Search Results

Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • Item
    Improvement of the optical properties after surface error correction of aluminium mirror surfaces
    (London : Biomed Central, 2021) Ulitschka, M.; Bauer, J.; Frost, F.; Arnold, T.
    Ion beam finishing techniques of aluminium mirrors have a high potential to meet the increasing demands on applications of high-performance mirror devices for visible and ultraviolet spectral range. Reactively driven ion beam machining using oxygen and nitrogen gases enables the direct figure error correction up to 1 μm machining depth while preserving the initial roughness. However, the periodic turning mark structures, which result from preliminary device shaping by single-point diamond turning, often limit the applicability of mirror surfaces in the short-periodic spectral range. Ion beam planarization with the aid of a sacrificial layer is a promising process route for surface smoothing, resulting in successfully reduction of the turning mark structures. A combination with direct surface smoothing to perform a subsequent improvement of the microroughness is presented with a special focus on roughness evolution, chemical composition, and optical surface properties. As a result, an ion beam based process route is suggested, which allows almost to recover the reflective properties and an increased long-term stability of smoothed aluminium surfaces.
  • Item
    Superconductivity in multi-phase Mg-B-O compounds
    (Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 2012) Prikhna, T.; Gawalek, W.; Eisterer, M.; Weber, H.W.; Noudem, J.; Sokolovsky, V.; Chaud, X.; Moshchil, V.; Karpets, M.; Kovylaev, V.; Borimskiy, A.; Tkach, V.; Kozyrev, A.; Kuznietsov, R.; Dellith, J.; Shmidt, C.; Basyuk, T.; Litzkendorf, D.; Karau, F.; Dittrich, U.; Tomsic, M.
    Structures of MgB2-based materials manufactured under pressure (up to 2 GPa) by different methods having high superconducting performance and connectivity are multiphase and contain different Mg-B-O compounds. Some oxygen can be incorporated into MgB2 and boron into MgO structures, MgBx (X=4-20) inclusions contain practically no oxygen. Regulating manufacturing temperature, pressure, introducing additions one can influence oxygen and boron distribution in the materials and thus, affect the formation, amount and sizes of Mg-B-O and MgBx inclusions and changing type of pinning, pinning force and so affect critical current density jc. The boron concentration increase in initial Mg and B mixture allows obtaining sample containing 88.5 wt% of MgB12 with Tc of 37.4 K (estimated magnetically).
  • Item
    Reactive species driven oxidative modifications of peptides—Tracing physical plasma liquid chemistry
    (Melville, NY : American Inst. of Physics, 2021) Wenske, Sebastian; Lackmann, Jan-Wilm; Busch, Larissa Milena; Bekeschus, Sander; von Woedtke, Thomas; Wende, Kristian
    The effluence of physical plasma consists of a significant share of reactive species, which may interact with biomolecules and yield chemical modifications comparable to those of physiological processes, e.g., post-translational protein modifications (oxPTMs). Consequentially, the aim of this work is to understand the role of physical plasma-derived reactive species in the introduction of oxPTM-like modifications in proteins. An artificial peptide library consisting of ten peptides was screened against the impact of two plasma sources, the argon-driven MHz-jet kINPen and the helium-driven RF-jet COST-Jet. Changes in the peptide molecular structure were analyzed by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. The amino acids cysteine, methionine, tyrosine, and tryptophan were identified as major targets. The introduction of one, two, or three oxygen atoms was the most common modification observed. Distinct modification patterns were observed for nitration (+N + 2O–H), which occurred in kINPen only (peroxynitrite), and chlorination (+Cl–H) that was exclusive for the COST-Jet in the presence of chloride ions (atomic oxygen/hypochlorite). Predominantly for the kINPen, singlet oxygen-related modifications, e.g., cleavage of tryptophan, were observed. Oxidation, carbonylation, and double oxidations were attributed to the impact of hydroxyl radicals and atomic oxygen. Leading to a significant change in the peptide side chain, most of these oxPTM-like modifications affect the secondary structure of amino acid chains, and amino acid polarity/functionality, ultimately modifying the performance and stability of cellular proteins.
