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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
281

Hydrophobicity, solvation and structure formation in liquids

Chacko, Blesson January 2017 (has links)
In this thesis we use density functional theory (DFT) to study the solvent mediated interactions between solvophobic, solvophilic and patchy nanostructures namely rectangular cross section blocks. We calculate both the density profiles and local compressibility around the blocks and the results obtained for our model system provide a means to understanding the basic physics of solvent mediated interactions between nanostructures, and between objects such as proteins in water, that possess hydrophobic and hydrophilic patches. Our results give an improved understanding of the behaviour of liquids around solvophobic objects and solvophobicity (hydrophobicity) in general. Secondly, we look into the physics incorporated in standard mean-field DFT. This is normally derived by making what appears to be a rather drastic approximation for the two body density distribution function: ρ(2)(r,r′) ≈ ρ(r)ρ(r′), where ρ(r) is the one-body density distribution function. We provide a rationale for why the DFT often does better than this approximation would make you expect. Finally, we develop a lattice model to understand the nature of the pattern formation exhibited by certain systems of particles deposited on liquid-air interfaces and in particular the nature of the transitions between the different patterned structures that are observed. This is done using Monte Carlo computer simulations and DFT and links the observed microphase ordering with the micellisation process seen e.g. in surfactant systems.
282

First-Principles Study of Thermodynamic Properties in Thin-Film Photovoltaics

January 2011 (has links)
abstract: This thesis focuses on the theoretical work done to determine thermodynamic properties of a chalcopyrite thin-film material for use as a photovoltaic material in a tandem device. The material of main focus here is ZnGeAs2, which was chosen for the relative abundance of constituents, favorable photovoltaic properties, and good lattice matching with ZnSnP2, the other component in this tandem device. This work is divided into two main chapters, which will cover: calculations and method to determine the formation energy and abundance of native point defects, and a model to calculate the vapor pressure over a ternary material from first-principles. The purpose of this work is to guide experimental work being done in tandem to synthesize ZnGeAs2 in thin-film form with high enough quality such that it can be used as a photovoltaic. Since properties of photovoltaic depend greatly on defect concentrations and film quality, a theoretical understanding of how laboratory conditions affect these properties is very valuable. The work done here is from first-principles and utilizes density functional theory using the local density approximation. Results from the native point defect study show that the zinc vacancy (VZn) and the germanium antisite (GeZn) are the more prominent defects; which most likely produce non-stoichiometric films. The vapor pressure model for a ternary system is validated using known vapor pressure for monatomic and binary test systems. With a valid ternary system vapor pressure model, results show there is a kinetic barrier to decomposition for ZnGeAs2. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Materials Science and Engineering 2011
283

Prédiction et simulation numérique de nouveaux matériaux à deux dimensions / Prediction and simulation of new materials in two dimensions

Abboud, Ali 09 November 2018 (has links)
Dans le domaine des nanosciences, la recherche sur les matériaux possédant des dimensions réduites a connu des progrès spectaculaires. Tandis que de nombreux travaux ont été fait initialement sur le graphène, l'attention s'est ensuite portée vers d'autres matériaux bidimensionnels, tels que le nitrure de bore hexagonal ou encore les dichalcogénures de métaux de transition. Néanmoins, il est toujours nécessaire de trouver des matériaux possédant des caractéristiques équivalentes ou supérieures à celles des composés déjà connus. Dans le cadre de cette thèse, nous avons utilisé le calcul ab initio et plus particulièrement la théorie de la fonctionnelle de la densité pour prédire et comprendre les propriétés de trois familles de matériaux bidimensionnels. Premièrement, en prenant la structure du phosphorène comme structure de référence et en remplaçant le phosphore par des atomes voisins dans le tableau périodique, nous avons pu obtenir des matériaux inconnus jusqu'ici. Ensuite, nous nous sommes intéressés à des matériaux à base d'halogénures tels que AcOBr ou BaFCl, parmi d'autres. Enfin, nous avons mis l'accent sur des composés bidimensionnels quaternaires, tels que ScP2AgSe6, P2AgSe6Bi, P2CuBiSe6 et CuInP2 S6. Pour chaque matériau, nous avons démontré qu'il était dynamiquement stable et étudié sa structure électronique, et pour certains l'effet d'un champ électrique sur le matériau, ce qui ouvre la porte à de futures études expérimentales dans le domaine / In the field of nanosciences, research on materials with reduced dimensions has seen spectacular progress. While many works were initially done on graphene, the attention then came to other two-dimensional materials, such as hexagonal boron nitride or transition metal dichalcogenides. Nevertheless, it is still necessary to find materials with characteristics equivalent to or superior to those of the already known compounds. In this thesis, we used ab initio calculations and more particularly density functional theory to predict and understand the properties of three families of two-dimensional materials. First, taking the phosphorene structure as the reference and replacing phosphorus with neighboring atoms in the periodic table, we have been able to obtain unknown materials so far. Then we looked at halide materials such as AcOBr or BaFCl, among others. Finally, we have focused on two-dimensional quaternary compounds, such as ScP2AgSe6, P2AgSe6Bi, P2CuBiSe6 and CuInP2S6. For each compound, we demonstrated that it was dynamically stable and studied its electronic structure, and for some the effect of an electric field on the material, which opens the door for future experimental studies in the field
284

