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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.
1

Détermination expérimentale de la distribution de taille de pores d’un milieu poreux par l’injection d’un fluide à seuil ou analyse harmonique / Experimental identification of the pore size distribution of porous media using a frequency analysis or a yield stress fluid.

Malvault, Guillaume 27 September 2013 (has links)
Deux approches pour caractériser les milieux poreux en terme de distribution de taille de pores (DTP) sont développées au sein de l'équipe ECPS. Ce travail a pour but de confirmer expérimentalement leurs validités. A l'instar des autres méthodes utilisant l'intrusion du mercure, l'adsorption isotherme ou la thermoporosimétrie, la première méthode consiste à utiliser un fluide à seuil d'écoulement. En effet, l'utilisation de l'écoulement d'un fluide à seuil de type Herschel-Bulkley, au travers d'un poreux, en fonction du gradient de pression permet (en utilisant les solutions analytique et numérique du problème inverse) de déterminer la fonction de distribution de la taille de pores. La seconde méthode utilise l'admittance complexe d'un milieu poreux, mesurée à partir de la réponse en débit à une sollicitation harmonique du gradient de pression. Comme la fréquence de la sollicitation est reliée aux rayons des pores par le biais de la profondeur de pénétration hydrodynamique, l'admittance permet de retrouver la distribution de taille de pores par la résolution numérique du problème inverse associé. Ces deux techniques sont basées sur le modèle de faisceaux de capillaires parallèles employé dans la plupart des autres études qui traitent du même problème. Nos expériences s'appuient sur des milieux poreux calibrés. L'application de ces techniques aux milieux poreux réels se fait actuellement en collaboration avec le TREFLE de Bordeaux. Les résultats expérimentaux obtenus affirment clairement la validité et l'applicabilité de ces deux méthodes pour la caractérisation de la DTP. Il est désormais envisageable de les transférer pour un usage industriel. / Two approaches to characterize porous media in terms of pore size distribution (PSD) are developed within our ECPS team. The aim of this study is to experimentally confirm their validity. Like the other methods using mercury intrusion, adsorption isotherm or thermoporometry, the first method consists in the use of a fluid flow threshold. Indeed, the use of flow of a yield-stress fluid like those of Herschel-Bulkley's, through a porous media, versus the pressure gradient, permits (using the analytical and numerical solutions of the inverse problem) to determine the distribution function of its PSD. The second method uses the complex admittance of a porous medium, measured from the flow rate response to a harmonic pressure gradient. As the frequency of the sollicitation is related to the pore radius through the hydrodynamic penetration depth, the admittance allows to determine the PSD using numerical solution of the associated inverse problem. Both techniques are based on the parallel capillaries bundle model, as used in most of similar studies. Our experiments use calibrated porous media. The application of these techniques to real porous media is currently lead in collaboration with the TREFLE (Bordeaux). Our experimental results clearly confirm the validity and the applicability of these methods for the characterization of the PSD. It is now possible to transfer them for an industrial use.
2

Electrical Characterization of Cluster Devices

Sattar, Abdul January 2011 (has links)
The aim of the study presented in this thesis is to explore the electrical and physical properties of films of tin and lead clusters. Understanding the novel conductance properties of cluster films and related phenomenon such as coalescence is important to fabricate any cluster based devices. Coalescence is an important phenomenon in metallic cluster films. Due to coalescence the morphology of the films changes with time which changes their properties and could lead to failure in cluster devices. Coalescence is studied in Sn and Pb cluster films deposited on Si$_3$N$_4$ surfaces using Ultra High Vacuum (UHV) cluster deposition system. The conductance of the overall film is linked to the conductance of the individual necks between clusters by simulations. It is observed that the coalescence process in Sn and Pb films follows a power law in time with an exponent smaller than reported in literature. These results are substantiated by the results from previous experimental and Kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) simulation studies at UC. Percolating films of Sn show unique conductance properties. These films are characterized using various electrode configurations, applied voltages and temperatures. The conductance measurements are performed by depositing clusters on prefabricated gold electrodes on top of Si$_3$N$_4$ substrates. Sn cluster films exhibit a variety of conductance behaviours during and after the end of deposition. It is observed that the evolution of conductance during the onsets at percolation threshold is dependent on the film morphology. Samples showing difference responses in onset also behave differently after the end of deposition. Therefore all samples were categorized according to their onset behaviour. After the end of deposition, when a bias voltage is applied, the conductance of Sn films steps up and down between various well-defined conductance levels. It is also observed that in many cases the conductance levels between which these devices jump are close to integral multiples of the conductance quantum. There are many possible explanations for the steps in conductance. One of the explanations is formation and breaking of conducting paths in the cluster films by electric field induced evaporation and electromigration respectively. The stepping behaviour is similar to that in non-volatile memory devices and hence very interesting to explore due to potential applications.
3

Superconductive Effects in Thin Cluster Films

Grigg, John Antony Hugh January 2012 (has links)
In this thesis, the superconductive and superresistive properties of thin percolating films of lead nanoclusters are presented. The samples were created by depositing clusters from an inert gas aggregation cluster source onto substrates held at either room temperature or 10K. Observations of the characteristic behaviours of the samples were made through R(T ) and V (I) measurements. Several interesting features were observed - smooth and discrete steps in the R(I) curves, hysteresis between increasing and decreasing bias currents, and non-zero resistances at superconducting temperatures. Explanations are proposed in terms of theoretical models of several phenomena - phase slips, phase slip centres and hotspots - which have seen little prior application to percolating systems in literature.

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