23 research outputs found

    Efficiency of electron cooling in cold-electron bolometers with traps

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    Electron on-chip cooling from the base temperature of 300 mK is very important for highly sensitive detectors operating in space due to problems of dilution fridges at low gravity. Electron cooling is also important for ground-based telescopes equipped with 3He cryostats being able to function at any operating angle. This work is aimed at the investigation of electron cooling in the low -temperature range. New samples of cold-electron bolometers with traps and hybrid superconducting/ferromagnetic absorbers have shown a temperature reduction of the electrons in the refrigerator junctions from 300 to 82 mK, from 200 to 33 mK, and from 100 to 25 mK in the idle regime without optical power load. The electron temperature was determined by solving heat balance equa-tions with account of the leakage current, sixth power of temperature in the whole temperature range, and the Andreev current using numerical methods and an automatic fit algorithm

    Study of the Effect of Two Phases in Li4SiO4ā€“Li2SiO3 Ceramics on the Strength and Thermophysical Parameters

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    This research was funded by the Science Committee of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan (No. BR11765580). The research of the team from Latvia (A.M., V.P. and A.I.P.) has been carried out within the framework of the EUROfusion Consortium, funded by the European Union via the Euratom Research and Training Programme (Grant Agreement No. 101052200ā€”EUROfusion). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Commission. Neither the European Union nor the European Commission can be held responsible for them. The research was partly (A.M., V.P. and A.I.P.) performed in the Center of Excellence of the Institute of Solid State Physics, University of Latvia, supported through European Unions Horizon 2020 Framework Programme H2020-WIDESPREAD-01-2016-2017-TeamingPhase2 under grant agreement No. 739508, project CAMART2.The paper studies the effect of Li2SiO3/Li4SiO4 phase formation in lithium-containing ceramics on the strength and thermophysical characteristics of lithium-containing ceramics, which have great prospects for use as blanket materials for tritium propagation. During the phase composition analysis of the studied ceramics using the X-ray diffraction method, it was found that an increase in the lithium component during synthesis leads to the formation of an additional orthorhombic Li2SiO3 phase, and the main phase in ceramics is the monoclinic Li4SiO4 phase. An analysis of the morphological features of the synthesized ceramics showed that an increase in the Li2SiO3 impurity phase leads to ceramic densification and the formation of impurity grains near grain boundaries and joints. During determination of the strength characteristics of the studied ceramics, a positive effect of an increase in the Li2SiO3 impurity phase and dimensional factors on the strengthening and increase in the resistance to external influences during compression of ceramics was established. During tests for resistance to long-term thermal heating, it was found that for two-phase ceramics, the decrease in strength and thermophysical characteristics after 500 h of annealing was less than 5%, which indicates a high resistance and stability of these ceramics in comparison with single-phase orthosilicate ceramics. Ā© 2022 by the authors. --//-- This is an open access article Kozlovskiy A., Shlimas D.I., Zdorovets M.V., Moskina A., Pankratov V., Popov A.I. "Study of the Effect of Two Phases in Li4SiO4ā€“Li2SiO3 Ceramics on the Strength and Thermophysical Parameters" (2022) Nanomaterials, 12 (20), art. no. 3682, DOI: 10.3390/nano12203682 published under the CC BY 4.0 licence.European Commission 101052200ā€”EUROfusion; Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan BR11765580; institute of Solid-State Physics, University of Latvia has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Framework Programme H2020-WIDESPREAD-01-2016-2017-Teaming Phase 2 under grant agreement No. 739508, project CAMART2.

    Filterless visible-range color sensing and wavelength-selective photodetection based on barium/nickel codoped bandgap-engineered potassium sodium niobate ferroelectric ceramics

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    Abstract Photosensors, photodetectors, or color sensors are key components for various optical and optoelectronic applications. Semiconductor-based photodetection has been a dominator which is excellent at measuring the photon intensity of incident light. However, the wavelength of the incident light to be measured must be known beforehand and it mostly depends on auxiliary methods to filter unknown wavelengths. Herein, an alternative but simple mechanism that is using a monolithic, bandgap-engineered photoferroelectric ceramic to blindly determine the wavelength and intensity of incident light at the same time is demonstrated. The photoferroelectric compound is Ba- and Ni-codoped (K,Na)NbOā‚ƒ exhibiting a direct bandgap of ā‰ˆ2ā€‰eV and a spontaneous polarization of ā‰ˆ0.25ā€‰Cā€‰mā»Ā². The bandā€“band charge carrier transition is confirmed by multiple characterization methods of photoluminescence, photodielectric spectroscopy, and photoconductivity. The existent optoelectrical cumulative effect enabled by the simultaneous narrow bandgap and strong ferroelectricity allows to reliably distinguish the wavelengths of 405, 552, and 660ā€‰nm as well as the power density ranging from ā‰ˆ0.1 to 10ā€‰Wā€‰cmā»Ā², with the photoresponsivity of up to 60ā€‰Ī¼Aā€‰Wā»Ā¹. Consequently, this work proposes an alternative to semiconductor-based counterparts for filterless, wavelength-selective photodetection and color sensing

