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Posterminaries: After Nabarro, Alexander H. King
Posterminaries: After Nabarro, Alexander H. King
Alexander H. King
With the passing of Frank Nabarro in July of this year, we have lost one of the founding fathers of materials science. His name appears in many of the textbooks from which we train our students today, and also on the spines of several volumes on dislocation theory, including his classic monograph on the subject. He rightly stands among the gods of our field. Ninety years old at his death, he was a sprightly dancer at the frontiers of knowledge, right up to the end.
Posterminaries: The Scales Of Judgement, Alexander H. King
Posterminaries: The Scales Of Judgement, Alexander H. King
Alexander H. King
Materials scientists are generally well-versed in physics, and physics, above all, is a science of measurements. The first instinct of a physicist is to parse a problem in terms of its measurables in the dimensions of mass, length, and time, and it is the shifting of attention down the scale of length that particularly characterizes our present times as the Nano Age.
Dynamics Of Surface Catalyzed Reactions; The Roles Of Surface Defects, Surface Diffusion, And Hot Electrons, Gabor Somorjai, Kaitlin Bratlie, Max Montano, Jeong Park
Dynamics Of Surface Catalyzed Reactions; The Roles Of Surface Defects, Surface Diffusion, And Hot Electrons, Gabor Somorjai, Kaitlin Bratlie, Max Montano, Jeong Park
Kaitlin M. Bratlie
The mechanism that controls bond breaking at transition metal surfaces has been studied with sum frequency generation (SFG), scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), and catalytic nanodiodes operating under the highpressure conditions. The combination of these techniques permits us to understand the role of surface defects, surface diffusion, and hot electrons in dynamics of surface catalyzed reactions. Sum frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy and kinetic measurements were performed under 1.5 Torr of cyclohexene hydrogenation/dehydrogenation in the presence and absence of H2 and over the temperature range 300-500 K on the Pt(100) and Pt(111) surfaces. The structure specificity of the Pt(100) and Pt(111) surfaces …
Posterminaries: Plain Text, Alexander H. King
Posterminaries: Plain Text, Alexander H. King
Alexander H. King
You just can’t win an argument with an English professor.
Gold Nanoparticles Propulsion From Surface Fueled By Absorption Of Femtosecond Laser Pulse At Their Surface Plasmon Resonance, Wenyu Huang, Wei Qian, Mostafa A. El-Sayed
Gold Nanoparticles Propulsion From Surface Fueled By Absorption Of Femtosecond Laser Pulse At Their Surface Plasmon Resonance, Wenyu Huang, Wei Qian, Mostafa A. El-Sayed
Wenyu Huang
Femtosecond laser irradiation of assembled nanoprisms on a quartz substrate at their strong absorbing surface plasmon resonance frequency causes their propulsion from the substrate. SEM and AFM show that the particles fly while keeping their prismatic shape, but they decrease in size by an amount that can be calculated assuming atomic sublimation. Several mechanisms are mentioned, but the sublimation mechanism, which rapidly builds up pressure under the particle and propels it away from substrate, is discussed in detail. From the kinetic energy given to the flying nanoparticle, an initial velocity of ∼160 m/s (∼360 miles/h) is calculated. The dependence of …
Thermal Effects On Domain Orientation Of Tetragonal Piezoelectrics Studied By In Situ X-Ray Diffraction, Wonyoung Chang, Alexander H. King, Keith J. Bowman
Thermal Effects On Domain Orientation Of Tetragonal Piezoelectrics Studied By In Situ X-Ray Diffraction, Wonyoung Chang, Alexander H. King, Keith J. Bowman
Alexander H. King
Thermal effects on domain orientation in tetragonal lead zirconate titanate (PZT) and lead titanate (PT) have been investigated by using in situ x-ray diffraction with an area detector. In the case of a soft PZT, it is found that the texture parameter called multiples of a random distribution (MRD) initially increases with temperature up to approximately 100 °C and then falls to unity at temperatures approaching the Curie temperature, whereas the MRD of hard PZT and PT initially undergoes a smaller increase or no change. The relationship between the mechanical strain energy and domain wall mobility with temperature is discussed.
Solid-Solid Phase Transformation Via Internal Stress-Induced Virtual Melting, Significantly Below The Melting Temperature. Application To Hmx Energetic Crystal, Valery I. Levitas, Bryan F. Henson, Laura B. Smilowitz, Blaine W. Asay
Solid-Solid Phase Transformation Via Internal Stress-Induced Virtual Melting, Significantly Below The Melting Temperature. Application To Hmx Energetic Crystal, Valery I. Levitas, Bryan F. Henson, Laura B. Smilowitz, Blaine W. Asay
Valery I. Levitas
We theoretically predict a new phenomenon, namely, that a solid−solid phase transformation (PT) with a large transformation strain can occur via internal stress-induced virtual melting along the interface at temperatures significantly (more than 100 K) below the melting temperature. We show that the energy of elastic stresses, induced by transformation strain, increases the driving force for melting and reduces the melting temperature. Immediately after melting, stresses relax and the unstable melt solidifies. Fast solidification in a thin layer leads to nanoscale cracking which does not affect the thermodynamics or kinetics of the solid−solid transformation. Thus, virtual melting represents a new …
Nmr Studies Of Lysozyme Surface Accessibility By Using Different Paramagnetic Relaxation Probes, Andrea Bernini, Ottavia Spiga, Vincenzo Venditti, Filippo Prischi, Luisa Bracci, Angela Pui-Ling Tong, Wing-Tak Wong, Neri Niccolai
Nmr Studies Of Lysozyme Surface Accessibility By Using Different Paramagnetic Relaxation Probes, Andrea Bernini, Ottavia Spiga, Vincenzo Venditti, Filippo Prischi, Luisa Bracci, Angela Pui-Ling Tong, Wing-Tak Wong, Neri Niccolai
Vincenzo Venditti
Paramagnetic probes, whose approach to proteins can be monitored by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies, have been found to be of primary relevance for investigating protein surfaces' accessibility. Here, a Gd(III) neutral complex which contains two metal ions, [Gd2(L7)(H2O)2], is suggested as a paramagnetic probe particularly suited for systematic NMR investigation of protein surface accessibility, due to an expected high relaxivity and to the lack of electric charge which could favor specific interactions. Hen egg white lysozyme has been used as a model system to verify the absence of preferential approaches of this paramagnetic probe to specific protein moieties by …