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1.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 573: 193-203, 2020 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32278950

RESUMEN

HYPOTHESIS: One of the main drawbacks of metal-supported materials, traditionally prepared by the impregnation of metal salts onto pre-synthesized porous supports, is the formation of large and unevenly dispersed particles. Generally, the larger are the particles, the lower is the number of catalytic sites. Maximum atom exposure can be reached within single-atom materials, which appear therefore as the next generation of porous catalysts. EXPERIMENTS: Herein, we designed single iron atom-supported silica materials through sol-gel hydrothermal treatment using mixtures of a non-ionic surfactant (Pluronic P123) and a metallosurfactant (cetyltrimethylammoniumtrichloromonobromoferrate, CTAF) as porogens. The ratio between the Pluronic P123 and the CTAF enables to control the silica structural and textural properties. More importantly, CTAF acts as an iron source, which amount could be simply tuned by varying the non-ionic/metallo surfactants molar ratio. FINDINGS: The fine distribution of iron atoms onto the silica mesopores results from the iron distribution within the mixed micelles, which serve as templates for the polymerization of the silica matrix. Several characterization methods were used to determine the structural and textural properties of the silica material (XRD, N2 sorption isotherms and TEM) and the homogeneous distribution and lack of clustering of iron atoms in the resulting materials (elemental analysis, magnetic measurements, pair distribution function (PDF), MAS-NMR and TEM mapping). The oxidation and spin state of single-iron atoms determined from their magnetic properties were confirmed by DFT calculations. This strategy might find straightforward applications in preparing versatile single atom catalysts, with improved efficiency compared to nanosized ones.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 99(3): 037006, 2007 Jul 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17678319

RESUMEN

Temperature dependences of the magnetic susceptibility, specific heat, and electrical resistivity have been measured for the Mo(3)Sb(7) compound in the 0.6-350 K range. This compound exhibits bulk superconductivity occurring at 2.25 K and follows the Kadowaki-Woods relation, A/gamma(2)=1.0 x 10(-5) microOmega x cm(K x mol/mJ)(2), as a heavy-fermion system does. We show, from experimental evidence and theoretical argument, that Mo(3)Sb(7) can be classified as a coexistent superconductor-spin fluctuation system. The McMillan equation including paramagnon effects was found to give an accurate estimation of the transition temperature.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 93(10): 106602, 2004 Sep 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15447433

RESUMEN

The direct impact of the electronic structure on spin-polarized transport has been experimentally proven in high-quality Fe/MgO/Fe epitaxial magnetic tunnel junctions, with an extremely flat bottom Fe/MgO interface. The voltage variation of the conductance points out the signature of an interfacial resonance state located in the minority band of Fe(001). When coupled to a metallic bulk state, this spin-polarized interfacial state enhances the band matching at the interface and therefore increases strongly the conductivity in the antiparallel magnetization configuration. Consequently, the tunnel magnetoresistance is found to be positive below 0.2 V and negative above. On the other hand, when the interfacial state is either destroyed by roughness-related disorder or not coupled to the bulk, the magnetoresistance is almost independent on the bias voltage.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 89(10): 107206, 2002 Sep 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12225223

RESUMEN

Magnetic interactions involving ferromagnetic layers separated by an insulating barrier have been studied experimentally on a fully epitaxial hard-soft magnetic tunnel junction: Fe/MgO/Fe/Co. For a barrier thickness below 1 nm, a clear antiferromagnetic interaction is observed. Moreover, when reducing the MgO thickness from 1 to 0.5 nm, the coupling strength increases up to J=-0.26 erg.cm(-2). This behavior, well fitted by theoretical models, provides an unambiguous signature of the interlayer exchange coupling by spin-polarized quantum tunneling.

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