Publications by authors named "EG Michel"

There is growing interest in material candidates with properties that can be engineered beyond traditional design limits. Compositionally complex oxides (CCO), often called high entropy oxides, are excellent candidates, wherein a lattice site shares more than four cations, forming single-phase solid solutions with unique properties. However, the nature of compositional complexity in dictating properties remains unclear, with characteristics that are difficult to calculate from first principles.

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  • LiPSCl is a promising electrolyte for solid-state batteries because of its high lithium-ion conductivity, but it faces issues when used with high-voltage cathodes due to side reactions.
  • LiInCl (LIC) is introduced as a more stable alternative for high-voltage applications, acting as a protective coating (LIC@NCA) that improves battery performance.
  • Batteries using the LIC@NCA coating demonstrate significantly better discharge capacity and retention over multiple cycles compared to those without the coating, thanks to advanced techniques revealing reduced detrimental reactions at the interface.
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In this work, we present an electrochemical sensor for fast, low-cost, and easy detection of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein in infected patients. The sensor is based on a selected combination of nanomaterials with a specific purpose. A bioconjugate formed by Few-layer bismuthene nanosheets (FLB) and tetrahedral DNA nanostructures (TDNs) is immobilized on Carbon Screen-Printed Electrodes (CSPE).

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A new quinoline-based COF (covalent organic framework), obtained by Povarov reaction, containing 2,6-diisopropylphenyl moieties as substituents over the heterocyclic ring is described for detecting Zn in aqueous solution. The introduction of the mentioned bulky phenyl rings into the network favors an increase of the distance between the reticular sheets and their arrangement, obtaining a new material with an alternating AB type stacking. The new material exhibits good selectivity to detect Zn by fluorescence emission in aqueous solutions up to a concentration of 1.

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Artificial nanostructuring of graphene has served as a platform to induce variations in its structural and electronic properties, fostering the experimental observation of a wide and fascinating phenomenology. Here, we present an approach to graphene tuning, based on Rh(110) surface reconstruction induced by oxygen atoms intercalation. The resulting nanostructured graphene has been characterized by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) complemented by low-energy electron microscopy (LEEM), micro low-energy electron diffraction (μ-LEED), micro angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (μ-ARPES), and micro X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (μ-XPS) measurements under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions at room temperature (RT).

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We report a novel delithiation process for epitaxial thin films of LiCoO(001) cathodes using only physical methods, based on ion sputtering and annealing cycles. Preferential Li sputtering followed by annealing produces a surface layer with a Li molar fraction in the range 0.5 < < 1, characterized by good crystalline quality.

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  • Nasopharyngeal stenosis (NPS) is a serious complication that can happen after radiation treatment for nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and this review discusses the latest management strategies and patient outcomes.
  • A review of 14 studies found 59 patients with NPS, with most (51) successfully treated through endoscopic excision; fewer had success with balloon dilation.
  • Primary excision of scar tissue is identified as the most effective treatment, showing lower revision rates compared to balloon dilation (62% vs. 17%).
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The exfoliation of tridimensional crystal structures has recently been considered a new source of bidimensional materials. The new approach offers the possibility of dramatically enlarging the library of bidimensional materials, but the number of nanolayers produced so far is still limited. Here, we report for the first time the use of a new type of material, α-germanium nanolayers (2D α-Ge).

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The presence of heavy metal ions in water is an environmental issue derived mainly from industrial and mineral contamination. Metal ions such as Cd(II), Pb(II), Hg(II), or As(III) are a significant health concern worldwide because of their high toxicity, mobility, and persistence. Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are an emerging class of crystalline organic porous materials that exhibit very interesting properties such as chemical stability, tailored design, and low density.

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LiCoO (LCO) is a common battery cathode material that has recently emerged as a promising material for other applications including electrocatalysis and as electrochemical random access memory (ECRAM). During charge-discharge cycling LCO exhibits phase transformations that are significantly complicated by electron correlation. While the bulk phase diagram for an ensemble of battery particles has been studied extensively, it remains unclear how these phases scale to nanometer dimensions and the effects of strain and diffusional anisotropy at the single-particle scale.

