Reprint

Advanced Synchrotron Radiation Techniques for Nanostructured Materials

Edited by
October 2019
138 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03921-680-2 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03921-681-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Advanced Synchrotron Radiation Techniques for Nanostructured Materials that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Summary

Nanostructured materials exploit physical phenomena and mechanisms that cannot be derived by simply scaling down the associated bulk structures and phenomena; furthermore, new quantum effects come into play in nanosystems. The exploitation of these emerging nanoscale interactions prompts the innovative design of nanomaterials. Understanding the behavior of materials on all length scales—from the nanostructure up to the macroscopic response—is a critical challenge for materials science. Modern analytical technologies based on synchrotron radiation (SR) allow for the non-destructive investigation of the chemical, electronic, and magnetic structure of materials in any environment. SR facilities have developed revolutionary new ideas and experimental setups for characterizing nanomaterials, involving spectroscopy, diffraction, scatterings, microscopy, tomography, and all kinds of highly sophisticated combinations of such investigation techniques. This book is a collection of contributions addressing several aspects of synchrotron radiation as applied to the investigation of chemical, electronic, and magnetic structure of nanostructured materials. The results reported here provide not only an interesting and multidisciplinary overview of the chemicophysical investigations of nanostructured materials carried out by state-of-the-art SR-induced techniques, but also an exciting glance into the future perspectives of nanomaterial characterization methods.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
synchrotron radiation induced spectroscopies; XPS; NEXAFS; nanostructures; titanium alloy; self-assembling peptides; bioactive materials; room temperature ionic liquids; in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy; binding energies; cyclic voltammetry; electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; micro-mesoporous carbon electrode; supercapacitor materials; thin films; multilayers; thermal conductivity; thermal expansion; laser heating; synchrotron pump-probe powder scattering; nuclear forward scattering; metallic glasses; magnetic annealing; synchrotron radiation; crystallization kinetics; Ge(001)-2 × 1; oxidation; synchrotron radiation photoemission; oxygen reduction reaction; spinel oxides; soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy; partial covalency; catalytic activity; semiconductor nanowires; synchrotron probes; nano-scale resolution; ferromagnetic resonance; X-ray magnetic circular dichroism; scanning transmission X-ray microscopy; n/a