211 research outputs found

    Evidence for two disparate spin dynamic regimes within Fe-substituted La0.7 Pb0.3 (Mn1-x Fex) O3 (0≤x≤0.2) colossal magnetoresistive manganites: Neutron spin-echo measurements

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    10 págs.; 7 figs.; 1 tab. ; PACS number s : 75.25. z, 75.30.Ds, 75.40.Gb, 75.47.GkThe spin dynamics of substituted colossal magnetoresistive (CMR) manganites of general formula La0.7 Pb0.3 (Mn1-x Fex) O3, 0≤x≤0.2 is investigated by means of neutron spin-echo measurements. Substitution of Mn by Fe leads to a strong decrease of the temperature of macroscopic magnetic long-range ordering with a concomitant enhancement of the CMR effect. For x=0.2, a long-range-ordered state is not achieved as a result of the increase in antiferromagnetic interactions brought forward by Fe+3 -Mn couplings. The results display two relaxations having well separated decay constants. A fast process with a relaxation time of about 10 ps within the paramagnetic phase is found for all compositions. It shows a remarkably strong dependence with temperature and sample composition as the apparent activation energy for spin diffusion as well as the preexponential term exemplify. The physical origin of such a fast relaxation is assigned to heavily damped or overdamped spin waves (spin diffusion) on the basis of some signatures of excitations having finite frequencies found for the parent compound La0.7 Pb0.3 Mn O3 at temperatures just below Tc, together with preliminary data on the effect of Fe doping on the stiffness constant. A slower relaxation is present for all compositions. Its temperature dependence follows the behavior of the macroscopic magnetization, and its intensity grows within the ordered ferromagnetic state. Its physical origin is ascribed to collective reorientation of nanoscale ferromagnetic domains on the basis of the wave-vector dependence of its relaxation rate and amplitude. © 2007 The American Physical Society.J.G. and J.M.B. thank the Spanish Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia for financial support under research Grant No. MAT2005-0686-C04-03. F.J.B. and P.R. acknowledge financial support from the European Commission through NMI3 to carry out preliminary measurements at the FZJ facilities.Peer Reviewe

    Molecular observation of contour-length fluctuations limiting topological confinement in polymer melts

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    In order to study the mechanisms limiting the topological chain confinement in polymer melts, we have performed neutron-spin-echo investigations of the single-chain dynamic-structure factor from polyethylene melts over a large range of chain lengths. While at high molecular weight the reptation model is corroborated, a systematic loosening of the confinement with decreasing chain length is found. The dynamic-structure factors are quantitatively described by the effect of contour-length fluctuations on the confining tube, establishing this mechanism on a molecular level in space and time

    Statistical Mechanics of Vacancy and Interstitial Strings in Hexagonal Columnar Crystals

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    Columnar crystals contain defects in the form of vacancy/interstitial loops or strings of vacancies and interstitials bounded by column ``heads'' and ``tails''. These defect strings are oriented by the columnar lattice and can change size and shape by movement of the ends and forming kinks along the length. Hence an analysis in terms of directed living polymers is appropriate to study their size and shape distribution, volume fraction, etc. If the entropy of transverse fluctuations overcomes the string line tension in the crystalline phase, a string proliferation transition occurs, leading to a supersolid phase. We estimate the wandering entropy and examine the behaviour in the transition regime. We also calculate numerically the line tension of various species of vacancies and interstitials in a triangular lattice for power-law potentials as well as for a modified Bessel function interaction between columns as occurs in the case of flux lines in type-II superconductors or long polyelectrolytes in an ionic solution. We find that the centered interstitial is the lowest energy defect for a very wide range of interactions; the symmetric vacancy is preferred only for extremely short interaction ranges.Comment: 22 pages (revtex), 15 figures (encapsulated postscript

    Fractal diffusion in high temperature polymer electrolyte fuel cell membranes

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    © 2018 Author(s). The performance of fuel cells depends largely on the proton diffusion in the proton conducting membrane, the core of a fuel cell. High temperature polymer electrolyte fuel cells are based on a polymer membrane swollen with phosphoric acid as the electrolyte, where proton conduction takes place. We studied the proton diffusion in such membranes with neutron scattering techniques which are especially sensitive to the proton contribution. Time of flight spectroscopy and backscattering spectroscopy have been combined to cover a broad dynamic range. In order to selectively observe the diffusion of protons potentially contributing to the ion conductivity, two samples were prepared, where in one of the samples the phosphoric acid was used with hydrogen replaced by deuterium. The scattering data from the two samples were subtracted in a suitable way after measurement. Thereby subdiffusive behavior of the proton diffusion has been observed and interpreted in terms of a model of fractal diffusion. For this purpose, a scattering function for fractal diffusion has been developed. The fractal diffusion dimension dw and the Hausdorff dimension df have been determined on the length scales covered in the neutron scattering experiments

    The Cyclostratigraphy Intercomparison Project (CIP): consistency, merits and pitfalls

