Nanolaminates based on ferroelectric polycrystalline doped HfO have gained interest because those compounds show enhanced functional properties. Here, we achieve coexisting improvement of remanent polarization and dielectric permittivity in wake-up-free epitaxial HfZrO/HfO nanolaminates with different numbers of HfO nanolayers if compared with HfZrO single films of equivalent thickness or other reported polycrystalline nanolaminates. Comprehensive structural characterization reveals that the origin of the enhancement must be the larger amount of the orthorhombic phase in the nanolaminates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To propose a methodology for integrating the out-of-field and imaging doses to the in-field dose received by radiotherapy (RT) patients. In addition, the impact of considering the total dose in planning and radiation-induced second malignancies (RISM) risk assessment will be evaluated in several scenarios comprising photon and proton treatments.
Methods: The total dose is the voxel-wise sum of the doses from the different radiation sources (accounting for the radiobiological effectiveness) produced during the whole RT chain.
Cement-based 3D printing provides an opportunity to create cement-based elements with a hierarchy of structures and patterns that are not easily achievable using traditional casting techniques, thereby providing new possibilities for improving thermal control and energy storage in cement-based materials. In this study, the influence of internal architecture and ink formulation on the thermal behavior of 3D-printed cement composite beams was investigated using infrared thermal imaging and a conceptual one-dimensional heat transfer model based on cooling fins in convective media. Three-dimensional printed beams with rectilinear, three-dimensional honeycomb, and Archimedean chord infill patterns and cement ink formulations with and without 5% halloysite nanoclay were exposed to a heating source at one end.
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