Search results for " magnitude"

showing 10 items of 407 documents

Temperature- and Magnetic-Field-Dependent Longitudinal Spin Relaxation in Nitrogen-Vacancy Ensembles in Diamond

2011

We present an experimental study of the longitudinal electron-spin relaxation time (T1) of negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy (NV) ensembles in diamond. T1 was studied as a function of temperature from 5 to 475 K and magnetic field from 0 to 630 G for several samples with various NV and nitrogen concentrations. Our studies reveal three processes responsible for T1 relaxation. Above room temperature, a two-phonon Raman process dominates, and below, we observe an Orbach-type process with an activation energy, 73(4) meV, which closely matches the local vibrational modes of the NV center. At yet lower temperatures, sample dependent cross relaxation processes dominate, resulting in temperature …

Materials scienceNitrogenFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and Astronomy02 engineering and technologyActivation energyengineering.materialSpectrum Analysis Raman01 natural sciencessymbols.namesakeVacancy defect0103 physical sciences010306 general physicsCondensed Matter - Materials ScienceCondensed matter physicsTemperatureSpin–lattice relaxationMaterials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)DiamondModels Theoretical021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyMagnetic fieldMagnetic FieldsMolecular vibrationengineeringsymbolsDiamond0210 nano-technologyRaman spectroscopyOrder of magnitudePhysical Review Letters
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Upconversion luminescence in erbium doped transparent oxyfluoride glass ceramics containing hexagonal NaYF4 nanocrystals

2015

Abstract In this work transparent erbium doped oxyfluoride glass ceramics containing hexagonal NaYF 4 nanocrystals has been prepared by melt-quenching and subsequent heat treatment of the precursor glass. The formation of β-NaYF 4 was confirmed by X-ray diffraction measurements. The overall intensity of the upconversion luminescence of the glass ceramics sample is 2 orders of magnitude higher than that of the precursor glass. The observed enhancement of the efficiency is explained by the incorporation of Er 3+ into low-phonon β-NaYF 4 crystalline phase.

Materials scienceOrders of magnitude (temperature)DopingMineralogychemistry.chemical_elementPhoton upconversionErbiumNanocrystalchemistryChemical engineeringvisual_artPhase (matter)Materials ChemistryCeramics and Compositesvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCeramicLuminescenceJournal of the European Ceramic Society
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Facet-Independent Electric-Field-Induced Volume Metallization of Tungsten Trioxide Films.

2015

Reversible metallization of band and Mott insulators by ionic-liquid gating is accompanied by significant structural changes. A change in conductivity of seven orders of magnitude at room temperature is found in epitaxial films of WO3 with an associated monoclinic-to-cubic structural reorganization. The migration of oxygen ions along open volume channels is the underlying mechanism.

Materials scienceOrders of magnitude (temperature)Inorganic chemistry02 engineering and technologyGatingConductivityEpitaxy01 natural sciencesCondensed Matter::Materials Sciencechemistry.chemical_compoundElectric field0103 physical sciencesGeneral Materials Scienceskin and connective tissue diseases010306 general physicsCondensed matter physicsMechanical EngineeringMott insulator021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyTungsten trioxideVolume (thermodynamics)chemistryMechanics of MaterialsCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electronssense organs0210 nano-technologyAdvanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.)
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Ultrafast antiferromagnetic switching in NiO induced by spin transfer torques

2020

NiO is a prototypical antiferromagnet with a characteristic resonance frequency in the THz range. From atomistic spin dynamics simulations that take into account the crystallographic structure of NiO, and in particular a magnetic anisotropy respecting its symmetry, we describe antiferromagnetic switching at THz frequency by a spin transfer torque mechanism. Sub-picosecond S-state switching between the six allowed stable spin directions is found for reasonably achievable spin currents, like those generated by laser induced ultrafast demagnetization. A simple procedure for picosecond writing of a six-state memory is described, thus opening the possibility to speed up current logic of electron…

Materials scienceOrders of magnitude (temperature)Physics::OpticsFOS: Physical sciences02 engineering and technology01 natural sciences0103 physical sciencesAntiferromagnetism010306 general physicsSpin-½Condensed Matter - Materials ScienceCondensed matter physicsNon-blocking I/OSpin-transfer torqueMaterials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)Computational Physics (physics.comp-ph)021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologySymmetry (physics)3. Good healthCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterMagnetic anisotropyPicosecondCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons0210 nano-technologyPhysics - Computational PhysicsOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)
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Ab initio quantum-chemical computations of the absorption cross sections of HgX2 and HgXY (X, y = Cl, Br, and I): Molecules of interest in the Earth'…

2018

13 pags., 4 figs., 2 tabs.

