198 research outputs found
Antiferromagnetic interactions in single crystalline Zn1-xCoxO thin films
In a rather contradictory situation regarding magnetic data on Co-doped ZnO,
we have succeeded in fabricating high-quality single crystalline Zn1-xCoxO
(x=0.003-0.07) thin films. This gives us the possibility, for the first time,
to examine the it intrinsic magnetic properties of ZnO:Co at a quantitative
level and therefore to address several unsolved problems, the major one being
the nature of the Co-Co interaction in the ZnO structure.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures,accepted for publication in PR
The INTERNODES method for applications in contact mechanics and dedicated preconditioning techniques
The mortar finite element method is a well-established method for the numerical solution of partial differential equations on domains displaying non-conforming interfaces. The method is known for its application in computational contact mechanics. However, its implementation remains challenging as it relies on geometrical projections and unconventional quadrature rules. The INTERNODES (INTERpolation for NOn-conforming DEcompositionS) method, instead, could overcome the implementation difficulties thanks to flexible interpolation techniques. Moreover, it was shown to be at least as accurate as the mortar method making it a very promising alternative for solving problems in contact mechanics. Unfortunately, in such situations the method requires solving a sequence of ill-conditioned linear systems. In this paper, preconditioning techniques are designed and implemented for the efficient solution of those linear systems
Bleaching of sol-gel glass film with embedded gold nanoparticles by thermal poling
Gold clusters embedded in glass are expected to be hard to dissolve in the form of ions since gold is essentially a nonreactive metal. In spite of that, bleaching of Au-doped nanocomposite sol-gel glass film on a soda-lime glass substrate is demonstrated in which electric-field thermal poling is employed to effectively dissolve randomly distributed gold nanoparticles (15 nm in diameter) embedded in a low conductivity sol-gel glass film with a volume filling factor as small as 2.3%. The surface plasmon absorption band at 520 nm is suppressed in the region covered by the anodic electrode. The phenomenon is explained by the ionization of the gold nanoparticles and the redistribution of gold ions in the glass matrix due to the action of the extremely high electrostatic field locally developed during poling
Ferromagnetism in Co-doped ZnO films grown by molecular beam epitaxy: magnetic, electrical and microstructural studies
We studied structural, optical and magnetic properties of high-quality 5 and
15% Co-doped ZnO films grown by plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) on
(0001)-sapphire substrates. Magnetic force microscopy (MFM) and magnetic
measurements with SQUID magnetometer show clear ferromagnetic behavior of the
films up to room temperature whereas they are antiferromagnetic below 200 K
approximately. Temperature dependence of the carrier mobility was determined
using Raman line shape analysis of the longitudinal-optical-phonon-plasmon
coupled modes. It shows that the microscopic mechanism for ferromagnetic
ordering is coupling mediated by free electrons between spins of Co atoms.
These results bring insight into a subtle interplay between charge carriers and
magnetism in MBE-grown Zn(1-x)CoxO films.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 2 table
Influence of s,p-d and s-p exchange couplings on exciton splitting in (Zn,Mn)O
This work presents results of near-band gap magnetooptical studies on
(Zn,Mn)O epitaxial layers. We observe excitonic transitions in reflectivity and
photoluminescence, that shift towards higher energies when the Mn concentration
increases and split nonlinearly under the magnetic field. Excitonic shifts are
determined by the s,p-d exchange coupling to magnetic ions, by the
electron-hole s-p exchange, and the spin-orbit interactions. A quantitative
description of the magnetoreflectivity findings indicates that the free
excitons A and B are associated with the Gamma_7 and Gamma_9 valence bands,
respectively, the order reversed as compared to wurtzite GaN. Furthermore, our
results show that the magnitude of the giant exciton splittings, specific to
dilute magnetic semiconductors, is unusual: the magnetoreflectivity data is
described by an effective exchange energy N_0(beta-alpha)=+0.2+/-0.1 eV, what
points to small and positive N_0 beta. It is shown that both the increase of
the gap with x and the small positive value of the exchange energy N_0 beta
corroborate recent theory describing the exchange splitting of the valence band
in a non-perturbative way, suitable for the case of a strong p-d hybridization.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Magnetic Anisotropy of Co2+ as Signature of Intrinsic Ferromagnetism in ZnO:Co
We report on the magnetic properties of thoroughly characterized Zn1-xCoxO
epitaxial thin films, with low Co concentration, x=0.003-0.005. Magnetic and
EPR measurements, combined with crystal field theory, reveal that isolated Co2+
ions in ZnO possess a strong single ion anisotropy which leads to an "easy
plane" ferromagnetic state when the ferromagnetic Co-Co interaction is
considered. We suggest that the peculiarities of the magnetization process of
this state can be viewed as a signature of intrinsic ferromagnetism in ZnO:Co
materials.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Quasi-ordered photonic structures colour the bluespotted ribbontail ray
Due to the scarcity of blue colour exhibited by natural organisms, highlighting the underlying this colour mechanisms is always very impactful for the understanding of the natural world. In this research, the colour of the blue rounded spots occurring in the skin of Taeniura lymma stingray was unveiled by a combination of experimental and numerical techniques. Our results demonstrated that this blue colour arises from coherent scattering in quasi-ordered photonic structures occurring in the skin of this stingray.</p
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