90 research outputs found
Control of the chemiluminescence spectrum with porous Bragg mirrors
Tunable, battery free light emission is demonstrated in a solid state device
that is compatible with lab on a chip technology and easily fabricated via
solution processing techniques. A porous one dimensional (1D) photonic crystal
(also called Bragg stack or mirror) is infiltrated by chemiluminescence
rubrene-based reagents. The Bragg mirror has been designed to have the photonic
band gap overlapping with the emission spectrum of rubrene. The
chemiluminescence reaction occurs in the intrapores of the photonic crystal and
the emission spectrum of the dye is modulated according to the photonic band
gap position. This is a compact, powerless emitting source that can be
exploited in disposable photonic chip for sensing and point of care
applications.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Design of the Test Section for the Experimental Validation of Antipermeation and Corrosion Barriers for WCLL BB
Tritium permeation into the Primary Heat Transfer System (PHTS) of DEMO and ITER reactors is one of the challenging issues to be solved in order to demonstrate the feasibility of nuclear fusion power plants construction. Several technologies were investigated as antipermeation and corrosion barriers to reduce the tritium permeation flux from the breeder into the PHTS. Within this frame, alumina coating manufactured by Pulsed Laser Deposition (PLD) and Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) are two of the main candidates for the Water Cooled Lithium Lead (WCLL) Breeder Blanket (BB). In order to validate the performance of the coatings on relevant WCLL BB geometries, a mock-up was designed and will be characterized in an experimental facility operating with flowing lithium-lead, called TRIEX-II. The present work aims to illustrate the preliminary engineering design of a WCLL BB mock-up in order to deeply investigate permeation of hydrogen isotopes through PHTS water pipes. The permeation tests are planned in the temperature range between 330 and 500 °C, with hydrogen and deuterium partial pressure in the range of 1â1000 Pa. The hydrogen isotopes transport analysis carried out for the design and integration of the mock-up in TRIEX-II facility is also shown
Combination of Acoustic Methods and the Indentation Technique for the Measurement of Film Properties
New techniques are continuously being developed to produce films and thin films, whose properties typically depend on the preparation process, and can be significantly different from those of the material in bulk form. The characterization of thin layers remains an open issue. A precise knowledge of the mechanical properties is crucial in several cases, and is of general interest.
A full mechanical characterization includes the determination of both the elastic properties, which characterize the reversible deformations, and the properties which characterize the reversible behaviour. In most cases the elastic behaviour can be completely characterized by the elastic moduli, or equivalently by the components of the elastic tensor. It is well known that also in the simplest case, the homogeneous isotropic continuum, the elastic stiffness cannot be characterized by a single parameter, but needs two independent parameters; in the case of anisotropic solids the number of independent parameters further increases. The inelastic behaviour is typically more complex.
Among the methods to perform the mechanical characterization, a specific class exploits vibrations of acoustic nature as a probe of the material behaviour. These methods are non destructive, and involve only elastic strains; therefore, they are intrinsically unable to give indications about any inelastic behaviour. On the other hand, due to the complete absence of inelastic strains, the relationship between the raw measurement results and the stiffness parameters can be more straightforward, and less subjected to uncertainties or to spurious effects, possibly allowing better accuracies.
The mechanical characterization of supported films typically requires specific methods. The most widespread technique is indentation, for which a specific standard exists, and which induces both elastic and inelastic strains: It supplies significant information about irreversible deformation, but the extraction of the information concerning the elastic behaviour is non trivial, and typically leads to a single parameter, usually referred to as 'indentation modulus'. If a reasonable assumption about the value of Poisson???s ratio is available, a value of Young modulus can be derived, which obviously depends on the reliability of the adopted assumption. In the case of films, since the nano and micro-structure can be different from that of bulk samples, a well grounded assumption about the value of Poisson???s ratio might be not available. It is also well known that, when supported films are measured, care must be exercised to avoid the influence of the substrate properties.
Methods which exploit acoustic vibrations have been developed also for supported films. Acoustic properties depend on stiffness and inertia; therefore, as it happens for bulky samples, acoustic methods require a value of mass density, independently measured. However in acoustic methods the intrinsic absence of inelastic strains makes the derivation of the stiffness parameters less subjected to spurious effects, and less dependent on specific modelling assumptions.
Among the techniques based on acoustic excitations, the so called laser ultrasonics techniques rely on impulsive, therefore broadband, excitation, while quantitative acoustic microscopy relies on monochromatic excitation. In the detection of vibrational excitations, substantial advantages are offered by light, a contact-less and inertia-less probe; such advantages are particularly relevant in the measurement of films and small structures. They are exploited by Brillouin spectroscopy, which relies on Brillouin scattering: the inelastic scattering of light by acoustic excitations. Brillouin spectrometry relies on spontaneous thermal excitation, which has a small amplitude, but has the broadest band, allowing access to the GHz and multi GHz band. For all these methods, the outcome is the measurement of the propagation velocity of one or more acoustic modes. If sufficient information is gathered, a full elastic characterization can be achieved by purely vibrational means, if an independent value of the mass density is available. However, a complete elastic characterization by only acoustic means is not always achievable. The results of acoustic methods and of indentation can therefore be combined, with the purpose to obtain a complete elastic characterization, not achievable by each of the techniques alone. This can be particularly useful in the case of new materials or of films of unconventiona structures, for which a reliable assumption about the value of Poisson???s ratio, needed by indentation, is not available. And the combination of techniques anyhow offers a useful cross-check among techniques based on completely different principles.
