Time-domain Brillouin scattering (TDBS) is a developing technique for imaging/evaluation of materials, currently used in material science and biology. Three-dimensional imaging and characterization of polycrystalline materials has been recently reported, demonstrating evaluation of inclined material boundaries. Here, the TDBS technique is applied to monitor the destruction of a lithium niobate single crystal upon non-hydrostatic compression in a diamond anvil cell. The 3D TDBS experiments reveal, among others, modifications of the single crystal plate with initially plane-parallel surfaces, caused by non-hydrostatic compression, the laterally inhomogeneous variations of the plate thickness and relative inclination of opposite surfaces. Our experimental observations, supported by theoretical interpretation, indicate that TDBS enables the evaluation of materials interface orientation/inclination locally, from single point measurements, avoiding interface profilometry. A variety of observations reported in this paper paves the way to further expansion of the TDBS imaging use to analyze fascinating processes/phenomena occurring when materials are subjected to destruction.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pacs.2023.100547 | DOI Listing |
J Acoust Soc Am
December 2024
Service Hydrographique et Océanographique de la Marine, Brest, France.
The new generation of non-hydrostatic and compressible numerical models of the ocean can explicitly simulate acoustic waves when and where space and time resolution is adapted. We show that these models can consequently propagate accurately acoustic waves and modes through a free-surface, stratified ocean evolving simultaneously both in space and time, bringing them to the state of the art of acoustic propagation modelling. To some extent, both numerical cost and memory footprint may temper their range of applications but they are an unprecedented tool to evaluate deterministically the effects of ocean variability on low-frequency acoustic propagation in a realistically-evolving ocean.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sci Comput
July 2024
Weierstrass Institute for Applied Analysis and Stochastics, Mohrenstr. 39, 10117 Berlin, Germany.
This paper studies two hybrid discontinuous Galerkin (HDG) discretizations for the velocity-density formulation of the compressible Stokes equations with respect to several desired structural properties, namely provable convergence, the preservation of non-negativity and mass constraints for the density, and gradient-robustness. The later property dramatically enhances the accuracy in well-balanced situations, such as the hydrostatic balance where the pressure gradient balances the gravity force. One of the studied schemes employs an -conforming velocity ansatz space which ensures all mentioned properties, while a fully discontinuous method is shown to satisfy all properties but the gradient-robustness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotoacoustics
October 2023
Laboratoire d'Acoustique de l'Université du Mans (LAUM), UMR 6613, Institut d'Acoustique - Graduate School (IA-GS), CNRS, Le Mans Université, France.
Time-domain Brillouin scattering (TDBS) is a developing technique for imaging/evaluation of materials, currently used in material science and biology. Three-dimensional imaging and characterization of polycrystalline materials has been recently reported, demonstrating evaluation of inclined material boundaries. Here, the TDBS technique is applied to monitor the destruction of a lithium niobate single crystal upon non-hydrostatic compression in a diamond anvil cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDalton Trans
May 2023
Key Laboratory of High-Temperature and High-Pressure Study of the Earth's Interior, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guiyang, Guizhou 550081, China.
High-pressure structural, magnetic and electrical transport characteristics of CrBr were synthetically investigated using Raman scattering, electrical conductivity, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) and first-principles theoretical calculations during compression and decompression under different hydrostatic conditions. Upon pressurization, CrBr underwent a second-order structural transition at 9.5 GPa, followed by the semiconductor-to-metal and magnetic switching at 25.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
January 2022
Key Laboratory of High-temperature and High-pressure Study of the Earth's Interior, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences Guiyang Guizhou 550081 China
A series of high-pressure Raman spectroscopy and electrical conductivity experiments have been performed to investigate the vibrational and electrical transport properties of SnS under non-hydrostatic and hydrostatic environments. Upon compression, an coupled structural-electronic transition in SnS occurred at 30.2 GPa under non-hydrostatic conditions, which was evidenced by the splitting of the E mode and the discontinuities in Raman shifts, Raman full width at half maximum (FWHM) and electrical conductivity.
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