643 research outputs found
Structure and stability of graphene nanoribbons in oxygen, carbon dioxide, water, and ammonia
We determine, by means of density functional theory, the stability and the
structure of graphene nanoribbon (GNR) edges in presence of molecules such as
oxygen, water, ammonia, and carbon dioxide. As in the case of
hydrogen-terminated nanoribbons, we find that the most stable armchair and
zigzag configurations are characterized by a non-metallic/non-magnetic nature,
and are compatible with Clar's sextet rules, well known in organic chemistry.
In particular, we predict that, at thermodynamic equilibrium, neutral GNRs in
oxygen-rich atmosphere should preferentially be along the armchair direction,
while water-saturated GNRs should present zigzag edges. Our results promise to
be particularly useful to GNRs synthesis, since the most recent and advanced
experimental routes are most effective in water and/or ammonia-containing
solutions.Comment: accepted for publication in PR
Structure, Stability, Edge States and Aromaticity of Graphene Ribbons
We determine the stability, the geometry, the electronic and magnetic
structure of hydrogen-terminated graphene-nanoribbons edges as a function of
the hydrogen content of the environment by means of density functional theory.
Antiferromagnetic zigzag ribbons are stable only at extremely-low ultra-vacuum
pressures. Under more standard conditions, the most stable structures are the
mono- and di-hydrogenated armchair edges and a zigzag edge reconstruction with
one di- and two mono-hydrogenated sites. At high hydrogen-concentration
``bulk'' graphene is not stable and spontaneously breaks to form ribbons, in
analogy to the spontaneous breaking of graphene into small-width nanoribbons
observed experimentally in solution. The stability and the existence of exotic
edge electronic-states and/or magnetism is rationalized in terms of simple
concepts from organic chemistry (Clar's rule)Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication by Physical Review
Letter
Electronic structure of solid coronene: differences and commonalities to picene
We have obtained the first-principles electronic structure of solid coronene,
which has been recently discovered to exhibit superconductivity with potassium
doping. Since coronene, along with picene, the first aromatic superconductor,
now provide a class of superconductors as solids of aromatic compounds, here we
compare the two cases in examining the electronic structures. In the undoped
coronene crystal, where the molecules are arranged in a herringbone structure
with two molecules in a unit cell, the conduction band above an insulating gap
is found to comprise four bands, which basically originate from the lowest two
unoccupied molecular orbitals
(doubly-degenerate, reflecting the high symmetry of the molecular shape) in
an isolated molecule but the bands are entangled as in solid picene. The Fermi
surface for a candidate of the structure of Kcoronene with , for which
superconductivity is found, comprises multiple sheets, as in doped picene but
exhibiting a larger anisotropy with different topology.Comment: 5 pages, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Marshall Space Flight Center Autumn 2005
The East Test Area at Marshall Space Flight Center has five major test stands, each of which has two or more test positions, not counting the SSME and RD-180 engine test facilities in the West Test Area. These research and development facilities are capable of testing high pressure pumps, both fuel and oxidizer, injectors, chambers and sea-level engine assemblies, as well as simulating deep space environments in the 12, 15 and 20 foot vacuum chambers. Liquid propellant capabilities are high pressure hydrogen (liquid and gas), methane (liquid and gas), and RP-1 and high pressure LOX. Solid propellant capability includes thrust measurement and firing capability up to 1/6 scale Shuttle SRB segment. In the past six months MSFC supported multiple space access and exploration programs in the previous six months. Major programs were Space Exploration, Shuttle External Tank research, Reusable Solid Rocket Motor (RSRM) development, as well as research programs for NASA and other customers. At Test Stand 115 monopropellant ignition testing was conducted on one position. At the second position multiple ignition/variable burn time cycles were conducted on Vacuum Plasma Spatter (VPS) coated injectors. Each injector received fifty cycles; the propellants were LOX Hydrogen and the ignition source was TEA. Following completion of the monopropellant test series the stand was reconfigured to support ignition testing on a LOX Methane injector system. At TS 116 a thrust stand used to test Booster Separation Motors from the Shuttle SRB system was disassembled and moved from Chemical Systems Division s Coyote Canyon plant to MSFC. The stand was reassembled and readied for BSM testing. Also, a series of tests was run on a Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne Low Element Density (LED) injector engine. The propellants for this engine are LOX and LH2. At TS 300 the 20 foot vacuum chamber was configured to support hydrogen testing in the Multipurpose Hydrogen Test Bed (MHTB) test article. This testing, which went 24/7 for fourteen consecutive days, demonstrated long duration storage methods intended to minimize losses of propellant in support of the Space Exploration Initiative. The facility is being converted to support similar research using liquid methane. The 12 foot chamber at TS 300 was used to create ascent profiles (both heat and altitude effects) for foam panel testing in support of the Shuttle External Tank program. At TS 500, one position was in build-up to support ATK Thiokol research into the gas dynamics associated with high pressure flow across the propellant joint in segmented solid rocket motors. The testing involves flowing high pressure gas through a 24 motor case. Initial tests will be conducted with simulated aluminum grain, followed by tests using actual propellant. The second position at TS 500 has been in build-up for testing a LOX methane thruster manufactured by KT Engineering. At the Solid Propulsion Test Area (SPTA), the first dual segment 24 solid rocket motor was fired for ATK Thiokol in support of the RSRM program. A new axial thrust measurement stand was designed and fabricated for this testing. Real Time Radiography (RTR) will be deployed to examine nozzle erosion on the next dual segment motor
