We investigate the effect of finite size on the chemical diffusion of deuterium in extremely thin V(001) layers. A five fold increase in the diffusion coefficient is observed at concentrations around 0.2 [D/V], when the thickness of the V is decreased from 28 to 14 atomic layers (≈2.1-4.2 nm). The size dependent deuterium-deuterium interaction energy is argued to be the root of the observed changes as the diffusion rates are similar at low concentrations. The results demonstrate the feasibility of using finite-size effects to enhance the chemical diffusion of light interstitials in solids. We discuss the general applicability of these effects to other systems.
We investigate the hysteresis obtained in the hydrogen absorption and desorption cycle for a single crystal [Formula: see text] superlattice. Below the critical temperature, a small but clear hysteresis is observed in the pressure-composition isotherms, while it is absent above. The experimental results thereby prove the relevance of macroscopic energy barriers for obtaining hysteresis in coherent structural transformations. The textured Pd layer exhibits substantially larger hysteresis effects, which can be related to an irreversible energy loss caused by defect generation in Pd.
We demonstrate that spectral selective photocatalytic multilayer films can be tailored such that they can harness the full solar spectrum for enhanced photocatalytic gas-phase oxidation of acetaldehyde. Thin films of anatase TiO 2 were deposited on a thin solar absorber TiAlN film to fabricate bilayer TiO 2 /TiAlN films by dc magnetron sputtering on aluminium substrates. The structural and optical properties of the films were characterized by X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. The reaction rate and quantum yield for acetaldehyde removal was measured and an almost tenfold enhancement of the quantum yield was observed for the TiO 2 /TiAlN films compared with the single TiO 2 film, on par with enhancements achieved with new heterojunction photocatalysts. The results were interpreted by a temperature-induced change of the reaction kinetics. Absorption of simulated solar light illumination resulted in a temperature increase of the TIAlN film that was estimated to be at most 126 K. We show that a concomitant temperature increase of the top layer TiO 2 by 100 K shifts the water gassurface equilibrium from multilayer to submonolayer coverage. We propose that this is the main reason for the observed enhancement of the photocatalytic activity, whereby gas phase molecules may come in direct contact with free surface sites instead of having to diffuse through a thin water film. The implications of the results for judicious control of temperature and relative humidity for efficient gas-phase photocatalysis and exploitation of selective solar absorbing films are discussed.
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