Search results for "Electric current"

showing 10 items of 75 documents

Towards quantum phase slip based standard of electric current

2019

An accurate standard of electric current is a long-standing challenge of modern metrology. It has been predicted that a superconducting nanowire in the regime of quantum fluctuations can be considered as the dynamic equivalent of a chain of conventional Josephson junctions. In full analogy with the quantum standard of electric voltage based on the Josephson effect, the quantum phase slip phenomenon in ultrathin superconducting nanowires could be used for building the quantum standard of electric current. This work presents advances toward this ultimate goal.

010302 applied physicsPhysicsSuperconductivityJosephson effectPhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)Condensed matter physicsNanowire02 engineering and technologyOtaNano021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesMetrologyCondensed Matter::Superconductivity0103 physical sciencesElectric current0210 nano-technologyQuantumQuantum fluctuationVoltage
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Measurement of the activation energies of oxygen ion diffusion in yttria stabilized zirconia by flicker noise spectroscopy

2019

The low-frequency noise in a nanometer-sized virtual memristor consisting of a contact of a conductive atomic force microscope (CAFM) probe to an yttria stabilized zirconia (YSZ) thin film deposited on a conductive substrate is investigated. YSZ is a promising material for the memristor application since it is featured by high oxygen ion mobility, and the oxygen vacancy concentration in YSZ can be controlled by varying the molar fraction of the stabilizing yttrium oxide. Due to the low diameter of the CAFM probe contact to the YSZ film (similar to 10nm), we are able to measure the electric current flowing through an individual filament both in the low resistive state (LRS) and in the high r…

010302 applied physicsResistive touchscreenMaterials sciencePhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)business.industryMemristor Noise induced phenomenaOxide02 engineering and technologySubstrate (electronics)021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesNoise (electronics)chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistry0103 physical sciencesOptoelectronicsFlicker noiseThin filmElectric current0210 nano-technologybusinessYttria-stabilized zirconia
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Flux flow spin Hall effect in type-II superconductors with spin-splitting field

2019

We predict the very large spin Hall effect in type-II superconductors which mechanism is drastically different from the previously known ones. We find that in the flux-flow regime the spin is transported by the spin-polarized Abrikosov vortices moving under the action of the Lorenz force in the direction perpendicular to the applied electric current. Due to the large vortex velocities the spin Hall angle can be of the order of unity in realistic systems based on the high-field superconductors or the recently developed superconductor/ferromagnetic insulator proximity structures. We propose the realization of high-frequency pure spin current generator based on the periodic structure of moving…

0301 basic medicineFOS: Physical scienceslcsh:MedicineArticlesuprajohteetSuperconductivity (cond-mat.supr-con)03 medical and health sciencessymbols.namesake0302 clinical medicineCondensed Matter::SuperconductivityMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)lcsh:ScienceSuperconductivityPhysicsMultidisciplinaryCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsCondensed matter physicsspin Hall effectCondensed Matter - Superconductivitylcsh:RVortex030104 developmental biologyFerromagnetismSpin Hall effectsymbolsCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electronslcsh:QElectric currentLorentz forceType-II superconductor030217 neurology & neurosurgeryVoltageScientific Reports
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Suppression of the cardiac electric field artifact from the heart action evoked potential

2006

The study of heart action-related brain potentials is strongly disrupted by the presence of an inherent cardiac electric artifact. The hypothesis is presented that most of the electric current coupled to the cardiac field surrounds the skull and flows through the scalp tissue without crossing the cranial cavity. This pseudo two-dimensional conduction model contrasts with the volumetric conduction of the brain electrical activity, and this property is exploited to cancel the cardiac electric artifact. QRS loop vector-cardiographic projections on saggital planes were recorded in 11 healthy subjects in the head and neck areas. Comparative analysis of the projection eccentricities, estimated by…

AdultMaleField (physics)Biomedical EngineeringQRS complexElectric fieldCranial cavitymedicineHumansEvoked potentialEvoked PotentialsPhysicsArtifact (error)SkullElectric ConductivityElectroencephalographyHeartSignal Processing Computer-AssistedMiddle AgedComputer Science ApplicationsAmplitudemedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleElectric currentArtifactsBiomedical engineeringMedical and Biological Engineering and Computing
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Modeling And Measurements Of The Arc Plasma In A Mixture Of Gases

2006

Radial distributions of Ar mass fractions and temperatures in plasmas produced in a wall-stabilized arc have been calculated. Modeling have been performed for many different mixtures of Ar+N2 and three different arc currents. The obtained results show that the radial distributions of Ar mass fractions strongly depend on the chemical composition of the plasma. In plasmas containing large amount of Ar the distributions have local minima at the arc axis (in high temperature plasma regions), whereas in plasmas consisting mainly of nitrogen the distributions reveal maxima on the discharge axis. Those features seem to be connected with the dissociation of the nitrogen.

ArgonPlasma cleaningchemistry.chemical_elementPlasmaDissociation (chemistry)chemistryPhysics::Plasma PhysicsPhysics::Space PhysicsAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsPlasma diagnosticsElectric currentAtomic physicsChemical compositionMass fractionAIP Conference Proceedings
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Electric current induced modification of germanium nanowire NEM switch contact.

