3,510 research outputs found
Temperature-dependent Raman scattering of DyScO3 and GdScO3 single crystals
We report a temperature-dependent Raman scattering investigation of DyScO3
and GdScO3 single crystals from room temperature up to 1200 {\deg}C. With
increasing temperature, all modes decrease monotonously in wavenumber without
anomaly, which attests the absence of a structural phase transition. The high
temperature spectral signature and extrapolation of band positions to higher
temperatures suggest a decreasing orthorhombic distortion towards the ideal
cubic structure. Our study indicates that this orthorhombic-to-cubic phase
transition is close to or higher than the melting point of both rare-earth
scandates (\approx 2100 {\deg}C), which might exclude the possibility of the
experimental observation of such a phase transition before melting. The
temperature-dependent shift of Raman phonons is also discussed in the context
of thermal expansion
Post-spinel transformations and equation of state in ZnGa2O4: Determination at high-pressure by in situ x-ray diffraction
Room temperature angle-dispersive x-ray diffraction measurements on spinel
ZnGa2O4 up to 56 GPa show evidence of two structural phase transformations. At
31.2 GPa, ZnGa2O4 undergoes a transition from the cubic spinel structure to a
tetragonal spinel structure similar to that of ZnMn2O4. At 55 GPa, a second
transition to the orthorhombic marokite structure (CaMn2O4-type) takes place.
The equation of state of cubic spinel ZnGa2O4 is determined: V0 = 580.1(9) A3,
B0 = 233(8) GPa, B0'= 8.3(4), and B0''= -0.1145 GPa-1 (implied value); showing
that ZnGa2O4 is one of the less compressible spinels studied to date. For the
tetragonal structure an equation of state is also determined: V0 = 257.8(9) A3,
B0 = 257(11) GPa, B0'= 7.5(6), and B0''= -0.0764 GPa-1 (implied value). The
reported structural sequence coincides with that found in NiMn2O4 and MgMn2O4.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, 2 Table
Experimental evidence of thermal fluctuations on the X-ray absorption near-edge structure at the aluminum K-edge
After a review of temperature-dependent experimental x-ray absorption
near-edge structure (XANES) and related theoretical developments, we present
the Al K-edge XANES spectra of corundum and beryl for temperature ranging from
300K to 930K. These experimental results provide a first evidence of the role
of thermal fluctuation in XANES at the Al K-edge especially in the pre-edge
region. The study is carried out by polarized XANES measurements of single
crystals. For any orientation of the sample with respect to the x-ray beam, the
pre-edge peak grows and shifts to lower energy with temperature. In addition
temperature induces modifications in the position and intensities of the main
XANES features. First-principles DFT calculations are performed for both
compounds. They show that the pre-edge peak originates from forbidden 1s to 3s
transitions induced by vibrations. Three existing theoretical models are used
to take vibrations into account in the absorption cross section calculations:
i) an average of the XANES spectra over the thermal displacements of the
absorbing atom around its equilibrium position, ii) a method based on the crude
Born-Oppenheimer approximation where only the initial state is averaged over
thermal displacements, iii) a convolution of the spectra obtained for the atoms
at the equilibrium positions with an approximate phonon spectral function. The
theoretical spectra so obtained permit to qualitatively understand the origin
of the spectral modifications induced by temperature. However the correct
treatment of thermal fluctuation in XANES spectroscopy requires more
sophisticated theoretical tools
High-pressure investigations of CaTiO3 up to 60 GPa using X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy
In this work, we investigate calcium titanate (CaTiO3 - CTO) using X-ray
diffraction and Raman spectroscopy up to 60 and 55 GPa respectively. Both
experiments show that the orthorhombic Pnma structure remains stable up to the
highest pressures measured, in contradiction to ab-initio predictions. A fit of
the compression data with a second-order Birch-Murnaghan equation of state
yields a bulk modulus K0 of 181.0(6) GPa. The orthorhombic distortion is found
to increase slightly with pressure, in agreement with previous experiments at
lower pressures and the general rules for the evolution of perovskites under
pressure. High-pressure polarized Raman spectra also enable us to clarify the
Raman mode assignment of CTO and identify the modes corresponding to rigid
rotation of the octahedra, A-cation shifts and Ti-O bond stretching. The Raman
signature is then discussed in terms of compression mechanisms.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 4 table
Pressure Dependence of the Magnetic Anisotropy in the "Single-Molecule Magnet" [Mn4O3Br(OAc)3(dbm)3]
The anisotropy splitting in the ground state of the single-molecule magnet
[Mn4O3Br(OAc)3(dbm)3] is studied by inelastic neutron scattering as a function
of hydrostatic pressure. This allows a tuning of the anisotropy and thus the
energy barrier for slow magnetisation relaxation at low temperatures. The value
of the negative axial anisotropy parameter changes from
-0.0627(1) meV at ambient to -0.0603(3) meV at 12 kbar pressure, and in the
same pressure range the height of the energy barrier between up and down spins
is reduced from 1.260(5) meV to 1.213(9) meV. Since the bond is
significantly softer and thus more compressible than the bonds,
pressure induces a tilt of the single ion Mn anisotropy axes, resulting
in the net reduction of the axial cluster anisotropy.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
High-pressure structural investigation of several zircon-type orthovanadates
Room temperature angle-dispersive x-ray diffraction measurements on
zircon-type EuVO4, LuVO4, and ScVO4 were performed up to 27 GPa. In the three
compounds we found evidence of a pressure-induced structural phase
transformation from zircon to a scheelite-type structure. The onset of the
transition is near 8 GPa, but the transition is sluggish and the low- and
high-pressure phases coexist in a pressure range of about 10 GPa. In EuVO4 and
LuVO4 a second transition to a M-fergusonite-type phase was found near 21 GPa.
