348 research outputs found
Nanocharacterisation of precipitates in austenite high manganese steels with advanced techniques: HRSTEM and DualEELS mapping
To achieve optimal mechanical properties in high manganese steels, the precipitation of nanoprecipitates of vanadium and niobium carbides is under investigation. It is shown that under controlled heat treatments between 850°C and 950°C following hot deformation, few-nanometre precipitates of either carbide can be produced in test steels with suitable contents of vanadium or niobium. The structure and chemistry of these precipitates are examined in detail with a spatial resolution down to better than 1 nm using a newly commissioned scanning transmission electron microscope. In particular, it is shown that the nucleation of vanadium carbide precipitates often occurs at pre-existing titanium carbide precipitates which formed from titanium impurities in the bulk steel. This work will also highlight the links between the nanocharacterisation and changes in the bulk properties on annealing
Medipix3 Demonstration and understanding of near ideal detector performance for 60 & 80 keV electrons
In our article we report first quantitative measurements of imaging
performance for the current generation of hybrid pixel detector, Medipix3, as
direct electron detector. Utilising beam energies of 60 & 80 keV, measurements
of modulation transfer function (MTF) and detective quantum efficiency (DQE)
have revealed that, in single pixel mode (SPM), energy threshold values can be
chosen to maximize either the MTF or DQE, obtaining values near to, or even
exceeding, those for an ideal detector. We have demonstrated that the Medipix3
charge summing mode (CSM) can deliver simultaneous, near ideal values of both
MTF and DQE. To understand direct detection performance further we have
characterized the detector response to single electron events, building an
empirical model which can predict detector MTF and DQE performance based on
energy threshold. Exemplifying our findings we demonstrate the Medipix3 imaging
performance, recording a fully exposed electron diffraction pattern at 24-bit
depth and images in SPM and CSM modes. Taken together our findings highlight
that for transmission electron microscopy performed at low energies (energies
<100 keV) thick hybrid pixel detectors provide an advantageous and alternative
architecture for direct electron imagin
From attosecond to zeptosecond coherent control of free-electron wave functions using semi-infinite light fields
Light-electron interaction in empty space is the seminal ingredient for
free-electron lasers and also for controlling electron beams to dynamically
investigate materials and molecules. Pushing the coherent control of free
electrons by light to unexplored timescales, below the attosecond, would enable
unprecedented applications in light-assisted electron quantum circuits and
diagnostics at extremely small timescales, such as those governing
intramolecular electronic motion and nuclear phenomena. We experimentally
demonstrate attosecond coherent manipulation of the electron wave function in a
transmission electron microscope, and show that it can be pushed down to the
zeptosecond regime with existing technology. We make a relativistic pulsed
electron beam interact in free space with an appropriately synthesized
semi-infinite light field generated by two femtosecond laser pulses reflected
at the surface of a mirror and delayed by fractions of the optical cycle. The
amplitude and phase of the resulting coherent oscillations of the electron
states in energymomentum space are mapped via momentum-resolved ultrafast
electron energy-loss spectroscopy. The experimental results are in full
agreement with our theoretical framework for light-electron interaction, which
predicts access to the zeptosecond timescale by combining semi-infinite X-ray
fields with free electrons.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Direct observation of domain wall structures in curved permalloy wires containing an antinotch
The formation and field response of head-to-head domain walls in curved permalloy wires, fabricated to contain a single antinotch, have been investigated using Lorentz microscopy. High spatial resolution maps of the vector induction distribution in domain walls close to the antinotch have been derived and compared with micromagnetic simulations. In wires of 10 nm thickness the walls are typically of a modified asymmetric transverse wall type. Their response to applied fields tangential to the wire at the antinotch location was studied. The way the wall structure changes depends on whether the field moves the wall away from or further into the notch. Higher fields are needed and much more distorted wall structures are observed in the latter case, indicating that the antinotch acts as an energy barrier for the domain wal
An abnormality in glucocorticoid receptor expression differentiates steroid responders from nonresponders in keloid disease
