634 research outputs found
Lithium Diffusion & Magnetism in Battery Cathode Material LixNi1/3Co1/3Mn1/3O2
We have studied low-temperature magnetic properties as well as
high-temperature lithium ion diffusion in the battery cathode materials
LixNi1/3Co1/3Mn1/3O2 by the use of muon spin rotation/relaxation. Our data
reveal that the samples enter into a 2D spin-glass state below TSG=12 K. We
further show that lithium diffusion channels become active for T>Tdiff=125 K
where the Li-ion hopping-rate [nu(T)] starts to increase exponentially.
Further, nu(T) is found to fit very well to an Arrhenius type equation and the
activation energy for the diffusion process is extracted as Ea=100 meV.Comment: Submitted to Journal of Physics: Conference Series (2014
Magnetic Order in the 2D Heavy-Fermion System CePt2In7 studied by muSR
The low-temperature microscopic magnetic properties of the quasi-2D
heavyfermion compound, CePt2In7 are investigated by using a positive muon-spin
rotation and relaxation (?muSR) technique. Clear evidence for the formation of
a commensurate antiferromagnetic order below TN=5.40 K is presented. The
magnetic order parameter is shown to fit well to a modified BSC gap-energy
function in a strong-coupling scenario.Comment: Accepted in Journal of Physics: Conference Series (2014
Effects of principal stress rotation on the wave–seabed interactions
This paper simulates the wave–seabed interactions considering the principal stress rotation (PSR) by using the finite element method. The soil model is developed within the framework of kinematic hardening and the bounding surface concept, and it can properly consider the impact of PSR by treating the PSR generating stress rate independently. The simulation results are compared with centrifuge test results. The comparison indicates that the simulation with the soil model considering the PSR can better reproduce the test results on the development of pore water pressure and liquefaction than the soil model without considering the PSR. It indicates that it is important to consider the PSR impact in simulation of wave–seabed soil interactions
Nodal Landau Fermi-Liquid Quasiparticles in Overdoped LaSrCuO
Nodal angle resolved photoemission spectra taken on overdoped
LaSrCuO are presented and analyzed. It is proven that the
low-energy excitations are true Landau Fermi-liquid quasiparticles. We show
that momentum and energy distribution curves can be analyzed self-consistently
without quantitative knowledge of the bare band dispersion. Finally, by
imposing Kramers-Kronig consistency on the self-energy , insight into
the quasiparticle residue is gained. We conclude by comparing our results to
quasiparticle properties extracted from thermodynamic, magneto-resistance, and
high-field quantum oscillation experiments on overdoped
TlBaCuO.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Electronic structure near the 1/8-anomaly in La-based cuprates
We report an angle resolved photoemission study of the electronic structure
of the pseudogap state in \NdLSCO ( K). Two opposite dispersing Fermi
arcs are the main result of this study. The several scenarios that can explain
this observation are discussed.Comment: A high-resolution version can be found at
http://lns.web.psi.ch/lns/download/Pockets/arXiv.pd
Spectroscopic evidence for preformed Cooper pairs in the pseudogap phase of cuprates
Angle-resolved photoemission on underdoped LaSrCuO
reveals that in the pseudogap phase, the dispersion has two branches located
above and below the Fermi level with a minimum at the Fermi momentum. This is
characteristic of the Bogoliubov dispersion in the superconducting state. We
also observe that the superconducting and pseudogaps have the same d-wave form
with the same amplitude. Our observations provide direct evidence for preformed
Cooper pairs, implying that the pseudogap phase is a precursor to
superconductivity
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