Corrosion of Al alloy often starts from the nanoscale corrosion around the surface-exposed Al-Fe intermetallic particles (IMPs) and leads to a serious damage limiting its application range in the automobile industry. To solve this issue, understanding of the nanoscale corrosion mechanism around the IMP is essential, yet it is impeded by the difficulties in directly visualizing nanoscale distribution of reaction activity. Here, this difficulty is overcomed by open-loop electric potential microscopy (OL-EPM) and investigate nanoscale corrosion behavior around the IMPs in H SO solution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCharges accumulated in an electric double layer (EDL) play key roles in various interfacial phenomena and electronic devices. However, direct imaging of their spatial distribution has been a great challenge, which has hindered our nano-level understanding of the mechanisms of such interfacial phenomena and functions. In this study, we present direct imaging of charges accumulated at an electrode-electrolyte interface using three-dimensional open-loop electric potential microscopy (3D-OL-EPM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCorrosion is a traditional problem but still one of the most serious problems in industry. To reduce the huge economic loss caused by corrosion, tremendous effort has been made to understand, predict and prevent it. Corrosion phenomena are generally explained by the formation of corrosion cells at a metal-electrolyte interface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently, optical lattices with nonzero Berry's phases of Bloch bands have been realized. New approaches for measuring Berry's phases and topological properties of bands with experimental tools appropriate for ultracold atoms need to be developed. In this Letter, we propose an interferometric method for measuring Berry's phases of two-dimensional Bloch bands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTopological phases exhibit some of the most striking phenomena in modern physics. Much of the rich behaviour of quantum Hall systems, topological insulators, and topological superconductors can be traced to the existence of robust bound states at interfaces between different topological phases. This robustness has applications in metrology and holds promise for future uses in quantum computing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe introduce a new approach to create and detect Majorana fermions using optically trapped 1D fermionic atoms. In our proposed setup, two internal states of the atoms couple via an optical Raman transition-simultaneously inducing an effective spin-orbit interaction and magnetic field-while a background molecular BEC cloud generates s-wave pairing for the atoms. The resulting cold-atom quantum wire supports Majorana fermions at phase boundaries between topologically trivial and nontrivial regions, as well as "Floquet Majorana fermions" when the system is periodically driven.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNontrivial symmetry of order parameters is crucial in some of the most interesting quantum many-body states of ultracold atoms as well as condensed matter systems. Examples in cold atoms include p-wave Feshbach molecules and d-wave paired states of fermions that could be realized in optical lattices in the Hubbard regime. Identifying these states in experiments requires measurements of the relative phase of different components of the entangled pair wave function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe theoretically analyze Ramsey interference experiments in one-dimensional quasicondensates and obtain explicit expressions for the time evolution of full distribution functions of fringe contrast. We show that distribution functions contain unique signatures of the many-body mechanism of decoherence. We argue that Ramsey interference experiments provide a powerful tool for analyzing strongly correlated nature of 1D interacting systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interplay of thermodynamics and quantum correlations can give rise to counterintuitive phenomena in many-body systems. We report on an isentropic effect in a spin mixture of attractively interacting fermionic atoms in an optical lattice. As we adiabatically increase the attraction between the atoms, we observe that the gas expands instead of contracting.
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