Material dynamics at extreme pressures and strain rates (open access)

Material dynamics at extreme pressures and strain rates

Solid state experiments at extreme pressures (10-100 GPa) and strain rates ({approx}10{sup 6}-10{sup 8}s{sup -1}) are being developed on high-energy laser facilities, and offer the possibility for exploring new regimes of materials science. [Re 2004] These extreme solid-state conditions can be accessed with either shock loading or with quasi-isentropic ramped pressure pulses being developed on the Omega laser. [Ed 2004] Velocity interferometer measurements establish the high strain rates. Constitutive models for solid-state strength under these conditions are tested by comparing 2D continuum simulations with experiments measuring perturbation growth due to the Rayleigh-Taylor instability in solid-state samples. Lattice compression, phase, and temperature are deduced from extended x-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) measurements, from which the shock-induced a-w phase transition in Ti is inferred to occur on sub-nanosecond time scales. [Ya 2004] Time resolved lattice response and phase can be inferred from dynamic x-ray diffraction measurements, where the elastic-plastic (1D-3D) lattice relaxation in shocked Cu is shown to occur promptly (< 1 ns). [Lo 2003] Subsequent large-scale MD simulations have elucidated the microscopic dynamics that underlie the 3D lattice relaxation. Deformation mechanisms are identified by examining the residual microstructure in recovered samples. [Re 2004] For example, the slip-twinning threshold in single-crystal Cu …
Date: August 25, 2004
Creator: Remington, Bruce A.; Cavallo, Rob M.; Edwards, Michael J.; Ho, David D.; Lasinski, Barbara F.; Lorenz, Karl T. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pore Fluid Effects on Shear Modulus for Sandstones with Soft Anisotropy (open access)

Pore Fluid Effects on Shear Modulus for Sandstones with Soft Anisotropy

None
Date: March 25, 2004
Creator: Berger, E. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Boron-Carbide Barrier Layers in Scandium-Silicon Multilayers (open access)

Boron-Carbide Barrier Layers in Scandium-Silicon Multilayers

None
Date: March 25, 2004
Creator: Jankowski, Alan Frederic; Saw, Cheng K.; Walton, Christopher C.; Hayes, Jeffrey P. & Nilsen, Joseph
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Near-Field Hydrology Data Package for the Integrated Disposal Facility 2005 Performance Assessment (open access)

Near-Field Hydrology Data Package for the Integrated Disposal Facility 2005 Performance Assessment

CH2MHill Hanford Group, Inc. (CHG) is designing and assessing the performance of an Integrated Disposal Facility (IDF) to receive immobilized low-activity waste (ILAW), Low-Level and Mixed Low-Level Wastes (LLW/MLLW), and the Waste Treatment Plant (WTP) melters used to vitrify the ILAW. The IDF Performance Assessment (PA) assesses the performance of the disposal facility to provide a reasonable expectation that the disposal of the waste is protective of the general public, groundwater resources, air resources, surface water resources, and inadvertent intruders. The PA requires prediction of contaminant migration from the facilities, which is expected to occur primarily via the movement of water through the facilities and the consequent transport of dissolved contaminants in the pore water of the vadose zone. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) assists CHG in its performance assessment activities. One of PNNL’s tasks is to provide estimates of the physical, hydraulic, and transport properties of the materials comprising the disposal facilities and the disturbed region around them. These materials are referred to as the near-field materials. Their properties are expressed as parameters of constitutive models used in simulations of subsurface flow and transport. In addition to the best-estimate parameter values, information on uncertainty in the parameter values and …
Date: June 25, 2004
Creator: Meyer, Philip D.; Saripalli, Prasad & Freedman, Vicky L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Removal of Mercury From Contaminated Soils at the Pavlodar Chemical Plant. (open access)

Removal of Mercury From Contaminated Soils at the Pavlodar Chemical Plant.