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We report on the delithiation of LiCoO thin films using oxalic acid (CHO) with the goal of understanding the structural degradation of an insertion oxide associated with Li chemical extraction. Using a multi-technique approach that includes synchrotron radiation X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, micro Raman spectroscopy, photoelectron spectroscopy and conductive atomic force microscopy we reveal the balance between selective Li extraction and structural damage. We identify three different delithiation regimes, related to surface processes, bulk delithiation and damage generation.

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2D materials have opened a new field in materials science with outstanding scientific and technological impact. A largely explored route for the preparation of 2D materials is the exfoliation of layered crystals with weak forces between their layers. However, its application to covalent crystals remains elusive.

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The Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) is an antisymmetric exchange interaction that stabilizes chiral spin textures. It is induced by inversion symmetry breaking in noncentrosymmetric lattices or at interfaces. Recently, interfacial DMI has been found in magnetic layers adjacent to transition metals due to the spin-orbit coupling and at interfaces with graphene due to the Rashba effect.

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Lithium-sulfur batteries stands out as a promising technology for energy storage owing to a combination of favorable characteristics including a high theoretical gravimetric capacity, energy density, inexpensive character, and environmental benignity. Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are a rapidly developing family of functional nanostructures which combine porosity and crystallinity, and which have been already used in these kinds of batteries to build sulfur electrodes, by embedding sulfur into porous COFs in order to enhance cycle lifetimes. In this contribution, this is taken one step forward and a COF endowed with vinyl groups is used, in order to graft sulfur to the COF skeleton through inverse vulcanization.

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Antimonene, a novel group 15 two-dimensional material, is functionalized with a tailormade perylene bisimide through strong van der Waals interactions. The functionalization process leads to a significant quenching of the perylene fluorescence, and surpasses that observed for either graphene or black phosphorus, thus allowing straightforward characterization of the flakes by scanning Raman microscopy. Furthermore, scanning photoelectron microscopy studies and theoretical calculations reveal a remarkable charge-transfer behavior, being twice that of black phosphorus.

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We report a surface X-ray diffraction study of the crystalline structure changes and critical behavior across the (3√2 × √2)R45° → (√2 × √2)R45° surface phase transition at 360 K for 0.5 monolayers of Sn on Cu(100). The phase transition is of the order-disorder type and is due to the disordering of the Cu atomic vacancies present in the low temperature phase.

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We report an investigation into the surface electronic structure of Pb/Cu(100) in the submonolayer coverage range. A prominent surface band is detected in the whole coverage range analysed. The band is gradually filled as Pb coverage increases.

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The application of genetic algorithms to the analysis of surface x-ray diffraction data is discussed and the implementation of a genetic algorithm of evolutionary type is described in detail. The structure of Sn/Cu(100)-[Formula: see text] is determined on the basis of surface x-ray diffraction data analysed using this algorithm. The results are compared to previous findings using other techniques.

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We present measurements of the Fermi surface and underlying band structure of Sn/Cu(100)-[Formula: see text]. This phase is observed for a coverage of 0.60-0.

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High-resolution photoemission of the Sn 4d core level of Sn/Ge(111)-(3x3) resolves three main components in the line shape, which are assigned to each of the three Sn atoms that form the unit cell. The line shape found is in agreement with an initial state picture and supports that the two down atoms are inequivalent. In full agreement with these results, scanning tunnel microscopy images directly show that the two down atoms are at slightly different heights in most of the surface, giving rise to an inequivalent-down-atoms (3x3) structure.

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We investigate clean and atomic hydrogen exposed beta-SiC(100) 3 x 2 surfaces by synchrotron radiation-based Si 2p core-level photoemission spectroscopy. The clean 3 x 2 surface reconstruction exhibits three surface and subsurface components. Upon hydrogen exposures, those surface and subsurface components are shifted to lower binding energies by large values, indicating significant charge transfer to the surface and subsurface regions, in excellent agreement with the recently discovered H-induced beta-SiC(100) 3 x 2 surface metallization.

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We report an investigation on the properties of 0.33 ML of Sn on Ge(111) at temperatures down to 5 K. Low-energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy show that the (3x3) phase formed at approximately 200 K, reverts to a new ((square root 3)x(square root 3))R30 degrees phase below 30 K.

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A phenomenological study of the [Formula: see text] phase transitions occurring in the adsorption systems Pb/Ge(111) and Sn/Ge(111) is presented. The starting point of such a study is the Landau theory. The critical behaviour expected theoretically for the two interfaces, and the corresponding influence of defects, are discussed in detail.

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