241 research outputs found

    High-mobility Hydrogenated Indium Oxide without Introducing Water During Sputtering

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    AbstractThe key role of water to obtain high-mobility IO:H (hydrogenated indium oxide) layers has been well documented, but introducing the required tiny amount of water is technologically challenging. We first use simulations to evidence the key role of high mobility for the transparent conductive oxide for high-efficiency crystalline silicon solar cells. Then, we investigate an approach to fabricate high-mobility IO:H that circumvent the introduction of water vapor, relying on water vapor from ambient air. A sputtering tool equipped with a residual gas analyzer allows partial pressure monitoring of hydrogen and water in the system, and to link the gas composition to the properties of the deposited films. To vary the residual water pressure, we varied the pumping time after opening the chamber and before starting the deposition to reach different base pressures (1. 10-5 mbar to 3. 10-7 mbar), which are mostly composed of residual water. An optimum base pressure around 3. 10-6 mbar—and not lower pressures—was found to yield the highest mobility values after annealing. An alternative approach by introducing a small flow of hydrogen together with argon and oxygen is also shown to provide promising results

    Orbit and trajectory measurement with low intensity lead ion beams in the SPS

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    The orbit measurement system of the CERN SPS was designed to measure the position of dense proton beams with an intensity of up to 0.28 A. The lower design limit for the lead ion beam intensity has been fixed at 35mA. This requires a substantial extension of the dynamic range. We describe the properties of the system and its modifications together with the results obtained for sulphur ion beams in the past and lead ions more recently

    Intensity and bunch length measurement for lepton beam in the injection lines of the SPS and LEP

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    We describe a system which is used operationally to measure the absolute intensity of single lepton bunches in a beam transfer line. It is based on the detailed knowledge of every single item of a complex measuring chain that comprises a beam coupler on one end and an acquisition system on the other end. This knowledge can be acquired by a well tested theoretical model and careful measurement of the transfer function of each processing module. A precision better than 3 % can be obtained and no external calibration is required. A value for the bunch length can be deduced from a spectral intensity measurement at two well chosen frequencies

    Tune Measurements in the SPS as a Multicycling Machine

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    Throughout the operation cycle of the SPS different particles are accelerated : High intensity protons, leptons and heavy ions. For each particle type a measurement of the betatron tunes along the acceleration cycle is required. The paper describes the different excitation and data analysis methods used in order to minimize beam blow-up during the measurements (protons) or in order to optimize the time resolution (leptons). Measurement examples are given

    Steroid profiling by UHPLC-MS/MS in dried blood spots collected from healthy women with and without testosterone gel administration.

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    The quantification of a large panel of endogenous steroids in serum by LC-MS/MS represents a powerful clinical tool for the screening or diagnosis of diverse endocrine disorders. This approach has also demonstrated excellent sensitivity for the detection of testosterone misuse in the anti-doping field, especially in female athlete population. In both situations, the use of dried blood spots (DBS) could provide a viable alternative to invasive venous blood collection. Here, the evaluation of DBS sampling for the quantification of a panel of endogenous steroids using UHPLC-MS/MS is described. The UHPLC-MS/MS method was validated for quantitative analysis of eleven free and eight conjugated steroids and was then used for the analysis of DBS samples collected in 14 healthy women during a normal menstrual cycle (control phase) followed by a 28-days testosterone gel treatment (treatment phase). Results were compared with those obtained from serum matrix. Satisfactory performance was obtained for all compounds in terms of selectivity, linearity, accuracy, precision, combined uncertainty, stability as well as extraction recovery and matrix effects. In control phase, high correlation was observed between DBS and serum concentrations for most compounds. In treatment phase, higher testosterone concentrations were observed in capillary than in venous DBS, suggesting a possible interference resulting from testosterone contamination on finger(s) used for gel application. Steroid profiling in capillary DBS represents a simple and efficient strategy for monitoring endogenous steroid concentrations and their fluctuation in clinical context of steroid-related disorders, or for the detection of testosterone abuse in anti-doping

    Real time- and control software for the new orbit measurement system for the CERN SPS

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    The 240 channel SPS Orbit acquisition system is implemented on a PowerPC under the LynxOS operating system, making use of multi threaded real-time capabilities. The acquired data is transferred efficiently by DMA via the PCI bus into the main memory. System configuration aspects were implemented in a Broker architecture, where individual threads communicate with an Oracle database and the acquisition systems. This Broker hides the implementation details of the front-end systems. A versatile configuration client is provided in Java, to provide both local graphical user interfaces and remote WWW access using a dedicated gateway to the SL equipment layer. The timing diagnostics of the acquisition system are provided in a LabView application integrating oscilloscope control and channel multiplex control. This paper describes in detail the technical solutions implemented and reports on the arguments, which have led to particular choices

    Performance of the new SPS beam position orbit system (MOPOS)

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    The orbit and trajectory measurement system COPOS of the CERN SPS accelerator has been in operation since the construction of the machine in 1976. Over the years the system has been slightly modified in order to follow the evolving demands of the machine, in particular for its operation as a p-pbar collider and, since 1991, for the acceleration of heavy ions. In 1995 the performance of the system was reviewed and the following shortcomings were identified: - lack of turn-by-turn position measurements due to the 1ms integration time of the voltage to frequency converters used for the analogue to digital conversion (to be compared with a revolution time of 23 ms), - ageing effects on the 200 MHz resonating input filters, which had over the years drifted out of tolerance. As a consequence the signal to noise ratio, the linearity and the absolute precision were affected, - the calibration system based on electromechanical relays had become very unreliable, such that frequent calibrations were no longer possible, - a remote diagnostic for the observation of timing signals relative to the beam signals was missing. For the above reasons a large-scale upgrade program was launched, the results of which are described in the following sections

    Coupling Impedance of the CERN SPS beam position monitors

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    A detailed knowledge of the beam coupling impedance of the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) is required in order to operate this machine with a higher intensity for the foreseen Large Hadron Collider (LHC) luminosity upgrade. A large number of Beam Position Monitors (BPMs) is currently installed in the SPS, and this is why their contribution to the SPS impedance has to be assessed. This paper focuses on electromagnetic (EM) simulations and bench measurements of the longitudinal and transverse impedance generated by the horizontal and vertical BPMs installed in the SPS machine

    Toward Annealing Stable Molybdenum Oxide Based Hole Selective Contacts For Silicon Photovoltaics

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    Molybdenum oxide MoOX combines a high work function with broadband optical transparency. Sandwiched between a hydrogenated intrinsic amorphous silicon passivation layer and a transparent conductive oxide, this material allows a highly efficient hole selective front contact stack for crystalline silicon solar cells. However, hole extraction from the Si wafer and transport through this stack degrades upon annealing at 190 C, which is needed to cure the screen printed Ag metallization applied to typical Si solar cells. Here, we show that effusion of hydrogen from the adjacent layers is a likely cause for this degradation, highlighting the need for hydrogen lean passivation layers when using such metal oxide based carrier selective contacts. Pre MoOX deposition annealing of the passivating a Si H layer is shown to be a straightforward approach to manufacturing MoOX based devices with high fill factors using screen printed metallization cured at 190
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