2015

We present an investigation of contact properties of a germanium (Ge) nanowire based nanoelectromechanical (NEM) switch in its ON state. The contact stiffness in the ON state was evaluated by detecting the nanowire's resonance frequency. It was found that the resonance frequency increases when electric current flows through the nanowire/counter electrode contact area. The reason for modification in the contact area is referred to as electric-current-induced processes in the native oxide layer covering the nanowires. The presented resonance shift method is a simple way to indicate strengthening of the nanowire/counter electrode contact area without disassembling the contact.

Auxiliary electrodeMaterials sciencebusiness.industryMechanical EngineeringNanogeneratorNanowireOxidechemistry.chemical_elementResonanceBioengineeringNanotechnologyGermaniumGeneral Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMechanics of MaterialsOptoelectronicsGeneral Materials ScienceElectrical and Electronic EngineeringElectric currentContact areabusinessNanotechnology
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Transport equations of electrodiffusion processes in the laboratory reference frame.

2006

The transport equations of electrodiffusion processes use three reference frames for defining the fluxes: Fick's reference in diffusion, solvent-fixed reference in transference numbers, and laboratory fluxes in electric conductivity. The convenience of using only one reference frame is analyzed here from the point of view of the thermodynamics of irreversible processes. A relation between the fluxes of ions and solvent and the electric current density is deduced first from a mass and volume balance. This is then used to show that (i) the laboratory and Fick's diffusion coefficients are identical and (ii) the transference numbers of both the solvent and the ion in the laboratory reference fr…

ChemistryBoundary (topology)ThermodynamicsMechanicsSurfaces Coatings and FilmsIonElectrical resistivity and conductivityMaterials ChemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryElectric currentExperimental methodsDiffusion (business)Volume balanceReference frameThe journal of physical chemistry. B
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Morphological, electrical and optical properties of organic light-emitting diodes with a LiF/Al cathode and an Al-hydroxyquinoline/diamine junction

2004

Abstract We report the results of the morphological, electrical and optical characterisation of double-layer Alq3-based organic emitting diodes with a lithium fluoride (LiF)/Al cathode. A detailed electron microscopy investigation of their cross-section shows the presence of LiF isolated grains underneath the Al film. Due to the introduction of the LiF layer, luminance was larger than 30,000 cd/m2 at a bias voltage VB=25 V with a maximum external luminous efficiency as large as 46 lm/W at VB=20 V. Performing on/off VB cycles at a very low frequency, each time a recovery of the initial electric and luminous performance was observed. The non-exponential decay of both electric current and lumi…

ChemistryMechanical EngineeringMetals and AlloysAnalytical chemistryalq3; electroluminescence; organic diodes; thin filmsLithium fluorideBiasingElectroluminescenceCondensed Matter PhysicsCathodeElectronic Optical and Magnetic Materialslaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundMechanics of MaterialslawMaterials ChemistryOLEDElectric currentLuminous efficacyDiode
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A pH-tunable nanofluidic diode: electrochemical rectification in a reconstituted single ion channel.

2006

We report pH-dependent electrochemical rectification in a protein ion channel (the bacterial porin OmpF) reconstituted on a planar phospholipid membrane. The measurements performed at single-channel level show that the electric current is controlled by the protein fixed charge and it can be tuned by adjusting the local pH. Under highly asymmetric pH conditions, the channel behaves like a liquid diode. Unlike other nanofluidic devices that display also asymmetric conductance, here the microscopic charge distribution of the system can be explored by using the available high-resolution (2.4 A) channel crystallographic structure. Continuum electrostatics calculations confirm the hypothesized bi…

ChemistryStatic ElectricityAnalytical chemistryConductanceCharge densityPorinsHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationCrystallography X-RayIon ChannelsSurfaces Coatings and FilmsMembraneRectificationBacterial ProteinsBiomimeticsStatic electricityMaterials ChemistryElectrochemistryNanotechnologyPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryElectric currentIon channelDiodeThe journal of physical chemistry. B
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Study of the effect of the membrane composition on ion transfer across a supported liquid membrane

2003

Abstract The rate of ion transfer across the supported liquid membrane (SLM) is studied in the rotating diffusion cell (RDC), varying the chemical composition of the SLM from net-cloth supported gel membranes to radiation-grafted polymer membranes. Steady-state current–voltage curves are measured as a function of the rotation rate, and values for the standard rate constant, k 0 , are determined for a series of tetraalkylammonium cations from the analysis of the initial slopes and the diffusion limiting currents. The analysis gives values for k 0 of the order of 10 −2 –10 −4 cm s −1 , which is in rather good agreement with the values found in the literature for this type of the system. As co…

ChromatographyChemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringCapacitive sensingSynthetic membraneAnalytical chemistryIonic bondingAnalytical ChemistryReaction rate constantMembraneElectrochemistryElectric currentDiffusion (business)Drug carrierJournal of Electroanalytical Chemistry
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