortive phase as well as the tendency to incommensurate modulation in EuTiO3.Comment: PRB, in pres

    Lab Scale Fixed-Bed Reactor for Operando X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy for Structure Activity Studies of Supported Metal Oxide Catalysts

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    Lab scale fixed-bed reactor is applied for operando transmission X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) for structure-activity studies of supported metal oxide catalysts under real reaction conditions. This setup includes many properties of an optimal fixed-bed reactor for operando transmission XAS studies. For instance, it is usable in a wide range of temperature (up to 1,000°C), pressure and space velocity. Besides, this operando setup can be used for transmission XAS measurements in a wide edge energy range. The potential of this reactor for operando transmission XAS is demonstrated by, as examples, the three-way catalytic performance of Pd/Al2O3/CeZrO2 and Rh/Al2O

    RF-plasma assisted pulsed laser deposition of nitrogen-doped SrTiO3 thin films

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    Perovskite-type nitrogen substituted SrTiO3 thin films were deposited with a one-step process by RF-plasma assisted pulsed laser deposition from a SrTiO3 target using a N2 plasma, while deposition with a NH3 plasma yields films with almost no incorporated nitrogen. The deposited films exhibit a cubic perovskite-type crystal structure and reveal oriented growth on MgO(100) substrates. The unit cell parameters of the studied N-doped SrTiO3 films range within 3.905<a<3.918Å, which is slightly larger than for SrTiO3 (a=3.905Å). The nitrogen content in the deposited films varies from 0.2 to 0.7atom%. The amount of incorporated nitrogen in the films decreases with increasing RF-power, while the N2 flow rate does not have any pronounced influence on the N content. Nitrogen incorporation results in an increased optical absorption at 400-600nm, which is associated with N(2p) energy states that have a higher energy level than the valence band in strontium titanate. The optical band gap energies in the studied N-doped SrTiO3 films are at 3.2-3.3eV, which is very similar to that of pure strontium titanate (∼3.2eV). Films deposited with NH3 for the RF-plasma exhibit a lower degree of crystallinity and reveal almost no nitrogen incorporation into the crystal lattic
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