201 research outputs found

    Understanding the magnetism in noncentrosymmetric CeIrGe3 Muon spin relaxation and neutron scattering studies

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    The magnetic properties of a pressure induced noncentrosymmetric heavy-fermion superconductor CeIrGe3_3 have been investigated by muon spin relaxation (μ\muSR), powder neutron diffraction (ND) and inelastic neutron scattering (INS) techniques at ambient pressure. For completeness we have also measured the ac magnetic susceptibility χac(T)\chi_{\rm ac}(T), dc magnetic susceptibility χ(T)\chi(T), dc isothermal magnetization M(H)M(H) and heat capacity Cp(T,H)C_{\rm p}(T,H) down to 2 K. CeIrGe3_{3} is known to exhibit pressure induced superconductivity (Tc1.5T_{\rm c}\approx 1.5 K) at a pressure of 20 GPa and antiferromagnetic ordering at 8.7 K, 4.7 K and 0.7 K at ambient pressure. Our χac(T)\chi_{\rm ac}(T) and χ(T)\chi(T) data show an additional anomaly near 6.2 K which is also captured in Cp(T)C_{\rm p}(T) data. From χac(T)\chi_{\rm ac}(T), χ(T)\chi(T) and Cp(T)C_{\rm p}(T) measurements we infer three antiferromagnetic transitions above 2 K at TN1=8.5T_{\rm N1}= 8.5 K, TN2=6.0T_{\rm N2}= 6.0 K and TN3=4.6T_{\rm N3}= 4.6 K. Our μ\muSR study also confirms the presence of three transitions through the observation of one frequency for TN2<TTN1T_{\rm N2} < T\leq T_{\rm N1}, two frequencies for TN3<TTN2T_{\rm N3} < T\leq T_{\rm N2} and three frequencies for TTN3T\leq T_{\rm N3} in the oscillatory asymmetry. The ND data reveal an incommensurate nature of the magnetic ordering at T=7T=7 K with the propagation vector k = (0,0,0.688(3)), and a commensurate magnetic structure at T=1.5T=1.5 K with the propagation vector locked to the value k = (0,0,2/3) and magnetic moments oriented along the cc axis. The commensurate structure couples a macroscopic ferromagnetic component, resulting in a strong dependence of the lock-in transition temperature on external magnetic field. The INS data show two well defined crystal electric field (CEF) excitations arising from the CEF-split Kramers doublet ground state of Ce3+^{3+}.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, 1 tabl

    Effects of magnetic doping and temperature dependence on phonon dynamics in CaFe\_{1-x}Co\_{x}AsF compounds (x = 0, 0.06, 0.12)

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    We report detailed measurements of composition as well as temperature dependence of the phonon density-of-states in a new series of FeAs compounds with composition CaFe1\_{1-x}Co\_{x}AsF (x = 0, 0.06, 0.12). The composition as well as temperature dependence of phonon spectra for CaFe\_{1-x}Co\_{x}AsF (x = 0, 0.06, 0.12) compounds have been measured using time of flight IN4C and IN6 spectrometers at ILL, France. The comparison of phonon spectra at 300 K in these compounds shows that acoustic phonon modes up to 12 meV harden in the doped compounds in comparison to the parent CaFeAsF. While intermediate energy phonon modes from 15 meV to 25 meV are also found to shift towards high energies only in the 12 % Co doped CaFeAsF compound. The experimental results for CaFe\_{1-x}Co\_{x}AsF (x = 0, 0.06, 0.12) are quite different from our previous phonon studies on parent and superconducting MFe2As2 (M=Ba, Ca, Sr) where low-energy acoustic phonon modes do not react with doping, while the phonon spectra in the intermediate range from 15 to 25 K are found to soften in these compounds. We argue that stronger spin phonon interaction play an important role for the emergence of superconductivity in these compounds. The lattice dynamics of CaFe\_{1-x}Co\_{x}AsF (x = 0, 0.06, 0.12) compounds is also investigated using the ab-initio as well as shell model phonon calculations. We show that the nature of the interaction between the Ca and the Fe-As layers in CaFeAsF compounds is quite different compared with our previous studies on CaFe2As2.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure

    Dispersed ice of permafrost peatlands represents an important source of labile carboxylic acids, nutrients and metals

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    Thawing of frozen organic and mineral soils and liberation of organic carbon (OC), macro- and micro-nutrients and trace elements from pore ice in high latitude regions represent a potentially important but poorly quantified retroactive linkage to climate warming. This is especially true for permafrost peatlands, occupying a sizable proportion of all permafrost territories and presenting a large and highly vulnerable stock of soil OC which can be subjected to fast thawing at currently circum-zero temperatures. The conventional method of assessing the labile water-soluble fraction of permafrost soils is aqueous extraction from dried soil. However, this technique does not allow collecting native ice present in soil pores and is therefore likely to underestimate or overestimate the pool of labile soil C and nutrients. Here, we present results of direct pore ice analyses performed on native peat cores from the western Siberia Lowland in comparison to the water extraction (10 and 100 gdry peat L-1) of soluble components from the same peat subjected to freeze drying. Aqueous leachates of permafrost peat from both thawed (0–45 cm) and frozen (45–130 cm) layers yielded high concentrations of DOC, nutrients, carboxylic acids and trace metals, comparable or higher to those in peat porewater and dispersed peat ice. We found strong (a factor of 3 to 30) enrichment in the frozen part of the core (below 45 cm, which is active layer depth) in dissolved OC, many carboxylates (acetate, formate, lactate, butyrate, propionate, pyruvate), inorganic nutrients (Si, P, N) and trace elements (Fe, Al, Mn, Zn, Sr and Ba). The dispersed ice which is present in peat below active layer represents highly labile reservoir of organic and inorganic nutrients which should be considered in permafrost thaw scenario

    Magnetic Lattice Dynamics of the Oxygen-Free FeAs Pnictides: How Sensitive are Phonons to Magnetic Ordering?

