10 research outputs found
Electrochemical Pitting And Repassivation On Icosahedral AL-CU-FE, And A Comparison With Crystalline Phases
We report the electrochemical potentials at which localized pitting and repassivation occur on icosahedral Al-Cu-Fe, and on a series of related alloys and elemental metals. The electrochemistry occurs in a buffered NaCI solution, pH 8.4. Under these conditions, pitting and repassivation appear to be controlled mainly by the chemical composition of the alloy, although the quasicrystalline phase displays an anomalous resistance to repassivation. Corrosion of this phase proceeds by dissolution of Al and Fe, leaving behind pits which are Cu-enriched
Room Temperature Oxidation of Al-Cu-Fe and Al-Cu-Fe-Cr Quasicrystals
We have investigated formation of oxides on quasicrystalline and crystalline alloy surfaces of similar composition, in different oxidizing environments. This includes a comparison between a quaternary orthorhombic approximate of Al-Cu-Fe-Cr quasicrystal and the ternary Al-Cu-Fe quasicrystalline and crystalline phases. We noted that each sample showed the following common trends: preferential oxidation of the Al, enrichment in the concentration of Al present at the surface upon oxidation, water concentration is directly related to oxide thickness, and the oxide thickness displays a strong correlation with the bulk concentration of Al in the sample
Recommended from our members
SOLAR NANTENNA ELECTROMAGNETIC COLLECTORS
This research explores a new efficient approach for producing electricity from the abundant energy of the sun. A nanoantenna electromagnetic collector (NEC) has been designed, prototyped, and tested. Proof of concept has been validated. The device targets mid-infrared wavelengths where conventional photovoltaic (PV) solar cells do not respond but is abundant in solar energy. The initial concept of designing NEC antennas was based on scaling of radio frequency antenna theory. This approach has proven unsuccessful by many due to not fully understanding and accounting for the optical behavior of materials in the THz region. Also until recent years the nanofabrication methods were not available to fabricate the optical antenna elements. We have addressed and overcome both technology barriers. Several factors were critical in successful implementation of NEC including: 1) frequency-dependent modeling of antenna elements, 2) selection of materials with proper THz properties and 3) novel manufacturing methods that enable economical large-scale manufacturing. The work represents an important step toward the ultimate realization of a low-cost device that will collect as well as convert this radiation into electricity, which will lead to a wide spectrum, high conversion efficiency, and low cost solution to complement conventional PVs
Recommended from our members
Catalyst Activity and Post-operation Analyses of Pt/TiO2 (Rutile) Catalysts Used in the Sulfuric Acid Decomposition Reaction
Production of hydrogen by splitting of water at lower temperatures than by direct thermal decomposition can be achieved by a series of particular chemical reactions that establish a thermochemical cycle [1]. Among the high number of thermochemical water-splitting cycles proposed in the literature [2], the sulfur-based group is of considerable interest. All the sulfur-based cycles employ the catalytic decomposition of sulfuric acid into SO2 and O2. The produced O2 corresponds to the O2 generated from water in the overall cycle. Research performed at the Idaho National Laboratory [3] has found that even one of the most stables catalysts, Pt supported on low surface area titania, deactivates with time on stream (TOS). To develop an understanding of the factors that cause catalyst deactivation, samples of 1% Pt supported on titania (rutile) catalyst were submitted to flowing concentrated sulfuric acid at 1123 K and atmospheric pressure for different TOSs between 0 and 548 h and a number of chemical and spectroscopic analyses applied to the spent samples
Room Temperature Oxidation of Al-Cu-Fe and Al-Cu-Fe-Cr Quasicrystals
We have investigated formation of oxides on quasicrystalline and crystalline alloy surfaces of similar composition, in different oxidizing environments. This includes a comparison between a quaternary orthorhombic approximate of Al-Cu-Fe-Cr quasicrystal and the ternary Al-Cu-Fe quasicrystalline and crystalline phases. We noted that each sample showed the following common trends: preferential oxidation of the Al, enrichment in the concentration of Al present at the surface upon oxidation, water concentration is directly related to oxide thickness, and the oxide thickness displays a strong correlation with the bulk concentration of Al in the sample.This article is from Quasicrystals: Proceedings of the MRS 1998 Fall Meeting 553 (1999): pp. 263—268, doi:10.1557/PROC-553-263</p
Electrochemical Pitting And Repassivation On Icosahedral AL-CU-FE, And A Comparison With Crystalline Phases
We report the electrochemical potentials at which localized pitting and repassivation occur on icosahedral Al-Cu-Fe, and on a series of related alloys and elemental metals. The electrochemistry occurs in a buffered NaCI solution, pH 8.4. Under these conditions, pitting and repassivation appear to be controlled mainly by the chemical composition of the alloy, although the quasicrystalline phase displays an anomalous resistance to repassivation. Corrosion of this phase proceeds by dissolution of Al and Fe, leaving behind pits which are Cu-enriched.This article is from Quasicrystals: Proceedings of the MRS 1998 Fall Meeting 553 (1999): pp. 275—280, doi:10.1557/PROC-553-275</p
Surface Oxidation of Al-Pd-Mn and Al-Cu-Fe Alloys
The application of ultrahigh vacuum surface analytical techniques to the study of the oxidation of Al-Pd-Mn and Al-Cu-Fe quasicrystals is presented. Comparisons of the effects of various oxidation environments are made for each material as well as for a cubic phase of Al-Pd-Mn. We find that the oxidation of the two icosahedral alloys is similar. Exposure to oxygen in vacuum, normal air, humid air and immersion in water represent progressively better oxidizing environments, resulting in increasingly deeper oxides. Oxidation of Al occurs most readily, but oxidation of other metals also becomes apparent upon going from oxygen in vacuum to immersion in water; which also attests to the effectiveness of water as an oxidant. Oxide thicknesses for both quasicrystalline alloys are comparable for each oxidation environments. Comparison of quasicrystalline to cubic Al-Pd-Mn shows that the cubic phase is more readily oxidized. In addition, while the surfaces of both quasicrystalline alloys become significantly enriched in Al upon oxidation, such enrichment is not observed for the cubic alloy. This suggests that the structure of quasicrystals plays an important role in their oxidation chemistry.This article is from Proceedings of the Conference on New Horizons in Quasicrystals: Research and Application (1997): pp. 157—164</p
Electrodeposition of Copper for Three-Dimensional Metamaterial Fabrication
Metamaterials typically consist of
metallic and dielectric repeating
structures. Electrodeposition of copper is the preferred approach
to fabricating the metallic part of the metamaterials of interest
in this study. The highly variant topography requires chemical additives,
like chloride ions, 3-mercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid (MPSA), polyethylene
glycol (PEG), and polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) to enhance bottom-up
superfilling while maintaining terrace flatness. This study focuses
on both experimental and computational investigations of the degradation
potential of the additives and their adsorption mechanism in a highly
acidic copper electrolyte in order to optimally parametrize the copper
electrodeposition process. Results show Cl–MPSA–PEG–PVP
additives perform well, but substitution of PVP with Janus Green B
provides better terrace leveling. Additionally, NMR data show a quick
and complete conversion of MPSA to bisÂ(3-sulfopropyl) disulfide (SPS)
in the acidic copper bath. Finally, FEM simulations further show that
the accelerator species may initially accumulate and be transported
vertically until overplating, whereby they are transported laterally