Publications by authors named "M Kavai"

A portable and disposable laser-scribed graphene (LSG) device was fabricated on polyetherimide (PEI) substrate for electrochemical detection of benzodiazepines (BZ) drugs such as diazepam (DZ) and midazolam (MZ) in commercial beverage samples. Morphological characterizations of the LSG material recorded by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed the porous nature of the proposed electrochemical device, which contributed to the enhancement of the electroactive area. Besides, the structural and electrochemical characterizations performed by Raman spectroscopy, cyclic voltammetry (CV), and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) measurements revealed that the PEI-LSG material presents highly disordered graphene-like structures and high electron transfer features, respectively.

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Magnetic fluctuations induced by geometric frustration of local Ir-spins disturb the formation of long-range magnetic order in the family of pyrochlore iridates. As a consequence, PrIrO lies at a tuning-free antiferromagnetic-to-paramagnetic quantum critical point and exhibits an array of complex phenomena including the Kondo effect, biquadratic band structure, and metallic spin liquid. Using spectroscopic imaging with the scanning tunneling microscope, complemented with machine learning, density functional theory and theoretical modeling, we probe the local electronic states in PrIrO and find an electronic phase separation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Heavy-fermion systems exhibit unique electronic behaviors due to the interplay of localized and itinerant electrons, with questions around the existence of Kondo lattices in magnetically ordered phases.
  • Utilizing advanced techniques like scanning tunneling microscopy and neutron scattering, the study investigates the electronic structures in the antiferromagnetic material USb, revealing a significant energy gap where Kondo hybridization appears below around 80 K.
  • The findings suggest a distinct separation of antiferromagnetism and Kondo lattice influence across different electronic orbitals, introducing the idea of orbital selectivity, and highlight a unique transition at 45 K that could be connected to a "hidden-order" phase found in related materials.
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The quest to understand correlated electronic systems has pushed the frontiers of experimental measurements toward the development of new experimental techniques and methodologies. Here we use a novel home-built uniaxial-strain device integrated into our variable temperature scanning tunneling microscope that enables us to controllably manipulate in-plane uniaxial strain in samples and probe their electronic response at the atomic scale. Using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) with spin-polarization techniques, we visualize antiferromagnetic (AFM) domains and their atomic structure in Fe1+yTe samples, the parent compound of iron-based superconductors, and demonstrate how these domains respond to applied uniaxial strain.

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Resonant x-ray scattering (RXS) has recently become an increasingly important tool for the study of ordering phenomena in correlated electron systems. Yet, the interpretation of RXS experiments remains theoretically challenging because of the complexity of the RXS cross section. Central to this debate is the recent proposal that impurity-induced Friedel oscillations, akin to quasi-particle interference signals observed with a scanning tunneling microscope (STM), can lead to scattering peaks in RXS experiments.

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