Search results for "Stability."
showing 10 items of 3015 documents
Sensitive laser spectroscopy on trapped barium ions by quenching with hydrogen
1983
The sensitivity of laser spectroscopy on barium ions stored in a radio frequency quadrupole trap was drastically increased by using hydrogen for quenching the optically pumped metastable states. The attained fluorescence intensity per ion permits the detection of single ions. The method will be applied to environmental studies on actinides.
Aza–oxa macrocyclic ligands functionalised with naphthylmethyl fluorescent groups
2000
Abstract Compounds L 1 and L 2 were obtained by reaction of 2-(bromomethyl)naphthalene with 1,4,10-trioxa-7,13-diazacyclopentadecane and 1,4,7-trioxa-10-azacyclododecane, respectively. These receptors contain aza–oxa crowns attached covalently to fluorescent groups. The protonation and coordination behaviour of L 1 and L 2 against metal ions has been studied in dioxane:water (70:30 v/v, 25°C, 0.1 M potassium nitrate) using potentiometric methods. All metal ions studied form complexes with L 1 and L 2 with the logarithm of the formation constants L+M 2+ =[M(L)] 2+ in the sequence Cd 2+ ≅Pb 2+ , Zn 2+ 2+ for L 1 and Zn 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ 2+ for L 2 . The fluorescent behaviour of L 1 and L 2 was stud…
Thermodynamic predictions of the formation of chalcogenide glasses
1985
The understanding of glass forming ability requires quantitative information on the stable and metastable phase equilibria of binary and multicomponent systems, particularly as a function of composition and temperature. This paper discusses the success of the use of Gibbs free energy curves for the supercooled liquid relative to the stable crystalline phases to describe glass forming ability. Applications are reported for the systems GeSe2-Se, Sb2Se3-Se and GeSe2-Sb2Se3 for which experimental minimal quenching rates are available. A strongly associated regular solution model for the liquid phase gives a predicted behaviour consistent with experimental data. The method is intended to apply t…
On the Nature of the Plateau in Two-Step Dinuclear Spin-Crossover Complexes
2004
A remarkable feature of the spin-crossover process in several dinuclear iron(II) compounds is a plateau in the two-step transition curve. Up to now, it has not been possible to analyse the spin state of dinuclear pairs that constitute such a plateau, due to the relative high temperatures at which the transition takes place in complexes investigated so far. We solved this problem by experimentally studying a novel dinuclear spin-crossover compound [[Fe(phdia)(NCS)(2)](2)(phdia)] (phdia: 4,7-phenanthroline-5,6-diamine). We report here on the synthesis and characterisation of this system, which exhibits a two-step spin transition at T(c1)=108 K and T(c2)=80 K, displaying 2 K and 7 K wide therm…
Microgel regions in dilute agarose solutions: the notion of non-gelling concentration, and the role of spinodal demixing
1991
Abstract Freely drifting microgel regions are found in aqueous solutions of agarose, a representative biostructural polysaccharide, at concentrations between 0.01% and 0.05% w/v when quenched from 100°C to lower temperature. The size of these domains depends on the quench temperature and agarose concentration. The results agree with recent findings on the role that fluctuations within or close to the instability region of solution have as the initial step towards the self-assembly of supramolecular structures, and throw a new light on the notion of the lowest solute concentration needed for gelation.
Competition between intrinsic and extrinsic effects in the quenching of the superconducting state in FeSeTe thin films
2015
We report the first experimental observation of the quenching of the superconducting state in current-voltage characteristics of an iron-based superconductor, namely, in FeSeTe thin films. Based on available theoretical models, our analysis suggests the presence of an intrinsic flux-flow electronic instability along with non-negligible extrinsic thermal effects. The coexistence and competition of these two mechanisms classify the observed instability as halfway between those of low-temperature and of high-temperature superconductors, where thermal effects are respectively largely negligible or predominant.
Lifetime of the metastable 6P 3/2 level of PbII
1989
Pb+-ions were stored in a r.f.-quadrupole trap. Short laser pulses at a 710-nm M1-transition excited the ions to the metastable 6P 3/2 level. Time-resolved registration of the subsequent decay photons at the same wavelength directly gives the lifetime of that state. No dependence of the decay rate on the density of different buffer gases up to 10−5 mbar pressure was observed and from this we deduced upper limits to the quenching cross section. We have observed, however, a small dependence on the stored ion number. The final result for the lifetime is 41.2 ± 0.7 ms in agreement with the result of a previous calculation.
Active queue management stability in multiple bottleneck networks
2004
In this paper, we show that the active queue management (AQM) controllers, usually configured on a single bottleneck basis, may not prevent instability in the presence of multiple bottlenecks. We justify this result through a multiple bottleneck model.
Bistable spin-crossover nanoparticles showing magnetic thermal hysteresis near room temperature
2007
We have demonstrated that the reverse micelle technique can be applied to polymeric spin-crossover systems, such as [Fe(Htrz)2(trz)](BF4), to control the growth of the crystallites. Small nanoparticles of diameters around 10 nm and narrow size distribution were obtained. It is easy to envision that, by modifying the synthetic procedure, the size and critical temperatures of these nanoparticles can be tuned. On one hand, different ratios of solvent, water, and surfactants will lead to different micelle sizes, which will affect the particle size and, maybe, the magnetic properties. On the other hand, the critical temperatures can be lowered towards room temperature by changing the composition…
Magnetic octupole moment of Yb-173 using collinear laser spectroscopy
2021
The hyperfine constants of the $4{f}^{14}6s6p^{3}P_{2}^{o}$ state in neutral Yb have been measured using three different dipole transitions. This state was recently shown to have a comparatively large hyperfine magnetic octupole splitting, and thus a puzzlingly large magnetic octupole moment. The measurement is performed using collinear laser spectroscopy on a fast atomic beam, which provides a straightforward route to probing long-lived metastable atomic states with high resolution. From the combined analysis of all three lines we find no significant evidence for a nonzero octupole moment in $^{173}\mathrm{Yb}$.