264 research outputs found
Effect of chiral interactions on the structure of Langmuir monolayers
Structural changes in monolayers of the enantiomer and the racemic mixture of 1-hexadecyl-glycerol with temperature and surface pressure variations are compared. On compression, both monolayers exhibit a variation of the tilt azimuth from the direction to the nearest neighbor to the next nearest neighbor. In the monolayer of the racemate, this variation occurs as a first order transition. In the monolayer of the enantiomer, the unit cell is oblique, and continuously passes from a state close to the low-pressure state of the racemate to a state close to its high-pressure state. The azimuths of the unit-cell distortion and that of the tilt remain almost equal to each other. The effect of chirality decreases when the temperature is increased. Structural changes are explained in detail within the framework of the Landau theory of phase transitions
Crystal truncation rods in kinematical and dynamical x-ray diffraction theories
Crystal truncation rods calculated in the kinematical approximation are shown
to quantitatively agree with the sum of the diffracted waves obtained in the
two-beam dynamical calculations for different reflections along the rod. The
choice and the number of these reflections are specified. The agreement extends
down to at least of the peak intensity. For lower intensities,
the accuracy of dynamical calculations is limited by truncation of the electron
density at a mathematically planar surface, arising from the Fourier series
expansion of the crystal polarizability
Small-angle X-ray scattering from GaN nanowires on Si(111): facet truncation rods, facet roughness and Porod's law
Small-angle X-ray scattering from GaN nanowires grown on Si(111) is measured in the grazing-incidence geometry and modelled by means of a Monte Carlo simulation that takes into account the orientational distribution of the faceted nanowires and the roughness of their side facets. It is found that the scattering intensity at large wavevectors does not follow Porod's law I(q) ∝ q-4. The intensity depends on the orientation of the side facets with respect to the incident X-ray beam. It is maximum when the scattering vector is directed along a facet normal, reminiscent of surface truncation rod scattering. At large wavevectors q, the scattering intensity is reduced by surface roughness. A root-mean-square roughness of 0.9 nm, which is the height of just 3-4 atomic steps per micrometre-long facet, already gives rise to a strong intensity reduction. open access
Small-angle X-ray scattering from GaN nanowires on Si(111): facet truncation rods, facet roughness and Porod's law
Small-angle X-ray scattering from GaN nanowires grown on Si(111) is measured in the grazing-incidence geometry and modelled by means of a Monte Carlo simulation that takes into account the orientational distribution of the faceted nanowires and the roughness of their side facets. It is found that the scattering intensity at large wavevectors does not follow Porod's law I(q) ∝ q-4. The intensity depends on the orientation of the side facets with respect to the incident X-ray beam. It is maximum when the scattering vector is directed along a facet normal, reminiscent of surface truncation rod scattering. At large wavevectors q, the scattering intensity is reduced by surface roughness. A root-mean-square roughness of 0.9 nm, which is the height of just 3-4 atomic steps per micrometre-long facet, already gives rise to a strong intensity reduction. open acces
Chiral and herringbone symmetry breaking in water-surface monolayers
We report the observation from monolayers of eicosanoic acid in the L′2 phase of three distinct out-of-plane first-order diffraction peaks, indicating molecular tilt in a nonsymmetry direction and hence the absence of mirror symmetry. At lower pressures the molecules tilt in the direction of their nearest neighbors. In this region we find a structural transition, which we tentatively identify as the rotator-herringbone transition L2d−L2h
Thermal roughening of an SOS-model with elastic interaction
We analyze the effects of a long-ranged step-step interaction on thermal
roughening within the framework of a solid-on-solid model of a crystal surface
by means of Monte Carlo simulation. A repulsive step-step interaction is
modeled by elastic dipoles located on sites adjacent to the steps. In order to
reduce the computational effort involved in calculating interaction energy
based on long-ranged potentials, we employ a multi-grid scheme. As a result of
the long-range character of the step interaction, the roughening temperature
increases drastically compared to a system with short-range cutoff as a
consequence of anti-correlations between surface defects
X-ray diffraction peak profiles from threading dislocations in GaN epitaxial films
We analyze the lineshape of x-ray diffraction profiles of GaN epitaxial
layers with large densities of randomly distributed threading dislocations. The
peaks are Gaussian only in the central, most intense part of the peak, while
the tails obey a power law. The decay typical for random dislocations
is observed in double-crystal rocking curves. The entire profile is well fitted
by a restricted random dislocation distribution. The densities of both edge and
screw threading dislocations and the ranges of dislocation correlations are
obtained
X-ray scattering study of GaN nanowires grown on Ti/AlO by molecular beam epitaxy
GaN nanowires (NWs) grown by molecular beam epitaxy on Ti films sputtered on
AlO are studied by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and grazing incidence
small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS). XRD, performed both in symmetric Bragg
reflection and at grazing incidence, reveals Ti, TiO, TiAl, and
TiON crystallites with in-plane and out-of-plane lattice parameters
intermediate between those of AlO and GaN. These topotaxial
crystallites in Ti film, formed due to interfacial reactions and N exposure,
possess fairly little misorientation with respect to AlO. As a
result, GaN NWs grow on the top TiN layer possessing a high degree of epitaxial
orientation with respect to the substrate. The measured GISAXS intensity
distributions are modeled by the Monte Carlo method taking into account the
orientational distributions of NWs, a variety of their cross-sectional shapes
and sizes, and roughness of their side facets. The cross-sectional size
distributions of the NWs and the relative fractions of and
side facets are determined
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