Soils beneath and adjacent to the Pavlodar Chemical Plant in Kazakhstan have been contaminated with elemental mercury as a result of chlor alkali processing using mercury cathode cell technology. The work described in this paper was conducted in preparation for a demonstration of a technology to remove the mercury from the contaminated soils using a vacuum assisted thermal distillation process. The process can operate at temperatures from 250-500 C and pressures of 0.13kPa-1.33kPa. Following vaporization, the mercury vapor is cooled, condensed and concentrated back to liquid elemental mercury. It will then be treated using the Sulfur Polymer Stabilization/Solidification process developed at Brookhaven National Laboratory as described in a companion paper at this conference. The overall project objectives include chemical and physical characterization of the contaminated soils, study of the influence of the soil's physical-chemical and hydro dynamical characteristics on process parameters, and laboratory testing to optimize the mercury sublimation rate when heating in vacuum. Based on these laboratory and pilot-scale data, a full-scale production process will be designed for testing. This paper describes the soil characterization. This work is being sponsored by the International Science and Technology Center.
Date: September 25, 2004
Creator: Khrapunov, v. Ye.; Isakova, R. A.; Levintov, B. L.; Kalb, P. D.; Kamberov, I. M. & Trebukhov, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gas Desorption and Electron Emission from 1 MeV Potassium Iion Bombardment of Stainless Steel (open access)

Gas Desorption and Electron Emission from 1 MeV Potassium Iion Bombardment of Stainless Steel

Gas desorption and electron emission coefficients were measured for 1 MeV potassium ions incident on stainless steel at grazing angles (between 80 and 88 degrees from normal incidence) using a new gas-electron source diagnostic (GESD). Issues addressed in design and commissioning of the GESD include effects from backscattering of ions at the surface, space-charge limited emission current, and reproducibility of desorption measurements. We find that electron emission coefficients {gamma}{sub e} scale as 1/cos({theta}) up to angles of 86 degrees, where {gamma}{sub e} = 90. Nearer grazing incidence, {gamma}{sub e} is reduced below the 1/cos({theta}) scaling by nuclear scattering of ions through large angles, reaching {gamma}{sub e} = 135 at 88 degrees. Electrons were emitted with a measured temperature of {approx}30 eV. Gas desorption coefficients {gamma}{sub 0} were much larger, of order {gamma}{sub 0} = 10{sub 4}. They also varied with angle, but much more slowly than 1/cos({theta}). From this we conclude that the desorption was not entirely from adsorbed layers of gas on the surface. Two mitigation techniques were investigated: rough surfaces reduced electron emission by a factor of ten and gas desorption by a factor of two; a mild bake to {approx}220 degrees had no effect on electron emission, …
Date: March 25, 2004
Creator: Molvik, A; Covo, M K; Bieniosek, F; Prost, L; Seidl, P; Baca, D et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbon Nanotube-Based Permeable Membranes: A Platform for Studying Nanofluidics (open access)

Carbon Nanotube-Based Permeable Membranes: A Platform for Studying Nanofluidics

A membrane of multiwalled carbon nanotubes embedded in a silicon nitride matrix was fabricated for use in studying fluid mechanics on the nanometer scale. Characterization by fluorescent tracer diffusion and scanning electron microscopy suggests that the membrane is void-free near the silicon substrate on which it rests, implying that the hollow core of the nanotube is the only conduction path for molecular transport. Nitrogen flow measurements of a nanoporous silicon nitride membrane, fabricated by sacrificial removal of carbon, give a flow rate of 0.086 cc/sec. Calculations of water flow across a nanotube membrane give a rate of 2.1x10{sup -6} cc/sec (0.12 {micro}L/min).
Date: May 25, 2004
Creator: Holt, J K; Park, H G; Noy, A; Huser, T; Eaglesham, D & Bakajin, O
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chord Distributions of a Spherical Shell (open access)

Chord Distributions of a Spherical Shell

None
Date: June 25, 2004
Creator: Chang, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrosion Behavior of Titanium Grade 7 in Fluoride-Containing NaCl Brines (open access)

