High-temperature thermal evolution of SiAs precipitates in silicon

1992 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Parisini ◽  
D. Nobili ◽  
A. Armigliato ◽  
M. Derdour ◽  
L. Moro ◽  
...  
2010 ◽  
Vol 43 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 618-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Lorincik ◽  
V. Klouc̆ek ◽  
M. Negyesi ◽  
J. Kabátová ◽  
L. Novotný ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zuo-Dong Yu ◽  
Yuan Zhou ◽  
Wei-Guo Yin ◽  
Hai-Qing Lin ◽  
Chang-De Gong

1982 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Estrade-Szwarckopf ◽  
J. Conard ◽  
P. Lauginie ◽  
J. Van Der Klink ◽  
P. Lagrange ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTBy 133Cs and 13C NMR, EPR, susceptibility anisotropy and X-Ray diffraction,we studied the thermal evolution of Cs24 from 100 to 500 K. A smooth transition is observed near 300 K which can be interpreted in structural and electronic terms: at lower temperatures, the Cs atoms are located in a disordered manner on graphitic hexagonal sites and are almost completely ionized; in the high temperature state, the Cs atoms are completely disordered relatively to the graphitic lattice and their electrons are at least partly relocalized on the metallic s-function.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentina Shcherbakova ◽  
Vladimir Bakhmutov ◽  
Valeriy Shcherbakov ◽  
Grigoriy Zhidkov

<p>The Precambrian period occupies ≈ 85% of the Earth’s geological history and accommodates all the main formation stages of the Earth as a planet, including the emergence of its magnetic field. Variations in the time-averaged geomagnetic dipole moment have the potential to learn about the long-term development of the geodynamo and its response to mantle forcing and thermal evolution of the core. But determinations of paleointensity (Banc) of the geomagnetic field during this period are sparse and of limited reliability. Here we report detailed palaeomagnetic and paleointensity studies combined with comprehensive investigations of magnetic properties of Proterozoic volcanic rocks from the Ukrainian Shield.</p><p>The Ukrainian Shield comprises the crust of the Palaeoproterozoic protocraton Volgo-Sarmatia, which together with the Fennoscandian crustal segment constitutes the East European Craton (Baltica). The different megablocks of Ukrainian Shield can be treated as a coherent unit since 1.77 Ga.  Our studies has been performed on gabbro-anorthosite complexes from Ingul megablock within the Korsun-Novomigorodsky Pluton (ages 1.75-1.72 Ga) and North-Western megablock within the Korosten Pluton (age ca 1.76 Ga). The high-temperature stable ChRM component was isolated in the interval of blocking temperatures of 500-580°C by more than 300 samples from 7 sites. The presence of dual-polarity high-temperature component, lack of signs of metamorphism and good agreement of the mean palaeomagnetic pole position obtained from the Ingul block with age ca.1.75 Ga (Φ=22.5º, Λ=167.3º, dp/dm=4.0/7.7) with previous studies of anorthosites (Elming et al., 2001) of similar age suggests a primary origin of ChRM.</p><p>Comprehensive investigations of magnetic properties of rocks, the electron microscopic images of thin sections and X-ray diffractograms were performed. Rocks demonstrate thermally stable successive Msi(T) curves with clearly pronounced near-magnetite Tc. The carriers of remanent magnetization are fine magnetite isolated needle-like and/or lamellar ferromagnetic particles dispersed in plagioclas. According to the thermomagnetic criterion, high-temperature pTRMs show typical SD-PSD behavior. Palaeointensity determinations were successful on samples from 5 sites carrying well-identified ChRM components using the Thellier-Coe method with pTRM checks and the Wilson protocols. Reliable Banc values give generally low palaeofield (3.7-6.6 µT) with corresponding VDM values in the range (0.93-1.6)×10<sup>22</sup> Am<sup>2</sup>. These findings agree with our previous results for Proterozoic rocks of Kola Peninsula (age 1.86 GA) and with the data reported in the World paleointensity databases (http://wwwbrk.adm.yar.ru/palmag/index_e.html and others data), which also provide a noticeably low paleofield intensity with mean VDM = 3.2×10<sup>22</sup> Am<sup>2</sup> for the Paleo-Proterozoic period. Thus, our new data support the Proterozoic dipole low hypothesize by Biggin et al., 2009. The work was supported by the state assignment 17-05-00259 and the RFBR grant 19-05-00433.</p>


