244 research outputs found
Imaging Soft Materials with Scanning Tunneling Microscopy
By modifying freeze-fracture replication, a standard electron microscopy fixation technique, for use with the scanning tunneling microscope (STM), a variety of soft, non-conductive biomaterials can be imaged at high resolution in three dimensions. Metal replicas make near ideal samples for STM in comparison to the original biological materials. Modifications include a 0.1 μm backing layer of silver and mounting the replicas on a fine-mesh silver filters to enhance the rigidity of the metal replica. This is required unless STM imaging is carried out in vacuum; otherwise, a liquid film of contamination physically connects the STM tip with the sample. This mechanical coupling leads to exaggerated height measurements; the enhanced rigidity of the thicker replica eliminates much of the height amplification. Further improvement was obtained by imaging in a dry nitrogen atmosphere. Calibration and reproducibility were tested with replicas of well characterized bilayers of cadmium arachidate on mica that provide regular 5.5 nm steps. We have used the STM/replica technique to examine the ripple shape and amplitude in the P/J. phase of dimyristoylpbospbatidyl-choline (DMPC) in water. STM images were analyzed using a cross-correlation averaging program to eliminate the effects of noise and the finite size and shapes of the metal grains that make up the replica. The correlation averaging allowed us to develop a composite ripple profile averaged over hundreds of individual ripples and different samples. The STM/replica technique is sufficiently general that it can be used to examine a variety of hydrated lipid and protein samples at a lateral resolution of about 1 nm and a vertical resolution of about 0.3 run
Characteristic Energy of the Coulomb Interactions and the Pileup of States
Tunneling data on crystals confirm
Coulomb interaction effects through the dependence of the
density of states. Importantly, the data and analysis at high energy, E, show a
pileup of states: most of the states removed from near the Fermi level are
found between ~40 and 130 meV, from which we infer the possibility of universal
behavior. The agreement of our tunneling data with recent photoemission results
further confirms our analysis.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Local Strong Coupling Pairing in -Wave Superconductor with Inhomogeneous Bosonic Modes
Recent local tunneling data indicate strong nanoscale inhomogeneity of
superconducting gap in high temperature superconductors. Strong local nanoscale
inhomogeneity in the bosonic scattering mode has also been observed in the same
samples. We argue that these two inhomogeneities directly related to each
other. To address local boson scattering effects, we develop a local strong
coupling model of superconducting pairing in a coarse grained superconducting
state. Each patch is characterized by local coupling to the bosonic mode as
well as by local mode energy. We find that local gap value on each patch grows
with the local strength of electron-boson interaction. At the same time local
gap value decreases with the local boson mode energy, an observation consistent
with the tunneling experiments. We argue that features in the tunneling
spectrum due to boson scattering are consistent with experimentally observed
spectra. We also address the to isotope substitution. Since
both coupling constant and boson energy could change upon isotope substitution,
we prove that interplay between these two effects can produce results that are
very different from conventional BCS model.Comment: 16 pages latex file, 15 eps and ps fig files. See more details at
http://theory.lanl.go
A phase of liposomes with entangled tubular vesicles
An equilibrium phase belonging to the family of bilayer liposomes in ternary mixtures of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC), water, and geraniol (a biological alcohol derived from oil-soluble vitamins that acts as a cosurfactant) has been identified. Electron and optical microscopy reveal the phase, labeled Ltv, to be composed of highly entangled tubular vesicles. In situ x-ray diffraction confirms that the tubule walls are multilamellar with the lipids in the chain-melted state. Macroscopic observations show that the Ltv phase coexists with the well-known L4 phase of spherical vesicles and a bulk L alpha phase. However, the defining characteristic of the Ltv phase is the Weissenberg rod climbing effect under shear, which results from its polymer-like entangled microstructure
Quantum-critical superconductivity in underdoped cuprates
We argue that the pseudogap phase may be an attribute of the non-BCS pairing
of quantum-critical, diffusive fermions near the antiferromagnetic quantum
critical point. We derive and solve a set of three coupled Eliashberg-type
equations for spin-mediated pairing and show that in some range below the
pairing instability, there is no feedback from superconductivity on fermionic
excitations, and fermions remain diffusive despite of the pairing. We conject
that in this regime, fluctuations of the pairing gap destroy the
superconducting condensate but preserve the leading edge gap in the fermionic
spectral function.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Commissioning of Dedicated Furnace for Nb3Sn Coatings of 2.6 GHz Single Cell Cavities
We present the results of commissioning a dedicated furnace for Nb3Sn
coatings of 2.6 GHz single cell cavities. Nb3Sn is a desired coating due to its
high critical temperature and smaller surface resistance compared to bulk Nb.
Usage of Nb3Sn coated cavities will greatly reduce operating costs due to
decreased dependance on cryo cooling. Tin is deposited by use of a tin chloride
nucleation agent and tin vapor diffusion. Analysis of the resultant coating was
performed using SEM/EDS to verify successful formation of Nb3Sn. Witness
samples in line of sight of the source were used in order to understand the
coating efficacy.Comment: 21st Intl Conf Radio Frequency Superconductivity (SRF 2023
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