Materials sciencePhotodissociationAb initioGeneral Physics and AstronomyHalide02 engineering and technologyElectronic structure010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesMolecular physicsSpectral line0104 chemical sciencesMoleculePhysical and Theoretical Chemistry0210 nano-technologyBasis setOrder of magnitudePhysical Chemistry Chemical Physics 21: 455-467 (2019)
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Graphene Cardboard: from Ripples to Tunable Metamaterial

2014

Recently graphene was introduced with tunable ripple texturing, a nanofabric enabled by graphene's remarkable elastic properties. However, one can further envision sandwiching the ripples, thus constructing composite nanomaterial, graphene cardboard. Here the basic mechanical properties of such structures are investigated computationally. It turns out that graphene cardboard is highly tunable material, for its elastic figures of merit vary orders of magnitude, with Poisson ratio tunable from 10 to -0.5 as one example. These trends set a foundation to guide the design and usage of metamaterials made of rippled van der Waals solids.

Materials sciencePhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)Orders of magnitude (temperature)FOS: Physical sciences02 engineering and technology01 natural scienceslaw.inventionNanomaterialssymbols.namesakelawMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)0103 physical sciencesFigure of merit010306 general physicsCondensed Matter - Materials ScienceNanocompositeta114Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physicsbusiness.industryGrapheneMaterials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)Metamaterial021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPoisson's ratiosymbolsOptoelectronicsvan der Waals force0210 nano-technologybusiness
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Thermal characteristics of silicon nitride membranes at sub-Kelvin temperatures

1998

We have performed calorimetric measurements on 200 nm thin silicon nitride membranes at temperatures from 0.07 to 1 K. Besides full windows, membranes cut into a thermally isolating suspended bridge geometry were investigated. Based on dc and ac measurements employing normal-metal/insulator/superconductor (NIS) tunnel junctions both as a thermometer and a heater, we report on heat transport and thermal relaxation in silicon nitride films. The bridge structure improves thermal isolation and, consequently, energy sensitivity by two orders of magnitude over those of the full membrane with the same size, and makes such a structure very attractive for bolometric and microrefrigeration applicatio…

Materials sciencePhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)business.industryBolometerAnalytical chemistryInsulator (electricity)Cryogenicslaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundMembraneThermal conductivitySilicon nitridechemistrylawOptoelectronicsThermal stabilitybusinessOrder of magnitudeApplied Physics Letters
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Monte Carlo simulation in polymer physics: Some recent developments

1991

The computer simulation of macromolecular materials has to deal with phenomena on length scales from 1A to 100A, as well as with time scales ranging over many orders of magnitude, and thus still presents a challenge. With suitably coarse-grained models which disregard detailed information on chemical structure nevertheless collective phenomena can be described, such as unmixing of polymer blends, mesophase ordering of block-copolymer melts, “blob formation” in semidilute solutions, etc. Simulations of such models provide a sensitive test of approximate theories and give valuable hints for experiments.

Materials sciencePolymers and PlasticsOrders of magnitude (time)Organic ChemistryMonte Carlo methodMaterials ChemistryMesophasePolymer physicsStatistical physicsCondensed Matter PhysicsMakromolekulare Chemie. Macromolecular Symposia
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New Schemes for the Production and Spectroscopy of Positronium

1989

The rate of positronium formation has been increased by 2–3 orders of magnitude using recently developed accelerator based slow positron sources. This opens the possibility of improvements of precision experiments on the Ps atom as well as new experiments on excited states. First evidence for enhanced metastable Ps formation is presented and future possibilities are discussed.

Materials sciencePositronlawOrders of magnitude (temperature)MetastabilityExcited stateAtomParticle acceleratorPhysics::Atomic PhysicsAtomic physicsSpectroscopylaw.inventionPositronium
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Novel biosensoric devices based on molecular protein hetero-multilayer films

1997

We have developed a novel concept for the modification of technical surfaces with molecularly well-organized layers of bioorganic components. A molecular construction set has been used to implement this concept which is based on molecularly stratified polyelectrolyte films as a structure decoupling protein layers from solid substrates. Utilizing this technology, one can start from a number of different substrates to obtain the same surface structures, on which protein hetero-multilayer films can be prepared to functionalize the interface for (potentially very different) purposes. We have demonstrated the viability of this concept by constructing a biosensor surface that was characterized by…

Materials scienceProtein ConformationBiophysicsProteinsNanotechnologyBiosensing TechniquesOrders of magnitude (numbers)BiochemistryPolyelectrolyteModels StructuralElectrolytesSpectrometry FluorescenceEnergy TransferMonolayerIndicators and ReagentsReactivity (chemistry)AdsorptionLayer (electronics)BiosensorStoichiometryFluorescent DyesProtein BindingAdvances in Biophysics
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