2006 ◽  
Vol 527-529 ◽  
pp. 531-534 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.E. Carlos ◽  
E.R. Glaser ◽  
N.Y. Garces ◽  
B.V. Shanabrook ◽  
Mark A. Fanton

High temperature anneals were used to study the evolution of native defects in semiinsulating (SI), ultrahigh purity SiC using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), infrared and visible photoluminescence (PL) and COREMA (Contactless Resistivity Mapping) measurements. In EPR we observe a defect that we tentatively identify as VC-CSi-VC. The EPR intensities of this defect and the UD1 IRPL increase significantly with annealing in all samples.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shirin Kaboli ◽  
Gabriel Girard ◽  
Wen Zhu ◽  
Alina Cristina Gheorghe ◽  
Vijh Ashok ◽  
...  

We present the thermal evolution of two NASICON-type ceramics namely LATP (Li1+xAlxTi2−x(PO4)3) and LAGP (Li1+xAlxGe2−x(PO4)3) by monitoring the electrode-electrolyte interfaces (i.e., Li/LATP and Li/LAGP) at temperatures up to 330 C...


2016 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 78-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos A. López ◽  
José C. Pedregosa ◽  
María T. Fernández-Díaz ◽  
José A. Alonso

This work presents the crystal structure evolution of a novel ionic conductor Sr11Mo4O23at high temperature. The formula of this phase can be rewritten as Sr1.75□0.25SrMoO5.75, highlighting the relationship with double perovskitesA2B′B′′O6. The crystal network contains oxygen-anion and strontium-cation vacancies. The structure is complex; Sr, Mo and O atoms are distributed in four, two and six distinct Wyckoff sites, respectively. It was refined from neutron powder diffraction data collected at 473, 673, 873 and 1073 K. The thermal evolution of crystallographic parameters supports the known reversible process of removal/uptake of O-atom content in the 673–873 K temperature range. Above 873 K, from difference Fourier maps, it was found that the structure exhibits an oxygen delocalization around one of the Mo sites. This delocalization was understood as a dynamical octahedral tilt of the MoO6octahedron, yielding an increase in the ionic conductivity at high temperature.


Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 961
Author(s):  
Elena S. Zhitova ◽  
H. Chris Greenwell ◽  
Mariya G. Krzhizhanovskaya ◽  
David C. Apperley ◽  
Igor V. Pekov ◽  
...  

In Situ high-temperature powder X-ray diffraction experiments were undertaken for the coarse crystalline natural layered double hydroxides (LDHs) quintinite, hydrotalcite, stichtite, and iowaite in the temperature range 25–1000 °C, with thermal analyses of these minerals and their annealed forms carried out in parallel. In the temperature range from 25 °C to 170–210 °C quintinite, hydrotalcite, and stichtite (carbonate members of the LDH family) demonstrated contraction of the basal d00n-value of 0.1–0.3 Å, followed by a sharp contraction of 1.0–1.1 Å at T > 170–210 °C. The high-temperature modified states were stable up to 380–420 °C, before decomposing to an amorphous phase. Iowaite (chloride member of the family) was stable up to 320 °C and transformed to an amorphous phase at higher temperature. Iowaite experiences continuous contraction of the d00n-value of up to 0.5 Å in the temperature range 25–200 °C, reaching a plateau at a temperature range of 200–320 °C. Assessing the reversibility of thermal transformation shows complete reconstruction of the crystal structure of the hydrotalcite and iowaite heated to 300 °C. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance analysis shows that some Al changes coordination from 6- to 4-fold, synchronously with quintinite transformation to the amorphous phase. All phases transform to periclase and a spinel-type compound upon further heating. Thermal analysis of samples annealed at 125 °C shows that carbonate members do not have a tendency to form dehydrated phases, whereas for iowaite, a dehydrated phase having 0.9 apfu lesser water content as in the initial sample has been obtained. Thermal evolution of LDHs is found to depend on the nature of the interaction of interlayer species and water molecules to H atoms of the metal-hydroxide layer.


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