Direct Detection of Fast Neutrons by Organic Semiconducting Single Crystal Detectors

2021 ◽  
pp. 2108857
Author(s):  
Dou Zhao ◽  
Pingkun Cai ◽  
Wei Cheng ◽  
Wenbao Jia ◽  
Binbin Zhang ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (46) ◽  
pp. 14156-14161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seung Bin Baek ◽  
Dohyun Moon ◽  
Robert Graf ◽  
Woo Jong Cho ◽  
Sung Woo Park ◽  
...  

Crystallographic observation of adsorbed gas molecules is a highly difficult task due to their rapid motion. Here, we report the in situ single-crystal and synchrotron powder X-ray observations of reversible CO2 sorption processes in an apparently nonporous organic crystal under varying pressures at high temperatures. The host material is formed by hydrogen bond network between 1,3,5-tris-(4-carboxyphenyl)benzene (H3BTB) and N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) and by π–π stacking between the H3BTB moieties. The material can be viewed as a well-ordered array of cages, which are tight packed with each other so that the cages are inaccessible from outside. Thus, the host is practically nonporous. Despite the absence of permanent pathways connecting the empty cages, they are permeable to CO2 at high temperatures due to thermally activated molecular gating, and the weakly confined CO2 molecules in the cages allow direct detection by in situ single-crystal X-ray diffraction at 323 K. Variable-temperature in situ synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction studies also show that the CO2 sorption is reversible and driven by temperature increase. Solid-state magic angle spinning NMR defines the interactions of CO2 with the organic framework and dynamic motion of CO2 in cages. The reversible sorption is attributed to the dynamic motion of the DMF molecules combined with the axial motions/angular fluctuations of CO2 (a series of transient opening/closing of compartments enabling CO2 molecule passage), as revealed from NMR and simulations. This temperature-driven transient molecular gating can store gaseous molecules in ordered arrays toward unique collective properties and release them for ready use.


2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. P10007-P10007 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Rebai ◽  
A Milocco ◽  
L Giacomelli ◽  
E Perelli Cippo ◽  
M Tardocchi ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ram Devanathan ◽  
Ning Yu ◽  
Kurt E. Sickafus ◽  
Michael Nastasi

Magnesium aluminate spinel is considered to be a remarkably radiation resistant material. Single crystal spinel exhibits very little damage when irradiated with fast neutrons or energetic ions. Recently, amorphization of single-crystal MgAl204 was observed, for the first time, following irradiation with 400 keV Xe2+ at about 100 K to a peak dose of 25 dpa. Electron diffraction patterns from spinel subjected to different doses show the extinction of first-order fundamental reflections prior to the occurence of amorphization. This suggests that, enroute to becoming amorphous, ion-irradiated spinel transforms to a metastable crystalline state with a lattice constant that is half that of spinel. In an effort to understand this phase transformation, we have analyzed the structure of the metastable state using electron diffraction.Spinel belongs to the spacegroup Fd3m (fee Bravais lattice). The unit cell has a lattice constant of about 0.8 nm and is made of two sets of four octants.


1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (11) ◽  
pp. 1522-1528 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myer Bloom ◽  
Mark A. LeGros

A theoretical analysis of the oscillating voltage at twice the Larmor frequency (2ω0), due to quadrupolar polarization of 14N nuclei, predicts a signal at least ten orders of magnitude smaller than the magnetic-induction signal produced by the same sample. However, nonsecular parts of the quadrupolar interaction are predicted to give rise to observable magnetic-induction signals at 2ω0 that provide a monitor of "two-quantum coherence." The theoretical prediction is verified using a single crystal of NaNO2 at room temperature. The corresponding signal from a crystalline powder is zero. Some limitations and possible extensions of the experiment are proposed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 102 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 975-983 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maysoon Khasawneh ◽  
J. Stephen Hartman ◽  
Alex D. Bain *

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