Background: Glucocorticoids (GCs) are first-line treatment for keloid disease (KD) but are limited by high incidence of resistance, recurrence and undesirable sideeffects. Identifying patient responsiveness early could guide therapy. Methods: Nineteen patients with KD were recruited at week 0 (before treatment) and received intralesional steroids. At weeks 0, 2 and 4, noninvasive imaging and biopsies were performed. Responsiveness was determined by clinical response and a significant reduction in vascular perfusion following steroid treatment, using full-field laser perfusion imaging (FLPI). Responsiveness was also evaluated using (i) spectrophotometric intracutaneous analysis to quantify changes in collagen and melanin and (ii) histology to identify changes in epidermal thickness and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) expression. Biopsies were used to quantify changes in glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expression using quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. Results: At week 2, the FLPI was used to separate patients into steroid responsive (n = 12) and nonresponsive groups (n = 7). All patients demonstrated a signifccant decrease in GAG at week 2 (P < 0 05). At week 4, responsive patients exhibited significant reduction in melanin, GAG, epidermal thickness (all P < 0 05) and a continued reduction in perfusion (P < 0 001) compared with nonresponders. Steroid-responsive patients had increased GR expression at baseline and showed autoregulation of GR compared with nonresponders, who showed no change in GR transcription or protein. Conclusions: This is the first demonstration that keloid response to steroids can be measured objectively using noninvasive imaging. FLPI is a potentially reliable tool to stratify KD responsiveness. Altered GR expression may be the mechanism gating therapeutic response
DMI meter: Measuring the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction inversion in Pt/Co/Ir/Pt multilayers
We describe a field-driven domain wall creep-based method for the
quantification of interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions (DMI) in
perpendicularly magnetized thin films. The use of only magnetic fields to drive
wall motion removes the possibility of mixing with current-related effects such
as spin Hall effect or Rashba field, as well as the complexity arising from
lithographic patterning. We demonstrate this method on sputtered Pt/Co/Ir/Pt
multilayers with a variable Ir layer thickness. By inserting an ultrathin layer
of Ir at the Co/Pt interface we can reverse the sign of the effective DMI
acting on the sandwiched Co layer, and therefore continuously change the domain
wall (DW) structure from right- to the left-handed N\'{e}el wall. We also show
that the DMI shows exquisite sensitivity to the exact details of the atomic
structure at the film interfaces by comparison with a symmetric epitaxial
Pt/Co/Pt multilayer
Laser-Induced Skyrmion Writing and Erasing in an Ultrafast Cryo-Lorentz Transmission Electron Microscopy
We demonstrate that light-induced heat pulses of different duration and
energy can write skyrmions in a broad range of temperatures and magnetic field
in FeGe. Using a combination of camera-rate and pump-probe cryo-Lorentz
Transmission Electron Microscopy, we directly resolve the spatio-temporal
evolution of the magnetization ensuing optical excitation. The skyrmion lattice
was found to maintain its structural properties during the laser-induced
demagnetization, and its recovery to the initial state happened in the
sub-{\mu}s to {\mu}s range, depending on the cooling rate of the system
A transmission electron microscope study of N\'eel skyrmion magnetic textures in multilayer thin film systems with large interfacial chiral interaction
Skyrmions in ultrathin ferromagnetic metal (FM)/heavy metal (HM) multilayer
systems produced by conventional sputtering methods have recently generated
huge interest due to their applications in the field of spintronics. The
sandwich structure with two correctly-chosen heavy metal layers provides an
additive interfacial exchange interaction which promotes domain wall or
skyrmion spin textures that are N\'eel in character and with a fixed chirality.
Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is a high resolution method
ideally suited to quantitatively image such chiral magnetic configurations.
When allied with physical and chemical TEM analysis of both planar and
cross-sectional samples, key length scales such as grain size and the chiral
variation of the magnetisation variation have been identified and measured. We
present data showing the importance of the grain size (mostly < 10nm) measured
from direct imaging and its potential role in describing observed behaviour of
isolated skyrmions (diameter < 100nm). In the latter the region in which the
magnetization rotates is measured to be around 30 nm. Such quantitative
information on the multiscale magnetisation variations in the system is key to
understanding and exploiting the behaviour of skyrmions for future device
applications.Comment: 11 pages , 6 figures, journal articl
A transmission electron microscope study of Néel skyrmion magnetic textures in multilayer thin film systems with large interfacial chiral interaction
Skyrmions in ultrathin ferromagnetic metal (FM)/heavy metal (HM) multilayer systems produced by conventional sputtering methods have recently generated huge interest due to their applications in the field of spintronics. The sandwich structure with two correctly-chosen heavy metal layers provides an additive interfacial exchange interaction which promotes domain wall or skyrmion spin textures that are Néel in character and with a fixed chirality. Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is a high resolution method ideally suited to quantitatively image such chiral magnetic configurations. When allied with physical and chemical TEM analysis of both planar and cross-sectional samples, key length scales such as grain size and the chiral variation of the magnetisation variation have been identified and measured. We present data showing the importance of the grain size (mostly < 10 nm) measured from direct imaging and its potential role in describing observed behaviour of isolated skyrmions (diameter < 100 nm). In the latter the region in which the magnetization rotates is measured to be around 30 nm. Such quantitative information on the multiscale magnetisation variations in the system is key to understanding and exploiting the behaviour of skyrmions for future applications in information storage and logic devices
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