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Surface Stoichiometry and Depth Profile of Tix-CuyNz Thin Films Deposited by Magnetron Sputtering
(2021)
The lateral movement in lipid membranes depends on their diffusion constant within the membrane. However, when the flux of the subphase is high, the convective flow beneath the membrane also influences lipid movement. Lipid monolayers of an unsaturated fatty acid at the water–air interface serve as model membranes. The formation of domains in the liquid/condensed coexistence region is investigated. The dimension of the domains is fractal, and they grow with a constant growth velocity. Increasing the compression speed of the monolayer induces a transition from seaweed growth to dendritic growth. Seaweed domains have broad tips and wide and variable side branch spacing. In contrast, dendritic domains have a higher fractal dimension, narrower tips, and small, well-defined side branch spacing. Additionally, the growth velocity is markedly larger for dendritic than seaweed growth. The domains’ growth velocity increases and the tip radius decreases with increasing supersaturation in the liquid/condensed coexistence region. Implications for membranes are discussed.
Electrochemically active ϵ‐MnO2 and ɣ‐MnO2 as tunnel‐type host‐guest structures have been extensively studied by crystallography and electrochemical techniques for application in battery cathode materials. However, the Gibbs energies of the underlying ion and electron transfer processes across the electrode interfaces have not yet been determined. Here we report for the first time these data for ϵ‐MnO2. This was possible by measuring the mid‐peak potentials in cyclic voltammetry and the open‐circuit potentials under electrochemically reversible conditions.