83 research outputs found

    Domain structure of epitaxial Co films with perpendicular anisotropy

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    Epitaxial hcp Cobalt films with pronounced c-axis texture have been prepared by pulsed lased deposition (PLD) either directly onto Al2O3 (0001) single crystal substrates or with an intermediate Ruthenium buffer layer. The crystal structure and epitaxial growth relation was studied by XRD, pole figure measurements and reciprocal space mapping. Detailed VSM analysis shows that the perpendicular anisotropy of these highly textured Co films reaches the magnetocrystalline anisotropy of hcp-Co single crystal material. Films were prepared with thickness t of 20 nm < t < 100 nm to study the crossover from in-plane magnetization to out-of-plane magnetization in detail. The analysis of the periodic domain pattern observed by magnetic force microscopy allows to determine the critical minimum thickness below which the domains adopt a pure in-plane orientation. Above the critical thickness the width of the stripe domains is evaluated as a function of the film thickness and compared with domain theory. Especially the discrepancies at smallest film thicknesses show that the system is in an intermediate state between in-plane and out-of-plane domains, which is not described by existing analytical domain models

    Fe-based superconducting thin films—preparation and tuning of superconducting properties

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    High field superconducting properties of Ba(Fe₁₋ₓCoₓ)₂As₂ thin films

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    In general, the critical current density, Jc, of type II superconductors and its anisotropy with respect to magnetic field orientation is determined by intrinsic and extrinsic properties. The Fe-based superconductors of the ‘122’ family with their moderate electronic anisotropies and high yet accessible critical fields (Hc2 and Hirr) are a good model system to study this interplay. In this paper, we explore the vortex matter of optimally Co-doped BaFe2As2 thin films with extended planar and c-axis correlated defects. The temperature and angular dependence of the upper critical field is well explained by a two-band model in the clean limit. The dirty band scenario, however, cannot be ruled out completely. Above the irreversibility field, the flux motion is thermally activated, where the activation energy U0 is going to zero at the extrapolated zero-kelvin Hirr value. The anisotropy of the critical current density Jc is both influenced by the Hc2 anisotropy (and therefore by multi-band effects) as well as the extended planar and columnar defects present in the sample

    Effect of Internal Defects on the Fatigue Behavior of Additive Manufactured Metal Components: A Comparison between Ti6Al4V and Inconel 718

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    In order to obtain a widespread application of Additive Manufactured (AM) technology in the aircraft industry for fatigue critical parts, a detailed characterization of the Fatigue and Damage Tolerance (F&DT) behavior of structural components is required. Metal AM techniques in particular are prone to internal defects inherently present due to the nature of the process, which have a detrimental effect on fatigue properties. In the present work, Ti6Al4V and Inconel 718 coupons with artificially induced defects of different dimensions were produced by the Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LPBF) technique. Fatigue tests were performed, and a different defect sensitiveness was observed between the two materials with Inconel being more defect tolerant compared to Titanium. The environmental role at the crack tip of internal defects was discussed, and based on a purely fracture mechanics approach, a simplified stress–life–defect size model was finally devised. The experimental test results together with the information obtained from the fracture surface analysis of tested samples are used to validate the model predictions. The proposed approach could be adopted to define a critical defect size map to be used for tailored Non-Destructive Testing (NDT) evaluation

    TThermodynamics of the thermoelectric working fluid close to the superconducting phase transition

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    The bottleneck in state-of-the-art thermoelectric power generation and cooling is the low performance of thermoelectric materials. While the adverse effects of lattice phonons on performance can be mitigated, the main difficulty remains to obtain a large thermoelectric power factor as the Seebeck coefficient and the electrical conductivity cannot be increased independently. Here, relating the thermoelastic properties of the electron gas that performs the thermoelectric energy conversion, to its transport properties, we analyze theoretically whether an electronic phase transition can enhance thermoelectric conversion and at what cost. More precisely, we consider the metal-to-superconductor phase transition in a model two-dimensional system, and we seek to quantify the contribution of the 2D fluctuating Cooper pairs to the power factor in the close vicinity of the critical temperature TcT_{\rm c}. In addition, we provide experimental evidence of the rapid increase of the Seebeck coefficient without decreasing the electrical conductivity near TcT_{\rm c} in a 100-nm Ba(Fe1x_{1-x}Cox_x)2_2As2_2 thin film with high structural quality resulting in a power factor enhancement of approximately 300. This level of performance cannot be achieved in a system with low structural quality as shown experimentally with our sample degraded by ion bombardment as defects preclude the strong enhancement of the Seebeck coefficient near the phase transition. Finally, we theoretically discuss the ideal thermoelectric conversion efficiency (i.e. disregarding adverse phonon effects) and show that driving the electronic system to the vicinity of a phase transition may be an innovative path towards a strong performance increase but at the cost of a narrow temperature range of use of such materials.Comment: Submission to SciPos

    Epitaxial growth and anisotropy of La(O,F)FeAs thin films deposited by Pulsed Laser Deposition

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    LaFeAsO1-xFx thin films were deposited successfully on (001)-oriented LaAlO3 and MgO substrates from stoichiometric LaFeAsO1-xFx polycrystalline targets with fluorine concentrations up to x = 0.25 by PLD. Room temperature deposition and post annealing of the films yield nearly phase pure films with a pronounced c-axis texture and a strong biaxial in-plane orientation. Transport measurements show metallic resistance and onset of superconductivity at 11 K. Hc2(T) was determined by resistive measurements and yield Hc2 values of 3 T at 3.6 K for B||c and 6 T at 6.4 K for B||ab.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
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