965 resultados para amorphous solids
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At the jamming transition, amorphous packings are known to display anomalous vibrational modes with a density of states (DOS) that remains constant at low frequency. The scaling of the DOS at higher packing fractions remains, however, unclear. One might expect to find a simple Debye scaling, but recent results from effective medium theory and the exact solution of mean-field models both predict an anomalous, non-Debye scaling. Being mean-field in nature, however, these solutions are only strictly valid in the limit of infinite spatial dimension, and it is unclear what value they have for finite-dimensional systems. Here, we study packings of soft spheres in dimensions 3 through 7 and find, away from jamming, a universal non-Debye scaling of the DOS that is consistent with the mean-field predictions. We also consider how the soft mode participation ratio evolves as dimension increases.
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Many food materials exist in a disordered amorphous solid state due to processing. Therefore, understanding the concept of amorphous state, its important phase transition (i.e., glass transition), and the related phenomena (e.g., enthalpy relaxation) is important to food scientists. Food saccharides, including mono-, di-, oligo-, and polysaccharides, are among the most important major components in food. Focusing on the food saccharides, this review covers important topics related to amorphous solids, including the concept and molecular arrangement of amorphous solid, the formation of amorphous food saccharides, the concept of glass transition and enthalpy relaxation, physical property changes and molecular mobility around the glass transition, measurement of the glass transition and enthalpy relaxation, their mathematical descriptions and models, and influences on food stability.
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La construction modulaire est une stratégie émergente qui permet la fabrication de matériaux ordonnés à l’échelle atomique. Elle consiste en l’association programmée de sous-unités moléculaires via des sites réactifs judicieusement sélectionnés. L’application de cette stratégie a d’ores et déjà produit des matériaux aux propriétés remarquables, notamment les réseaux organiques covalents, dans lesquels des atomes de carbone et d’autres éléments légers sont liés de manière covalente. Bien que des matériaux assemblés par des interactions non-covalentes puissent être préparés sous la forme de monocristaux macroscopiques de cette façon, ceci n’était pas possible dans le cas des réseaux organiques covalents. Afin de pallier cette lacune, nous avons choisi d’étudier des réactions de polymérisation réversibles ayant lieu par un mécanisme d’addition. En effet, l’hypothèse de départ de cette thèse suppose qu’un tel processus émule le phénomène de cristallisation classique – régi par des interactions non-covalentes – et favorise la formation de monocristaux de dimensions importantes. Pour tester la validité de cette hypothèse, nous avons choisi d’étudier la polymérisation des composés polynitroso aromatiques puisque la dimérisation des nitrosoarènes est réversible et procède par addition. Dans un premier temps, nous avons revu en profondeur la littérature portant sur la dimérisation des nitrosoarènes. À partir des données alors recueillies, nous avons conçu, dans un deuxième temps, une série de composés polynitroso ayant le potentiel de former des réseaux organiques covalents bi- et tridimensionnels. Les paramètres thermodynamiques propres à leur polymérisation ont pu être estimés grâce à l’étude de composés mononitroso modèles. Dans un troisième temps, nous avons synthétisé les divers composés polynitroso visés par notre étude. Pour y parvenir, nous avons eu à développer une nouvelle méthodologie de synthèse des poly(N-arylhydroxylamines) – les précurseurs directs aux composés polynitroso. Dans un quatrième temps, nous avons étudié la polymérisation des composés polynitroso. En dépit de difficultés d’ordre pratique causées par la polymérisation spontanée de ces composés, nous avons pu identifier les conditions propices à leur polymérisation en réseaux organiques covalents hautement cristallins. Plusieurs nouveaux réseaux covalents tridimensionnels ont ainsi été produits sous la forme de monocristaux de dimensions variant entre 30 µm et 500 µm, confirmant la validité de notre hypothèse de départ. Il a par conséquent été possible de résoudre la structure de ces cristaux par diffraction de rayons X sur monocristal, ce qui n’avait jamais été possible dans le passé pour ce genre de matériau. Ces cristaux sont remarquablement uniformes et les polymères qui les composent ont des masses moléculaires extrêmement élevées (1014-1017 g/mol). Toutefois, la polymérisation de la majorité des composés polynitroso étudiés a plutôt conduit à des solides amorphes ou à des solides cristallins constitués de la forme monomérique de ces composés. D’autres composés nitroso modèles ont alors été préparés afin d’expliquer ce comportement, et des hypothèses ont été émises à partir des données alors recueillies. Enfin, les structures de plusieurs composés polynitroso ayant cristallisés sous une forme monomérique ont été analysés en détails par diffraction des rayons X. Notre stratégie, qui consiste en l’utilisation de monomères ayant la capacité de polymériser spontanément par un processus d’addition réversible, semble donc prometteuse pour obtenir de nouveaux réseaux covalents monocristallins à partir de composés polynitroso ou d’autres monomères de nature similaire. De plus, les résultats présentés au cours de cette thèse établissent un lien entre la science des polymères et la chimie supramoléculaire, en illustrant comment des structures ordonnées, covalentes ou non covalentes, peuvent toutes deux être construites de façon prévisible.
