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Electrical and Electronics

Electrical & Computer Engineering Faculty Publications

Charge transport

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Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Charge Transport, Conductivity And Seebeck Coefficient In Pristine And Tcnq Loaded Preferentially Grown Metal Organic Frameworks, Xin Chen, Kai Zhang, Zeinab Mohammed Hassan, Engelbert Redel, Helmut Baumgart Jan 2021

Charge Transport, Conductivity And Seebeck Coefficient In Pristine And Tcnq Loaded Preferentially Grown Metal Organic Frameworks, Xin Chen, Kai Zhang, Zeinab Mohammed Hassan, Engelbert Redel, Helmut Baumgart

Electrical & Computer Engineering Faculty Publications

This investigation on Metal-Organic Framework (MOF) HUKUST-1 films focuses on comparing the undoped pristine state and with the case of doping by TCNQ infiltration of the MOF pore structure. We have determined the temperature dependent charge transport and p-type conductivity for HKUST-1 films. Furthermore, the electrical conductivity and the current-voltage characteristics have been characterized in detail. Because the most common forms of MOFs, bulk MOF powders, do not lend themselves easily to electrical characterization investigations, here in this study the electrical measurements were performed on dense, compact surface-anchored metal-organic framework (SURMOF) films. These monolithic, well-defined, and (001) preferentially oriented MOF …


Are Microbubbles Necessary For The Breakdown Of Liquid Water Subjected To A Submicrosecond Pulse?, R. P. Joshi, J. Qian, G. Zhao, J. Kolb, K. H. Schoenbach, E. Schamiloglu, J. Gaudet Jan 2004

Are Microbubbles Necessary For The Breakdown Of Liquid Water Subjected To A Submicrosecond Pulse?, R. P. Joshi, J. Qian, G. Zhao, J. Kolb, K. H. Schoenbach, E. Schamiloglu, J. Gaudet

Electrical & Computer Engineering Faculty Publications

Electrical breakdown in homogeneous liquid water for an ∼ 100 ns voltage pulse is analyzed. It is shown that electron-impact ionization is not likely to be important and could only be operative for low-density situations or possibly under optical excitation. Simulation results also indicate that field ionization of liquid water can lead to a liquid breakdown provided the ionization energies were very low in the order of 2.3eV. Under such conditions, an electric-field collapse at the anode and plasma propagation toward the cathode, with minimal physical charge transport, is predicted. However, the low, unphysical ionization energies necessary for matching …