Selected Publications
R. Vanfleet (et al.)
Nanocrystalline as well as submicron sized, non-agglomerated, spherical ZrO2 particles have been successfully synthesized using the sol-gel technique utilizing hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) as a polymeric steric stabilizer. The effect of various parameters such as the ratio of molar concentration of water and alkoxide (R), the molar concentration [HPC] and the molecular weight (MWHPC) of HPC polymer as well as the calcination temperature on ZrO2 nanocrystallites size and their phase evolution behavior is systematically studied. The phase evolution behavior of nanocrystalline ZrO2 is explained and correlated with the adsorption behavior of HPC polymer on ZrO2 nanoparticles surface, which is observed to be a function of R, [HPC], MWHPC and the calcination temperature. Optimum synthesis parameters for obtaining 100% tetragonal phase in nanocrystalline ZrO2 are identified for the present sol-gel method of synthesizing nanoparticles.
R. Vanfleet (et al.)
Since its discovery in 1991, carbon nanotubes (CNT) have attracted intense attention because of their potential applications in advanced technologies. Different synthesis techniques have been developed, for example: (1) the carbon arc discharge method, (2) laser ablation of graphite, and (3) catalytic vapor growth. Most of these techniques involve only relatively simple and inexpensive equipment. It is fairly routine now to produce CNTs in small quantities in a research laboratory. However, the study of physical properties of individual CNT required much more sophisticated instrumentation due to the nanometer size of CNTs. The obstacle of handling CNT without an electron/scanning probe microscope has posed a formidable challenge and has hampered both current research and future applications of CNTs.
R. Vanfleet (et al.)
Cerium oxide has been investigated to be an effective coating material for high temperature applications for various alumina- and chromia-forming alloys. The present study investigates the use of microemulsion method to obtain monodispersed, non-agglomerated nanocrystalline ceria particles in the range of 5 nm using sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulphosuccinate (AOT) as a surfactant. Furthermore, the use of non-agglomerated nanocrystalline ceria particles to develop improved high temperature oxidation resistant coatings on AISI 304-grade stainless steel was investigated. It was found that non-agglomerated nanocrystalline ceria particles were more effective in improving the oxidation resistance than the agglomerated nanocrystalline particles.
R. R. Vanfleet (et al.)
The interface of direct bonded GaAs to GaAs has been studied by scanning transmission electron microscopy and electron energy loss spectroscopy. Voids are seen along the boundary with most being partially filled with a gallium particle. Two general sizes of voids are seen. The large voids (d similar to 45 nm) are distributed in an approximately linear relationship and the smaller (d similar to 12 nm) randomly. In compliant substrates, one of the layers is made thin (less than or equal to 10 nm) and twisted similar to 45 degrees. The larger voids often extend past this thin compliant layer, but no evidence of granularity of the epitaxial film is observed. (C) 2000 American Institute of Physics. [S0003-6951(00)00119-4].
Efficient techniques for computing axisymmetric non-neutral plasma equilibria are described. These equilibria may be obtained either by requiring global thermal equilibrium, by specifying the midplane radial density profile, or by specifying the radial profile of integral n dz. Both splines and finite-differences are used, and the accuracy of the two is compared by using a new characterization of the thermal equilibrium density profile which gives a simple formula for estimating the radial and axial gradient scale lengths of thermal equilibria. It is found that for global thermal equilibrium 1% accuracy is achieved with splines if the distance between neighboring splines is about two Debye lengths while finite differences require a grid spacing of about one-half Debye length to achieve the same accuracy.
Numerical investigations of a warm-fluid model with an isothermal equation of state for the perpendicular dynamics of an axisymmetric, magnetically confined pure electron plasma predict an exponentially unstable, l = 1, diocotron mode for hollow density profiles. The unstable mode can be identified with a stable, nonsmooth mode that exists in cold drift models but which is destabilized by finite temperature effects. The unstable mode has many properties similar to the experimental results reported by Driscoll [Phys. Rev. Lett. 64, 645 (1990)].