Publications by authors named "Headrick R"

Sophisticated thin film growth techniques increasingly rely on the addition of a plasma component to open or widen a processing window, particularly at low temperatures. Taking advantage of continued increases in accelerator-based X-ray source brilliance, this real-time study uses X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS) to elucidate the nanoscale surface dynamics during Plasma-Enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition (PE-ALD) of an epitaxial indium nitride film. Ultrathin films are synthesized from repeated cycles of alternating self-limited surface reactions induced by temporally separated pulses of the material precursor and plasma reactant, allowing the influence of each on the evolving morphology to be examined.

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Boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) have attracted attention for their predicted extraordinary properties; yet, challenges in synthesis and processing have stifled progress on macroscopic materials. Recent advances have led to the production of highly pure BNNTs. Here we report that neat BNNTs dissolve in chlorosulfonic acid (CSA) and form birefringent liquid crystal domains at concentrations above 170 ppmw.

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Chlorosulfonic acid and oleum are ideal solvents for enabling the transformation of disordered carbon nanotubes (CNTs) into precise and highly functional morphologies. Currently, processing these solvents using extrusion techniques presents complications due to chemical compatibility, which constrain equipment and substrate material options. Here, we present a novel acid solvent system based on methanesulfonic or -toluenesulfonic acids with low corrosivity, which form true solutions of CNTs at concentrations as high as 10 g/liter (≈0.

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Investigating the relationship between structure and dynamical processes is a central goal in condensed matter physics. Perhaps the most noted relationship between the two is the phenomenon of de Gennes narrowing, in which relaxation times in liquids are proportional to the scattering structure factor. Here, a similar relationship is discovered during the self-organized ion-beam nanopatterning of silicon using coherent x-ray scattering.

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In ferroelectric thin films and superlattices, the polarization is intricately linked to crystal structure. Here we show that it can also play an important role in the growth process, influencing growth rates, relaxation mechanisms, electrical properties and domain structures. This is studied by focusing on the properties of BaTiO thin films grown on very thin layers of PbTiO using x-ray diffraction, piezoforce microscopy, electrical characterization and rapid in-situ x-ray diffraction reciprocal space maps during the growth using synchrotron radiation.

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Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are a class of 1D nanomaterials that exhibit extraordinary electrical and optical properties. However, many of their fundamental studies and practical applications are stymied by sample polydispersity. SWCNTs are synthesized in bulk with broad structural (chirality) and geometrical (length and diameter) distributions; problematically, all known post-synthetic sorting methods rely on ultrasonication, which cuts SWCNTs into short segments (typically <1 µm).

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The properties of artificially grown thin films are strongly affected by surface processes during growth. Coherent X-rays provide an approach to better understand such processes and fluctuations far from equilibrium. Here we report results for vacuum deposition of C on a graphene-coated surface investigated with X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy in surface-sensitive conditions.

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A monofilament fiber spun from individual carbon nanotubes is an arbitrarily long ensemble of weakly interacting, aligned, discrete nanoparticles. Despite the structural resemblance of carbon nanotube monofilament fibers to crystalline polymeric fibers, very little is known about their dynamic collective mechanics, which arise from van der Waals interactions among the individual carbon nanotubes. Using ultrafast stroboscopic microscopy, we study the collective dynamics of carbon nanotube fibers and compare them directly with nylon, Kevlar, and aluminum monofilament fibers under the same supersonic impact conditions.

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Ultrashort bunches of electrons, emitted from solid surfaces through excitation by ultrashort laser pulses, are an essential ingredient in advanced X-ray sources, and ultrafast electron diffraction and spectroscopy. Multiphoton photoemission using a noble metal as the photocathode material is typically used but more brightness is desired. Artificially structured metal photocathodes have been shown to enhance optical absorption via surface plasmon resonance but such an approach severely reduces the damage threshold in addition to requiring state-of-the-art facilities for photocathode fabrication.

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The electrical behaviors under mechanical deformation of an aligned single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) film nanocomposite have been systematically investigated in this work. Electrical signals along the CNT axis (‖) and perpendicular to the CNT axis (⊥) follow a specific pattern, which enables the mechanical motion to be determined by vector analysis of such signals. The unique electrical behaviors of the sandwiched nanocomposites originate from the anisotropic characteristics of the CNT films.

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At the microscopic scale, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) combine impressive tensile strength and electrical conductivity; however, their macroscopic counterparts have not met expectations. The reasons are variously attributed to inherent CNT sample properties (diameter and helicity polydispersity, high defect density, insufficient length) and manufacturing shortcomings (inadequate ordering and packing), which can lead to poor transmission of stress and current. To efficiently investigate the disparity between microscopic and macroscopic properties, a new method is introduced for processing microgram quantities of CNTs into highly oriented and well-packed fibers.

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In this study, we apply a simple but effective oxidative purification method to purify carbon nanotube (CNT) fibers synthesized via a floating catalyst technique. After the purification treatment, the resulting CNT fibers exhibited significant improvements in mechanical and electrical properties with an increase in strength, Young's modulus, and electrical conductivity by approximately 81, 230, and 100%, respectively. With the successful dissolution of the CNT fibers in superacid, an extensional viscosity method could be applied to measure the aspect ratio of the CNTs constituting the fibers, whereas high-purity CNT thin films could be produced with a low resistance of 720 Ω/sq at a transmittance of 85%.

