48 research outputs found
Investigation of radiation effects in water solutions during exposure with laser or LEDs light
Abstract only.The installation for gamma-, X-ray and neutron registration in water solutions (600 ml LiOH, or NaOH, or Na2CO3) during exposure with red light (λ=645+/-20 nm) of laser or light-emission devises (LEDs) was created. The laser light power was 5 mW and the LEDs - from 600 mW up to 10 W. Neutrons were measured with help of tow 3He counters, placed in paraphine barrel. Small neutron emission (up to 100 neutrons) has been registered in the form of series of short (ms) bursts during some minutes. Tritium production has also been detected in water solution probes. The gamma-ray and X-ray radiation measured by NaI scintillation detector & Geiger counters was not detected. Received results are discussed
Structural and thermal study of mesomorphic dodecylammonium carrageenates
Structural characteristics and thermal stability of a series of dodecylammonium carrageenates formed by stoichiometric complexation of dodecylammonium chloride and differently charged carrageenans (kappa-, iota- and lambda-carrageenan, respectively) were investigated. IR spectral analysis confirmed the electrostatic and hydrogen bond interactions between the dodecylammonium and carrageenan species. X-ray diffraction experiments show increased ordering in the complexes compared to that in the parent carrageenans. Dodecylammonium carrageenates have a layer structure, in which a polar sublayer contains layers of carrageenan chains and a nonpolar sublayer consists of conformationally disordered dodecylammonium chains electrostatically attached to the carrageenan backbone. The major factor that determines the dodecylammonium carrageenate structure is cationic surfactant, while the carrageenans moiety plays a major role in determining thermal properties. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Ordering in the Subphase of a Langmuir Monolayer: X-ray Diffraction and Anomalous Scattering Studies
Free-radical bulk polymerization of styrene: ESR and near-infrared spectroscopic study of the entire conversion range
The free radical polymerization of styrene in bulk was monitored by ESR and FT near-infrared spectroscopy at 70°C for a series of concentrations of the initiator, dimethyl 2,2′-azobis(isobutyrate). In order to obtain detailed kinetic information over the intire conversion range, and the gel effect range in particular, conversion and free radical concentration data points were accumulated with exceptionally short time intervals. The polystyrene radical concentration ([St•]) went through a sharp maximum at the gel effect, a feature that has hitherto escaped observation due to the rapid concentration changes in the gel effect range relative to the data point time intervals of previous studies. Temperature measurements throughout the polymerization were employed to calculate that a temperature increase was not the cause of the [St•] maximum, which thus appeares to be a genuine feature of the gel effect of this system under isothermal conditions. The propagation rate constant (kp) as a function of monomer conversion exhibited a marked dependence on initiator concentration at high monomer conversion; the sharp decrease in kp with increasing conversion was shifted to higher conversions with increasing initiator concentration
Anode interfacial engineering approaches to enhancing anode/hole transport layer interfacial stability and charge injection efficiency in organic light-emitting diodes
The integrity of anode/organic interfacial contact is shown to be crucial to the performance and stability of archetypical small molecule organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). In this contribution, vapor-deposited lipophilic, hole-transporting 1,4-bis(phenyl-m-tolylamino)biphenyl (TPD) and 1,4-bis(1-naphthylphenylamino)biphenyl (NPB) thin films are shown to undergo decohesion on ITO anode surfaces under mild heating. An effective approach to ameliorate such interfacial decohesion is introduction, via self-assembly or spin-coating, of covalently bound N(p-C6H4CH2CH2CH2 SiCl3)3 (TAA)- and 4,4′-bis[(p-trichlorosilylpropylphenyl)phenylamino]biphenyl (TPD-Si2)-derived adhesion/injection layers at the anode/hole transport layer interface. The resulting angstrom-scale hole transport layers prevent decohesion of vapor-deposited hole transport layers and significantly enhance OLED hole injection fluence. OLEDs fabricated with these modified interfaces exhibit appreciably reduced turn-on voltages, considerably higher luminous intensities, and enhanced thermal robustness versus bare ITO-based control devices. Spin-coated, cross-linked TPD-Si2 films, in particular, prove to be superior to conventional ITO functionalization interlayers, including copper phthalocyanine, in this regard. The present ITO-functionalized devices achieve maximum external forward quantum efficiencies as high as 1.2% and a luminous level of 15 000 cd/m2 in simple ITO/interlayer/HTL/Alq/Al heterostructures. We also show that Cu(Pc) interlayers actually suppress, rather than enhance, hole injection and template crystallization of vapor-deposited TPD and NPB at modest temperatures, resulting in poor OLED thermal stability