2,206 research outputs found

    Technical Considerations in Remote LIMS Access via the World Wide Web

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    The increased dependency on the World Wide Web by both laboratories and their customers has led LIMS developers to take advantage of thin-client web applications that provide both remote data entry and manipulation, along with remote reporting functionality. Use of an LIMS through a web browser allows a person to interact with a distant application, providing both remote administration and real-time analytical result delivery from virtually anywhere in the world. While there are many benefits of web-based LIMS applications, some concern must be given to these new methods of system architecture before justifying them as a suitable replacement for their traditional client-server systems. Developers and consumers alike must consider the security aspects of introducing a wide area network capable system into a production environment, as well as the concerns of data integrity and usability

    Structure, phase transformations, and defects of HfO₂ and ZrO₂ nanoparticles studied by ^(181)Ta and ^(111)Cd perturbed angular correlations, ^(1) H magic-angle spinning NMR, XPS, and x-ray and electron diffraction

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    Structure, phase transformations, grain growth, and defects of bare and alumina-coated nanoparticles of HfO₂ and ZrO₂ synthesized in a microwave-plasma process have been investigated by x-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and perturbed angular correlation (PAC) spectroscopy. The PAC technique was used to measure the electric quadrupole interactions (QIs) of the nuclear probes ^(181)Ta and ^(111)Cd in nanocrystalline HfO₂ and ZrO₂ as a function of temperature. For comparison, the QI of ^(181)Ta in the bulk oxides was determined in the same temperature range 300 K ≤ T ≤ 1550 K. The oxygen-metal ratio of the as- ynthesized particles was determined by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to be in the range 1.4 ≤ x ≤ 1.8. A hydrate surface layer with a hydrogen content of 5–10 wt %, consisting of chemisorbed hydroxyl groups and organic precursor fragments, was detected by ^(1) H magic-angle spinning NMR. XRD and TEM show that bare n-ZrO₂, Al₂O₃-coated n-ZrO₂, and Al₂O₃-coated n-HfO₂ are synthesized in the tetragonal or cubic modification with a particle size d < 5 nm, whereas bare n-HfO₂ is mainly monoclinic. The grain growth activation enthalpy of bare n-ZrO₂ is Q_(A)=32(5)kJ/mol. Coating with Al₂O₃ stabilizes the tetragonal over the monoclinic phase, both in hafnia and zirconia nanoparticles. While TEM micrographs of the native nanoparticles reveal a well-ordered cation sublattice, the observation of a broad QI distribution in the PAC spectra suggests a high degree of disorder of the oxygen sublattice. The gradual transformation of the disordered state and the phase evolution were studied by high-temperature QI measurements. Hafnia nanoparticles persist in the monoclinic (m) phase up to T ≤ 1400 K. In coated n-ZrO₂ /Al₂O₃, the monoclinic and tetragonal (t) phases coexist over a large temperature range, whereas uncoated, initially tetragonal or cubic (t or c) n-ZrO₂ presents a sharp m↔t transition. A “defect” component involving 30%–40% of the probe nuclei appears in the ^(181)Ta PAC spectra of all nanoparticles when these are cooled from high temperatures T ≥ 1200 K. The temperature dependence of this component can be reproduced by assuming that Ta impurities in hafnia and zirconia may trap electrons at low temperatures. The observation that the defect component appears only in nanoparticles with diameter d < 100 nm suggests that mobile electrons are available only in the surface region of the oxide particles, either from oxygen vacancies (Vo) and/or Vo- hydrogen donors at the interface of the nanoparticles and their hydrate layers. This conclusion is supported by the absence of a size effect for ^(111)Cd probes in HfO₂ and ZrO₂. The temperature dependence of the ^(181)Ta defect fraction is consistent with a Ta_(+) impurity level at E_d ~ 0.9 and 0.6 eV below the hafnia and zirconia conduction band, respectively
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