130 research outputs found
Phase Coherent Transport in Graphene Nanoribbons and Graphene Nanoribbon Arrays
We have experimentally investigated quantum interference corrections to the
conductivity of graphene nanoribbons at temperatures down to 20 mK studying
both weak localization (WL) and universal conductance fluctuations (UCF). Since
in individual nanoribbons at millikelvin temperatures the UCFs strongly mask
the weak localization feature we employ both gate averaging and ensemble
averaging to suppress the UCFs. This allows us to extract the phase coherence
length from both WL and UCF at all temperatures. Above 1 K, the phase coherence
length is suppressed due to Nyquist scattering whereas at low temperatures we
observe a saturation of the phase coherence length at a few hundred nanometers,
which exceeds the ribbon width, but stays below values typically found in bulk
graphene. To better describe the experiments at elevated temperatures, we
extend the formula for 1D weak localization in graphene, which was derived in
the limit of strong intervalley scattering, to include all elastic scattering
rates.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted by PR
Edge state effects in junctions with graphene electrodes
We consider plane junctions with graphene electrodes, which are formed by a
single-level system ("molecule") placed between the edges of two single-layer
graphene half planes. We calculate the edge Green functions of the electrodes
and the corresponding lead self-energies for the molecular levels in the cases
of semi-infinite single-layer electrodes with armchair and zigzag edges. We
show two main effects: first, a peculiar energy-dependent level broadening,
reflecting at low energies the linear energy dependence of the bulk density of
states in graphene, and, second, the shift and splitting of the molecular level
energy, especially pronounced in the case of the zigzag edges due to the
influence of the edge states. These effects give rise to peculiar conductance
features at finite bias and gate voltages.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, submitted to PR
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Modelling of a radio frequency plasma bridge neutralizer (RFPBN)
A performance model of a radio frequency plasma bridge neutralizer was developed to calculate the electrical parameters and optimize the neutralizer design. Minimization of power losses and gas consumption, and a maximization of the neutralizer lifetime and the reliability of the system are requirements of all electric propulsion concepts and strongly determine their future application. The requirements of the neutralizer depend on mission profiles
advanced electric propulsion diagnostic tools at iom
Abstract Recently, we have set up an Advanced Electric Propulsion Diagnostic (AEPD) platform [1] , which allows for the in-situ measurement of a comprehensive set of thruster performance parameters. The platform utilizes a five-axis-movement system for precise positioning of the thruster with respect to the diagnostic heads. In the first setup (AEPD1) an energy-selective mass spectrometer (ESMS) and a miniaturized Faraday probe for ion beam characterization, a telemicroscope and a triangular laser head for measuring the erosion of mechanical parts, and a pyrometer for surface temperature measurements were integrated. The capabilities of the AEPD1 platform were demonstrated with two electric propulsion thrusters, a gridded ion thruster RIT 22 (Airbus Defence & Space, Germany, [13]) and a Hall effect thruster SPT 100D EM1 (EDB Fakel, Russia, [1] , [4] ), in two different vacuum facilities
Managerial power in the German model: the case of Bertelsmann and the antecedents of neoliberalism
Our article extends the research on authoritarian neoliberalism to Germany, through a history of the Bertelsmann media corporation – sponsor and namesake of Germany’s most influential neoliberal think-tank. Our article makes three conceptual moves. Firstly, we argue that conceptualizing German neoliberalism in terms of an ‘ordoliberal paradigm’ is of limited use in explaining the rise and fall of Germany’s distinctive socio-economic model (Modell Deutschland). Instead, we locate the origins of authoritarian tendencies in the corporate power exercised by managers rather than in the power of state-backed markets imagined by ordoliberals. Secondly, we focus on the managerial innovations of Bertelsmann as a key actor enmeshed with Modell Deutschland. We show that the adaptation of business management practices of an endogenous ‘Cologne School’ empowered Bertelsmann’s postwar managers to overcome existential crises and financial constraints despite being excluded from Germany’s corporate support network. Thirdly, we argue that their further development in the 1970s also enabled Bertelsmann to curtail and circumvent the forms of labour representation associated with Modell Deutschland. Inspired by cybernetic management theories that it used to limit and control rather than revive market competition among its workforce, Bertelsmann began to act and think outside the postwar settlement between capital and labour before the settlement’s hotly-debated demise since the 1990s
Spin conductance of diffusive graphene nanoribbons: A probe of zigzag edge magnetization
We investigate spin transport in diffusive graphene nanoribbons with both clean and rough zigzag edges, and long-range potential fluctuations. The long-range fields along the ribbon edges cause the local doping to come close to the charge neutrality point forming p-n junctions with localized magnetic moments, similar to the predicted magnetic edge of clean zigzag graphene nanoribbons. The resulting random edge magnetization polarizes charge currents and causes sample-to-sample fluctuations of the spin currents obeying universal predictions. We show furthermore that, although the average spin conductance vanishes, an applied transverse in-plane electric field can generate a finite spin conductance. A similar effect can also be achieved by aligning the edge magnetic moments through an external magnetic field
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