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We study how intrinsic parameters of carbon nanotube (CNT) samples affect the properties of macroscopic CNT fibers with optimized structure. We measure CNT diameter, number of walls, aspect ratio, graphitic character, and purity (residual catalyst and non-CNT carbon) in samples from 19 suppliers; we process the highest quality CNT samples into aligned, densely packed fibers, by using an established wet-spinning solution process. We find that fiber properties are mainly controlled by CNT aspect ratio and that sample purity is important for effective spinning.

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Highly aligned, packed, and doped carbon nanotube (CNT) fibers with electrical conductivities approaching that of copper have recently become available. These fibers are promising for high-power electrical applications that require light-weight, high current-carrying capacity cables. However, a microscopic understanding of how doping affects the electrical conductance of such CNT fibers in a quantitative manner has been lacking.

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The nucleation mechanisms during solution deposition of organic semiconductor thin films determine the grain morphology and may influence the crystalline packing in some cases. Here, in-situ optical spectromicroscopy in reflection mode is used to study the growth mechanisms and thermal stability of 6,13-bis(trisopropylsilylethynyl)-pentacene thin films. The results show that the films form in a supersaturated state before transforming to a solid film.

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Single-wall carbon nanotube (SWCNT) films are ideal components for thin, flexible, and durable electronic devices. Here, we use a variety of processing approaches to fabricate SWCNT-silicon heterojunctions from both unsorted and chirality-enriched SWCNTs. Through measured structure/processing/property relationships, we quantify the influence of SWCNT purity, alignment and residual doping on device performance and diode characteristics.

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Coaxial cables for data transmission are ubiquitous in telecommunications, aerospace, automotive, and robotics industries. Yet, the metals used to make commercial cables are unsuitably heavy and stiff. These undesirable traits are particularly problematic in aerospace applications, where weight is at a premium and flexibility is necessary to conform with the distributed layout of electronic components in satellites and aircraft.

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In epitaxially strained ferroelectric thin films and superlattices, the ferroelectric transition temperature can lie above the growth temperature. Ferroelectric polarization and domains should then evolve during the growth of a sample, and electrostatic boundary conditions may play an important role. In this work, ferroelectric domains, surface termination, average lattice parameter and bilayer thickness are simultaneously monitored using in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction during the growth of BaTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices on SrTiO3 substrates by off-axis radio frequency magnetron sputtering.

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The origins of spin exchange in crystalline thin films of Copper Octabutoxy Phthalocyanine (Cu-OBPc) are investigated using Magnetic Circular Dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy. These studies are made possible by a solution deposition technique which produces highly ordered films with macroscopic grain sizes suitable for optical studies. For temperatures lower than 2 K, the contribution of a specific state in the valence band manifold originating from the hybridized lone pair in nitrogen orbitals of the Phthalocyanine ring, bears the Brillouin-like signature of an exchange interaction with the localized d-shell Cu spins.

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Exploration of optical properties of organic crystalline semiconductors thin films is challenging due to submicron grain sizes and the presence of numerous structural defects, disorder and grain boundaries. Here we report on the results of combined linear dichroism (LD)/ polarization-resolved photoluminescence (PL) scanning microscopy experiments that simultaneously probe the excitonic radiative recombination and the molecular ordering in solution-processed metal-free phthalocyanine crystalline thin films with macroscopic grain sizes. LD/PL images reveal the relative orientation of the singlet exciton transition dipoles at the grain boundaries and the presence of a localized electronic state that acts like a barrier for exciton diffusion across the grain boundary.

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We present spatially-, temporally- and polarization-resolved dual photoluminescence/linear dichroism microscopy experiments that investigate the correlation between long-range order and the nature of exciton states in solution-processed phthalocyanine thin films. The influence of grain boundaries and disorder is absent in these films because typical grain sizes are 3 orders of magnitude larger than focused excitation beam diameters. These experiments reveal the existence of a delocalized singlet exciton, polarized along the high mobility axis in this quasi-1D electronic system.

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A bimodal size distribution of two-dimensional islands is inferred during interface formation in heteroepitaxial growth of bismuth ferrite on (001) oriented SrTiO3 by sputter deposition. Features observed by in situ x-ray scattering are explained by a model where coalescence of islands determines the growth kinetics with negligible surface diffusion on SrTiO3. Small clusters maintain a compact shape as they coalesce, while clusters beyond a critical size impinge to form large irregular connected islands and a population of smaller clusters forms in the spaces between the larger ones.

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Ion bombardment of insulating surfaces such as Al(2)O(3) and SiO(2) produces ordered patterns of ripples. The ripple wavelength varies with ion energy, incidence angle and substrate temperature. A region of stability is also known to exist for near-normal incidence during Ar(+) ion bombardment, where initially rough surfaces are smoothened.

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The 1995 Shallow Water Acoustics in a Random Medium (SWARM) experiment [Apel et al., IEEE J. Ocean.

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Grazing incidence x-ray scattering was used to determine the temperature and ion-energy dependence of nanoscale corrugations that form on an amorphous SiO2 surface eroded by Ar+ ions. The corrugation wavelength lambda* shows a nearly linear dependence on ion energy. Between room temperature and approximately 200 degrees C, lambda* depends weakly on temperature and above approximately 200 degrees C it shows an Arrhenius-like increase.

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