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    To shed light on the role of magnetism on the superconducting mechanism of the oxygen-free FeAs pnictides, we investigate the effect of magnetic ordering on phonon dynamics in the low-temperature orthorhombic parent compounds, which present a spin-density wave. The study covers both the 122 (AFe2As2; A=Ca, Sr, Ba) and 1111 (AFeAsF; A=Ca, Sr) phases. We extend our recent work on the Ca (122 and 1111) and Ba (122) cases by treating computationally and experimentally the 122 and 1111 Sr compounds. The effect of magnetic ordering is investigated through detailed non-magnetic and magnetic lattice dynamical calculations. The comparison of the experimental and calculated phonon spectra shows that the magnetic interactions/ordering have to be included in order to reproduce well the measured density of states. This highlights a spin-correlated phonon behavior which is more pronounced than the apparently weak electron-phonon coupling estimated in these materials. Furthermore, there is no noticeable difference between phonon spectra of the 122 Ba and Sr, whereas there are substantial differences when comparing these to CaFe2As2 originating from different aspects of structure and bonding

    van der Waals interaction in nanotube bundles : consequences on vibrational modes

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    We have developed a pair-potential approach for the evaluation of van der Waals interaction between carbon nanotubes in bundles. Starting from a continuum model, we show that the intertube modes range from 5cm15 cm^{-1} to 60cm160 cm^{-1}. Using a non-orthogonal tight-binding approximation for describing the covalent intra-tube bonding in addition, we confirme a slight chiral dependance of the breathing mode frequency and we found that this breathing mode frequency increase by \sim 10 % if the nanotube lie inside a bundle as compared to the isolated tube.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Phonon and plasmon excitation in inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy of graphite

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    The inelastic electron tunneling spectrum (IETS)of highly oriented pyrolitic graphite (HOPG) has been measured with scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) at 6K. The observed spectral features are in very good agreement with the vibrational density of states (vDOS) of graphite calculated from first principles. We discuss the enhancement of certain phonon modes by phonon-assisted tunneling in STS based on the restrictions imposed by the electronic structure of graphite. We also demonstrate for the first time the local excitation of surface-plasmons in IETS which are detected at an energy of 40 meV.Comment: PRB rapid communication, submitte

    Confirming a predicted selection rule in inelastic neutron scattering spectroscopy: the quantum translator-rotator H2 entrapped inside C60

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    We report an inelastic neutron scattering (INS) study of H2 molecule encapsulated inside the fullerene C60 which confirms the recently predicted selection rule, the first to be established for the INS spectroscopy of aperiodic, discrete molecular compounds. Several transitions from the ground state of para-H2 to certain excited translation-rotation states, forbidden according to the selection rule, are systematically absent from the INS spectra, thus validating the selection rule with a high degree of confidence. Its confirmation sets a precedent, as it runs counter to the widely held view that the INS spectroscopy of molecular compounds is not subject to any selection rules

    Direct visualization of electroporation-assisted in vivo gene delivery to tumors using intravital microscopy – spatial and time dependent distribution

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    BACKGROUND: Electroporation is currently receiving much attention as a way to increase drug and DNA delivery. Recent studies demonstrated the feasibility of electrogene therapy using a range of therapeutic genes for the treatment of experimental tumors. However, the transfection efficiency of electroporation-assisted DNA delivery is still low compared to viral methods and there is a clear need to optimize this approach. In order to optimize treatment, knowledge about spatial and time dependency of gene expression following delivery is of utmost importance in order to improve gene delivery. Intravital microscopy of tumors growing in dorsal skin fold window chambers is a useful method for monitoring gene transfection, since it allows non-invasive dynamic monitoring of gene expression in tumors in a live animal. METHODS: Intravital microscopy was used to monitor real time spatial distribution of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) and time dependence of transfection efficiency in syngeneic P22 rat tumor model. DNA alone, liposome-DNA complexes and electroporation-assisted DNA delivery using two different sets of electric pulse parameters were compared. RESULTS: Electroporation-assisted DNA delivery using 8 pulses, 600 V/cm, 5 ms, 1 Hz was superior to other methods and resulted in 22% increase in fluorescence intensity in the tumors up to 6 days post-transfection, compared to the non-transfected area in granulation tissue. Functional GFP was detected within 5 h after transfection. Cells expressing GFP were detected throughout the tumor, but not in the surrounding tissue that was not exposed to electric pulses. CONCLUSIONS: Intravital microscopy was demonstrated to be a suitable method for monitoring time and spatial distribution of gene expression in experimental tumors and provided evidence that electroporation-assisted gene delivery using 8 pulses, 600 V/cm, 5 ms, 1 Hz is an effective method, resulting in early onset and homogenous distribution of gene expression in the syngeneic P22 rat tumor model

    SCC modification by use of amorphous nano-silica

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    In this study two different types of nano-silica (nS) were applied in self-compacting concrete (SCC), both having similar particle size distributions (PSD), but produced through two different processes: fumed powder silica and precipitated silica in colloidal suspension. The influence of nano-silica on SCC was investigated with respect to the properties of concrete in fresh (workability) and hardened state (mechanical properties and durability). Additionally, the densification of the microstructure of the hardened concrete was verified by SEM and EDS analyses. The obtained results demonstrate that nano-silica efficiently used in SCC can improve its mechanical properties and durability. Considering the reactivity of the two applied nano-silicas, the colloidal type showed a higher reactivity at early age, which influenced the final SCC properties
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