934 research outputs found
The role of hydrogen in room-temperature ferromagnetism at graphite surfaces
We present a x-ray dichroism study of graphite surfaces that addresses the
origin and magnitude of ferromagnetism in metal-free carbon. We find that, in
addition to carbon states, also hydrogen-mediated electronic states
exhibit a net spin polarization with significant magnetic remanence at room
temperature. The observed magnetism is restricted to the top 10 nm of
the irradiated sample where the actual magnetization reaches emu/g
at room temperature. We prove that the ferromagnetism found in metal-free
untreated graphite is intrinsic and has a similar origin as the one found in
proton bombarded graphite.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, submitted to New Journal of Physic
A compact ultrahigh-vacuum system for the in situ investigation of III/V semiconductor surfaces
A compact ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) system has been built to study growth and properties of III/V semiconductor surfaces and nanostructures. The system allows one to grow III/V semiconductor surfaces by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) and analyze their surface by a variety of surface analysis techniques. The geometric structure is examined by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), low-energy electron diffraction and reflection high-energy electron diffraction. The electronic properties of the surfaces are studied by angular resolved photoemission either in the laboratory using a helium discharge lamp or at the Berlin Synchrotron Radiation Facility BESSY. In order to meet the space restriction at BESSY the system dimensions are kept very small. A detailed description of the apparatus and the sample handling system is given. For the UHV-STM (Park Scientific Instruments, VP2) a new, versatile tip handling mechanism has been developed. It allows the transfer of tips out of the chamber and furthermore, the in situ tip cleaning by electron annealing. In addition, another more reliable in situ tip-preparation technique operating the STM in the field emission regime is described. The ability of the system is shown by an atomically resolved STM image of the c(4×4) reconstructed GaAs(001) surface
Bis(1,4,7-trithiacyclononane)nickel(II) bis(tetrafluoridoborate) nitromethane disolvate
The homoleptic thioether title complex, [Ni(C6H12S3)2](BF4)2·2CH3NO2, shows the expeced hexakis(thioether) octahedral environment around the NiII atom. It crystallized as two crystallographically independent complex cations, [Ni(9S3)2]2+ (9S3 = 1,4,7-trithiacyclononane), within the unit cell where each NiII lies on an inversion center. In addition to the complex cations, there are two crystallographically independent BF4
− anions present to balance the charge, and each shows disorder along a pseudo-C
3 axis with ratios of 0.53 (2):0.47 (2) and 0.55 (2):0.45 (2). Two nitromethane solvent molecules per complex cation are also present in the unit cell
Proton-induced magnetic order in carbon: SQUID measurements
In this work we have studied systematically the changes in the magnetic
behavior of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) samples after proton
irradiation in the MeV energy range. Superconducting quantum interferometer
device (SQUID) results obtained from samples with thousands of localized spots
of micrometer size as well on samples irradiated with a broad beam confirm
previously reported results. Both, the para- and ferromagnetic contributions
depend strongly on the irradiation details. The results indicate that the
magnetic moment at saturation of spots of micrometer size is of the order of
emu.Comment: Invited contribution at ICACS2006 to be published in Nucl. Instr. and
Meth. B. 8 pages and 6 figure
- …