256 research outputs found
Luminescence tuning of MOFs via ligand to metal and metal to metal energy transfer by co-doping of 2∞[Gd2Cl6(bipy)3]*2bipy with europium and terbium
The series of anhydrous lanthanide chlorides LnCl3, Ln=Pr–Tb, and 4,4'-bipyridine (bipy) constitute isotypic MOFs of the formula 2∞[Ln2Cl6(bipy)3]*2bipy. The europium and terbium containing compounds both exhibit luminescence of the referring trivalent lanthanide ions, giving a red luminescence for Eu3+ and a green luminescence for Tb3+ triggered by an efficient antenna effect of the 4,4'-bipyridine linkers. Mixing of different lanthanides in one MOF structure was undertaken to investigate the potential of this MOF system for colour tuning of the luminescence. Based on the gadolinium containing compound, co-doping with different amounts of europium and terbium proves successful and yields solid solutions of the formula 2∞[Gd2-x-yEuxTbyCl6(bipy)3]*2bipy (1–8), 0≤x, y≤0.5. The series of MOFs exhibits the opportunity of tuning the emission colour in-between green and red. Depending on the atomic ratio Gd:Eu:Tb, the yellow region was covered for the first time for an oxygen/carboxylate-free MOF system. In addition to a ligand to metal energy transfer (LMET) from the lowest ligand-centered triplet state of 4,4'-bipyridine, a metal to metal energy transfer (MMET) between 4f-levels from Tb3+ to Eu3+ is as well vital for the emission colour. However, no involvement of Gd3+ in energy transfers is observed rendering it a suitable host lattice ion and connectivity centre for diluting the other two rare earth ions in the solid state. The materials retain their luminescence during activation of the MOFs for microporosity
Attitude Determination in Space with Ambient Light Sensors using Machine Learning for Solar Cell Characterization
Exploration of novel thin-film solar cell technologies outreaches for their application in space. For extraterrestrial tests, irradiance conditions must be well determined to extract quantitative solar cell performances. Here, a new method for solar position determination is presented, based on parallelized ambient light sensor measurements is presented obtained from the sounding rocket experiment Organic and Hybrid Solar Cells In Space during the MAPHEUS-8 mission. The solar position evolution is optimized using stochastic and gradient-based methods in a Bayesian approach. Comparison with independent positioning estimates shows compelling agreement, lying mostly within 5° deviation. The inclusion of a simple Earth irradiation component mitigates a small systematic offset. Further, solution uncertainties are estimated with Monte-Carlo Markov-chain sampling. The point-source irradiation model's accuracy can compete with that of a camera-based trajectory. During equatorial Sun positions, the method's precision appears even higher––the 1σ uncertainty of the derived solar position is as small as 3° for the effective angular deviation. This simple sensor array triangulation method being complementary to other attitude determination methods shows reasonable accuracies and allows implementation in systems of limited computational capabilities to determine the solar position or irradiance conditions for space or terrestrial solar cell applications
The ground state of Sr3Ru2O7 revisited; Fermi liquid close to a ferromagnetic instability
We show that single-crystalline Sr3Ru2O7 grown by a floating-zone technique
is an isotropic paramagnet and a quasi-two dimensional metal as spin-triplet
superconducting Sr2RuO4 is. The ground state is Fermi liquid with very low
residual resistivity (3 micro ohm cm for in-plane currents) and a nearly
ferromagnetic metal with the largest Wilson ratio Rw>10 among paramagnets so
far. This contrasts with the ferromagnetic order at Tc=104 K reported on single
crystals grown by a flux method [Cao et al., Phys. Rev. B 55, R672 (1997)]. We
have also found a dramatic changeover from paramagnetism to ferromagnetism
under applied pressure. This suggests the existence of a substantial
ferromagnetic instability on the verge of a quantum phase transition in the
Fermi liquid state.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. B : Rapid co
Dielectric relaxations of nanocomposites composed of HEUR polymers and magnetite nanoparticles
We investigate the dynamics of nanocomposites composed of hydrophobically modified ethoxylated urethanes (HEUR) and magnetite nanoparticles (MNPs) as dry films. Weemployed dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS) in combination with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and thermally stimulated depolarization currents (TSDC).The three techniques reveal a strong heterogeneity of the matrix of the nanocomposites, consisting of (i) a crystalline poly(ethyleneoxide) PEO bulk phase, (ii) an amorphous PEO portion, and (iii) small PEO crystallites which experience different constraints than the PEO bulk phase. TSDC and DRS reveal a very high direct current (DC)-conductivity of the pure matrix, which increases with MNPs concentration. The increase of the DCconductivity is not related to an increase of the segmental mobility, but most likely to the change of the morphology of the hydrophobic domains of the polymer matrix, due to the formation of large MNPs clusters. Indeed, the MNPs neither influence the segmental dynamics of the polymer nor the phase behavior of the polymer matrix. The addition of MNPs slightly increases the activation energy related to the γ-relaxation of the polymer. This effect might be related to the changes in nano-morphology as demonstrated by the slight increase of the degree of crystallinity. The analysis of the DRS data with the electrical modulus M’’(ω) and the derivative ε’’der formalism allow us to identify a low-frequency process in addition to the conductivity relaxation. This low-frequency dispersion is also revealed by TSDC. It is most likely related to the Maxwell-Wagner- Sillars relaxation, which typically occurs in systems which feature phase separation. The detailed investigation of the dielectric properties of these novel nanocomposites with increasing MNPs concentration will be useful for their practical application, for example as absorbers of electromagnetic waves
Metamagnetism and critical fluctuations in high quality single crystals of the bilayer ruthenate Sr3Ru2O7
We report the results of low temperature transport, specific heat and
magnetisation measurements on high quality single crystals of the bilayer
perovskite Sr3Ru2O7, which is a close relative of the unconventional
superconductor Sr2RuO4. Metamagnetism is observed, and transport and
thermodynamic evidence for associated critical fluctuations is presented. These
relatively unusual fluctuations might be pictured as variations in the Fermi
surface topography itself. No equivalent behaviour has been observed in the
metallic state of Sr2RuO4.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Revtex 3.
