2,090 research outputs found
Porous 'Ouzo-effect' silica-ceria composite colloids and their application to aluminium corrosion protection.
By exploiting spontaneous emulsification to prepare porous SiO(2) particles, we report the formation of porous CeO(2)@SiO(2) hybrid colloids and their incorporation into a silica-zirconia coating to improve the corrosion protection of aluminium
Nanocontainers for Self-Healing Coatings
This progress report covers recent achievements in the development of nanocontainers for self‐healing corrosion protection coatings. The functionality and design of Layer‐by‐Layer‐assembled, polymer, and inorganic nanocontainers are demonstrated in the coatings for protection of steel and aluminium alloys. The release of the corrosion inhibitors from nanocontainers occurs only when triggered by local pH changes or other internal or external stimuli, which prevents leakage of the corrosion inhibitor out of the coating and increases coating durability. This leads to the self‐healing ability of the coating and terminates corrosion propagation.</jats:p
Characterization of micro- and nanocapsules for self-healing anti-corrosion coatings by high-resolution SEM with coupled transmission mode and EDX
The observation of morphological details down to the nanometer range of the outer surface of micro-, submicro- and nanoparticles in a high-resolution scanning electron microscope (SEM) was extended with in-depth observation by enabling the transmission mode in the SEM, i.e. TSEM. The micro- and nanocapsules characterized in this study were fabricated as depots for protective agents to be embedded in innovative self-healing coatings. By combining the two imaging modes (upper and in-depth observation) complementing each other a better characterisation by a more comprehensive interpretation of the 'consistency' of the challenging specimens, e.g. including details 'hidden' beyond the surface or the real specimen shape at all, has been attained. Furthermore, the preparation of the quasi electron transparent samples onto thin supporting foils enables also elemental imaging by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) with high spatial resolution. Valuable information on the elemental distribution in individual micro-, submicro- and even nanocapsules completes the '3D' high resolution morphological characterization at the same multimodal SEM/TSEM/EDX system
Nonclassical Moments and their Measurement
Practically applicable criteria for the nonclassicality of quantum states are
formulated in terms of different types of moments. For this purpose the moments
of the creation and annihilation operators, of two quadratures, and of a
quadrature and the photon number operator turn out to be useful. It is shown
that all the required moments can be determined by homodyne correlation
measurements. An example of a nonclassical effect that is easily characterized
by our methods is amplitude-squared squeezing.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Nanocapsules containing salt hydrate phase change materials for thermal energy storage
Nanocapsules containing salt hydrate for latent heat storage were proven to be thermally and chemically stable over 100 cycles.</p
Universal measurement of quantum correlations of radiation
A measurement technique is proposed which, in principle, allows one to
observe the general space-time correlation properties of a quantized radiation
field. Our method, called balanced homodyne correlation measurement, unifies
the advantages of balanced homodyne detection with those of homodyne
correlation measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, small misprints were corrected, accepted to Phys.
Rev. Let
Unusual Sonochemical Assembly between Carbon Allotropes for High Strain-Tolerant Conductive Nanocomposites
Facile methods toward strain-tolerant graphene-based electronic components remain scarce. Although being frequently used to disperse low-dimensional carbonaceous materials, ultrasonication (US) has never been reliable for fabricating stretchable carbonaceous nanocomposite (SCNC). Inspired by the unusual sonochemical assembly between graphene oxide (GO) and carbon nanotube (CNT), we verified the roots-like GO–CNT covalent bonding, rather than just π–π conjugation, was formed during US. In addition, the shockwave-induced collision in the binary-component system enables a burst of fragmentation at the early stage, spatially homogeneous hybridization, and time-dependent restoration of graphitic domains. All of the above are distinct from extensive fragmentation of a conventional single-component system and π–π conjugative assembly. The optimized SCNC exhibits conductivity comparable to reduced monolayer GO and outperforms π–π assemblies in retaining electrical conductance at a strain of 160%—among one of the best reported stretchable conductors. Raman analysis and mechanics simulation confirm the dominant role of counterweighing between the intrinsic and external strains on the mechano-response and durability of SCNC. This work suggests the guideline of creating multiple-component sonochemical systems for various functional nanocomposites
Formation and stability of self-assembled coherent islands in highly mismatched heteroepitaxy
We study the energetics of island formation in Stranski-Krastanow growth
within a parameter-free approach. It is shown that an optimum island size
exists for a given coverage and island density if changes in the wetting layer
morphology after the 3D transition are properly taken into account. Our
approach reproduces well the experimental island size dependence on coverage,
and indicates that the critical layer thickness depends on growth conditions.
The present study provides a new explanation for the (frequently found) rather
narrow size distribution of self-assembled coherent islands.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, In print, Phys. Rev. Lett. Other related
publications can be found at http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
The influence of surface stress on the equilibrium shape of strained quantum dots
The equilibrium shapes of InAs quantum dots (i.e., dislocation-free, strained
islands with sizes >= 10,000 atoms) grown on a GaAs (001) substrate are studied
using a hybrid approach which combines density functional theory (DFT)
calculations of microscopic parameters, surface energies, and surface stresses
with elasticity theory for the long-range strain fields and strain relaxations.
In particular we report DFT calculations of the surface stresses and analyze
the influence of the strain on the surface energies of the various facets of
the quantum dot. The surface stresses have been neglected in previous studies.
Furthermore, the influence of edge energies on the island shapes is briefly
discussed. From the knowledge of the equilibrium shape of these islands, we
address the question whether experimentally observed quantum dots correspond to
thermal equilibrium structures or if they are a result of the growth kinetics.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B (February 2, 1998).
Other related publications can be found at
http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
Transmission electron microscopy investigation of segregation and critical floating-layer content of indium for island formation in InGaAs
We have investigated InGaAs layers grown by molecular-beam epitaxy on
GaAs(001) by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and photoluminescence
spectroscopy. InGaAs layers with In-concentrations of 16, 25 and 28 % and
respective thicknesses of 20, 22 and 23 monolayers were deposited at 535 C. The
parameters were chosen to grow layers slightly above and below the transition
between the two- and three-dimensional growth mode. In-concentration profiles
were obtained from high-resolution TEM images by composition evaluation by
lattice fringe analysis. The measured profiles can be well described applying
the segregation model of Muraki et al. [Appl. Phys. Lett. 61 (1992) 557].
Calculated photoluminescence peak positions on the basis of the measured
concentration profiles are in good agreement with the experimental ones.
Evaluating experimental In-concentration profiles it is found that the
transition from the two-dimensional to the three-dimensional growth mode occurs
if the indium content in the In-floating layer exceeds 1.1+/-0.2 monolayers.
The measured exponential decrease of the In-concentration within the cap layer
on top of the islands reveals that the In-floating layer is not consumed during
island formation. The segregation efficiency above the islands is increased
compared to the quantum wells which is explained tentatively by
strain-dependent lattice-site selection of In. In addition, In0.25Ga0.75As
quantum wells were grown at different temperatures between 500 oC and 550 oC.
The evaluation of concentration profiles shows that the segregation efficiency
increases from R=0.65 to R=0.83.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, sbmitted in Phys. Rev.
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