37,776 research outputs found
Interferometric method for determining the sum of the flexoelectric coefficients (e1+e3) in an ionic nematic material
The time-dependent periodic distortion profile in a nematic liquid crystal phase grating has been measured from the displacement of tilt fringes in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. A 0.2 Hz squarewave voltage was applied to alternate stripe electrodes in an interdigitated electrode geometry. The time-dependent distortion profile is asymmetric with respect to the polarity of the applied voltage and decays with time during each half period due to ionic shielding. This asymmetry in the response allows the determination of the sum of the flexoelectric coefficients (e1+e3) using nematic continuum theory since the device geometry does not possess inherent asymmetry
High sensitivity of 17O NMR to p-d hybridization in transition metal perovskites: first principles calculations of large anisotropic chemical shielding
A first principles embedded cluster approach is used to calculate O chemical
shielding tensors, sigma, in prototypical transition metal oxide ABO_3
perovskite crystals. Our principal findings are 1) a large anisotropy of sigma
between deshielded sigma_x ~ sigma_y and shielded sigma_z components (z along
the Ti-O bond); 2) a nearly linear variation, across all the systems studied,
of the isotropic sigma_iso and uniaxial sigma_ax components, as a function of
the B-O-B bond asymmetry. We show that the anisotropy and linear variation
arise from large paramagnetic contributions to sigma_x and sigma_y due to
virtual transitions between O(2p) and unoccupied B(nd) states. The calculated
isotropic delta_iso and uniaxial delta_ax chemical shifts are in good agreement
with recent BaTiO_3 and SrTiO_3 single crystal 17O NMR measurements. In PbTiO_3
and PbZrO_3, calculated delta_iso are also in good agreement with NMR powder
spectrum measurements. In PbZrO_3, delta_iso calculations of the five
chemically distinct sites indicate a correction of the experimental
assignments. The strong dependence of sigma on covalent O(2p)-B(nd)
interactions seen in our calculations indicates that 17O NMR spectroscopy,
coupled with first principles calculations, can be an especially useful tool to
study the local structure in complex perovskite alloys.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, and 3 Table
First Principles NMR Study of Fluorapatite under Pressure
NMR is the technique of election to probe the local properties of materials.
Herein we present the results of density functional theory (DFT) \textit{ab
initio} calculations of the NMR parameters for fluorapatite (FAp), a calcium
orthophosphate mineral belonging to the apatite family, by using the GIPAW
method [Pickard and Mauri, 2001]. Understanding the local effects of pressure
on apatites is particularly relevant because of their important role in many
solid state and biomedical applications. Apatites are open structures, which
can undergo complex anisotropic deformations, and the response of NMR can
elucidate the microscopic changes induced by an applied pressure. The computed
NMR parameters proved to be in good agreement with the available experimental
data. The structural evaluation of the material behavior under hydrostatic
pressure (from --5 to +100 kbar) indicated a shrinkage of the diameter of the
apatitic channel, and a strong correlation between NMR shielding and pressure,
proving the sensitivity of this technique to even small changes in the chemical
environment around the nuclei. This theoretical approach allows the exploration
of all the different nuclei composing the material, thus providing a very
useful guidance in the interpretation of experimental results, particularly
valuable for the more challenging nuclei such as Ca and O.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 3 table
Evidence for Photoionization Driven Broad Absorption Line Variability
We present a qualitative analysis of the variability of quasar broad
absorption lines using the large multi-epoch spectroscopic dataset of the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey Data Release 10. We confirm that variations of absorption
lines are highly coordinated among different components of the same ion or the
same absorption component of different ions for C IV, Si IV and N V.
Furthermore, we show that the equivalent widths of the lines decrease or
increase statistically when the continuum brightens or dims. This is further
supported by the synchronized variations of emission and absorption line
equivalent width, when the well established intrinsic Baldwin effect for
emission lines is taken into account. We find that the emergence of an
absorption component is usually accompanying with dimming of the continuum
while the disappearance of an absorption line component with brightening of the
continuum. This suggests that the emergence or disappearance of a C IV
absorption component is only the extreme case, when the ionic column density is
very sensitive to continuum variations or the continuum variability amplitude
is larger. These results support the idea that absorption line variability is
driven mainly by changes in the gas ionization in response to continuum
variations, that the line-absorbing gas is highly ionized, and in some extreme
cases, too highly ionized to be detected in UV absorption lines. Due to
uncertainties in the spectroscopic flux calibration, we cannot quantify the
fraction of quasars with asynchronized continuum and absorption line
variations.Comment: 41 pages, 15 figures, accepted to Ap
From Structure to Function in Open Ionic Channels
We consider a simple working hypothesis that all permeation properties of
open ionic channels can be predicted by understanding electrodiffusion in fixed
structures, without invoking conformation changes, or changes in chemical
bonds. We know, of course, that ions can bind to specific protein structures,
and that this binding is not easily described by the traditional electrostatic
equations of physics textbooks, that describe average electric fields, the
so-called `mean field'. The question is which specific properties can be
explained just by mean field electrostatics and which cannot. I believe the
best way to uncover the specific chemical properties of channels is to invoke
them as little as possible, seeking to explain with mean field electrostatics
first. Then, when phenomena appear that cannot be described that way, by the
mean field alone, we turn to chemically specific explanations, seeking the
appropriate tools (of electrochemistry, Langevin, or molecular dynamics, for
example) to understand them. In this spirit, we turn now to the structure of
open ionic channels, apply the laws of electrodiffusion to them, and see how
many of their properties we can predict just that way.Comment: Nearly final version of publicatio
Status of the Electroforming Shield Design (ESD) project
The utilization of a digital computer to augment electrodeposition/electroforming processes in which nonconducting shielding controls local cathodic current distribution is reported. The primary underlying philosophy of the physics of electrodeposition was presented. The technical approach taken to analytically simulate electrolytic tank variables was also included. A FORTRAN computer program has been developed and implemented. The program utilized finite element techniques and electrostatic theory to simulate electropotential fields and ionic transport
- …