Infrared optical properties of Pr2CuO4
The ab-plane reflectance of a Pr2CuO4 single crystal has been measured over a
wide frequency range at a variety of temperatures, and the optical properties
determined from a Kramers-Kronig analysis. Above ~ 250 K, the low frequency
conductivity increases quickly with temperature; the resistivity follows the
form e^(E_a/k_BT), where E_a ~ 0.17 eV is much less than the inferred optical
gap of ~ 1.2 eV. Transport measurements show that at low temperature the
resistivity deviates from activated behavior and follows the form
e^[(T_0/T)^1/4], indicating that the dc transport in this material is due to
variable-range hopping between localized states in the gap. The four
infrared-active Eu modes dominate the infrared optical properties. Below ~ 200
K, a striking new feature appears near the low-frequency Eu mode, and there is
additional new fine structure at high frequency. A normal coordinate analysis
has been performed and the detailed nature of the zone-center vibrations
determined. Only the low-frequency Eu mode has a significant Pr-Cu interaction.
Several possible mechanisms related to the antiferromagnetism in this material
are proposed to explain the sudden appearance of this and other new spectral
features at low temperature.Comment: 11 pages, 7 embedded EPS figures, REVTeX
From nodal liquid to nodal Mottness in a frustrated Hubbard model
We investigate the physics of frustrated 3-leg Hubbard ladders in the band
limit, when hopping across the ladder's rungs (t) is of the same
order as hopping along them (t) much greater than the onsite Coulomb repulsion
(U). We show that this model exhibits a striking electron-hole asymmetry close
to half-filling: the hole-doped system at low temperatures develops a
Resonating Valence Bond (RVB)-like d-wave gap (pseudogap close to (,0))
coinciding with gapless nodal excitations (nodal liquid); in contrast, the
electron-doped system is seen to develop a Mott gap at the nodes, whilst
retaining a metallic character of its majority Fermi surface. At lower
temperatures in the electron-doped case, d-wave superconducting correlations --
here, coexisting with gapped nodal excitations -- are already seen to arise.
Upon further doping the hole-doped case, the RVB-like state yields to d-wave
superconductivity. Such physics is reminiscent of that exhibited by the high
temperature cuprate superconductors--notably electron-hole asymmetry as noted
by Angle Resolved PhotoEmission Spectroscopy (ARPES) and the resistivity
exponents observed. This toy model also reinforces the importance of a more
thorough experimental investigation of the known 3-leg ladder cuprate systems,
and may have some bearing on low dimensional organic superconductors.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figure
Critical adsorption near edges
Symmetry breaking surface fields give rise to nontrivial and long-ranged
order parameter profiles for critical systems such as fluids, alloys or magnets
confined to wedges. We discuss the properties of the corresponding universal
scaling functions of the order parameter profile and the two-point correlation
function and determine the critical exponents eta_parallel and
eta_perpendicular for the so-called normal transition.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Neutron Scattering study of Sr_2Cu_3O_4Cl_2
We report a neutron scattering study on the tetragonal compound
Sr_2Cu_3O_4Cl_2, which has two-dimensional (2D) interpenetrating Cu_I and
Cu_{II} subsystems, each forming a S=1/2 square lattice quantum Heisenberg
antiferromagnet (SLQHA). The mean-field ground state is degenerate, since the
inter-subsystem interactions are geometrically frustrated. Magnetic neutron
scattering experiments show that quantum fluctuations lift the degeneracy and
cause a 2D Ising ordering of the Cu_{II} subsystem. Due to quantum fluctuations
a dramatic increase of the Cu_I out-of-plane spin-wave gap is also observed.
The temperature dependence and the dispersion of the spin-wave energy are
quantitatively explained by spin-wave calculations which include quantum
fluctuations explicitly. The values for the nearest-neighbor superexchange
interactions between the Cu_I and Cu_{II} ions and between the Cu_{II} ions are
determined experimentally to be J_{I-II} = -10(2)meV and J_{II}= 10.5(5)meV,
respectively. Due to its small exchange interaction, J_{II}, the 2D dispersion
of the Cu_{II} SLQHA can be measured over the whole Brillouin zone with thermal
neutrons, and a novel dispersion at the zone boundary, predicted by theory, is
confirmed. The instantaneous magnetic correlation length of the Cu_{II} SLQHA
is obtained up to a very high temperature, T/J_{II}\approx 0.75. This result is
compared with several theoretical predictions as well as recent experiments on
the S=1/2 SLQHA.Comment: Figures and equations are rearrange
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