Publications by authors named "R J CANDLER"

The magnetoelectric behavior of epitaxial Fe-Ga microstructures on top of a (001)-oriented PMN-PT piezoelectric substrate is imaged with magnetic X-ray microscopy. Additionally, the micron-scale strain distribution in PMN-PT is characterized by X-ray microdiffraction and examined with respect to the results of the Fe-Ga magnetoelectric switching. The magnetic reorientation of Fe-Ga is found to be strongly correlated with size, shape, and crystallographic orientation of the microstructures.

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Objective: The objective of this study was the preclinical design and construction of a flexible intrasphenoid coil aiming for submillimeter resolution of the human pituitary gland.

Methods: Sphenoid sinus measurements determined coil design constraints for use in > 95% of adult patients. Temperature safety parameters were tested.

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Magnetic domain wall (DW)-based logic devices offer numerous opportunities for emerging electronics applications allowing superior performance characteristics such as fast motion, high density, and nonvolatility to process information. However, these devices rely on an external magnetic field, which limits their implementation; this is particularly problematic in large-scale applications. Multiferroic systems consisting of a piezoelectric substrate coupled with ferromagnets provide a potential solution that provides the possibility of controlling magnetization through an electric field via magnetoelastic coupling.

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Programming magnetic fields with microscale control can enable automation at the scale of single cells ≈10 µm. Most magnetic materials provide a consistent magnetic field over time but the direction or field strength at the microscale is not easily modulated. However, magnetostrictive materials, when coupled with ferroelectric material (i.

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Spinel iron oxide nanocrystals (NCs) have been reported to have atomic-level core and surface structural features that differ from those of the bulk material. Recent advances in a continuous growth synthesis of metal oxide NCs make it possible to prepare a series of NCs with subnanometer control of size with diameters below 10 nm that are well-suited for investigating size-dependent structure and reactivity. Here, we study the evolution of size-dependent structure in spinel iron oxide and determine how nanoscale structure influences the growth of NCs.

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