This chapter is devoted to this combination of indentation with acoustic techniques, namely quantitative acoustic microscopy and Brillouin spectroscopy
Injection Length in Staggered Organic Thin Film Transistors: Assessment and Implications for Device Downscaling
In staggered thin film transistors, the injection length is the fraction of the gate to contact overlap that is effectively involved in current injection. Its assessment is important to properly downscale device dimensions. In fact, in order to increase transistor operation speed, the whole device footprint should be downscaled, which means both the gate to contact overlap and the channel length, as they affect the relative weight of gate to contact parasitic capacitances and the carrier transit time along the channel respectively. Nevertheless, it is not advisable to make the gate to contact overlap smaller than the injection length, because this negatively affects contact resistances. Suitable figures of merits are introduced to quantify these aspects, and a method is proposed to extract the injection length from electrical measurements. As an example of application, transistors based on the prototypical n-type polymer poly[N,NâČ-bis(2-octyldodecyl)-naphthalene-1,4,5,8-bis(dicarboximide)-2,6-diyl]-alt-5,5âČ-(2,2âČ-bithiophene) (P(NDI2OD-T2) are analyzed. When the channel length is scaled while driving voltages are kept constant, in P(NDI2OD-T2) the injection length decreases as well, thus proving that the downscaling of the whole device footprint is feasible. The physical origins of this finding are analyzed and traced back to material properties, in order to suggest general guidelines for a successful transistor downscaling
Defective Carbon for NextâGeneration Stationary Energy Storage Systems: SodiumâIon and Vanadium Flow Batteries
This review examines the role of defective carbon-based electrodes in sodium-ion and vanadium flow batteries. Methods for introducing defects into carbon structures are explored and their effectiveness in improving electrode performance is demonstrated. In sodium-based systems, research focuses primarily on various precursor materials and heteroatom doping to optimise hard carbon electrodes. Defect engineering increases interlayer spacing, porosity, and changes the surface chemistry, which improves sodium intercalation and reversible capacities. Heteroatom functionalisation and surface modification affect solid electrolyte interface formation and coulombic efficiencies. For flow batteries, post-fabrication electrode enhancement methods produce defects to improve electrode kinetics, although these methods often introduce oxygen functional groups as well, making isolation of defect effects difficult. Continued research efforts are key to developing carbon-based electrodes that can meet the unique challenges of future battery systems
The real TiO2/HTM interface of solid-state dye solar cells: role of trapped states from a multiscale modelling perspective
We present a multiscale simulation of charge transport in a solid-state dye-sensitized solar cell, where the real morphology between TiO2 and the hole transport material is included
Characterization of aluminum-based coatings after short term exposure during irradiation campaign in the LVR-15 fission reactor
Protective aluminum-based coatings represent a promising anti-permeation and anti-corrosion barrier for breeding blanket systems developed for European DEMO fusion reactor. Following the prior in-depth characterizations, selected coating candidates were subjected to a combined test consisting of contact with liquid Pb-16Li, its repeated in-situ solidification and re-melting, tritium permeation during gamma and neutron irradiation in the LVR-15 fission reactor. During the sample exposure in the reactor, the temperature of Pb-16Li was between 300 and 425 °C. The irradiation damage averaged over the sample volume estimated by FISPACT code was limited to 0.037 dpa. This article presents post-irradiation characterization of cylindrical Eurofer97 samples coated by electro-chemical X-metal deposition from ionic liquid (ECX) and pulsed laser deposition (PLD) techniques. The coating damage relative to a reference uncoated sample is discussed
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Hyperbranched TiO2-CdS nano-heterostructures for highly efficient photoelectrochemical photoanodes.
Quasi-1D-hyperbranched TiO2 nanostructures are grown via pulsed laser deposition and sensitized with thin layers of CdS to act as a highly efficient photoelectrochemical photoanode. The device properties are systematically investigated by optimizing the height of TiO2 scaffold structure and thickness of the CdS sensitizing layer, achieving photocurrent values up to 6.6 mA cm-2 and reaching saturation with applied biases as low as 0.35 VRHE. The high internal conversion efficiency of these devices is to be found in the efficient charge generation and injection of the thin CdS photoactive film and in the enhanced charge transport properties of the hyperbranched TiO2 scaffold. Hence, the proposed device represents a promising architecture for heterostructures capable of achieving high solar-to-hydrogen efficiency
Hierarchical TiN-Supported TsFDH Nanobiocatalyst for CO2 Reduction to Formate
AbstractThe electrochemical reduction of CO2 to valueâadded products like formate represents a promising technology for the valorization of carbon dioxide. We propose a proofâofâconcept bioelectrochemical system (BES) for the reduction of CO2 to formate. For the first time, our device employs a nanostructured titanium nitride (TiN) support for the immobilization of a formate dehydrogenase (FDH) enzyme. The hierarchical TiN nanostructured support exhibits high surface area and wide pore size distribution, achieving high catalytic loading, and is characterized by higher conductivity than other oxideâbased supports employed for FDHs immobilization. We select the oxygenâtolerant FDH from Thiobacillus sp. KNK65MA (TsFDH) as enzymatic catalyst, which selectively reduces CO2 to formate. We identify an optimal TiN morphology for the enzyme immobilisation through enzymatic assay, reaching a catalyst loading of 59â
ÎŒgâcmâ2 of specificallyâadsorbed TsFDH and achieving a complete saturation of the anchoring sites available on the surface. We evaluate the electrochemical CO2 reduction performance of the TiN/TsFDH system, achieving a remarkable HCOOâ Faradaic efficiency up to 76â%, a maximum formate yield of 44.1â
ÎŒmolâmgâ1FDHâhâ1 and high stability. Our results show the technological feasibility of BES devices employing novel, nanostructured TiNâbased supports, representing an important step in the optimization of these devices
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