16,657 research outputs found
Heterostructure solar cells
The performance of gallium arsenide solar cells grown on Ge substrates is discussed. In some cases the substrate was thinned to reduce overall cell weight with good ruggedness. The conversion efficiency of 2 by 2 cm cells under AMO reached 17.1 percent with a cell thickness of 6 mils. The work described forms the basis for future cascade cell structures, where similar interconnecting problems between the top cell and the bottom cell must be solved. Applications of the GaAs/Ge solar cell in space and the expected payoffs are discussed
A parallel VLSI architecture for a digital filter of arbitrary length using Fermat number transforms
A parallel architecture for computation of the linear convolution of two sequences of arbitrary lengths using the Fermat number transform (FNT) is described. In particular a pipeline structure is designed to compute a 128-point FNT. In this FNT, only additions and bit rotations are required. A standard barrel shifter circuit is modified so that it performs the required bit rotation operation. The overlap-save method is generalized for the FNT to compute a linear convolution of arbitrary length. A parallel architecture is developed to realize this type of overlap-save method using one FNT and several inverse FNTs of 128 points. The generalized overlap save method alleviates the usual dynamic range limitation in FNTs of long transform lengths. Its architecture is regular, simple, and expandable, and therefore naturally suitable for VLSI implementation
Observation of Fermi-energy dependent unitary impurity resonances in a strong topological insulator Bi_2Se_3 with scanning tunneling spectroscopy
Scanning tunneling spectroscopic studies of Bi_2Se_3 epitaxial films on Si (111) substrates reveal highly localized unitary impurity resonances associated with non-magnetic quantum impurities. The strength of the resonances depends on the energy difference between the Fermi level (E_F) and the Dirac point (E_D) and diverges as E_F approaches E_D. The Dirac-cone surface state of the host recovers within ~ 2Å spatial distance from impurities, suggesting robust topological protection of the surface state of topological insulators against high-density impurities that preserve time reversal symmetry
Improved silicon nitride for advanced heat engines
The AiResearch Casting Company baseline silicon nitride (92 percent GTE SN-502 Si sub 3 N sub 4 plus 6 percent Y sub 2 O sub 3 plus 2 percent Al sub 2 O sub 3) was characterized with methods that included chemical analysis, oxygen content determination, electrophoresis, particle size distribution analysis, surface area determination, and analysis of the degree of agglomeration and maximum particle size of elutriated powder. Test bars were injection molded and processed through sintering at 0.68 MPa (100 psi) of nitrogen. The as-sintered test bars were evaluated by X-ray phase analysis, room and elevated temperature modulus of rupture strength, Weibull modulus, stress rupture, strength after oxidation, fracture origins, microstructure, and density from quantities of samples sufficiently large to generate statistically valid results. A series of small test matrices were conducted to study the effects and interactions of processing parameters which included raw materials, binder systems, binder removal cycles, injection molding temperatures, particle size distribution, sintering additives, and sintering cycle parameters
Effect of Strain Relaxation on Magnetotransport properties of epitaxial La_0.7Ca_0.3MnO_3 films
In this paper, we have studied the effect of strain relaxation on
magneto-transport properties of La_0.7Ca_0.3MnO_3 epitaxial films (200 nm
thick), which were deposited by pulsed laser deposition technique under
identical conditions. All the films are epitaxial and have cubic unit cell. The
amount of strain relaxation has been varied by taking three different single
crystal substrates of SrTiO_3, LaAlO_3 and MgO. It has been found that for
thicker films the strain gets relaxed and produces variable amount of disorder
depending on the strength of strain relaxation. The magnitude of lattice
relaxation has been found to be 0.384, 3.057 and 6.411 percent for film
deposited on SrTiO_3, LaAlO_3 and MgO respectively. The films on LaAlO_3 and
SrTiO_3 show higher T_{IM} of 243 K and 217 K respectively as compared to
T_{IM} of 191 K for the film on MgO. Similarly T_C of the films on SrTiO_3 and
LaAlO_3 is sharper and has value of 245 K and 220 K respectively whereas the TC
of the film on MgO is 175 K. Higher degree of relaxation creates more defects
and hence TIM (T_C) of the film on MgO is significantly lower than of SrTiO_3
and LaAlO_3. We have adopted a different approach to correlate the effect of
strain relaxation on magneto-transport properties of LCMO films by evaluating