Corrosion Behavior of Titanium Grade 7 in Fluoride-Containing NaCl Brines

The effects of fluoride on the corrosion behavior of Titanium Grade 7 (0.12-0.25% Pd) have been investigated. Up to 0.1 mol/L fluoride was added to the NaCl brines at 95 C, and three pH values of 4, 8, and 11 were selected for studying pH dependence of fluoride effects. It was observed that fluoride significantly altered the anodic polarization behavior, at all three pH values of 4, 8, and 11. Under acidic condition fluoride caused active corrosion. The corrosion of Titanium grade 7 was increased by three orders of magnitude when a 0.1 mol/L fluoride was added to the NaCl brines at pH 4, and the Pd ennoblement effect was not observed in acidic fluoride-containing environments. The effects of fluoride were reduced significantly when pH was increased to 8 and above.
Date: October 25, 2004
Creator: Lian, T; Whalen, M T & Wong, L
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fabrication of a Carbon Nanotube-Embedded Silicon Nitride Membrane for Studies of Nanometer-Scale Mass Transport (open access)

Fabrication of a Carbon Nanotube-Embedded Silicon Nitride Membrane for Studies of Nanometer-Scale Mass Transport

A membrane consisting of multiwall carbon nanotubes embedded in a silicon nitride matrix was fabricated for fluid mechanics studies on the nanometer scale. Characterization by tracer diffusion and scanning electron microscopy suggests that the membrane is free of large voids. An upper limit to the diffusive flux of D{sub 2}O of 2.4x10-{sup 8} mole/m{sup 2}-s was determined, indicating extremely slow transport. By contrast, hydrodynamic calculations of water flow across a nanotube membrane of similar specifications predict a much higher molar flux of 1.91 mole/m{sup 2}-s, suggesting that the nanotubes produced possess a 'bamboo' morphology. The carbon nanotube membranes were used to make nanoporous silicon nitride membranes, fabricated by sacrificial removal of the carbon. Nitrogen flow measurements on these structures give a membrane permeance of 4.7x10{sup -4} mole/m{sup 2}-s-Pa at a pore density of 4x10{sup 10} cm{sup -2}. Using a Knudsen diffusion model, the average pore size of this membrane is estimated to be 66 nm, which agrees well with TEM observations of the multiwall carbon nanotube outer diameter. These membranes are a robust platform for the study of confined molecular transport, with applications inseparations and chemical sensing.
Date: August 25, 2004
Creator: Holt, J K; Noy, A; Huser, T; Eaglesham, D & Bakajin, O
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser Wakefield Acceleration Driven by Atf co2 Laser (Stella-Lw). (open access)

Laser Wakefield Acceleration Driven by Atf co2 Laser (Stella-Lw).

A new experiment has begun that builds upon the successful Staged Electron Laser Acceleration (STELLA) experiment, which demonstrated high-trapping efficiency and narrow energy spread in a staged laser-driven accelerator. STELLA was based upon inverse free electron lasers (IFEL); the new experiment, called STELLA-LW, is based upon laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA). The first phase of STELLA-LW will be to demonstrate LWFA in a capillary discharge driven by the Brookhaven National Laboratory Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) terawatt CO{sub 2} laser beam. This will be the first time LWFA is conducted at 10.6-{micro}m laser wavelength. It will also be operating in an interesting pseudo-resonant regime where the laser pulse length is too long for resonant LWFA, but too short for self-modulated LWFA. Analysis has shown that in pseudo-resonant LWFA, pulse-steepening effects occur on the laser pulse that permits generation of strong wakefields. Various approaches are being explored for the capillary discharge including polypropylene and hydrogen-filled capillaries. Planned diagnostics for the experiment include coherent Thomson scattering (CTS) to detect the wakefield generation. This will be one of the first times CTS is used on a capillary discharge.
Date: September 25, 2004
Creator: Kimura,W. D.; Andreev,N. E.; Babzien,M.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan & Al., Et
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Observation and Measurement of MHD Activity Using Motional Stark Effect (MSE) Diagnostic (open access)

Observation and Measurement of MHD Activity Using Motional Stark Effect (MSE) Diagnostic

In a new mode of measurement, the amplitude of a tearing mode rotating at frequencies of up to tens of KHz has been obtained using the spectral features of high frequency MSE data. A formulation has been developed to calculate the pitch angle oscillations associated with these instabilities, from the MSE spectrum. Density fluctuations can be simultaneously obtained from MSE measurements if the intensity response to density variation can be calibrated. Examples of observations are given and detection limits are explored.
Date: June 25, 2004
Creator: Jayakumar, R; Makowski, M; Allen, S; Moller, J & Rhodes, T
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interferometric resolution boosting for spectrographs (open access)

