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Dive into the research topics where Martin Truchly is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Truchly.


Applied Surface Science | 2010

Studies of resistance switching effects in metal/YBa2Cu3O7−x interface junctions

A. Plecenik; Milan Tomasek; T. Plecenik; Martin Truchly; Jaroslav Noskovic; Miroslav Zahoran; T. Roch; M. Belogolovskii; Mariana Spankova; Š. Chromik; P. Kúš

Current-voltage characteristics of planar junctions formed by an epitaxial c-axis oriented YBa2Cu3O7-x thin film micro-bridge and Ag counter-electrode were measured in the temperature range from 4.2 K to 300 K. A hysteretic behavior related to switching of the junction resistance from a high-resistive to a low-resistive state and vice-versa was observed and analyzed in terms of the maximal current bias and temperature dependence. The same effects were observed on a sub-micrometer scale YBa2Cu3O7-x thin film - PtIr point contact junctions using Scanning Tunneling Microscope. These phenomena are discussed within a diffusion model, describing an oxygen vacancy drift in YBa2Cu3O7-x films in the nano-scale vicinity of the junction interface under applied electrical fields.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2012

Effect of crystallographic anisotropy on the resistance switching phenomenon in perovskites

T. Plecenik; Milan Tomasek; M. Belogolovskii; Martin Truchly; M. Gregor; Jaroslav Noskovic; Miroslav Zahoran; T. Roch; I. Boylo; Mariana Spankova; Š. Chromik; P. Kúš; A. Plecenik

Resistance switching effects in metal/perovskite contacts based on epitaxial c-axis oriented YBa2Cu3O6+c (YBCO) thin films with different crystallographic orientation have been studied. Three types of Ag/YBCO junctions with the contact restricted to (i) c-axis direction, (ii) ab-plane direction, and (iii) both were designed and fabricated, and their current-voltage characteristics have been measured. The type (i) junctions exhibited conventional bipolar resistance switching behavior, whereas in other two types the low-resistance state was unsteady and their resistance quickly relaxed to the initial high-resistance state. Physical mechanism based on the oxygen diffusion scenario, explaining such behavior, is discussed.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Direct creation of microdomains with positive and negative surface potential on hydroxyapatite coatings

T. Plecenik; Syed A. M. Tofail; Maros Gregor; Miroslav Zahoran; Martin Truchly; Fathima Laffir; T. Roch; Pavol Durina; Melinda Vargová; G. Plesch; P. Kúš; A. Plecenik

A method for the direct patterning of electrostatic potential at the surface of hydroxyapatite is presented here. Microdomains of surface potential have been created on hydroxyapatite coatings by a 20 keV focused electron beam with minimal alterations of surface chemistry. The success of such approach has been confirmed by Kelvin probe force microscopy measurements, which show that this method is capable of creating micron sized positive and negative local electrostatic potential. The shape and potential difference of these domains were found to depend on the dose of total injected charge from the electron beam as well as the speed with which such charge is injected.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2016

Inverse polarity of the resistive switching effect and strong inhomogeneity in nanoscale YBCO-metal contacts

Martin Truchly; T. Plecenik; E. Zhitlukhina; M. Belogolovskii; M. Dvoranova; P. Kúš; A. Plecenik

We have studied a bipolar resistive switching phenomenon in c-axis oriented normal-state YBa2Cu3O7-c (YBCO) thin films at room temperature by scanning spreading resistance microscopy (SSRM) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) techniques. The most striking experimental finding has been the opposite (in contrast to the previous room and low-temperature data for planar metal counter-electrode-YBCO bilayers) voltage-bias polarity of the switching effect in all SSRM and a number of STM measurements. We have assumed that the hysteretic phenomena in current-voltage characteristics of YBCO-based contacts can be explained by migration of oxygen-vacancy defects and, as a result, by the formation or dissolution of more or less conductive regions near the metal–YBCO interface. To support our interpretation of the macroscopic resistive switching phenomenon, a minimalist model that describes radical modifications of the oxygen-vacancy effective charge in terms of a charge-wind effect was proposed. It was shown theo...


Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine | 2012

Directly created electrostatic micro-domains on hydroxyapatite: probing with a Kelvin Force probe and a protein

T. Plecenik; Sylvain Robin; Maros Gregor; Martin Truchly; Sidney B. Lang; Abbasi A. Gandhi; Miroslav Zahoran; Fathima Laffir; Tewfik Soulimane; Melinda Vargová; G. Plesch; P. Kúš; A. Plecenik; Syed Ansar Tofail

Micro-domains of modified surface potential (SP) were created on hydroxyapatite films by direct patterning by mid-energy focused electron beam, typically available as a microprobe of Scanning Electron Microscopes. The SP distribution of these patterns has been studied on sub-micrometer scale by the Kelvin Probe Force Microscopy method as well as lysozyme adsorption. Since the lysozyme is positively charged at physiological pH, it allows us to track positively and negatively charged areas of the SP patterns. Distribution of the adsorbed proteins over the domains was in good agreement with the observed SP patterns.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Surface transport properties of Fe-based superconductors: The influence of degradation and inhomogeneity

T. Plecenik; M. Gregor; R. Sobota; Martin Truchly; Leonid Satrapinskyy; F. Kurth; B. Holzapfel; Kazumasa Iida; P. Kúš; A. Plecenik

Surface properties of Co-doped BaFe2As2 epitaxial superconducting thin films were inspected by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, scanning spreading resistance microscopy (SSRM), and point contact spectroscopy (PCS). It has been shown that surface of Fe-based superconductors degrades rapidly if being exposed to air, what results in suppression of gap-like structure on PCS spectra. Moreover, SSRM measurements revealed inhomogeneous surface conductivity, what is consistent with strong dependence of PCS spectra on contact position. Presented results suggest that fresh surface and small probing area should be assured for surface sensitive measurements like PCS to obtain intrinsic properties of Fe-based superconductors.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2014

Surface Charge and Carbon Contamination on an Electron-Beam-Irradiated Hydroxyapatite Thin Film Investigated by Photoluminescence and Phase Imaging in Atomic Force Microscopy

Radu Hristu; Denis E. Tranca; Stefan G. Stanciu; Maros Gregor; T. Plecenik; Martin Truchly; T. Roch; Syed A. M. Tofail; George A. Stanciu

The surface properties of hydroxyapatite, including electric charge, can influence the biological response, tissue compatibility, and adhesion of biological cells and biomolecules. Results reported here help in understanding this influence by creating charged domains on hydroxyapatite thin films deposited on silicon using electron beam irradiation and investigating their shape, properties, and carbon contamination for different doses of incident injected charge by two methods. Photoluminescence laser scanning microscopy was used to image electrostatic charge trapped at pre-existing and irradiation-induced defects within these domains, while phase imaging in atomic force microscopy was used to image the carbon contamination. Scanning Auger electron spectroscopy and Kelvin probe force microscopy were used as a reference for the atomic force microscopy phase contrast and photoluminescence laser scanning microscopy measurements. Our experiment shows that by combining the two imaging techniques the effects of trapped charge and carbon contamination can be separated. Such separation yields new possibilities for advancing the current understanding of how surface charge influences mediation of cellular and protein interactions in biomaterials.


Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology. B. Nanotechnology and Microelectronics: Materials, Processing, Measurement, and Phenomena | 2011

Temperature dependence of the resistance switching effect studied on the metal/YBa2Cu3O6+x planar junctions

Milan Tomasek; T. Plecenik; Martin Truchly; Jaroslav Noskovic; T. Roch; Miroslav Zahoran; Š. Chromik; Mariana Spankova; P. Kúš; A. Plecenik

The resistive switching (RS) effect observed in capacitorlike metal/insulator/metal junctions belongs to the most promising candidates for next generation of memory cell technology. It is based on a sudden change of the junction resistance caused by an electric field applied to the metal electrodes. The aim of this work was to study this effect on the structure metal/YBCO6/YBCO7, where YBCO7 is a metallic phase and YBCO6 is an insulator phase that arises spontaneously by outdiffusion of oxygen from a few nanometers wide YBCO surface layer. Oriented YBa2Cu3O7 thin films were prepared by the method of magnetron sputtering and consequently planar structures with metal-YBCO junction were made by the means of the optical lithography, ion etching, and vacuum evaporation. On these junctions, the authors have studied the temperature dependence of the RS effect with I-V and dI/dV-V transport measurements down to liquid He temperature. They have determined the temperature dependence of the RS effect threshold volta...


Journal of Applied Physics | 2017

Thermally induced age hardening in tough Ta-Al-N coatings via spinodal decomposition

M. Mikula; Davide Sangiovanni; Dušan Plašienka; T. Roch; M. Caplovicova; Martin Truchly; Leonid Satrapinskyy; R. Bystricky; D. Tonhauzerova; D. Vlčková; P. Kúš

We combine experiments and ab initio density functional theory calculations to investigate the evolution in structural and mechanical properties of TaAlN coatings as a function of the annealing temperature T. Formation of coherent cubic TaN- and AlN-rich nanometer-size domains, occurring during the initial stage of thermally induced phase separation within cubic NaCl-type (B1) TaAlN solid solutions, yields a monotonic increase in hardness from 29 GPa (as deposited coatings) up to a maximum of 35 GPa (+17%) reached after annealing at 1000 °C. Further thermal treatment at T > 1000 °C leads to the transformation of metastable cubic domains into stable hexagonal TaNx and wurtzite AlN phases, thus resulting in hardness reductions. A comparison of our results with those reported in the literature reveals that TaAlN coatings are at least as hard while considerably less stiff (lower elastic moduli) than TiAlN coatings, thus indicating a substantial increase in toughness achieved upon replacing Ti with Ta in the h...


Key Engineering Materials | 2013

Structure of Hydrogen Gas Sensing TiO2 Thin Films Prepared by Sol-Gel Method and their Comparison with Magnetron Sputtered Films

G. Plesch; Azhar Ali Haidry; Maros Gregor; Pavol Durina; Ján Greguš; Martin Truchly; T. Roch; T. Plecenik; Miroslav Zahoran; Jarmila Puskelova; M. Mikula; B. Grančič; Leonid Satrapinskyy; P. Kúš; A. Plecenik

TiO2 thin films with a thickness of about 150 nm were deposited by spin coating method on sapphire substrate from a sol-gel system. The hydrogen sensing properties of TiO2 films annealed at various temperatures were studied and correlated with their structure, optical and electrical properties. The annealing temperatures in the range of 600 800 °C lead to anatase films with a roughness in the range of 0.6 0.9 nm. Their sensitivity towards hydrogen is low. The thin films annealed at temperatures in the range 900 1000 °C consist of rutile phase and their roughness increased to 11.7 13.5 nm. They showed good hydrogen sensitivity with optimal operating temperature 200 250 °C. The structure and sensing properties of the prepared films are compared with those synthesized with magnetron sputtering. The maximum of sensitivity was measured on the thin films with diameter of the grains about 100 nm in both cases, i.e. on thin films prepared by sol-gel method as well as on thin films prepared by magnetron sputtering. The maximum sensitivity correlates with the diameter of the grains and dont depend on the allotropy of the titanium dioxide anatase or rutile.

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P. Kúš

Comenius University in Bratislava

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A. Plecenik

Comenius University in Bratislava

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T. Plecenik

Comenius University in Bratislava

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T. Roch

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Maros Gregor

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Miroslav Zahoran

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Pavol Durina

Comenius University in Bratislava

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B. Grančič

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Leonid Satrapinskyy

Comenius University in Bratislava

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M. Mikula

Comenius University in Bratislava

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