The equations of state for the zircon and scheelite phases are also determined.
Among the three studied compounds, we found that ScVO4 is less compressible
than EuVO4 and LuVO4, being the most incompressible orthovanadate studied to
date. The sequence of structural transitions and compressibilities are
discussed in comparison with other zircon-type oxides.Comment: 34 pages, 2 Tables, 11 Figure
EXAFS study of lead-free relaxor ferroelectric BaTi(1-x)Zr(x)O3 at the Zr K-edge
Extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) experiments at the Zr K-edge
were carried out on perovskite relaxor ferroelectrics BaTi(1-x)Zr(x)O3 (BTZ) (x
= 0.25, 0.30, 0.35), and on BaZrO3 for comparison. Structural information up to
4.5 A around the Zr atoms is obtained, revealing that the local structure
differs notably from the average Pm-3m cubic structure deduced from X-ray
diffraction. In particular, our results show that the distance between Zr atoms
and their first oxygen neighbors is independent of the Zr substitution rate x
and equal to that measured in BaZrO3, while the X-ray cubic cell parameter
increases linearly with x. Furthermore, we show that the Zr atoms tend to
segregate in Zr-rich regions. We propose that the relaxor behavior in BTZ is
linked to random elastic fields generated by this particular chemical
arrangement, rather than to random electric fields as is the case in most
relaxors.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Two and Three Dimensional Incommensurate Modulation in Optimally-Doped BiSrCaCuO
X-ray scattering measurements on optimally-doped single crystal samples of
the high temperature superconductor BiSrCaCuO reveal
the presence of three distinct incommensurate charge modulations, each
involving a roughly fivefold increase in the unit cell dimension along the {\bf
b}-direction. The strongest scattering comes from the well known (H, K
0.21, L) modulation and its harmonics. However, we also observe broad
diffraction which peak up at the L values complementary to those which
characterize the known modulated structure. These diffraction features
correspond to correlation lengths of roughly a unit cell dimension,
20 in the {\bf c} direction, and of 185
parallel to the incommensurate wavevector. We interpret these features as
arising from three dimensional incommensurate domains and the interfaces
between them, respectively. In addition we investigate the recently discovered
incommensuate modulations which peak up at (1/2, K 0.21, L) and related
wavevectors. Here we explicitly study the L-dependence of this scattering and
see that these charge modulations are two dimensional in nature with weak
correlations on the scale of a bilayer thickness, and that they correspond to
short range, isotropic correlation lengths within the basal plane. We relate
these new incommensurate modulations to the electronic nanostructure observed
in BiSrCaCuO using STM topography.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Glen Torridon Mineralogy and the Sedimentary History of the Clay Mineral Bearing Unit
Clay minerals are common in ancient terrains on Mars and their presence at the surface alludes to aqueous processes in the Noachian to Early Hesperian (>3.5 Ga). Gale crater was selected as Curiositys landing site largely because of the identification of clay mineral rich strata from orbit. On Earth, the types of clay minerals (i.e., smectites) identified in Gale crater are typically juvenile weathering products that ultimately record the interaction between primary igneous minerals with the hydrosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere. Trioctahedral and dioctahedral smectite were identified by Curiosity in units stratigraphically below the Clay Mineral-Bearing Unit (CBU) identified from orbit. Compositional and sedimentological data suggest the smectite formed via authigenesis in a lake environment and may have been altered during early diagenesis. The CBU is stratigraphically equivalent to a hematite-rich unit to the north and stratigraphically underlies sulfate-rich units to the south, suggesting a dynamic environment and evolving history of water in the ancient Gale crater lake. Targeting these clay mineral rich areas on Mars with rover missions provides an opportunity to explore the aqueous and sedimentary history of the planet
Chiral Polymerization in Open Systems From Chiral-Selective Reaction Rates
We investigate the possibility that prebiotic homochirality can be achieved
exclusively through chiral-selective reaction rate parameters without any other
explicit mechanism for chiral bias. Specifically, we examine an open network of
polymerization reactions, where the reaction rates can have chiral-selective
values. The reactions are neither autocatalytic nor do they contain explicit
enantiomeric cross-inhibition terms. We are thus investigating how rare a set
of chiral-selective reaction rates needs to be in order to generate a
reasonable amount of chiral bias. We quantify our results adopting a
statistical approach: varying both the mean value and the rms dispersion of the
relevant reaction rates, we show that moderate to high levels of chiral excess
can be achieved with fairly small chiral bias, below 10%. Considering the
various unknowns related to prebiotic chemical networks in early Earth and the
dependence of reaction rates to environmental properties such as temperature
and pressure variations, we argue that homochirality could have been achieved
from moderate amounts of chiral selectivity in the reaction rates.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Origins of Life and
Evolution of Biosphere
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