Interferometric resolution boosting for spectrographs

Externally dispersed interferometry (EDI) is a technique for enhancing the performance of spectrographs for wide bandwidth high resolution spectroscopy and Doppler radial velocimetry. By placing a small angle-independent interferometer near the slit of a spectrograph, periodic fiducials are embedded on the recorded spectrum. The multiplication of the stellar spectrum times the sinusoidal fiducial net creates a moir{acute e} pattern, which manifests high detailed spectral information heterodyned down to detectably low spatial frequencies. The latter can more accurately survive the blurring, distortions and CCD Nyquist limitations of the spectrograph. Hence lower resolution spectrographs can be used to perform high resolution spectroscopy and radial velocimetry. Previous demonstrations of {approx}2.5x resolution boost used an interferometer having a single fixed delay. We report new data indicating {approx}6x Gaussian resolution boost (140,000 from a spectrograph with 25,000 native resolving power), taken by using multiple exposures at widely different interferometer delays.
Date: May 25, 2004
Creator: Erskine, D J & Edelstein, J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bounds and Estimates for Elastic Constants of Random Polycrystals of Laminates (open access)

Bounds and Estimates for Elastic Constants of Random Polycrystals of Laminates

In order to obtain formulas providing estimates for elastic constants of random polycrystals of laminates, some known rigorous bounds of Peselnick, Meister, and Watt are first simplified. Then, some new self-consistent estimates are formulated based on the resulting analytical structure of these bounds. A numerical study is made, assuming first that the internal structure (i.e., the laminated grain structure) is not known, and then that it is known. The purpose of this aspect of the study is to attempt to quantify the differences in the predictions of properties of the same system being modeled when such internal structure of the composite medium and spatial correlation information is and is not available.
Date: August 25, 2004
Creator: Berger, E. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculating Expectations with Time-Dependent Perturbations in Quantum Monte Carlo (open access)

Calculating Expectations with Time-Dependent Perturbations in Quantum Monte Carlo

None
Date: May 25, 2004
Creator: Kalos, M H & de Saavedra, F A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Large-Actuator-Number Horizontal Path Correction of Atmospheric Turbulence utilizing an Interferometric Phase Conjugate Engine (open access)

Large-Actuator-Number Horizontal Path Correction of Atmospheric Turbulence utilizing an Interferometric Phase Conjugate Engine

An adaptive optical system used to correct horizontal beam propagation paths has been demonstrated. This system utilizes an interferometric wave-front sensor and a large-actuator-number MEMS-based spatial light modulator to correct the aberrations incurred by the beam after propagation along the path. Horizontal path correction presents a severe challenge to adaptive optics systems due to the short atmospheric transverse coherence length and the high degree of scintillation incurred by laser propagation along these paths. Unlike wave-front sensors that detect phase gradients, however, the interferometric wave-front sensor measures the wrapped phase directly. Because the system operates with nearly monochromatic light and uses a segmented spatial light modulator, it does not require that the phase be unwrapped to provide a correction and it also does not require a global reconstruction of the wave-front to determine the phase as required by gradient detecting wave-front sensors. As a result, issues with branch points are eliminated. Because the atmospheric probe beam is mixed with a large amplitude reference beam, it can be made to operate in a photon noise limited regime making its performance relatively unaffected by scintillation. The MEMS-based spatial light modulator in the system contains 1024 pixels and is controlled to speeds in excess …
Date: August 25, 2004
Creator: Baker, K. L.; Stappaerts, E. A.; Gavel, D.; Tucker, J.; Silva, D. A.; Wilks, S. C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sustainable Development in Kazakhastan: Using Oil and Gas Production by-Product Sulfur for Cost-Effective Secondary End-Use Products. (open access)

Sustainable Development in Kazakhastan: Using Oil and Gas Production by-Product Sulfur for Cost-Effective Secondary End-Use Products.

