0000000000222462

AUTHOR

Alexis Steinbrunn

Gas–solid chromatographic separation of hydrogen isotopes: a comparison between two palladium bearing materials – alumina and kieselguhr

The separation of hydrogen isotopes (H, D, T) is performed by displacement gas chromatography on palladium. A large isotopic effect is associated with the reversible adsorption of hydrogen by palladium. Two Pd support materials have been compared: alpha-alumina and kieselguhr. The study includes a physicochemical characterization and a set of functional tests. The Van Deemter model gives a fairly good analysis of the process but to get more information, thermoregulated separations are needed. For both supports, palladium is impregnated as small dispersed particles in the 0.1 to 0.3 μm range diameter. For the same palladium loading, alumina is more efficient than kieselguhr.

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MoO (x≤2) ultrathin film growth from reactions between metallic molybdenum and TiO2 surfaces

Abstract Exposures to oxygen at room temperature and annealings under vacuum were carried out on deposits obtained from molybdenum interacting with (1 1 0) TiO 2 surfaces in order to obtain molybdenum oxide ultra thin films. Exposures to oxygen at room temperature show that the interfacial molybdenum oxide layers resulting from the TiO 2 /Mo interactions are inactive towards oxygen whereas the metallic molybdenum clusters, which grew on top of the interfacial layers, oxidise into MoO 3 . Besides, during annealings under vacuum, substrate oxygen anions can diffuse into the deposit. Thus, between 400 and 500°C, molybdenum oxide layers are progressively oxidised into MoO 2 . Moreover, from the…

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Molybdenum thin-film growth on rutile titanium dioxide ()

Molybdenum films were deposited at room temperature on rutile TiO2(1 1 0) surfaces having different stoichiometries, surface roughnesses and crystallinities. The film structures and compositions and the substrate–film interfaces were investigated by X-ray diffraction, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Different substrate pretreatments resulted in markedly different film and interface structures. Under the growth conditions studied, no amorphous molybdenum oxide interlayers were formed upon deposition in contrast to previous studies. Preferred (1 1 0) textured Mo films grew on both air-annealed and oxygen-bombarded substrates. While sh…

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Barium depletion study on impregnated cathodes and lifetime prediction

In the thermionic cathodes used in cathode ray-tubes (CRTs), barium is the key element for the electronic emission. In the case of the dispenser cathodes made of a porous tungsten pellet impregnated with Ba, Ca aluminates, the evaporation of Ba determines the cathode lifetime with respect to emission performance in the CRT. The Ba evaporation results in progressive depletion of the impregnating material inside the pellet. In the present work, the Ba depletion with time has been extensively characterized over a large range of cathode temperature. Calculations using the depletion data allowed modeling of the depletion as a function of key parameters. The link between measured depletion and em…

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Effect of the surface stoichiometry on the interaction of Mo with TiO2 (110)

Abstract Molydenum has been deposited at room temperature on (110) TiO2 surfaces with different stoichiometries, roughnesses and crystallinities. Whatever the substrate preparation is, in-situ Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies as well as ex-situ atomic force microscopy (AFM) and reflexion high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED) studies reveal a Stranski–Krastanov growth mode: the completion of three monolayers followed by islands growth is observed in every case. The three monolayers are always composed of amorphous molybdenum oxide with an oxidation state of molybdenum less than IV. The oxidation of the molybdenum layers generates Ti3+ an…

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Initial chemical transport of reducing elements and chemical reactions in oxide cathode base metal

Abstract In the present work, the formation of compounds associated to the diffusion of reducing elements (Mg and Al) to the nickel surface of a one-piece oxide cathode has been studied. Those compounds have been evidenced after the annealing steps at high temperature performed on cathode base metal prior to the emitting coating deposition. Therefore, they form the “initial” interface between the nickel and the coating, in other words, the interface existing at the beginning of cathode life. Extensive analysis to characterize the nickel base prior to coating deposition has been performed by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), …

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