4 research outputs found
Recent developments in surface science and engineering, thin films, nanoscience, biomaterials, plasma science, and vacuum technology
Nanometer-sized structures, surfaces and sub-surface phenomena have played an enormous role in science and technological applications and represent a driving-force of current interdisciplinary science. Recent developments include the atomic-scale characterization of nanoparticles, molecular reactions at surfaces, magnetism at the atomic scale, photoelectric characterization of nanostructures as well as two-dimensional solids. Research and development of smart nanostructured materials governed by their surface properties is a rapidly growing field. The main challenge is to develop an accurate and robust electronic structure description. The density of surface-related trap states is analyzed by transient UV photoconductivity and temperature-dependent admittance spectroscopy. An advanced application of thin films on shaped substrates is the deposition of catalytic layers on hollow glass microspheres for hydrogen storage controlled exothermal hydrolytic release. Surface properties of thin films including dissolution and corrosion, fouling resistance, and hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity are explored to improve materials response in biological environments and medicine. Trends in surface bio-functionalization routes based on vacuum techniques, together with advances in surface analysis of biomaterials, are discussed. Pioneering advances in the application of X-ray nanodiffraction of thin film cross-sections for characterizing nanostructure and local strain including in-situ experiments during nanoindentation are described. Precise measurements and control of plasma properties are important for fundamental investigations and the development of next generation plasma-based technologies. Critical control parameters are the flux and energy distribution of incident ions at reactive surfaces||it is also crucial to control the dynamics of electrons initiating non-equilibrium chemical reactions. The most promising approach involves the exploitation of complementary advantages in direct measurements combined with specifically designed numerical simulations. Exciting new developments in vacuum science and technology have focused on forward-looking and next generation standards and sensors that take advantage of photonics based measurements. These measurements are inherently fast, frequency based, easily transferrable to sensors based on photonics and hold promise of being disruptive and transformative. Realization of Pascal, the SI unit for pressure, a cold-atom trap based ultra-high and extreme high vacuum (UHV and XHV) standard, dynamic pressure measurements and a photonic based thermometer are three key examples that are presented.660120160Agências de fomento estrangeiras apoiaram essa pesquisa, mais informações acesse artig
The impact of recent advances in laboratory astrophysics on our understanding of the cosmos
An emerging theme in modern astrophysics is the connection between
astronomical observations and the underlying physical phenomena that drive our
cosmos. Both the mechanisms responsible for the observed astrophysical
phenomena and the tools used to probe such phenomena - the radiation and
particle spectra we observe - have their roots in atomic, molecular, condensed
matter, plasma, nuclear and particle physics. Chemistry is implicitly included
in both molecular and condensed matter physics. This connection is the theme of
the present report, which provides a broad, though non-exhaustive, overview of
progress in our understanding of the cosmos resulting from recent theoretical
and experimental advances in what is commonly called laboratory astrophysics.
This work, carried out by a diverse community of laboratory astrophysicists, is
increasingly important as astrophysics transitions into an era of precise
measurement and high fidelity modeling.Comment: 61 pages. 11 figures; to appear in Reports on Progress in Physic