  • Item
    Pinning and trapped field in MgB2- and MT-YBaCuO bulk superconductors manufactured under pressure
    (Bristol : IOP Publ., 2016) Prikhna, T.; Eisterer, M.; Chaud, X.; Weber, H.W.; Habisreuther, T.; Moshchil, V.; Kozyrev, A.; Shapovalov, A.; Gawalek, W.; Wu, M.; Litzkendorf, D.; Goldacker, W.; Sokolovsky, V.; Shaternik, V.; Rabier, J.; Joulain, A.; Grechnev, G.; Boutko, V.; Gusev, A.; Shaternik, A.; Barvitskiy, P.
    The relevant pinning centers of Abrikosov vortices in MgB2-based materials are oxygen-enriched Mg-B-O inclusions or nanolayers and inclusions of MgBx (x>4) phases. The high critical current densities, jc, of 106 and 103A/cm2 at 1 and 8.5 T, respectively, at 20 K can be achieved in polycrystalline materials (prepared at 2 GPa) containing a large amount of admixed oxygen. Besides, oxygen can be incorporated into the MgB2 structure in small amounts (MgB1.5O0.5), which is supported by Auger studies and calculations of the DOS and the binding energy. The jc of melt textured YBa2Cu3O7-δ (or Y123)-based superconductors (MT-YBaCuO) depends not only on the perfectness of texture and the amount of oxygen in the Y123 structure, but also on the density of twins and micro-cracks formed during the oxygenation (due to shrinking of the c-lattice parameter). The density of twins and microcracks increases with the reduction of the distance between Y2BaCuO5 (Y211) inclusions in Y123. At 77 K jc=8·104 A/cm2 in self-field and jc=103 A/cm2 at 10 T were found in materials oxygenated at 16 MPa for 3 days with a density of twins of 22–35 per µm (thickness of the lamellae: 45-30 nm) and a density of micro-cracks of 200–280 per mm. Pinning can occur at the points of intersection between the Y123 twin planes and the Y211 inclusions. MTYBaCuO at 77 K can trap 1.4 T (38×38×17 mm, oxygenated at 0.1 MPa for 20 days) and 0.8 T (16 mm in diameter and 10 mm thick with 0.45 mm holes oxygenated at 10 MPa for 53 h). The sensitivity of MgB2 to magnetic field variations (flux jumps) complicates estimates of the trapped field. At 20 K 1.8 T was found for a block of 30 mm in diameter and a thickness of 7.5 mm and 1.5 T (if the magnetic field was increased at a rate of 0.1 T) for a ring with dimensions 24×18 mm and a thickness of 8 mm.
  • Item
    Remarkable performance recovery in highly defective perovskite solar cells by photo-oxidation
    (London [u.a.] : RSC, 2023) Goetz, Katelyn P.; Thome, Fabian T. F.; An, Qingzhi; Hofstetter, Yvonne J.; Schramm, Tim; Yangui, Aymen; Kiligaridis, Alexander; Loeffler, Markus; Taylor, Alexander D.; Scheblykin, Ivan G.; Vaynzof, Yana
    Exposure to environmental factors is generally expected to cause degradation in perovskite films and solar cells. Herein, we show that films with certain defect profiles can display the opposite effect, healing upon exposure to oxygen under illumination. We tune the iodine content of methylammonium lead triiodide perovskite from understoichiometric to overstoichiometric and expose them to oxygen and light prior to the addition of the top layers of the device, thereby examining the defect dependence of their photooxidative response in the absence of storage-related chemical processes. The contrast between the photovoltaic properties of the cells with different defects is stark. Understoichiometric samples indeed degrade, demonstrating performance at 33% of their untreated counterparts, while stoichiometric samples maintain their performance levels. Surprisingly, overstoichiometric samples, which show low current density and strong reverse hysteresis when untreated, heal to maximum performance levels (the same as untreated, stoichiometric samples) upon the photooxidative treatment. A similar, albeit smaller-scale, effect is observed for triple cation and methylammonium-free compositions, demonstrating the general application of this treatment to state-of-the-art compositions. We examine the reasons behind this response by a suite of characterization techniques, finding that the performance changes coincide with microstructural decay at the crystal surface, reorientation of the bulk crystal structure for the understoichiometric cells, and a decrease in the iodine-to-lead ratio of all films. These results indicate that defect engineering is a powerful tool to manipulate the stability of perovskite solar cells.