483 research outputs found
Structural relaxation of E' gamma centers in amorphous silica
We report experimental evidence of the existence of two variants of the E'
gamma centers induced in silica by gamma rays at room temperature. The two
variants are distinguishable by the fine features of their line shapes in
paramagnetic resonance spectra. These features suggest that the two E' gamma
differ for their topology. We find a thermally induced interconversion between
the centers with an activation energy of about 34 meV. Hints are also found for
the existence of a structural configuration of minimum energy and of a
metastable state.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Removing climbers more than doubles tree growth and biomass in degraded tropical forests
Huge areas of tropical forests are degraded, reducing their biodiversity, carbon, and timber value. The recovery of these degraded forests can be significantly inhibited by climbing plants such as lianas. Removal of super-abundant climbers thus represents a restoration action with huge potential for application across the tropics. While experimental studies largely report positive impacts of climber removal on tree growth and biomass accumulation, the efficacy of climber removal varies widely, with high uncertainty as to where and how to apply the technique. Using meta-analytic techniques, we synthesize results from 26 studies to quantify the efficacy of climber removal for promoting tree growth and biomass accumulation. We find that climber removal increases tree growth by 156% and biomass accumulation by 209% compared to untreated forest, and that efficacy remains for at least 19 years. Extrapolating from these results, climber removal could sequester an additional 32 Gigatons of CO2 over 10 years, at low cost, across regrowth, and production forests. Our analysis also revealed that climber removal studies are concentrated in the Neotropics (N = 22), relative to Africa (N = 2) and Asia (N = 2), preventing our study from assessing the influence of region on removal efficacy. While we found some evidence that enhancement of tree growth and AGB accumulation varies across disturbance context and removal method, but not across climate, the number and geographical distribution of studies limits the strength of these conclusions. Climber removal could contribute significantly to reducing global carbon emissions and enhancing the timber and biomass stocks of degraded forests, ultimately protecting them from conversion. However, we urgently need to assess the efficacy of removal outside the Neotropics, and consider the potential negative consequences of climber removal under drought conditions and for biodiversity
The use of high aspect ratio photoresist (SU-8) for super-hydrophobic pattern prototyping
In this work we present a reliable technique for the production of large areas of high aspect-ratio patterns and describe their use as model super-hydrophobic systems. The high thickness and straight sidewalls possible with SU-8 were used to generate dense patterns of small pillars. These photoresist patterns could be used directly, without the need for micromoulding. A method is given allowing resist thickness to be varied over a wide range and a bottom antireflective layer was used to simplify patterning on reflective substrates. This patterning technique allows rapid testing of wetting theories, as pattern size and depth can be varied simply and samples can be produced in sufficient numbers for laboratory use. We show how the static contact angle of water varies with pattern height for one sample-pattern and how static and dynamic contact angles vary with dimension using high aspect-ratio patterns
Proof of the thermodynamical stability of the E' center in SiO2
The E' center is a paradigmatic radiation-induced defect in SiO2 whose
peculiar EPR and hyperfine activity has been known since over 40 years. This
center has been traditionally identified with a distorted, positively-charged
oxygen vacancy V_O+. However, no direct proof of the stability of this defect
has ever been provided, so that its identification is still strongly
incomplete. Here we prove directly that distorted V_O+ is metastable and that
it satisfies the key requirements for its identification as E', such as thermal
and optical response, and activation-deactivation mechanisms.Comment: RevTeX 4 pages, 2 figure
Radiation effects in glasses used for immobilization of high-level waste and plutonium disposition
This paper is a comprehensive review of the state-of-knowledge in the field of radiation effects in glasses that are to be used for the immobilization of high-level nuclear waste and plutonium disposition. The current status and issues in the area of radiation damage processes, defect generation, microstructure development, theoretical methods and experimental methods ase reviewed. Questions of fundamental and technological interest that offer opportunities for research are identified
Characterization of E'delta and triplet point defects in oxygen deficient amorphous silicon dioxide
We report an experimental study by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) of
gamma ray irradiation induced point defects in oxygen deficient amorphous SiO2
materials. We have found that three intrinsic (E'gamma, E'delta and triplet)
and one extrinsic ([AlO4]0) paramagnetic centers are induced. All the
paramagnetic defects but E'gamma center are found to reach a concentration
