108 research outputs found
Photoinduced charge separation in Q1D heterojunction materials: Evidence for electron-hole pair separation in mixed-halide solids
Resonance Raman experiments on doped and photoexcited single crystals of
mixed-halide complexes (=Pt; =Cl,Br) clearly indicate charge
separation: electron polarons preferentially locate on PtBr segments while hole
polarons are trapped within PtCl segments. This polaron selectivity,
potentially very useful for device applications, is demonstrated theoretically
using a discrete, 3/4-filled, two-band, tight-binding, extended Peierls-Hubbard
model. Strong hybridization of the PtCl and PtBr electronic bands is the
driving force for separation.Comment: n LaTeX, figures available by mail from JTG ([email protected]
Pressure Tuning of the Charge Density Wave in the Halogen-Bridged Transition-Metal (MX) Solid
We report the pressure dependence up to 95 kbar of Raman active stretching
modes in the quasi-one-dimensional MX chain solid . The data
indicate that a predicted pressure-induced insulator-to-metal transition does
not occur, but are consistent with the solid undergoing either a
three-dimensional structural distortion, or a transition from a charge-density
wave to another broken-symmetry ground state. We show that such a transition
cacan be well-modeled within a Peierls-Hubbard Hamiltonian. 1993 PACS:
71.30.+h, 71.45.Lr, 75.30.Fv, 78.30.-j, 81.40.VwComment: 4 pages, ReVTeX 3.0, figures available from the authors on request
(Gary Kanner, [email protected]), to be published in Phys Rev B Rapid
Commun, REVISION: minor typos corrected, LA-UR-94-246
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Selective separation of ultra-fine particles by magnetophoresis
The selective and-specific extraction of species of interest fiom local environmental and other sample sources are importaut fbr scientific research, industrial processes, and environmental applications. A novel process for selective separation of ultrafine particles using 'magnetophoresis' is investigated. The principle of this process is that the direction and velocity of particle movement in a magnetic field are determined by magnetic, gravitational, and drag fbrces. By controlling these fbrces, one is able to control the migration rates of different species and then magnetically fiactionate mixtures of species into discrete groups. This study demonstrated for the fist time the selective separation of various species, such as iron (111) oxide, cupric (11) oxide, samarium (In) oxide, and cerium (III) oxide, by magnetophoresis. To better understand this phenomenon, a fbrce-balance model was developed that provides a good interpretation of the experimental results
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Magnetic separation for soil decontamination
High gradient magnetic separation (HGMS) is a physical separation process that is used to extract magnetic particles from mixtures. The technology is used on a large scale in the kaolin clay industry to whiten or brighten kaolin clay and increase its value. Because all uranium and plutonium compounds are slightly magnetic, HGMS can be used to separate these contaminants from non-magnetic soils. A Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) was signed in 1992 between Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) and Lockheed Environmental Systems and Technologies Company (LESAT) to develop HGMS for soil decontamination. This paper reports progress and describes the HGMS technology
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Use of high gradient magnetic separation for actinide application
Decontamination of materials such as soils or waste water that contain radioactive isotopes, heavy metals, or hazardous components is a subject of great interest. Magnetic separation is a physical separation process that segregates materials on the basis of magnetic susceptibility. Because the process relies on physical properties, separations can be achieved while producing a minimum of secondary waste. Most traditional physical separation processes effectively treat particles larger than 70 microns. In many situations, the radioactive contaminants are found concentrated in the fine particle size fraction of less than 20 microns. For effective decontamination of the fine particle size fraction most current operations resort to chemical dissolution methods for treatment. High gradient magnetic separation (HGMS) is able to effectively treat particles from 90 to {approximately}0.1 micron in diameter. The technology is currently used on the 60 ton per hour scale in the kaolin clay industry. When the field gradient is of sufficiently high intensity, paramagnetic particles can be physically captured and separated from extraneous nonmagnetic material. Because all actinide compounds are paramagnetic, magnetic separation of actinide containing mixtures is feasible. The advent of reliable superconducting magnets also makes magnetic separation of weakly paramagnetic species attractive. HGMS work at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) is being developed for soil remediation, waste water treatment and treatment of actinide chemical processing residues. LANL and Lockheed Environmental Systems and Technologies Company (LESAT) have worked on a co-operative research and development agreement (CRADA) to develop HGMS for radioactive soil decontamination. The program is designed to transfer HGMS from the laboratory and other industries for the commercial treatment of radioactive contaminated materials. 9 refs., 2 figs., 2 tabs
The world's smallest capacitive dilatometer, for high-resolution thermal expansion and magnetostriction in high magnetic fields
Contains fulltext :
177430.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)9 p
Pyridyl-thiazoles as a new class of ligand for metallosupramolecular chemistry: formation of double and triple helicates with Cu(ii)
Reaction of either 1,10-phenanthroline-2-thioamide or pyridine-2-thioamide with 1,4-dibromobutane-2,3-dione affords the novel thiazole-containing polydentate ligands L1 and L2, respectively; these ligands form dinuclear double and triple helicate architectures, respectively, with Cu2+
New multidentate ligands for supramolecular coordination chemistry: double and triple helical complexes of ligands containing pyridyl and thiazolyl donor units
Four new multidentate N-donor ligands L1–L4 have been prepared which contain a combination of pyridyl and thiazolyl donor units. The syntheses of these ligands are facile and high-yielding, being based on reaction of an -bromoacetyl unit with a thioamide to form the thiazolyl ring. The extended linear sequence of ortho-linked N-donor heterocycles (four for L1, six for L2; five for L3; and six for L4) is reminiscent of the well-known linear oligopyridines, although these new ligands are much easier to make and have significantly different geometric coordination properties because the presence of the five-membered thiazolyl rings results in natural breaks of the ligand backbone into distinct bidentate or terdentate domains. Thus, the tetradentate ligand L1 partitions into two bidentate domains to give dinuclear triple helicates [M2(L1)3]4+ with six-coordinate first-row transition metal dications (M = Co, Cu, Zn). The hexadentate ligand L2 partitions into two terdentate domains to give dinuclear double helicates [M2(L2)2]4+ with six-coordinate metal ions (M = Cu, Zn). In the double helicate [Cu2(L3)2]4+ the pentadentate ligand L3 only uses its two terminal bidentate binding sites, resulting in four-coordinate Cu(II) centres and a non-coordinated pyridyl residue in the centre of each of the two ligand strands. These pendant pyridyl residues are directed towards each other to give a potentially two-coordinate cavity between the metal ions in the centre of the helicate. Similarly, in the double helicate [Cu2(L4)2]4+ the metal ions are only four-coordinate, with each ligand having its central bipyridyl unit un-coordinated. This results in a potentially four-coordinate cavity between the two metal ions in the centre of the helicate. These easy-to-prepare ligands offer a great deal of scope for the development of multinuclear helicate
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