the resistivity variation through Mott's VRH model. The variable presence of
disorder in these thick films due to lattice relaxation which have been
analyzed through Mott's VRH model provides a strong additional evidence that
the strength of lattice relaxation produces disorder dominantly by increase in
density of defects such as stacking faults, dislocations, etc. which affect the
magneto-transport properties of thick epitaxial La_0.7Ca_0.3MnO_3 films
Measurement of a Sign-Changing Two-Gap Superconducting Phase in Electron-Doped Ba(Fe_{1-x}Co_x)_2As_2 Single Crystals using Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy
Scanning tunneling spectroscopic studies of (x =
0.06, 0.12) single crystals reveal direct evidence for predominantly two-gap
superconductivity. These gaps decrease with increasing temperature and vanish
above the superconducting transition . The two-gap nature and the slightly
doping- and energy-dependent quasiparticle scattering interferences near the
wave-vectors and are consistent with
sign-changing -wave superconductivity. The excess zero-bias conductance and
the large gap-to- ratios suggest dominant unitary impurity scattering.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Paper accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letters. Contact author: Nai-Chang Yeh ([email protected]
M\"{o}ssbauer study of the '11' iron-based superconductors parent compound Fe(1+x)Te
57Fe Moessbauer spectroscopy was applied to investigate the superconductor
parent compound Fe(1+x)Te for x=0.06, 0.10, 0.14, 0.18 within the temperature
range 4.2 K - 300 K. A spin density wave (SDW) within the iron atoms occupying
regular tetrahedral sites was observed with the square root of the mean square
amplitude at 4.2 K varying between 9.7 T and 15.7 T with increasing x. Three
additional magnetic spectral components appeared due to the interstitial iron
distributed over available sites between the Fe-Te layers. The excess iron
showed hyperfine fields at approximately 16 T, 21 T and 49 T for three
respective components at 4.2 K. The component with a large field of 49 T
indicated the presence of isolated iron atoms with large localized magnetic
moment in interstitial positions. Magnetic ordering of the interstitial iron
disappeared in accordance with the fallout of the SDW with the increasing
temperature
Dimensionality of superconductivity in the infinite-layer high-temperature cuprate Sr0.9M0.1CuO2 (M = La, Gd)
The high magnetic field phase diagram of the electron-doped infinite layer
high-temperature superconducting (high-T_c) compound Sr_{0.9}La_{0.1}CuO_2 was
probed by means of penetration depth and magnetization measurements in pulsed
fields to 60 T. An anisotropy ratio of 8 was detected for the upper critical
fields with H parallel (H_{c2}^{ab}) and perpendicular (H_{c2}^c) to the CuO_2
planes, with H_{c2}^{ab} extrapolating to near the Pauli paramagnetic limit of
160 T. The longer superconducting coherence length than the lattice constant
along the c-axis indicates that the orbital degrees of freedom of the pairing
wavefunction are three dimensional. By contrast, low-field magnetization and
specific heat measurements of Sr_{0.9}Gd_{0.1}CuO_2 indicate a coexistence of
bulk s-wave superconductivity with large moment Gd paramagnetism close to the
CuO_2 planes, suggesting a strong confinement of the spin degrees of freedom of
the Cooper pair to the CuO_2 planes. The region between H_{c2}^{ab} and the
irreversibility line in the magnetization, H_{irr}^{ab}, is anomalously large
for an electron-doped high-T_c cuprate, suggesting the existence of additional
quantum fluctuations perhaps due to a competing spin-density wave order.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B, Rapid Communications
(2004). Corresponding author: Nai-Chang Yeh (E-mail: [email protected]
Quasiparticle spectroscopy and high-field phase diagrams of cuprate superconductors -- An investigation of competing orders and quantum criticality
We present scanning tunneling spectroscopic and high-field thermodynamic
studies of hole- and electron-doped (p- and n-type) cuprate superconductors.
Our experimental results are consistent with the notion that the ground state
of cuprates is in proximity to a quantum critical point (QCP) that separates a
pure superconducting (SC) phase from a phase comprised of coexisting SC and a
competing order, and the competing order is likely a spin-density wave (SDW).
The effect of applied magnetic field, tunneling current, and disorder on the
revelation of competing orders and on the low-energy excitations of the
cuprates is discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in the International
Journal of Modern Physics B. (Correspondence author: Nai-Chang Yeh, e-mail:
[email protected]
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