limit value for doses above 10^3 kGy, suggesting a generation process from
precursors. Isochronal thermal treatments of a sample irradiated at 10^3 kGy
have shown that for T>500 K the concentrations of E'gamma and E'delta centers
increase concomitantly to the decrease of [AlO4]0. This occurrence speaks for
an hole transfer process from [AlO4]0 centers to diamagnetic precursors of E'
centers proving the positive charge state of the thermally induced E'gamma and
E'delta centers and giving insight on the origin of E'gamma from an oxygen
vacancy. A comparative study of the E'delta center and of the 10 mT doublet EPR
signals on three distinct materials subjected to isochronal and isothermal
treatments, has shown a quite general linear correlation between these two EPR
signals. This result confirms the attribution of the 10 mT doublet to the
hyperfine structure of the E'delta center, originating from the interaction of
the unpaired electron with a nucleus of 29Si (I=1/2). Analogies between the
microwave saturation properties of E'gamma and E'delta centers and between
those of their hyperfine structures are found and suggest that the unpaired
electron wave function involves similar Si sp3 hybrid orbitals; specifically,
for the E'delta the unpaired electron is supposed to be delocalized over four
such orbitals of four equivalent Si atoms.Comment: Approved for publication in Physical Review
Natural climate solutions
Our thanks for inputs by L. Almond, A. Baccini, A. Bowman, S. CookPatton, J. Evans, K. Holl, R. Lalasz, A. Nassikas, M. Spalding, M. Wolosin, and expert elicitation respondents. Our thanks for datasets developed by the Hansen lab and the NESCent grasslands working group (C. Lehmann, D. Griffith, T. M. Anderson, D. J. Beerling, W. Bond, E. Denton, E. Edwards, E. Forrestel, D. Fox, W. Hoffmann, R. Hyde, T. Kluyver, L. Mucina, B. Passey, S. Pau, J. Ratnam, N. Salamin, B. Santini, K. Simpson, M. Smith, B. Spriggs, C. Still, C. Strömberg, and C. P. Osborne). This study was made possible by funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Woodbury was supported in part by USDA-NIFA Project 2011-67003-30205 Data deposition: A global spatial dataset of reforestation opportunities has been deposited on Zenodo (https://zenodo.org/record/883444). This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1710465114/-/DCSupplemental.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Trade-Offs Between Carbon Stocks and Timber Recovery in Tropical Forests are Mediated by Logging Intensity
Forest degradation accounts for ~70% of total carbon losses from tropical forests. Substantial emissions are from selective logging, a land-use activity that decreases forest carbon density. To maintain carbon values in selectively logged forests, climate change mitigation policies and government agencies promote the adoption of reduced-impact logging (RIL) practices. However, whether RIL will maintain both carbon and timber values in managed tropical forests over time remains uncertain. In this study, we quantify the recovery of timber stocks and aboveground carbon at an experimental site where forests were subjected to different intensities of RIL (4, 8, and 16 trees/ha). Our census data span 20 years postlogging and 17 years after the liberation of future crop trees from competition in a tropical forest on the Guiana Shield, a globally important forest carbon reservoir. We model recovery of timber and carbon with a breakpoint regression that allowed us to capture elevated tree mortality immediately after logging. Recovery rates of timber and carbon were governed by the presence of residual trees (i.e., trees that persisted through the first harvest). The liberation treatment stimulated faster recovery of timber albeit at a carbon cost. Model results suggest a threshold logging intensity beyond which forests managed for timber and carbon derive few benefits from RIL, with recruitment and residual growth not sufficient to offset losses. Inclusion of the breakpoint at which carbon and timber gains outpaced postlogging mortality led to high predictive accuracy, including out-of-sample R2 values \u3e90%, and enabled inference on demographic changes postlogging. Our modeling framework is broadly applicable to studies that aim to quantify impacts of logging on forest recovery. Overall, we demonstrate that initial mortality drives variation in recovery rates, that the second harvest depends on old growth wood, and that timber intensification lowers carbon stocks
Electronic damage in quartz (c-SiO2) by MeV ion irradiations: Potentiality for optical waveguiding applications
The damage induced on quartz (c-SiO2) by heavy ions (F, O, Br) at MeV energies, where electronic stopping is dominant, has been investigated by RBS/C and optical methods. The two techniques indicate the formation of amorphous layers with an isotropic refractive index (n = 1.475) at fluences around 1014 cm−2 that are associated to electronic mechanisms. The kinetics of the process can be described as the superposition of linear (possibly initial Poisson curve) and sigmoidal (Avrami-type) contributions. The coexistence of the two kinetic regimes may be associated to the differential roles of the amorphous track cores and preamorphous halos. By using ions and energies whose maximum stopping power lies inside the crystal (O at 13 MeV, F at 15 MeV and F at 30 MeV) buried amorphous layer are formed and optical waveguides at the sample surface have been generated
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