Phase stability and electronic structures of perovskite and organic optoelectronic materials via first-principle calculations

Luo, Heng 12 March 2016 (has links)
Mixed ionic and electronic conductor oxides, in particular La1-xSrxCoyFe1-yO3-d (LSCF), have been widely used as the cathode materials in solid oxide fuel cells for high-temperature energy applications. The focus of this thesis is primarily on constructing the instability phase diagram of Sr segregations on LSCF surfaces at the experimentally relevant temperatures and oxygen partial pressures using the first-principles density functional theory (DFT). A generic first-principles free-energy functional is developed to obtain the nonstoichiometric oxygen vacancy concentrations for the bulk and surface phases. These results agree well with the corresponding thermo-gravimetry measurements, and furthermore suggest that the oxygen vacancies are energetically stabilized at surfaces for all temperatures and oxygen partial pressures, while such surface stabilization effects become stronger at higher temperatures and lower oxygen partial pressures. Based on these nonstoichiometric oxygen vacancy predictions, we construct the free-energy phase diagrams of the Sr-segregation reaction as a function of temperature, oxygen partial pressure, and CO2 partial pressure for both the bulk and surface LSCF phases. Our results suggest that Sr segregations strongly accumulate towards the LSCF surface phase where the oxygen vacancy nonstoichiometries are abundant. Our results also indicate that the Sr segregation reactions are significantly enhanced at high temperatures, low oxygen partial pressures, and high CO2 partial pressures. The computed reaction temperature ranges are consistent with the total reflection X-ray fluorescence (TXRF) measurements.
285

Large-scale density functional theory study of van-der-Waals heterostructures

Constantinescu, Gabriel Cristian January 2018 (has links)
Research on two-dimensional (2D) materials currently occupies a sizeable fraction of the materials science community, which has led to the development of a comprehensive body of knowledge on such layered structures. However, the goal of this thesis is to deepen the understanding of the comparatively unknown heterostructures composed of different stacked layers. First, we utilise linear-scaling density functional theory (LS-DFT) to simulate intricate interfaces between the most promising layered materials, such as transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDC) or black phosphorus (BP) and hexagonal boron nitride (hBN). We show that hBN can protect BP from external influences, while also preventing the band-gap reduction in BP stacks, and enabling the use of BP heterostructures as tunnelling field effect transistors. Moreover, our simulations of the electronic structure of TMDC interfaces have reproduced photoemission spectroscopy observations, and have also provided an explanation for the coexistence of commensurate and incommensurate phases within the same crystal. Secondly, we have developed new functionality to be used in the future study of 2D heterostructures, in the form of a linear-response phonon formalism for LS-DFT. As part of its implementation, we have solved multiple implementation and theoretical issues through the use of novel algorithms.
286

Investigating anharmonic effects in condensed matter systems

Prentice, Joseph Charles Alfred January 2018 (has links)
This thesis presents work done on the calculation of the effects of anharmonic nuclear motion on the properties of solid materials from first principles. Such anharmonic effects can be significant in many cases. A vibrational self-consistent field (VSCF) method is used as the basis for these calculations, which is then improved and applied to a variety of solid state systems. Firstly, work done to improve the efficiency of the VSCF method is presented. The standard VSCF method involves using density functional theory (DFT) to map the Born-Oppenheimer (BO) energy surface that the nuclei move in, a computationally expensive process. It is shown that the accurate forces available in plane-wave basis DFT can be used to help map the BO surface more accurately and reduce the computational cost. This improved VSCF+f method is tested on molecular and solid hydrogen, as well as lithium and zirconium, and is found to give a speed-up of up to 40%. The VSCF method is then applied to two different systems of physical interest. It is first applied to the case of the neutral vacancy in diamond, in order to resolve a known discrepancy between harmonic ab initio calculations and experiment -- the former predict a static Jahn-Teller distortion, whilst the latter leads to a dynamic Jahn-Teller effect. By including anharmonic corrections to the energy and nuclear wavefunction, we show that the inclusion of these effects results in agreement between first-principles calculations and experiment for the first time. Lastly, the VSCF method is applied to barium titanate, a prototypical ferroelectric material which undergoes a series of phase transitions from around 400 K downwards. The nature of these phase transitions is still unclear, and understanding them is an active area of research. We describe the physics of the phase transitions of barium titanate, including both anharmonicity and the effect of polarisation caused by long wavelength vibrations, to help understand the important physics from first principles.
287

