1,279 research outputs found
Superconductivity in metal rich Li-Pd-B ternary Boride
8K superconductivity was observed in the metal rich Li-Pd-B ternary system.
Structural, microstructural, electrical and magnetic investigations for various
compositions proved that Li2Pd3B compound, which has a cubic structure composed
of distorted Pd6B octahedrons, is responsible for the superconductivity. This
is the first observation of superconductivity in metal rich ternary borides
containing alkaline metal and Pd as a late transition metal. The compound
prepared by arc melting has high density, is stable in the air and has an upper
critical field, Hc2(0), of 6T.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figur
Enhanced tunability of thermodynamic stability of complex hydrides by the incorporation of H- anions
First-principles calculations were employed to investigate hypothetical complex hydrides (M,M')4FeH8 (M = Na, Li; M'=Mg, Zn, Y, Al). Besides complex anion [FeH6]4-, these materials contain two H- anions, which raise the total anionic charge state from tetravalent to hexavalent, and thereby significantly increasing the number of combinations of countercations. We have determined that similar to complex hydrides (M,M')2FeH6 containing only [FeH6]4-, the thermodynamic stability is tuned by the average cation electronegativity. Thus, the chemical flexibility provided by incorporating H- enhances the tunability of thermodynamic stability, which will be beneficial in obtaining optimal stability for hydrogen storage materials
First-principles study on the intermediate compounds of LiBH
We report the results of the first-principles calculation on the intermediate
compounds of LiBH. The stability of LiBH and LiBH has been examined with the ultrasoft pseudopotential method based on
the density functional theory. Theoretical prediction has suggested that
monoclinic LiBH is the most stable among the candidate
materials. We propose the following hydriding/dehydriding process of LiBH
via this intermediate compound : LiBHLiBH LiH HLiH B H. The hydrogen content and enthalpy of the first
reaction are estimated to be 10 mass% and 56 kJ/mol H, respectively, and
those of the second reaction are 4 mass% and 125 kJ/mol H. They are in good
agreement with experimental results of the thermal desorption spectra of
LiBH. Our calculation has predicted that the bending modes for the
-phonon frequencies of monoclinic LiBH are lower than
that of LiBH, while stretching modes are higher. These results are very
useful for the experimental search and identification of possible intermediate
compounds.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
Lithium colloids and color center creation in electron-irradiated Li2NH observed by electron-spin resonance
4 pagesInternational audienceWe have irradiated Li2NH powder with MeV electrons at room temperature and investigated the introduced defects with electron spin resonance. CESR indicates the presence of nanosize metallic Li colloids seen as a Lorentzian line with a g = 2.0023 and a line width DeltaH = 50 microT. A second, broader, signal (DeltaH = 3 to 4 mT) appears superimposed upon the Li line at low T (Curie-type behavior) which exhibits complex T-dependence with a break near 180 K for its g-value and DeltaH. We are suggesting for the latter a vacancy-type defect in the NH-sublattice, with freezing of its H-component below 180 K. When heated both the Li colloids and the color centers anneal around 100 C probably due to hydrogen evolution and subsequent chemical degradation
Pressure-induced structural transitions in MgH
The stability of MgH has been studied up to 20~GPa using
density-functional total-energy calculations. At ambient pressure
-MgH takes a TiO-rutile-type structure. -MgH is
predicted to transform into -MgH at 0.39~GPa. The calculated
structural data for - and -MgH are in very good agreement
with experimental values. At equilibrium the energy difference between these
modifications is very small, and as a result both phases coexist in a certain
volume and pressure field. Above 3.84~GPa -MgH transforms into
-MgH; consistent with experimental findings. Two further
transformations have been identified at still higher pressure: i) - to
-MgH at 6.73 GPa and (ii) - to -MgH at
10.26~GPa.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Dehydriding and rehydriding reactions of LiBH₄
Structural differences in LiBH₄ before and after the melting reaction at approximately 550 K were investigated to clarify the experimental method for the confirmation of reversible dehydriding and rehydriding reactions. Since the long-range order of LiBH₄ begins to disappear after the melting reaction was achieved, investigation of the atomistic vibrations of the [BH₄]-anion in LiBH₄ was found to be effective for the confirmation of the reversibility. In the present study, LiBH₄ was successively dehydrided (decomposed) into LiH and B under 1 MPa of hydrogen at 873 K, and then rehydrided (recombined) into LiBH₄ under 35 MPa of hydrogen at the same temperature (873 K). The temperatures at the beginning and ending of the dehydriding reaction are lowered, by approximately 30 K, for LiBH₄ substituted (or mixed) with Mg (atomic ratio of Li:Mg=9:1) as compared to those for LiBH₄ alone. This is similar to the tendency exhibited by LiNH₂
Magnetization measurements on Li2Pd3B superconductor
Magnetization in DC magnetic fields and at different temperatures have been
measured on the Li2Pd3B compound. This material was recently found to show
superconductivity at 7-8K. Critical fields Hc1(0) and Hc2(0) have been
determined to be 135Oe and 4T, respectively. Critical current density, scaling
of the pinning force within the Kramer model and the irreversibility field data
are presented. Several superconductivity parameters were deduced: x(csi)=9.1
nm, l(lamda)=194nm and k=21. The material resembles other boride
superconductors from the investigated points of view.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
123I-MIBG cardiac uptake and smell identification in parkinsonian patients with LRRK2 mutations
Reduced uptake of 123I- metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) on cardiac gammagraphy and impaired odor identification are markers of neurodegenerative diseases with Lewy bodies (LB) as a pathological hallmark, such as idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (IPD). LRRK2 patients present with a clinical syndrome indistinguishable from IPD, but LB have not been found in some cases. Patients with such mutations could behave differently than patients with IPD with respect to MIBG cardiac uptake and olfaction. We studied 14 LRRK2 patients, 14 IPD patients matched by age, gender, disease duration and severity, and 13 age and gender matched control subjects. Olfaction was analyzed through the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT). MIBG cardiac uptake was evaluated through the H/M ratio. The late H/M was 1.44 ± 0.31 for LRRK2 patients, 1.19 ± 0.15 for PD patients, and 1.67 ± 0.16 for control subjects. LRRK2 patients presented lower but not statistically significant MIBG cardiac uptake than controls (p = 0.08) and significant higher uptake than PD patients (p = 0.04). UPSIT mean scores were 21.5 ± 7.3 for LRRK2 patients, 18.7 ± 6.2 for IPD patients and 29.7 ± 5.7 for control subjects. UPSIT score was lower in both LRRK2 and PD than in controls. In LRRK2 patients a positive correlation was found between myocardial MIBG uptake and UPSIT scores, (R = 0.801, p < 0.001). In LRRK2 patients, MIBG cardiac uptake was less impaired than in PD; a positive correlation between MIBG cardiac uptake and UPSIT scores was observed. As MIBG cardiac reduced uptake and impaired odor identification are markers of LB pathology, this findings may represent neuropathological heterogeneity among LRRK2 patients
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