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2.
Acta Crystallogr B Struct Sci Cryst Eng Mater ; 78(Pt 2): 162-171, 2022 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35411855

ABSTRACT

BaCoX2O7 (X = As, P) are built on magnetic 1D units in which strong aperiodic undulations originate from incommensurate structural modulations with large atomic displacive amplitudes perpendicular to the chain directions, resulting in very unique multiferroic properties. High-pressure structural and vibrational properties of both compounds have been investigated by synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction and Raman spectroscopy at room temperature and combined with density functional calculations. A structural phase transition is observed at 1.8 GPa and 6.8 GPa in BaCoAs2O7 and BaCoP2O7, respectively. Sharp jumps are observed in their unit-cell volumes and in Raman mode frequencies, thus confirming the first-order nature of their phase transition. These transitions involve the disappearance of the modulation from the ambient-pressure polymorph with clear spectroscopic fingerprints, such as reduction of the number of Raman modes and change of shape on some peaks. The relation between the evolution of the Raman modes along with the structure are presented and supported by density functional theory structural relaxations.


Subject(s)
Spectrum Analysis, Raman , Vibration , Phase Transition , Powders , Spectrum Analysis, Raman/methods , X-Ray Diffraction
3.
Ther Innov Regul Sci ; 54(5): 1037-1046, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31989538

ABSTRACT

Beyond what are characterized as Special Populations in U.S. FDA regulatory considerations is vulnerability of patient populations in a broader context of international guidance. Such a review suggests a rich appreciation for the diversity of patients. Vulnerable patients' status and the associated patient protections are of growing interest in the clinical research environment. To participate in the current developments and reflections, we selected 12 international & recognized core documents that are discussing human research protections and identify all references to them pertinent to Vulnerables. This allows the identification of 15 different categories of Vulnerability, that we group in five kinds of challenges. We then map significant regulatory and ethical interpretations and their implications toward applying what Vulnerability constitutes for the stakeholder ecosystem and its evolving direction as part of the overall protection for patients, defined as a "chain of protection." Different levels of understanding are proposed: Who are vulnerable (a 'macro'-mapping), what is Vulnerability (a 'meso'-mapping) leading to applications with practical questions (a 'micro'-mapping). We offer this analysis and mapping for practical benefit to a range of stakeholders with staffs whose functional responsibilities indirectly or directly essentially touch the broad spectrum of involvement with patients. The practical application is for multi-stakeholder consideration of patients-as-subjects in research, especially for Sites and Ethics Committees/IRBs, given the extended efforts of "patient-centricity"-the 'how's' and 'what's' of including patients in the clinical research process from discovery to RWE and its implications. Also considered is the value of education and training purposes on the true diversity of patients so that sensitivity to such matters from protocol development through informed consent and privacy protections are taken into account in the era of "new science," technological advances, and expansion of clinical research investigators, patient populations, and types of non-traditional research sites.


Subject(s)
Ethics Committees, Research , Comprehension , Ecosystem , Humans , Informed Consent , Research Design
4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 112(7): 075501, 2014 Feb 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24579610

ABSTRACT

The interaction of coexisting structural instabilities in multiferroic materials gives rise to intriguing coupling phenomena and extraordinarily rich phase diagrams, both in bulk materials and strained thin films. Here we investigate the multiferroic BiMnO3 with its peculiar 6s2 electrons and four interacting mechanisms: electric polarity, octahedra tilts, magnetism, and cooperative Jahn-Teller distortion. We have probed structural transitions under high pressure by synchrotron x-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy up to 60 GPa. We show that BiMnO3 displays under pressure a rich sequence of five phases with a great variety of structures and properties, including a metallic phase above 53 GPa and, between 37 and 53 GPa, a strongly elongated monoclinic phase that allows ferroelectricity, which contradicts the traditional expectation that ferroelectricity vanishes under pressure. Between 7 and 37 GPa, the Pnma structure remains remarkably stable but shows a reduction of the Jahn-Teller distortion in a way that differs from the behavior observed in the archetypal orthorhombic Jahn-Teller distorted perovskite LaMnO3.

5.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 21(Pt 1): 89-96, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24365921

ABSTRACT

An overview of several innovations regarding in situ laser-heating techniques in the diamond anvil cell at the high-pressure beamline ID27 of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility is presented. Pyrometry measurements have been adapted to allow simultaneous double-sided temperature measurements with the installation of two additional online laser systems: a CO2 and a pulsed Nd:YAG laser system. This reiteration of laser-heating advancements at ID27 is designed to pave the way for a new generation of state-of-the-art experiments that demand the need for synchrotron diffraction techniques. Experimental examples are provided for each major development. The capabilities of the double pyrometer have been tested with the Nd:YAG continuous-wave lasers but also in a time-resolved configuration using the nanosecond-pulsed Nd:YAG laser on a Fe sample up to 180 GPa and 2900 K. The combination of time-resolved X-ray diffraction with in situ CO2 laser heating is shown with the crystallization of a high-pressure phase of the naturally found pyrite mineral MnS2 (11 GPa, 1100-1650 K).