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Department of Instrumentation, Cochin University of Science and Technology
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We present the first-principle electronic structure calculation on an amorphous material including many-body corrections within the GW approximation. We show that the inclusion of the local field effects in the exchange-correlation potential is crucial to quantitatively describe amorphous systems and defect states. We show that the mobility gap of amorphous silica coincides with the band gap of quartz, contrary to the traditional picture and the densityfunctional theory results. (C) 2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
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In dieser Arbeit werden nichtlineare Experimente zur Untersuchung der Dynamik in amorphen Festkörpern im Rahmen von Modellrechnungen diskutiert. Die Experimente beschäftigen sich mit der Frage nach dynamischen Heterogenitäten, worunter man das Vorliegen dynamischer Prozesse auf unterschiedlichen Zeitskalen versteht. Ist es möglich, gezielt 'langsame' oder 'schnelle' Dynamik in der Probe nachzuweisen, so ist die Existenz von dynamischen Heterogenitäten gezeigt. Ziel der Experimente sind deshalb sogenannte frequenzselektive Anregungen des Systems. In den beiden diskutierten Experimenten, zum einen nichtresonantes Lochbrennen, zum anderen ein ähnliches Experiment, das auf dem dynamischen Kerreffekt beruht, werden nichtlineare Antwortfunktionen gemessen. Um eine Probe in frequenzselektiver Weise anzuregen, werden zunächst einer oder mehrere Zyklen eines oszillierenden elektrischen Feldes an die Probe angelegt. Die Experimente werden zunächst im Terahertz-Bereich untersucht. Auf dieser Zeitskala findet man phonon-ähnliche kollektive Schwingungen in Gläsern. Diese Schwingungen werden durch (anharmonische) Brownsche Oszillatoren beschrieben. Der zentrale Befund der Modellrechnungen ist, daß eine frequenzselektive Anregung im Terahertz-Bereich möglich ist. Ein Nachweis dynamischer Heterogenitäten im Terahertz-Bereich ist somit durch beide Experimente möglich. Anschliessend wird das vorgestellte Kerreffekt-Experiment im Bereich wesentlich kleinerer Frequenzen diskutiert. Die langsame Reorientierungsdynamik in unterkühlten Flüssigkeiten wird dabei durch ein Rotationsdiffusionsmodell beschrieben. Es werden zum einen ein heterogenes und zum anderen ein homogenes Szenario zugrundegelegt. Es stellt sich heraus, daß wie beim Lochbrennen eine Unterscheidung durch das Experiment möglich ist. Das Kerreffekt-Experiment wird somit als eine relativ einfache Alternative zur Technik des nichtresonanten Lochbrennens vorgeschlagen.
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Adsorption of argon and nitrogen at their respective boiling points in cylindrical pores of MCM-41 type silica-like adsorbents is studied by means of a non-local density functional theory (NLDFT), which is modified to deal with amorphous solids. By matching the theoretical results of the pore filling pressure versus pore diameter against the experimental data, we arrive at a conclusion that the adsorption branch (rather than desorption) corresponds to the true thermodynamic equilibrium. If this is accepted, we derive the optimal values for the solid–fluid molecular parameters for the system amorphous silica–Ar and amorphous silica–N2, and at the same time we could derive reliably the specific surface area of non-porous and mesoporous silica-like adsorbents, without a recourse to the BET method. This method is then logically extended to describe the local adsorption isotherms of argon and nitrogen in silica-like pores, which are then used as the bases (kernel) to determine the pore size distribution. We test this with a number of adsorption isotherms on the MCM-41 samples, and the results are quite realistic and in excellent agreement with the XRD results, justifying the approach adopted in this paper.
