7,347 research outputs found

    Sorption of apolar pesticides by units of benzoic acid propyl ester in cyclic phosphazene

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    Indexación: Scopus.The effects of temperature, pH and agitation time (equilibrium) on the adsorption process of different pesticides on N3P3(OC6H4COOCH2CH2CH3)6 was studied. With optimal conditions experimental, the adsorption isotherms have been realized with through Langmuir and Freundlich models. Pesticides are compounds used mainly in agriculture to control various species (plants, insects, worms, fungi). Due to their physicochemical properties, they can remain for a long time in the application sites, bioaccumulating and moving between environmental compartments which generate various environmental problems. The results obtained showed a physisorption mechanism for the fve pesticides studied, with higher sorption for: azinphos methyl (93,5 mg kg-1), carbaryl (290.5 mg kg-1) and carbofuran (580.5 mg kg-1) at 20 ° C, according to the models used. © 2018 Sociedad Chilena de Quimica. All rights reserved.https://scielo.conicyt.cl/pdf/jcchems/v62n4/0717-9324-jcchems-62-04-3783.pd

    Tight binding model for iron pnictides

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    We propose a five-band tight-binding model for the Fe-As layers of iron pnictides with the hopping amplitudes calculated within the Slater-Koster framework. The band structure found in DFT, including the orbital content of the bands, is well reproduced using only four fitting parameters to determine all the hopping amplitudes. The model allows to study the changes in the electronic structure caused by a modification of the angle α\alpha formed by the Fe-As bonds and the Fe-plane and recovers the phenomenology previously discussed in the literature. We also find that changes in α\alpha modify the shape and orbital content of the Fermi surface sheets.Comment: 12 pages, 6 eps figures. Figs 1 and 2 modified, minor changes in the text. A few references adde

    Conductivity anisotropy in the antiferromagnetic state of iron pnictides

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    Recent experiments on iron pnictides have uncovered a large in-plane resistivity anisotropy with a surprising result: the system conducts better in the antiferromagnetic x direction than in the ferromagnetic y direction. We address this problem by calculating the ratio of the Drude weight along the x and y directions, Dx/Dy, for the mean-field Q=(\pi,0) magnetic phase diagram of a five-band model for the undoped pnictides. We find that Dx/Dy ranges between 0.3 < D_x/D_y < 1.4 for different interaction parameters. Large values of orbital ordering favor an anisotropy opposite to the one found experimentally. On the other hand D_x/D_y is strongly dependent on the topology and morfology of the reconstructed Fermi surface. Our results points against orbital ordering as the origin of the observed conductivity anisotropy, which may be ascribed to the anisotropy of the Fermi velocity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 pdf figures. Fig 1(b) changed, one equation corrected, minor changes in the text, references update

    Orbital differentiation and the role of orbital ordering in the magnetic state of Fe superconductors

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    We analyze the metallic (pi,0) antiferromagnetic state of a five-orbital model for iron superconductors. We find that with increasing interactions the system does not evolve trivially from the pure itinerant to the pure localized regime. Instead we find a region with a strong orbital differentiation between xy and yz, which are half-filled gapped states at the Fermi level, and itinerant zx, 3z^2-r^2 and x^2-y^2. We argue that orbital ordering between yz and zx orbitals arises as a consequence of the interplay of the exchange energy in the antiferromagnetic x direction and the kinetic energy gained by the itinerant orbitals along the ferromagnetic y direction with an overall dominance of the kinetic energy gain. We indicate that iron superconductors are close to the boundary between the itinerant and the orbital differentiated regimes and that it could be possible to cross this boundary with doping.Comment: 6 pages, including 7 figures. As accepted in Phys. Rev.

    Giant magnetoimpedance in Vitrovac amorphous ribbons over [0.3-400 MHz] frequency range

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    Giant magneto impedance (GMI) effect for as-cast Vitrovac®^{\textrm{\scriptsize\textregistered}} amorphous ribbons (Vacuumschmelze, Germany) in two configurations (parallel and normal to the ribbon axis) is studied over the frequency range [0.3-400 MHz] and under static magnetic fields -160 Oe <Hdc<< H_{dc} < +160 Oe. A variety of peak features and GMI ratio values, falling within a small field range, are observed and discussed.Comment: Paper submitted to International Conference on Magnetism 2003 (ICM Rome 2003

    Metal-to-glass ratio and the Magneto-Impedance of glass-covered CoFeBSi microwires at high frequencies

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    High frequency [1-500 MHz] measurements of the Magneto-Impedance (MI) of glass-covered Co69.4_{69.4}Fe3.7_{3.7}B15.9_{15.9}Si11_{11} microwires are carried out with various metal-to-wire diameter ratios. A twin-peak, anhysteretic behaviour is observed as a function of magnetic field. A maximum in ΔZ/Z\Delta Z/Z appears at different values of the frequency ff, 125, 140 and 85 MHz with the corresponding diameter ratio pp = 0.80, 0.55 and 0.32. We describe the measurement technique and interpret our results with a thermodynamic model that leads to a clearer view of the effects of pp on the maximum value of MI and the anisotropy field.Comment: 5 pages and 6 figure
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