A solvable non-conservative model of Self-Organized Criticality
We present the first solvable non-conservative sandpile-like critical model
of Self-Organized Criticality (SOC), and thereby substantiate the suggestion by
Vespignani and Zapperi [A. Vespignani and S. Zapperi, Phys. Rev. E 57, 6345
(1998)] that a lack of conservation in the microscopic dynamics of an SOC-model
can be compensated by introducing an external drive and thereby re-establishing
criticality. The model shown is critical for all values of the conservation
parameter. The analytical derivation follows the lines of Broeker and
Grassberger [H.-M. Broeker and P. Grassberger, Phys. Rev. E 56, 3944 (1997)]
and is supported by numerical simulation. In the limit of vanishing
conservation the Random Neighbor Forest Fire Model (R-FFM) is recovered.Comment: 4 pages in RevTeX format (2 Figures) submitted to PR
Synchronization and Coarsening (without SOC) in a Forest-Fire Model
We study the long-time dynamics of a forest-fire model with deterministic
tree growth and instantaneous burning of entire forests by stochastic lightning
strikes. Asymptotically the system organizes into a coarsening self-similar
mosaic of synchronized patches within which trees regrow and burn
simultaneously. We show that the average patch length grows linearly with
time as t-->oo. The number density of patches of length L, N(L,t), scales as
^{-2}M(L/), and within a mean-field rate equation description we find
that this scaling function decays as e^{-1/x} for x-->0, and as e^{-x} for
x-->oo. In one dimension, we develop an event-driven cluster algorithm to study
the asymptotic behavior of large systems. Our numerical results are consistent
with mean-field predictions for patch coarsening.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 2-column revtex format. To be submitted to PR
Phase Transitions in a Forest-Fire Model
We investigate a forest-fire model with the density of empty sites as control
parameter. The model exhibits three phases, separated by one first-order phase
transition and one 'mixed' phase transition which shows critical behavior on
only one side and hysteresis. The critical behavior is found to be that of the
self-organized critical forest-fire model [B. Drossel and F. Schwabl, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 69, 1629 (1992)], whereas in the adjacent phase one finds the spiral
waves of the Bak et al. forest-fire model [P. Bak, K. Chen and C. Tang, Phys.
Lett. A 147, 297 (1990)]. In the third phase one observes clustering of trees
with the fire burning at the edges of the clusters. The relation between the
density distribution in the spiral state and the percolation threshold is
explained and the implications for stationary states with spiral waves in
arbitrary excitable systems are discussed. Furthermore, we comment on the
possibility of mapping self-organized critical systems onto 'ordinary' critical
systems.Comment: 30 pages RevTeX, 9 PostScript figures (Figs. 1,2,4 are of reduced
quality), to appear in Phys. Rev.
Electronic Structures of N-doped Graphene with Native Point Defects
Nitrogen doping in graphene has important implications in graphene-based
devices and catalysts. We have performed the density functional theory
calculations to study the electronic structures of N-doped graphene with
vacancies and Stone-Wales defect. Our results show that monovacancies in
graphene act as hole dopants and that two substitutional N dopants are needed
to compensate for the hole introduced by a monovacancy. On the other hand,
divacancy does not produce any free carriers. Interestingly, a single N dopant
at divacancy acts as an acceptor rather than a donor. The interference between
native point defect and N dopant strongly modifies the role of N doping
regarding the free carrier production in the bulk pi bands. For some of the
defects and N dopant-defect complexes, localized defect pi states are partially
occupied. Discussion on the possibility of spin polarization in such cases is
given. We also present qualitative arguments on the electronic structures based
on the local bond picture. We have analyzed the 1s-related x-ray photoemission
and adsorption spectroscopy spectra of N dopants at vacancies and Stone-Wales
defect in connection with the experimental ones. We also discuss characteristic
scanning tunneling microscope (STM) images originating from the electronic and
structural modifications by the N dopant-defect complexes. STM imaging for
small negative bias voltage will provide important information about possible
active sites for oxygen reduction reaction.Comment: 40 pages, 2 tables, 16 figures. The analysis of Clar sextets is
added. This version is published on PHYSICAL REVIEW B 87, 165401(2013
Oxidation States of Graphene: Insights from Computational Spectroscopy
When it is oxidized, graphite can be easily exfoliated forming graphene oxide
(GO). GO is a critical intermediate for massive production of graphene, and it
is also an important material with various application potentials. With many
different oxidation species randomly distributed on the basal plane, GO has a
complicated nonstoichiometric atomic structure that is still not well
understood in spite of of intensive studies involving many experimental
techniques. Controversies often exist in experimental data interpretation. We
report here a first principles study on binding energy of carbon 1s orbital in
GO. The calculated results can be well used to interpret experimental X-ray
photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) data and provide a unified spectral
assignment. Based on the first principles understanding of XPS, a GO structure
model containing new oxidation species epoxy pair and epoxy-hydroxy pair is
proposed. Our results demonstrate that first principles computational
spectroscopy provides a powerful means to investigate GO structure.Comment: accepted by J. Chem. Phy
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