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    Cyclostratigraphy is an important tool for understanding astronomical climate forcing and reading geological time in sedimentary sequences, provided that an imprint of insolation variations caused by Earth’s orbital eccentricity, obliquity and/or precession is preserved (Milankovitch forcing). Numerous stratigraphic and paleoclimate studies have applied cyclostratigraphy, but the robustness of the methodology and its dependence on the investigator have not been systematically evaluated. We developed the Cyclostratigraphy Intercomparison Project (CIP) to assess the robustness of cyclostratigraphic methods using an experimental design of three artificial cyclostratigraphic case studies with known input parameters. Each case study is designed to address specific challenges that are relevant to cyclostratigraphy. Case 1 represents an offshore research vessel environment, as only a drill-core photo and the approximate position of a late Miocene stage boundary are available for analysis. In Case 2, the Pleistocene proxy record displays clear nonlinear cyclical patterns and the interpretation is complicated by the presence of a hiatus. Case 3 represents a Late Devonian proxy record with a low signal-to-noise ratio with no specific theoretical astronomical solution available for this age. Each case was analyzed by a test group of 17-20 participants, with varying experience levels, methodological preferences and dedicated analysis time. During the CIP 2018 meeting in Brussels, Belgium, the ensuing analyses and discussion demonstrated that most participants did not arrive at a perfect solution, which may be partly explained by the limited amount of time spent on the exercises (∼4.5 hours per case). However, in all three cases, the median solution of all submitted analyses accurately approached the correct result and several participants obtained the exact correct answers. Interestingly, systematically better performances were obtained for cases that represented the data type and stratigraphic age that were closest to the individual participants’ experience. This experiment demonstrates that cyclostratigraphy is a powerful tool for deciphering time in sedimentary successions and, importantly, that it is a trainable skill. Finally, we emphasize the importance of an integrated stratigraphic approach and provide flexible guidelines on what good practices in cyclostratigraphy should include. Our case studies provide valuable insight into current common practices in cyclostratigraphy, their potential merits and pitfalls. Our work does not provide a quantitative measure of reliability and uncertainty of cyclostratigraphy, but rather constitutes a starting point for further discussions on how to move the maturing field of cyclostratigraphy forward

    Dynamic properties of microemulsions modified with homopolymers and diplock copolymers: The determination of bending moduli and renormalization effects

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    The properties of bicontinuous microemulsions, consisting of water, oil, and a surfactant, can be modified by the addition of diblock copolymers (boosting effect) and homopolymers (inverse boosting effect) or a combination of both. Here, the influence of the addition of homopolymers (PEP(X) and PEO(X), X=5k or 10k molecular weight) on the dynamics of the surfactant layer is studied with neutron spin echo spectroscopy (NSE). Combining the results with the previous findings for diblock copolymers allows for a better separation of viscosity and bending modulus effects. With the addition of homopolymers, a significant increase of the relaxation rate compared to the pure microemulsion has been observed. The influence on the bending rigidity kappa is measured with NSE experiments. Homopolymer addition reduces kappa by up to Deltakappa approximately -0.5k(B)T, whereas the diblock copolymer yields an increase of kappa by approximately 0.3k(B)T. Comparison of the bending moduli that are obtained by analysis of the dynamics to those obtained from small angle neutron scattering (SANS) sheds light on the different renormalization length scales for NSE and SANS. Variation of the surfactant concentration at otherwise constant conditions of homopolymer or diblock-copolymer concentration shows that NSE results are leading to the pure bending rigidity, while the renormalized one is measured with SANS

    Plasticizer effect on the dynamics of polyvinylchloride studied by dielectric spectroscopy and quasielastic neutron scattering

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    We have studied the influence of plasticization on the microscopic dynamics of a glass-forming polymer. For this purpose we studied polyvinylchloride (PVC) with and without the commercially used plasticizer dioctylphthalate (DOP). We used dielectric spectroscopy and inelastic neutron scattering employing the neutron spin echo (NSE) technique. For both kinds of spectra the alpha relaxation could be consistently described by a model involving a distribution of individual relaxations of the Kohlrausch type. In contrast to earlier studies it turned out that an asymmetric distribution is necessary to fit the data at the lower temperatures investigated here. The shape parameters of the distribution (width, skewness) for PVC and PVC/DOP turned out to coincide when the characteristic relaxation times were the same. This means that the plasticizer only induces a remapping of the temperature dependence of the alpha relaxation. Comparison of NSE spectra S(Q,t)S(Q) at different scattering vectors Q gave the result that the slowing down at the structure factor peak Q(max) is surprisingly small for PVC while it is in the normal range for PVC/DOP

    Structural observation and kinetic pathway in the formation of polymeric micelles

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    The route by which amphiphilic molecules self-assemble into micelles is still not fully understood. In this Letter, we present direct structural information on the birth and growth of block copolymer micelles by means of synchrotron x-ray scattering with millisecond time resolution. Using a quantitative model, we show that the self-assembly process can be viewed as a nucleation and growth type process where the elemental growth mechanism is an exchange of single molecules
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