94 research outputs found
Auger electronic spectroscopy and electrical characterisation of InP(100) surfaces passivated by N2 plasma
International audienceAuger electron spectroscopy (AES) was used to investigate the processes taking place during the initial stages of InP(100) surfaces nitridation. This AES study combined with electrical measurements (intensity-potential) shows that the processes greatly differ depending on the nitridation angles. Results show that with grazing angle for nitrogen flow, the nitridation process is more efficient. Results obtained with AES spectra are coherent with electrical measurements : Hg/InN/InP(100) Schottky diodes present better electrical characteristics in the case of a grazing flow. That means, the adsorption of nitrogen on the surface is more important for this configuration
Hierarchically Porous Gd3+-Doped CeO2 Nanostructures for the Remarkable Enhancement of Optical and Magnetic Properties
Rare earth ion-doped CeO2 has attracted more and more attention because of its special electrical, optical, magnetic, or catalytic properties. In this paper, a facile electrochemical deposition route was reported for the direct growth of the porous Gd-doped CeO2. The formation process of Gd-doped CeO2 composites was investigated. The obtained deposits were characterized by SEM, EDS, XRD, and XPS. The porous Gd3+- doped CeO2 (10 at% Gd) displays a typical type I adsorption isotherm and yields a large specific surface area of 135 m2/g. As Gd3+ ions were doped into CeO2 lattice, the absorption spectrum of Gd3+-doped CeO2 nanocrystals exhibited a red shift compared with porous CeO2 nanocrystals and bulk CeO2, and the luminescence of Gd3+-doped CeO2 deposits was remarkably enhanced due to the presence of more oxygen vacancies. In addition, the strong magnetic properties of Gd-doped CeO2 (10 at% Gd) were observed, which may be caused by Gd3+ ions or more oxygen defects in deposits. In addition, the catalytic activity of porous Gd-doped CeO2 toward CO oxidation was studied
Adsorption and reaction of CO on (Pd–)Al2O3 and (Pd–)ZrO2: vibrational spectroscopy of carbonate formation
γ-Alumina is widely used as an oxide support in catalysis, and palladium nanoparticles supported by alumina represent one of the most frequently used dispersed metals. The surface sites of the catalysts are often probed via FTIR spectroscopy upon CO adsorption, which may result in the formation of surface carbonate species. We have examined this process in detail utilizing FTIR to monitor carbonate formation on γ-alumina and zirconia upon exposure to isotopically labelled and unlabelled CO and CO2. The same was carried out for well-defined Pd nanoparticles supported on Al2O3 or ZrO2. A water gas shift reaction of CO with surface hydroxyls was detected, which requires surface defect sites and adjacent OH groups. Furthermore, we have studied the effect of Cl synthesis residues, leading to strongly reduced carbonate formation and changes in the OH region (isolated OH groups were partly replaced or were even absent). To corroborate this finding, samples were deliberately poisoned with Cl to an extent comparable to that of synthesis residues, as confirmed by Auger electron spectroscopy. For catalysts prepared from Cl-containing precursors a new CO band at 2164 cm−1 was observed in the carbonyl region, which was ascribed to Pd interacting with Cl. Finally, the FTIR measurements were complemented by quantification of the amount of carbonates formed via chemisorption, which provides a tool to determine the concentration of reactive defect sites on the alumina surface
Epitaxial In2O3 layers for chemical sensors: structural and surface characterization
Indium oxide is one of the basic oxides, which have been extensively studied [1-3] due to its prominent applications for gas sensor design, and as modeling material, possessed of some interesting chemical and structural peculiarities such as polar surfaces and systematic anion vacancies. Like conductometric gas sensor material it demonstrates enhanced sensitivity to oxidizing gases (O3, NO, etc.). During our own experiments the interesting and unusual effects concerned with surface and gas sensing properties of undoped In2O3 thin films were revealed [4-6]. Nevertheless of rather great efforts in the direction of basic understanding it can be stated the lack of generalized pattern in description of sensitivity mechanism on that oxide. Thorough study of fundamental sensing properties needs well-characterized surfaces like in single crystals or epitaxial layers. Thus we make an attempt to prepare and characterize epitaxial layers of In2O3 with (100) orientation. As it is known (100) plane is the most stable in the In2O3 crystal
Evaluation of polycrystalline cerium oxide electrodes for electrochemiluminescent detection of sarcosine
Prostate cancer (PCa) is widely spread in male population, especially over 65 years. Currently used medical methods of PCa diagnosis often lead to false-positive results thus new non-invasive methods for PCa detection, such as urine tests for cancer metabolites, are actively studied. Herein, nanostructured polycrystalline cerium oxide thin films (CeO2/GC) prepared by magnetron sputtering on a glassy carbon substrate are tested for electrochemiluminescent (ECL) detection of sar-cosine exploiting the oxidative-reduction mechanism using Ru(bpy)32+ as luminophore. Non-functionalized CeO2/GC electrodes revealed a higher ECL signal stability compared to bare glassy carbon electrodes. Moreover, CeO2/GC electrodes were successfully applied for rapid and sensitive detection of different sarcosine con-centrations ranging from 50 to 5000 mu M. These results open new possibilities for developing sensing platforms for sarcosine detection based on the CeO2/GC working electrode via surface modification and functionalization, aiming to further investigate and improve their sensitivity and selectivity
Nitridation of InP(1 0 0) surface studied by synchrotron radiation
The nitridation of InP(1 0 0) surfaces has been studied using synchrotron
radiation photoemission. The samples were chemically cleaned and then ion
bombarded, which cleaned the surface and also induced the formation of metallic
indium droplets. The nitridation with a Glow Discharge Cell (GDS) produced
indium nitride by reaction with these indium clusters. We used the In 4d and P
2p core levels to monitor the chemical state of the surface and the coverage of
the species present. We observed the creation of In-N and P-N bonds while the
In-In metallic bonds decrease which confirm the reaction between indium
clusters and nitrogen species. A theoretical model based on stacked layers
allows us to assert that almost two monolayers of indium nitride are produced.
