Publications by authors named "Schachinger T"

Carbon dioxide (CO) and carbon monoxide (CO) hydrogenation to methane (CH) or methanol (MeOH) is a promising pathway to reduce CO emissions and to mitigate dependence on rapidly depleting fossil fuels. Along these lines, a series of catalysts comprising copper (Cu) or palladium (Pd) nanoparticles (NPs) supported on zinc oxide (ZnO) as well as bimetallic CuPd NPs supported on ZnO or graphene were synthesized various methodologies. The prepared catalysts underwent comprehensive characterization high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) mapping, electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), X-ray diffraction (XRD), hydrogen temperature-programmed reduction and desorption (H-TPR and H-TPD), and deuterium temperature-programmed desorption (DO-TPD).

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Article Synopsis
  • Accurate measurement of von Willebrand factor ristocetin cofactor activity (VWF:RCo) is essential for diagnosing von Willebrand disease and evaluating VWF products in the pharmaceutical industry, despite current high variability in lab results.
  • A new automated method for determining VWF:RCo minimizes manual errors with a pre-dilution setup, leading to consistent results comparable to experienced technicians.
  • This operator-independent protocol enhances standardization and efficiency in conducting VWF activity assays while maintaining high precision and accuracy.
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In this work, we show how the activity states of bimetallic Ni-Fe catalysts exsolved from NdCaFeNiO (NCFNi) can be influenced electrochemically. The NCFNi parent oxide was employed in the form of thin film mixed conducting model electrodes, which were operated in a humid hydrogen atmosphere. By precisely controlling the oxygen chemical potential in the parent oxide electrode applying an electrochemical polarisation, we managed to selectively exsolve Ni nanoparticles from the perovskite lattice and study their catalytic activity switching characteristics.

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We present a method to separate coherent and incoherent contributions of cathodoluminescence (CL) by using a time-resolved coincidence detection scheme. For a proof-of-concept experiment, we generate CL by irradiating an optical multimode fiber with relativistic electrons in a transmission electron microscope. A temporal analysis of the CL reveals a large peak in coincidence counts for small time delays, also known as photon bunching.

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In light optics, beams with orbital angular momentum (OAM) can be produced by employing a properly-tuned two-cylinder-lens arrangement, also called π/2 mode converter. It is not possible to convey this concept directly to the beam in an electron microscope due to the non-existence of cylinder lenses in commercial transmission electron microscopes (TEMs). A viable work-around are readily-available electron optical elements in the form of quadrupole lenses.

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Compound materials, such as transition-metal (TM) carbides, are anticipated to be effective electrocatalysts for the carbon dioxide reduction reaction (CORR) to useful chemicals. This expectation is nurtured by density functional theory (DFT) predictions of a break of key adsorption energy scaling relations that limit CORR at parent TMs. Here, we evaluate these prospects for hexagonal MoC in aqueous electrolytes in a multimethod experiment and theory approach.

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Here we demonstrate the use of nanofabricated grating holograms to diffract and shape electrons in a scanning electron microscope. The diffraction grating is placed in an aperture in the column. The entire diffraction pattern can be passed through the objective lens and projected onto the specimen, or an intermediate aperture can be used to select particular diffracted beams.

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The present paper describes the improvement of the performances of boron powder obtained applying the freeze-drying process (FDP) for the nanostructuration and doping of BO, which is here used as boron precursor. After the nanostructuration process, BO is reduced to elemental nanoboron (nB) through magnesiothermic reaction with Mg. For this work, the usefulness of the process was tested focusing on the carbon-doping (C-doping), using C, inulin and haemoglobin as C sources.

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This work studies the elastic scattering behavior of electron vortices when propagating through amorphous samples. A formulation of the multislice approach in cylindrical coordinates is used to theoretically investigate the redistribution of intensity between different angular momentum components due to scattering. To corroborate and elaborate on our theoretical results, extensive numerical simulations are performed on three model systems (SiN, FeB, Pt) for a wide variety of experimental parameters to quantify the purity of the vortices, the net angular momentum transfer, and the variability of the results with respect to the random relative position between the electron beam and the scattering atoms.

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In optics, mode conversion is an elegant way to switch between Hermite Gaussian and Laguerre Gaussian beam profiles and thereby impart orbital angular momentum onto the beam and to create vortices. In optics such vortex beams can be produced in a setup consisting of two identical cylinder lenses. In electron optics, quadrupole lenses can be used for the same purpose.

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A modular high vacuum chamber dedicated to thin film deposition is presented. We detail the vacuum and gas infrastructure required to operate two highly flexible chambers simultaneously, with a focus on evaporation techniques (thermal and electron beam) and magnetron sputtering, including baking equipment to remove residual water from the chamber. The use of O-ring-sealed flat flanges allows a tool-free assembly process, in turn enabling rapid changes of the whole setup.

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We discuss the feasibility of detecting spin polarized electronic transitions with a vortex filter. This approach does not rely on the principal condition of the standard electron energy-loss magnetic chiral dichroism (EMCD) technique, the precise alignment of the crystal in order to use it as a beam splitter, and thus would pave the way for the application of EMCD to new classes of materials and problems, like amorphous magnetic alloys and interface magnetism. The dichroic signal strength at the L-edge of ferromagnetic Cobalt (Co) is estimated on theoretical grounds using a single atom scattering approach.

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In this experimental work we present novel methods to increase the spatial resolution of valence electron energy loss spectrometry (VEELS) investigations below the limit given by the inelastic delocalization. For this purpose we analyse a layer stack consisting of silicon/silicon-oxide/silicon-nitride/silicon-oxide/silicon (SONOS) with varying layer thickness down to the 2nm level. Using a combination of a conical illumination and energy filtered transmission electron microscopy we are able to identify the layers by using low energy losses.

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Carbon deposition due to the inverse Boudouard reaction (2CO → CO + C) has been studied on yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ), YO, and ZrO in comparison to CH by a variety of different chemical, structural, and spectroscopic characterization techniques, including electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy and imaging, Raman spectroscopy, and electron microscopy. Consentaneously, all experimental methods prove the formation of a more or less conducting carbon layer (depending on the used oxide) of disordered nanocrystalline graphite covering the individual grains of the respective pure oxides after treatment in flowing CO at temperatures above ∼1023 K. All measurements show that during carbon deposition, a more or less substantial surface reduction of the oxides takes place.

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Standard electron optics predicts Larmor image rotation in the magnetic lens field of a TEM. Introducing the possibility to produce electron vortex beams with quantized orbital angular momentum brought up the question of their rotational dynamics in the presence of a magnetic field. Recently, it has been shown that electron vortex beams can be prepared as free electron Landau states showing peculiar rotational dynamics, including no and cyclotron (double-Larmor) rotation.

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Landau levels and states of electrons in a magnetic field are fundamental quantum entities underlying the quantum Hall and related effects in condensed matter physics. However, the real-space properties and observation of Landau wave functions remain elusive. Here we report the real-space observation of Landau states and the internal rotational dynamics of free electrons.

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Outer hair cells (OHCs) of the mammalian cochlea are equipped with a specific form of cellular motility that is driven by changes of the membrane potential. This electromotility is a membrane-based process generated by the membrane protein prestin (SLC26A5). Current models suggest that prestin undergoes a force-generating conformational transition upon changes of the membrane potential.

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