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Adsorption of argon at its boiling point infinite cylindrical pores is considered by means of the non-local density functional theory (NLDFT) with a reference to MCM-41 silica. The NLDFT was adjusted to amorphous solids, which allowed us to quantitatively describe argon adsorption isotherm on nonporous reference silica in the entire bulk pressure range. In contrast to the conventional NLDFT technique, application of the model to cylindrical pores does not show any layering before the phase transition in conformity with experimental data. The finite pore is modeled as a cylindrical cavity bounded from its mouth by an infinite flat surface perpendicular to the pore axis. The adsorption of argon in pores of 4 and 5 nm diameters is analyzed in canonical and grand canonical ensembles using a two-dimensional version of NLDFT, which accounts for the radial and longitudinal fluid density distributions. The simulation results did not show any unusual features associated with accounting for the outer surface and support the conclusions obtained from the classical analysis of capillary condensation and evaporation. That is, the spontaneous condensation occurs at the vapor-like spinodal point, which is the upper limit of mechanical stability of the liquid-like film wetting the pore wall, while the evaporation occurs via a mechanism of receding of the semispherical meniscus from the pore mouth and the complete evaporation of the core occurs at the equilibrium transition pressure. Visualization of the pore filling and empting in the form of contour lines is presented.
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Nitrogen adsorption on a surface of a non-porous reference material is widely used in the characterization. Traditionally, the enhancement of solid-fluid potential in a porous solid is accounted for by incorporating the surface curvature into the solid-fluid Potential of the flat reference surface. However, this calculation procedure has not been justified experimentally. In this paper, we derive the solid-fluid potential of mesoporous MCM-41 solid by using solely the adsorption isotherm of that solid. This solid-fluid potential is then compared with that of the non-porous reference surface. In derivation of the solid-fluid potential for both reference surface and mesoporous MCM-41 silica (diameter ranging front 3 to 6.5 nm) we employ the nonlocal density functional theory developed for amorphous solids. It is found that, to out, surprise, the solid-fluid potential of a porous solid is practically the same as that for the reference surface, indicating that there is no enhancement due to Surface curvature. This requires further investigations to explain this unusual departure from our conventional wisdom of curvature-induced enhancement. Accepting the curvature-independent solid-fluid potential derived from the non-porous reference surface, we analyze the hysteresis features of a series of MCM-41 samples. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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The application of nonlocal density functional theory (NLDFT) to determine pore size distribution (PSD) of activated carbons using a nongraphitized carbon black, instead of graphitized thermal carbon black, as a reference system is explored. We show that in this case nitrogen and argon adsorption isotherms in activated carbons are precisely correlated by the theory, and such an excellent correlation would never be possible if the pore wall surface was assumed to be identical to that of graphitized carbon black. It suggests that pore wall surfaces of activated carbon are closer to that of amorphous solids because of defects of crystalline lattice, finite pore length, and the presence of active centers.. etc. Application of the NLDFT adapted to amorphous solids resulted in quantitative description of N-2 and Ar adsorption isotherms on nongraphitized carbon black BP280 at their respective boiling points. In the present paper we determined solid-fluid potentials from experimental adsorption isotherms on nongraphitized carbon black and subsequently used those potentials to model adsorption in slit pores and generate a corresponding set of local isotherms, which we used to determine the PSD functions of different activated carbons. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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This article provides a review of the recent theory of transport in nanopores developed in the author's laboratory. In particular the influence of fluid-solid interactions on the transport coefficient is examined, showing that such interactions reduce the value of the coefficient by almost an order of magnitude in comparison to the Knudsen theory for non-interacting systems. The activation energy and potential energy barriers for diffusion in smooth pores with a one-dimensional potential energy profile are also discussed, indicating the inadequacy of the commonly used assumption of proportionality between the activation energy and heat of adsorption or the minimum pore potential energy. A further feature affected by fluid-solid interactions is the nature of the reflection of fluid molecules colliding with a pore wall surface, varying from being nearly specular - such as in carbon nanotubes - to nearly diffuse for amorphous solids. Diffuse reflection leads to momentum loss and reduced transport coefficients. However, fluid-solid interactions do not affect the transport coefficient in the single-file diffusion regime when the surface reflection is diffuse, and the transport coefficient in this case is largely independent of the adsorbed density.
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In the present work we report the characterization of PbO-GeO(2) films containing silver nanoparticles (NPs). Radio Frequency (RF) co-sputtering was used for deposition of amorphous films on glass substrates. Targets of 60PbO-40GeO(2) (in wt%) and bulk silver with purity of 99.99% were RF-sputtered using 3.5 m Torr of argon. The concentration of silver and gold NPs in the films was controlled varying the RF-power applied to the targets (40-50W for the PbO-GeO(2) target; 6-8 W for the metallic target). The films obtained were annealed in air at different temperatures and various periods of time. Absorption measurements have shown strong NPs surface plasmon bands. Different widths and peak wavelengths were observed, indicating that size, shape and distribution of the silver NPs are dependent on the deposition process parameters and on the annealing of the samples. X-Ray Fluorescence and Transmission Electron Microscopy were also used to characterize the samples. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.