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(25): 9503-11, 2013 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23721167

ABSTRACT

Hf3N4 in nanocrystalline form is produced by solution phase reaction of Hf(NEtMe)4 with ammonia followed by low-temperature pyrolysis in ammonia. Understanding of phase behavior in these systems is important because early transition-metal nitrides with the metal in maximum oxidation state are potential visible light photocatalysts. A combination of synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction and pair distribution function studies has been used to show this phase to have a tetragonally distorted fluorite structure with 1/3 vacancies on the anion sites. Laser heating nanocrystalline Hf3N4 at 12 GPa and 1500 K in a diamond anvil cell results in its crystallization with the same structure type, an interesting example of prestructuring of the phase during preparation of the precursor compound. This metastable pathway could provide a route to other new polymorphs of metal nitrides and to nitrogen-rich phases where they do not currently exist. Importantly it leads to bulk formation of the material rather than surface conversion as often occurs in elemental combination reactions at high pressure. Laser heating at 2000 K at a higher pressure of 19 GPa results in a further new polymorph of Hf3N4 that adopts an anion deficient cottunite-type (orthorhombic) structure. The orthorhombic Hf3N4 phase is recoverable to ambient pressure and the tetragonal phase is at least partially recoverable.

7.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 23(48): 485901, 2011 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22080722

ABSTRACT

We report a pressure-dependent investigation of KMnF(3) by x-ray diffraction up to 30 GPa. The results are discussed in the framework of Landau theory and in relation to the isostructural phase transition in SrTiO(3). The phase transition temperature near 186 K in KMnF(3) shifts to room temperature at a critical pressure of P(c) = 3.4 GPa; the pressure dependence of the transition point follows ΔP(c)/ΔT(c) = 0.0315 GPa K(-1). The transition becomes second order under high pressure, close to the tricritical point. The phase transition is determined by the rotation of MnF(6) octahedra with their simultaneous expansion along the rotation axis. The rotation angle was found to increase to 10.5° at 24 GPa. An additional anomaly was observed at higher pressure around 25 GPa, suggesting a further phase transition.

8.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 23(39): 395401, 2011 Oct 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21900739

ABSTRACT

We report a high-pressure synchrotron x-ray diffraction on a LaAlO(3) single crystal. The transition from rhombohedral to cubic at 14.8 GPa is confirmed by the loss of the superstructure reflections, whose intensity shows a linear pressure dependence, characteristic of a second-order transition. The crystal remains cubic up to 63 GPa, the highest pressure reached, which provides a confirmation over a very large pressure range of the general rules for the evolution of distortions of perovskites under pressure. We report the parameters of the Birch-Murnaghan equations of state in the low- and high-pressure phases and discuss the evolution of the bulk modulus.

9.
Dalton Trans ; 39(18): 4302-11, 2010 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20422088

ABSTRACT

We have performed in situ X-ray diffraction, Raman scattering, pseudosymmetry analysis and quantum mechanical atomistic simulations of the structure and behaviour of LaF(3) at high pressure, up to and exceeding the phase transition pressure reported for the I4/mmm structure and Cmma symmetry proposed previously. We observe that the structure of LaF(3)-II is best described as being of anti-Cu(3)Ti-type (oP8, Pmmn, SG59), which is closely related to the I4/mmm structure obtained by simulation, through notional distortion, and is evidently similar to the Cmma symmetry by comparison of published diffraction data. We demonstrate that the models are also related to each other, and can be derived through pseudosymmetry searches. LaF(3)-II does not undergo further phase transitions before at least 60 GPa, and none are expected before 1 Mbar. The similarity between the anti-Cu(3)Ti-type and the I4/mmm structure models and our in situ diffraction data, supports the transition mechanisms derived from atomistic model simulations for a generic REF(3) transition to the post-tysonite phase (where RE = La, Ce, Pr, Nd).

10.
J Phys Chem B ; 110(47): 23888-97, 2006 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17125355

ABSTRACT

The issue of the heterogeneity of boron doping in microcrystalline diamond films was addressed by four different methods: micro-Raman spectroscopy and Raman imaging, Kelvin probe force microscopy, conducting atomic force microscopy, and scanning electrochemical microscopy. The samples were commercially available films from Windsor Scientific, with an average boron concentration of about 5 x 10(20) cm(-3). In agreement with previous works, all of the methods showed that the boron uptake was nonuniform across the surface of the electrode. Two different types of regions were evidenced, with metallic or semiconducting properties that were characterized with different types of Raman spectra. The line shape of these spectra was strongly dependent on the excitation wavelength. Local variations in electroactivity were evidenced by the SECM curves, which are related to the electronic properties of the individual grains, which, in turn, are governed by the boron content of the individual crystallites. In this study, two different micro-Raman imaging techniques were used that reveal the grain structure of the films: the images constructed from the diamond line intensity perfectly reproduced the optical image obtained by illuminating the sample in reflection. The method also allows detection of the presence of nondiamond carbon, especially in the metallic parts of the samples. Other spectral features (intensity of the boron-related broad lines, as well as the frequency and width of the diamond line) were used to construct images. In every case, the grain structure of the film was revealed, as well as twinning within individual crystallites. All approaches revealed that no enhanced doping or boron depletion occurred at the grain boundaries.

12.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; (21): 2698-9, 2003 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14649817

ABSTRACT

Grafting of biotin on top of a polycrystalline boron-doped diamond layer was achieved by surface oxidation followed by an esterification reaction and revealed by fluorescently labelled streptavidin.

13.
Structure ; 10(10): 1409-14, 2002 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12377126

ABSTRACT

The combined use of a diamond anvil cell and ultrashort-wavelength undulator radiation has allowed the collection of high-resolution diffraction data from protein and virus crystals submitted to hydrostatic pressures beyond 2 kbar. Crystals of cubic cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) can be compressed to at least 3.5 kbar. Diffraction from CPMV crystals displaying an unusual disorder at atmospheric pressure was considerably enhanced by application of pressure. These experiments suggest that pressure may be used in some cases to improve order in crystals.


Subject(s)
Crystallography/methods , Proteins/chemistry , Viruses/chemistry , Pressure
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