424 research outputs found
Effect of high-intensity ultrasound on superconducting properties of polycrystalline YBCO
High intensity ultrasonic irradiation (sonication) of alkane slurries of
polycrystalline \ybco leads to a significant modification of the grain
morphology and, if performed with enforced oxygen flow, results in the increase
of the superconducting transition temperature. Sonication with added Fe(CO)
produces magnetic \fe2o3 nanoparticles deposited on the surface of \ybco (YBCO)
granules. Upon sintering these nanoparticles should act as efficient pinning
centers utilizing both condensation and magnetic contributions to the free
energy. The developed method could become a major technique to produce
practically useful high-pinning nanocomposite materials based on \ybco
superconductor.Comment: to be presented at LT-25 conferenc
Campbell Penetration Depth of a Superconductor in the Critical State
The magnetic penetration depth was measured in the presence
of a slowly relaxing supercurrent, . In single crystal
below approximately 25 K, is
strongly hysteretic. We propose that the irreversibility arises from a shift of
the vortex position within its pinning well as changes. The Campbell length
depends upon the ratio where is the critical current defined
through the Labusch parameter. Similar effects were observed in other cuprates
and in an organic superconductor
Off-axis electron holography of bacterial cells and magnetic nanoparticles in liquid
The mapping of electrostatic potentials and magnetic fields in liquids usingelectron holography has been considered to be unrealistic. Here, we showthat hydrated cells ofMagnetospirillum magneticumstrain AMB-1 and assem-blies of magnetic nanoparticles can be studied using off-axis electronholography in a fluid cell specimen holder within the transmission electronmicroscope. Considering that the holographic object and reference waveboth pass through liquid, the recorded electron holograms show sufficientinterference fringe contrast to permit reconstruction of the phase shift ofthe electron wave and mapping of the magnetic induction from bacterialmagnetite nanocrystals. We assess the challenges of performingin situmagne-tization reversal experiments using a fluid cell specimen holder, discussapproaches for improving spatial resolution and specimen stability, and outlinefuture perspectives for studying scientific phenomena, ranging from interpar-ticle interactions in liquids and electrical double layers at solid–liquidinterfaces to biomineralization and the mapping of electrostatic potentialsassociated with protein aggregation and folding
Magnetic irreversibility and Verwey transition in nano-crystalline bacterial magnetite
The magnetic properties of biologically-produced magnetite nanocrystals
biomineralized by four different magnetotactic bacteria were compared to those
of synthetic magnetite nanocrystals and large, high quality single crystals.
The magnetic feature at the Verwey temperature, , was clearly seen in
all nanocrystals, although its sharpness depended on the shape of individual
nanoparticles and whether or not the particles were arranged in magnetosome
chains. The transition was broader in the individual superparamagnetic
nanoparticles for which , where is the superparamagnetic
blocking temperature. For the nanocrystals organized in chains, the effective
blocking temperature and the Verwey transition is sharply
defined. No correlation between the particle size and was found.
Furthermore, measurements of suggest that magnetosome chains
behave as long magnetic dipoles where the local magnetic field is directed
along the chain and this result confirms that time-logarithmic magnetic
relaxation is due to the collective (dipolar) nature of the barrier for
magnetic moment reorientation
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