The Republic of Kazakhstan is continuing to develop its extensive petroleum reserves in the Tengiz region of the northeastern part of the Caspian Sea. Large quantities of by-product sulfur are being produced as a result of the removal of hydrogen sulfide from the oil and gas produced in the region. Lack of local markets and economic considerations limit the traditional outlets for by-product sulfur and the buildup of excess sulfur is a becoming a potential economic and environmental liability. Thus, new applications for re-use of by-product sulfur that will benefit regional economies including construction, paving and waste treatment are being developed. One promising application involves the cleanup and treatment of mercury at a Kazakhstan chemical plant. During 19 years of operation at the Pavlodar Khimprom chlor-alkali production facility, over 900 tons of mercury was lost to the soil surrounding and beneath the buildings. The Institute of Metallurgy and Ore Benefication (Almaty) is leading a team to develop and demonstrate a vacuum-assisted thermal process to extract the mercury from the soil and concentrate it as pure, elemental mercury, which will then be treated using the Sulfur Polymer Stabilization/Solidification (SPSS) process. The use of locally produced sulfur will recycle a low-value industrial …
Date: September 25, 2004
Creator: Kalb, P. D.; Vagin, S.; Beall, P. W. & Levintov, B. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Collinear Splitting, Parton Evolution and the Strange-Quark Asymmetry of the Nucleon in Nnlo Qcd. (open access)

Collinear Splitting, Parton Evolution and the Strange-Quark Asymmetry of the Nucleon in Nnlo Qcd.

We consider the collinear limit of QCD amplitudes at one-loop order, and their factorization properties directly in color space. These results apply to the multiple collinear limit of an arbitrary number of QCD partons, and are a basic ingredient in many higher-order computations. In particular, we discuss the triple collinear limit and its relation to flavor asymmetries in the QCD evolution of parton densities at three loops. As a phenomenological consequence of this new effect, and of the fact that the nucleon has non-vanishing quark valence densities, we study the perturbative generation of a strange-antistrange asymmetry s(x)-{bar s}(x) in the nucleon's sea.
Date: April 25, 2004
Creator: Rodrigo, G.; Catani, S.; de Florian, D. & Vogelsang, W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coping With Contaminated Sediments and Soils in the Urban Environment. (open access)

Coping With Contaminated Sediments and Soils in the Urban Environment.

Soils and sediments contaminated with toxic organic and inorganic compounds harmful to the environment and to human health are common in the urban environment. We report here on aspects of a program being carried out in the New York/New Jersey Port region to develop methods for processing dredged material from the Port to make products that are safe for introduction to commercial markets. We discuss some of the results of the program in Computational Environmental Science, Laboratory Environmental Science, and Applied Environmental Science and indicate some possible directions for future work. Overall, the program elements integrate the scientific and engineering aspects with regulatory, commercial, urban planning, local governments, and community group interests. Well-developed connections between these components are critical to the ultimate success of efforts to cope with the problems caused by contaminated urban soils and sediments.
Date: May 25, 2004
Creator: Jones, K. W.; Van Der Lelie,D.; Mcguigan, M. & Al., Et
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interim Status Groundwater Monitoring Plan for Low-Level Waste Management Areas 1 to 4, RCRA Facilities, Hanford,Washington (open access)

Interim Status Groundwater Monitoring Plan for Low-Level Waste Management Areas 1 to 4, RCRA Facilities, Hanford,Washington

This document describes the monitoring plan to meet the requirements for interim status groundwater monitoring at Hanford Site low-level waste burial grounds as specified by 40 CFR 265, incorporated by reference in WAC 173-303-400. The monitoring will take place at four separate low-level waste management areas in the 200-West and 200-East Areas, in the central part of the site. This plan replaces the previous monitoring plan.
Date: October 25, 2004
Creator: Dresel, P Evan
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Historical Sulfur Dioxide Emissions 1850-2000: Methods and Results (open access)