Ab initio Study of Tantalum Nitride and Silver Adatoms

January 2012 (has links)
abstract: In 2022, integrated circuit interconnects will approach 10 nm and the diffusion barrier layers needed to ensure long lasting devices will be at 1 nm. This dimension means the interconnect will be dominated by the interface and it has been shown the interface is currently eroding device performance. The standard interconnect system has three layers - a Copper metal core, a Tantalum Adhesion layer and a Tantalum Nitride Diffusion Barrier Layer. An alternate interconnect schema is a Tantalum Nitride barrier layer and Silver as a metal. The adhesion layer is removed from the system along with changing to an alternate, low resistivity metal. First principles are used to assess the interface of the Silver and Tantalum Nitride. Several stoichiometric 1:1 Tantalum Nitride polymorphs are assessed and it is found that the Fe2P crystal structure is actually the most stable crystal structure which is at odds with the published phase diagram for ambient crystal structure. The surface stability of Fe2P-TaN is assessed and the absorption enthalpy of Silver adatoms is calculated. Finally, the thermodynamic stability of the TaN-Ag interconnect system is assessed. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Materials Science and Engineering 2012
288

Algorithms and computer code for ab initio path integral molecular dynamics simulations

More, Joshua N. January 2015 (has links)
This thesis presents i-PI, a new path integral molecular dynamics code designed to capture nuclear quantum effects in ab initio electronic structure calculations of condensed phase systems. This software has an implementation of estimators used to calculate a wide range of static and dynamical properties and of state-of-the-art techniques used to increase the computational efficiency of path integral simulations. i-PI has been designed in a highly modular fashion, to ensure that it is as simple as possible to develop and implement new algorithms to keep up with the research frontier, and so that users can take maximum advantage of the numerous electronic structure programs which are freely available without needing to rewrite large amounts of code. Among the functionality of the i-PI code is a novel integrator for constant pressure dynamics, which is used to investigate the properties of liquid water at 750 K and 10 GPa, and efficient estimators for the calculation of single particle momentum distri- butions, which are used to study the properties of solid and liquid ammonia. These show respectively that i-PI can be used to make predictions about systems which are both difficult to study experimentally and highly non-classical in nature, and that it can illustrate the relative advantages and disadvantages of different theoretical methods and their ability to reproduce experimental data.
289

Experimental and Computational Investigations of Kinetically Stable Selenides Synthesized by the Modulated Elemental Reactants Method

Esters, Marco 10 April 2018 (has links)
The controlled and targeted synthesis of new solid materials is still a challenge difficult to overcome. Slow diffusion rates and long diffusion lengths require long reaction times and high synthesis temperatures, resulting in limited control over the reaction pathway. The Modulated Elemental Reactants (MER) method uses compositionally modulated precursors with atomically thin elemental layers that form amorphous alloys upon annealing while maintaining composition modulation. In this amorphous intermediate, nucleation, not diffusion, control the formation of the product, enabling kinetic control of the reaction, and the synthesis of new metastable compounds, heterostructures with designed nanoarchitecture, and thin films with a high degree of texturing. This dissertation uses experimental and computational methods to investigate compounds synthesized by the MER method. Firth, the MER method is used to synthesize ferromagnetic CuCr2Se4 films that show a large degree of crystallographic alignment and interesting magnetic properties such as temperature-dependent easy axes and negative magnetoresistivity. The second part investigates ferecrystals, rotationally disordered members of the misfit layer compounds family. The MER method’s ability to control the nanoarchitecture of the products is used to synthesize a new type of structural isomers, allowing for the synthesis of thousands of ternary compounds using the same elements. Experimental methods are also used to monitor the formation of ferecrystalline compounds using [(SnSe)1+δ][VSe2] as a model system. Despite the vast number of compounds available, however, explaining the properties and stability of ferecrystals is still in its infancy. In the last part of this dissertation, ab initio methods are employed to investigate the components in our ferecrystals. Specifically, isolated layers of VSe2 with its structural distortions due to a charge density wave, SnSe with its thickness-dependent structures, and BiSe with its flexible lattice and anti-phase boundaries are investigated to complement experimental results. Some properties, such as the structural distortion in VSe2 and the different stabilities of BiSe layers, can be explained very well using this simplified model, but others, such as the structure of SnSe layers, are not exclusively determined by their dimensionality, underlining the complex nature of the interactions in ferecrystals. This dissertation includes previously published and unpublished co-authored material.
290

