Patrick Kluth
Australian National University
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Journal of Applied Physics | 2005
Bernt Johannessen; Patrick Kluth; Christopher Glover; G. de M. Azevedo; David Llewellyn; Garry J Foran; Mark C Ridgway
Cu nanocrystals (NCs) were produced by multiple high-energy ion implantations into 5‐μm-thick amorphous silica (SiO2) at liquid-nitrogen temperature. The Cu-rich SiO2 films were subsequently annealed to reduce irradiation-induced damage and promote NC formation. The NC size distribution and structure were studied utilizing a combination of Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy, x-ray diffraction, cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy, and extended x-ray-absorption fine-structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy. We present results derived from all four techniques, focussing on EXAFS measurements to study the local atomic structure surrounding Cu atoms, and comparing NC samples with bulk standards. Using a unique sample preparation method, we drastically improve the signal-to-noise ratio to extract high-quality EXAFS data to enable the determination of a non-Gaussian bond length distribution via the third-order cumulant. We quantify subtle concentration- and annealing-temperature-dependent changes in the C...
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2013
Boshra Afra; Matias Rodriguez; C. Trautmann; Olli H. Pakarinen; Flyura Djurabekova; K. Nordlund; Thomas Bierschenk; Raquel Giulian; Mark C Ridgway; Giancarlo Rizza; Nigel Kirby; M. Toulemonde; Patrick Kluth
The morphology of swift heavy ion tracks in crystalline α-quartz was investigated using small angle x-ray scattering (SAXS), molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and transmission electron microscopy. Tracks were generated by irradiation with heavy ions with energies between 27 MeV and 2.2 GeV. The analysis of the SAXS data indicates a density change of the tracks of ~2 ± 1% compared to the surrounding quartz matrix for all irradiation conditions. The track radii only show a weak dependence on the electronic energy loss at values above 17 keV nm(-1), in contrast to values previously reported from Rutherford backscattering spectrometry measurements and expectations from the inelastic thermal spike model. The MD simulations are in good agreement at low energy losses, yet predict larger radii than SAXS at high ion energies. The observed discrepancies are discussed with respect to the formation of a defective halo around an amorphous track core, the existence of high stresses and/or the possible presence of a boiling phase in quartz predicted by the inelastic thermal spike model.
Applied Physics Letters | 2004
Patrick Kluth; Bernt Johannessen; V. Giraud; Allen Cheung; Christopher Glover; G. de M. Azevedo; Garry J Foran; Mark C Ridgway
P. K. is grateful to the Humboldt Foundation in Germany for support. P.K., B.J., A.C., C.J.G., G.d.M.A., G.J.F., and M.C.R. were supported by the Australian Synchrotron Research Program.
Applied Physics Letters | 2009
Patrick Kluth; Raquel Giulian; David Sprouster; Claudia Schnohr; Aidan Byrne; D. J. Cookson; Mark C Ridgway
P.K. and M.C.R. thank the Australian Research Council for support. P.K., R.G., D.J.S., and M.C.R. were supported by the Australian Synchrotron Research Program, funded by the Commonwealth of Australia via the Major National Research Facilities Program.
Applied Physics Letters | 2007
Bernt Johannessen; Patrick Kluth; David Llewellyn; Garry J Foran; David Cookson; Mark C Ridgway
While bulk crystalline elemental metals cannot be amorphized by ion irradiation in the absence of chemical impurities, the authors demonstrate that finite-size effects enable the amorphization of embedded Cu nanocrystals. The authors form and compare the atomic-scale structure of the polycrystalline, nanocrystalline, and amorphous phases, present an explanation for the extreme sensitivity to irradiation exhibited by nanocrystals, and show that low-temperature annealing is sufficient to return amorphized material to the crystalline form.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2010
David Sprouster; Raquel Giulian; Leandro Araujo; Patrick Kluth; Bernt Johannessen; David Cookson; Garry J Foran; Mark C Ridgway
This work was financially supported by the Australian Synchrotron and the Australian Research Council. ChemMatCARS Sector 15 is principally supported by the National Science Foundation/Department of Energy under Grant No. NSF/CHE-0822838. Use of the Advanced Photon Source was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.
Nuclear Fusion | 2015
Matt Thompson; Patrick Kluth; R.P. Doerner; Nigel Kirby; Cormac Corr
Helium nano-bubble formation in plasma facing materials has emerged as a major concern for the next-step fusion experiment ITER, where helium plasmas will be used during the tokamaks start-up phase. Here, we demonstrate that grazing incidence small-angle x-ray scattering is a powerful technique for the analysis of helium nano-bubble formation in tungsten. We measured helium bubbles with sizes between 1.5–2.5 nm in tungsten exposed to helium plasma at 700 °C, where a smaller number of larger bubbles were also observed. Depth distributions can be estimated by taking successive measurements across a range of x-ray incidence angles. Compared with traditional approaches in the field, such as transmission electron microscopy, this technique provides information across a much larger volume with high statistical precision, whilst also being non-destructive.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2011
David Sprouster; Raquel Giulian; Leandro Araujo; Patrick Kluth; Bernt Johannessen; David Cookson; Mark C Ridgway
This work was financially supported by the Australian Synchrotron and the Australian Research Council with access to equipment provided by the Australian Nanofabrication Facility. ChemMatCARS Sector 15 is principally supported by the NSF/ DOE under Grant No. NSF/CHE–0822838.
Journal of Physics D | 2009
W. Wesch; Claudia Schnohr; Patrick Kluth; Zohair Hussain; Leandro Araujo; Raquel Giulian; David Sprouster; Aidan Byrne; Mark C Ridgway
Swift heavy ion (SHI) irradiation of amorphous Si (a-Si) at non-perpendicular incidence leads to non-saturable plastic flow. The positive direction of flow suggests that a liquid phase of similar density to that of the amorphous solid must exist and accordingly a-Si behaves like a conventional glass under SHI irradiation. For room-temperature irradiation of a-Si, plastic flow is accompanied by swelling due to the formation of voids and a porous structure. For this paper, we have investigated the influence of SHI irradiation at room temperature on amorphous Ge (a-Ge), the latter produced by ion implantation of crystalline Ge substrates. Like a-Si, positive plastic flow is apparent, demonstrating that liquid polymorphism is common to these two semiconductors. Porosity is also observed, again confined to the amorphous phase and the result of electronic energy deposition. Enhanced plastic flow coupled with a volume expansion is clearly responsible for the structural modification of both a-Si and a-Ge irradiated at room temperature with swift heavy ions.
Applied Physics Letters | 2007
Raquel Giulian; Patrick Kluth; Leandro Araujo; David Llewellyn; Mark C Ridgway
The influence of ion irradiation of SiO2 on the size of metal nanocrystals (NCs) formed by ion implantation has been investigated. Thin SiO2 films were irradiated with high-energy Ge ions then implanted with Pt ions. Without Ge irradiation, the largest Pt NCs were observed beyond the Pt projected range. With irradiation, Ge-induced structural modification of the SiO2 layer yielded a decrease in Pt NC size with increasing Ge fluence at such depths. A defect-mediated NC nucleation mechanism is proposed and a simple yet effective means of modifying and controlling the Pt NC size is demonstrated.