Historical Sulfur Dioxide Emissions 1850-2000: Methods and Results

A global, self-consistent estimate of sulfur dioxide emissions over the last one and a half century were estimated by using a combination of bottom-up and best available inventory methods including all anthropogenic sources. We find that global sulfur dioxide emissions peaked about 1980 and have generally declined since this time. Emissions were extrapolated to a 1{sup o} x 1{sup o} grid for the time period 1850-2000 at annual resolution with two emission height levels and by season. Emissions are somewhat higher in the recent past in this new work as compared with some comprehensive estimates. This difference is largely due to our use of emissions factors that vary with time to account for sulfur removals from fossil fuels and industrial smelting processes.
Date: January 25, 2004
Creator: Smith, Steven J.; Andres, Robert; Conception , Elvira & Lurz, Joshua
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impulse Response Estimation for Spatial Resolution Enhancement in Ultrasonic NDE Imaging (open access)

Impulse Response Estimation for Spatial Resolution Enhancement in Ultrasonic NDE Imaging

This report describes a signal processing algorithm and MATLAB software for improving spatial resolution in ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation (NDE) imaging of materials. Given a measured reflection signal and an associated reference signal, the algorithm produces an optimal least-squares estimate of the impulse response of the material under test. This estimated impulse response, when used in place of the raw reflection signal, enhances the spatial resolution of the ultrasonic measurements by removing distortion caused by the limited-bandwidth transducers and the materials under test. The theory behind the processing algorithms is briefly presented, while the reader is referred to the bibliography for details. The main focus of the report is to describe how to use the MATLAB software. Two processing examples using actual ultrasonic measurements are provided for tutorial purposes.
Date: June 25, 2004
Creator: Clark, G A
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ultrasonic Examination of Double-Shell Tank 241-SY-101. Examination Completed March 2004. (open access)

Ultrasonic Examination of Double-Shell Tank 241-SY-101. Examination Completed March 2004.

COGEMA Engineering Corporation (COGEMA), under a contract from CH2M Hill Hanford Group (CH2M Hill), has performed an ultrasonic nondestructive examination of selected portions of Double-Shell Tank 241-SY-101. The purpose of this examination was to provide information that could be used to evaluate the integrity of the wall of the primary tank. The requirements for the ultrasonic examination of Tank 241-SY-101 were to detect, characterize (identify, size, and locate), and record measurements made of any wall thinning, pitting, or cracks that might be present in the wall of the primary tank. Any measurements that exceed the requirements set forth in the Engineering Task Plan (ETP), RPP-17750 (Jensen 2003) and summarized on page 1 of this document, are reported to CH2M Hill and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) for further evaluation. Under the contract with CH2M Hill, all data is to be recorded on disk and paper copies of all measurements are provided to PNNL for third-party evaluation. PNNL is responsible for preparing a report that describes the results of the COGEMA ultrasonic examinations.
Date: May 25, 2004
Creator: Pardini, Allan F. & Posakony, Gerald J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Macroscopic Superlattices of CdSe Colloidal Nanocrystals: Appearance and Optical Properties (open access)

Macroscopic Superlattices of CdSe Colloidal Nanocrystals: Appearance and Optical Properties

Two and three dimensional assemblies of colloidal nanocrystals (NCs) have been of great interest during recent years [1-3]. While size-dependent optical and electronic properties of isolated particles are particularly important for fundamental research, studies of their ordered assemblies provide a transition path to the engineering of materials and devices for future practical applications. Assemblies of NCs of different materials, such as semiconductors, metals and metal oxides, have been reported in the literature during recent years [4-7]. However, perfect, crystallographic-ordered assemblies of colloidal NCs or colloidal superlattices (SLs) have been observed so far only using transmission (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) in a very small scale of a few hundred nanometers, while macroscopic characterization and device application demonstrations have been performed mainly on amorphous, randomly packed powders of NCs [8, 9]. To make SLs available for traditional methods of characterization, they should be obtained in a sufficiently large size. For colloidal NCs soluble in variety of solvents, simple growth from solution seems to be an appropriate choice to produce SLs. In solution, NCs act as large molecules that, as shown previously [1, 8], can form nanoscale ordered assemblies by the classical Frank-Cabrerra mechanism [10] of crystal growth. It is, however, …
Date: March 25, 2004
Creator: Zaitseva, N; Manna, L; Leon, F; Gerion, D; Saw, C & Galli, G
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library