Adsorção de Trihalometanos em Nanotubos de Carbono / Trihalomethanes Adsorption on Carbon Nanotubes

Girão, Eduardo Costa January 2008 (has links)
GIRÃO, Eduardo Costa. Adsorção de Trihalometanos em Nanotubos de Carbono. 2008. 99 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Física) - Programa de Pós-Graduação em Física, Departamento de Física, Centro de Ciências, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Fortaleza, 2008. / Submitted by Edvander Pires (edvanderpires@gmail.com) on 2015-04-28T21:05:23Z No. of bitstreams: 1 2008_dis_ecgirao.pdf: 4549992 bytes, checksum: 10c808440592e6fefb005e5b81528a33 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Edvander Pires(edvanderpires@gmail.com) on 2015-04-29T17:50:52Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 2008_dis_ecgirao.pdf: 4549992 bytes, checksum: 10c808440592e6fefb005e5b81528a33 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2015-04-29T17:50:52Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 2008_dis_ecgirao.pdf: 4549992 bytes, checksum: 10c808440592e6fefb005e5b81528a33 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008 / In this work we study the interaction of thihalomethanes (THM) with single wall carbon nanotubes using first principles calculations based on the Density Functional Theory (DFT), implemented in the SIESTA code which uses pseudopotentials to describe core electrons and localized basis to expand the valence wavefunctions. The adsorption of CHCl3 (the most important and abundant THM) on pristine, vacant and carboxylated carbon nanotubes is simulated aiming to understand the interaction process in different geometries and pursuing the best route for the potential application of carbon nanotubes as filters. The metallic (5,5) and semiconducting (8,0) nanotubes are used in all calculations. A complementary study involving bromated THMs (CHCl2Br, CHClBr2 and CHBr3) is also performed in order to investigate the influence of the bromine atoms on the interaction between THMs and pristine nanotubes. Based on the analysis of structural, electronic and energetic properties it is verified that THMs are adsorbed on the carbon nanotube surface through a physisorption process (binding energies in the range -0,06 eV to -0,21 eV) in all cases. This fact makes carbon nanotubes as promissing candidates to extract THMs from aqueous solutions. The calculations also predict the stability of chemical groups (COCCl3 and COOCCl3) bounded on the nanotube surface. These chemical groups can be derived from possible chemical reactions, through coupling agents, between CHCl3 and the carboxyl groups anchored to the nanotube wall. The binding energies of these groups and the nanotubes are found to be in the range -1,31 eV to -2,26 eV. / Nesta dissertação, a adsorção de trihalometanos (THMs) em nanotubos de carbono de parede simples é estudada por meio de cálculos de primeiros princípios baseados na Teoria do Funcional da Densidade (DFT), implementada no código computacional SIESTA que faz uso de pseudopotenciais para descrever os elétrons de caroço e bases localizadas para expandir as funções de onda dos elétrons de valência. A interação do CHCl3 (o mais importante e abundante dos THMs) com nanotubos puros, com vacâncias e carboxilados é simulada a fim de se entender o processo de interação em diferentes geometrias e encontrar as melhores rotas para a possível utilização de nanotubos como filtros. Em todos os sistemas estudados foram utilizados o tubo metálico (5,5) e o semicondutor (8,0). Um estudo complementar com THMs bromados (CHCl2Br, CHClBr2 e CHBr3) também foi realizado. Com estes últimos cálculos, busca-se observar a influência do número de átomos de bromo do THM sobre a interação com os nanotubos puros. Através da análise de propriedades estruturais, eletrônicas e energéticas, é verificado que os THMs são adsorvidos fisicamente na superfície dos nanotubos (energias de ligação variando de -0,06 eV a -0,21 eV) em todos os sistemas, tornando-os candidatos para se extrair THMs de soluções aquosas. Os cálculos prevêem ainda a estabilidade de complexos formados por grupos químicos (como COCCl3 e COOCCl3 oriundos de possíveis reações químicas do CHCl3 com grupos carboxila) agregados na superfície dos tubos. A energia de ligação de tais grupos com os nanotubos variou de -1,31 eV até -2,26 eV.

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