    Electrochemical Reduction of La2O3, Nd2O3, and CeO2 in LiCl-Li2O Melt

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    The reduction of pellets composed of individual CeO2, Nd2O3 and a La2O3-Nd2O3-CeO2 mixture by lithium extracted on a cathode during lithium chloride electrolysis at 650 °C was studied. The methods of cyclic voltammetry, electron microscopy, including determination of the elemental composition of the studied objects, and X-ray diffraction analysis were applied for the present study. The reduction degree of rare-earth metal (REM) oxides was determined using both the bromine method and reduction melting of the samples in the graphite crucible. The formation of the metallic phase composed of the rare-earth elements (REEs) was not observed even at the cathode potentials, corresponding to the formation of the liquid alkali metal phase, and lithium extraction, which, in the quantitative ratio, exceeds greatly the values needed for the reduction reaction. CeO2 was found to reduce to Ce2O3

    Building A Model and an Algorithm for Modeling the Movement of People Carrying Goods When They Are Evacuated From Premises

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    Evacuation is often the only way to save a person who is in a life-threatening situation. At present, evacuation software is used to simulate the movement of human flows, which does not always reflect the real processes of their movement. Therefore, it is a relevant task to build models for modeling the movement of human flows for different types of emergencies, different categories of human movement, and various spatial forms of their representation. Such a task arises when evacuating people from premises for various functional purposes. During evacuation, people often carry some goods. When people move carrying some goods, their horizontal projection takes a more complex shape than an ellipse or circle considered in earlier studies. Moreover, in practice, there is often a task to model the movement of people taking into consideration the maximum permissible distances between them. This paper reports the new quasi-phi functions of interaction between the ellipse and rectangle accounting for the maximum allowable distances between them. The proposed mathematical apparatus has made it possible to formalize the interaction between objects, thereby enabling the construction of a well-substantiated mathematical model, as well as the methods and algorithms for modeling the movement of people carrying some goods. The possibility to simulate the movement of people with certain objects has shown taking into consideration the maximum permissible distances between them. A test example of the movement of people along four corridors was simulated, in each of which there were 28 people subsequently merging into one flow. Given the uniform distribution of three types of cargo: Ā«backpacksĀ», Ā«suitcasesĀ», and Ā«bags on wheelsĀ», the movement slowed down by about 4 %. When half of the evacuees had Ā«bags on wheelsĀ» that can move away from people at arm's length, the slowdown was about 6 %

    Defect-related photoluminescence and photoluminescence excitation as a method to study the excitonic bandgap of AlN epitaxial layers : Experimental and ab initio analysis

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    We report defect-related photoluminescence (PL) and its vacuum ultraviolet photoluminescence excitation (PLE) spectra of aluminum nitride layers with various layer thicknesses and dislocation densities grown on two different substrates: sapphire and silicon. The defect-related transitions have been distinguished and examined in the emission and excitation spectra investigated under synchrotron radiation. The broad PL bands of two defect levels in the AlN were detected at around 3 eV and 4 eV. In the PLE spectra of these bands, a sharp excitonic peak originating most probably from the A-exciton of AlN was clearly visible. Taking into account the exciton binding energy, the measurements allow determination of the bandgaps of the investigated AlN samples and their temperature dependencies. Next, they are compared with the literature data obtained by other experimental techniques for bulk AlN crystals and layers grown on different substrates. The obtained results revealed that the AlN bandgap depends on the substrate. The theoretical analysis using density functional theory calculations showed that the effect is induced by the tetragonal strain related to the lattice mismatch between the substrate and the AlN layer, which has a strong influence on the spectral positions of the intrinsic excitons, and consequently on the bandgap of AlN layers

    Unveiling the role of carbonate in nickel-based plasmonic core@shell hybrid nanostructure for photocatalytic water splitting

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    Abstract Though carbonates are known for several decades, their role in sun-light driven photocatalysis is still hidden. Herein, carbonate boosted solar water splitting in nickel-based plasmonic hybrid nanostructures is disclosed for the first time via in-situ experiments and density-functional theory (DFT)-based calculations. Ni@NiO/NiCOā‚ƒ core@shell (shell consisting of crystalline NiO and amorphous NiCOā‚ƒ) nanostructure with varying size and compositions are studied for hydrogen production. The visible light absorption at āˆ¼470 nm excludes the possibility of NiO as an active photocatalyst, emphasizing plasmon driven Hā‚‚ evolution. Under white light irradiation, higher hydrogen yield of āˆ¼80 Āµmol/g/h for vacuum annealed sample over pristine (āˆ¼50 Āµmol/g/h) complements the spectroscopic data and DFT results, uncovering amorphous NiCOā‚ƒ as an active site for Hā‚‚ absorption due to its unique electronic structure. This conclusion also supports the time-resolved photoluminescence results, indicating that the plasmonic electrons originating from Ni are transferred to NiCOā‚ƒ via NiO. The Hā‚‚ evolution rate can further be enhanced and tuned by the incorporation of NiO between Ni and NiCOā‚ƒ
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