The effect of annealing on the nitridated layers at 450 C has also been
analysed. It appears that this system is stable up to this temperature, well
above the congruent evaporation temperature (370 C) of clean InP(1 0
0): no increase of metallic indium bonds due to decomposition of the substrate
is detected as shown in previous works [L. Bideux, Y. Ould-Metidji, B. Gruzza,
V. Matolin, Surf. Interface Anal. 34 (2002) 712] studying the InP(1 0 0)
surfaces
Properties of Nitrogen/Silicon Doped Vertically Oriented Graphene Produced by ICP CVD Roll-to-Roll Technology
Simultaneous mass production of high quality vertically oriented graphene nanostructures and doping them by using an inductively coupled plasma chemical vapor deposition (ICP CVD) is a technological problem because little is understood about their growth mechanism over enlarged surfaces. We introduce a new method that combines the ICP CVD with roll-to-roll technology to enable the in-situ preparation of vertically oriented graphene by using propane as a precursor gas and nitrogen or silicon as dopants. This new technology enables preparation of vertically oriented graphene with distinct morphology and composition on a moving copper foil substrate at a lower cost. The technological parameters such as deposition time (1–30 min), gas partial pressure, composition of the gas mixture (propane, argon, nitrogen or silane), heating treatment (1–60 min) and temperature (350–500 °C) were varied to reveal the nanostructure growth, the evolution of its morphology and heteroatom’s intercalation by nitrogen or silicon. Unique nanostructures were examined by FE-SEM microscopy, Raman spectroscopy and energy dispersive X-Ray scattering techniques. The undoped and nitrogen- or silicon-doped nanostructures can be prepared with the full area coverage of the copper substrate on industrially manufactured surface defects. Longer deposition time (30 min, 450 °C) causes carbon amorphization and an increased fraction of sp3-hybridized carbon, leading to enlargement of vertically oriented carbonaceous nanostructures and growth of pillars
Preserving Charge and Oxidation State of Au(III) Ions in an Agent-Functionalized Nanocrystal Model System
Supporting functional molecules on crystal facets is an established technique in nanotechnology. To preserve the original activity of ionic metallorganic agents on a supporting template, conservation of the charge and oxidation state of, the active center is indispensable. We. present a model system of a metallorganic agent that, indeed, fulfills this design criterion on a technologically relevant metal support With potential Impact on Au(III)-porphyrin-functionalized nanoparticles for an improved anticancer-drug delivery. Employing scanning tunneling microscopy and -spectroscopy in combination with photoemission spectroscopy,we clarify at the single-molecule level the underlying mechanisms of this exceptional adsorption mode. It is based on the balance between a high-energy oxidation state and an electrostatic screening-response of the surface (image charge). Modeling with first principles methods reveals submolecular details of the metal-ligand bonding interaction and completes the study by providing an Illustrative electrostatic.. model relevant for ionic metalorganic agent molecules, in general
Influence of band width on the scattered ion yield spectra of a He + Ion by resonant or quasi-resonant charge exchange neutralization
The influence of the band structure, especially the bandwidth, on the scattered ion yield spectra of a He+ ion by the resonant or quasi-resonant neutralization was theoretically examined using quantum rate equations. When calculating the scattered ion yield spectra of He+ to simulate the experimental data, we observed that the band structure, especially the bandwidth, had a strong influence on the spectra at relatively low incident He+ ion energies of less than several hundred eV. Through many simulations, it was determined that theoretical calculations that include bandwidth calculation can simulate or reproduce the experimentally observed spectra of He+-In, He+-Ga, and He+-Sn systems. In contrast, simulations not including bandwidth simulation could neither reproduce nor account for such spectra. Furthermore, the calculated ion survival probability (ISP) at low incident ion energies tended to decrease with increasing bandwidth. This decrease in ISP probably corresponds to the relatively small scattered ion yield usually observed at low incident ion energies. Theoretically, such a decrease indicates that a He+ ion with a low incident energy can be easily neutralized on the surface when the bandwidth is large
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