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“Granular films assembled of CoN, CrM and mixtures of CoN and CrM clusters: structure and electron transport properties”. Kuhn LT, Vanhoutte F, Cannaerts M, Neukermans S, Verschoren G, Bouwen W, van Haesendonck C, Lievens P, Silverans RE, Pauwels B, Van Tendeloo G, (2000)
Keywords: P3 Proceeding; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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Ghorbanfekr Kalashami H (2019) Graphene-based membranes and nanoconfined water : molecular dynamics simulation study. 243 p
Keywords: Doctoral thesis; Condensed Matter Theory (CMT); Plasma Lab for Applications in Sustainability and Medicine – Antwerp (PLASMANT)
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“Gravitational energy of solar oscillations and climatic changes”. Callebaut DK, Makarovska Y, Tlatov, 463, 297 (2000)
Abstract: The gravitational energy associated with variations in the radius of the Sun is huge: with a relative change of 1/2000 (the estimated difference between maximum and minimum solar activity) and taking only the convection zone to expand, corresponds to about 2 10(34)J, which is 1/10 of the total rotational energy of the Sun. Non-radial oscillations with a tiny nonlinearity can still yield energies comparable to or larger than the total magnetic energy of a full sunspot cycle or three or four orders more than the luminosity of the Sun, but that is not sufficient to account for the changes of the temperature on Earth. The expansion of the upper layers of the convection zone, however, may directly or indirectly affect the climate and the biological aspects on the Earth. Moreover this suits a qualitative explanation why the Sun expands during a minimum of the magnetic activity.
Keywords: P1 Proceeding; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation)
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Van Oijstaeijen W (2023) Green infrastructure and local implementation : (green) bridging the gap between research and practice. xvii, 194 p
Abstract: Climate change is an ever-increasing threat to our planet, with the urbanisation of previously open spaces exacerbating the issue. The loss of open space leads to a decrease in ecosystem services, which negatively impacts the liveability in urbanised environments, and beyond. The incorporation of green infrastructure (GI) into the built environment is acknowledged as an effective and multi-functional measure to make our living environment resilient and future-proof. Notwithstanding that the local level is essential for effective GI implementation, research into local decision making is very limited. This thesis therefore aims to address two significant gaps in the implementation of GI. The first objective is to bridge the science-policy gap by integrating scientific knowledge on ES and GI into local decision-making processes. In this context, the policy dimension within this thesis involves the process of translating overarching policy objectives into practical actions within local decision-making practices, abstracting from the intricacies of higher-level policymaking itself. The second objective focuses on the people-policy gap, which involves understanding stakeholders' perspectives and priorities regarding GI and its associated ecosystem services. Through stated preference valuation techniques (discrete choice experiments and a best-worst scaling experiment), multi-stakeholder GI perceptions are gathered. Finally, a novel tool to GI valuation is developed, acknowledging the different stakeholder views and building on the insights of collaborative tool development and design. By gaining insights into the demand, prioritisation, and provision of GI from the two most important stakeholder groups at the local level (residents and local decision-makers), this research aims to foster effective communication and alignment between public preferences and policy implementation. Ultimately, addressing these gaps will contribute to more informed planning and decision-making practices related to green infrastructure. The overall goal of this thesis is to enhance the uptake of GI knowledge in the local decision-making context, proposing pathways to facilitate and optimise investments in public GI.
Keywords: Administrative Services; Doctoral thesis; Engineering sciences. Technology; Engineering Management (ENM)
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Vets C (2020) Growth properties of carbon nanomaterials : towards tuning for electronic applications. 130 p
Keywords: Doctoral thesis; Plasma Lab for Applications in Sustainability and Medicine – Antwerp (PLASMANT)
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Amelinckx S, van Dyck D, van Landuyt J, Van Tendeloo G (1997) Handbook of microscopy: applications in materials science, solid-state physics and chemistry. Vch, Weinheim
Keywords: ME1 Book as editor or co-editor; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT); Vision lab
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Van Grieken RE, Markowicz AA (2002) Handbook of X-ray spectrometry. 1016 p
Keywords: ME2 Book as editor or co-editor; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation)
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“High energy transitions and phonon-assisted harmonics of a shallow magneto-donor in GaAs/AlGaAs multiple quantum wells”. Bruno-Alfonso A, Hai G-Q, Peeters FM, Yeo T, Ryu SR, McCombe BD, , 1413 (2001)
Keywords: P1 Proceeding; Condensed Matter Theory (CMT)
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“High field magnetotransport in a Ga0.8In0.2As quantum well with a parallel δ-layer”. van der Burgt M, Karavolas VC, Peeters FM, Singleton J, Nicholas RJ, Herlach F, Harris JJ, van Hove M, Borghs G, , 588 (1995)
Keywords: P3 Proceeding; Condensed Matter Theory (CMT)
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“High resolution electron microscopy for materials”. van Landuyt J Eurem 92, Granada, page 23 (1992).
Keywords: H3 Book chapter; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
Times cited: 7
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“High-E scanning m-XRF experiment on test paintings”. Dik J, Janssens K, van der Snickt G, Wallert A, Rickers K, Falkenberg G page 1589 (2008).
Keywords: H3 Book chapter; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation)
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Stosic D (2018) High-performance Ginzburg-Landau simulations of superconductivity. 166 p
Abstract: Superconductivity is one of the most important discoveries of the last century. With many applications in physics, engineering, and technology, superconductors are crucial to our way of living. Several material and engineering issues however prevent their widespread usage in everyday life. Comprehensive studies are being directed at these materials and their properties to come up with new technologies that will address these challenges and enhance their superconductive capabilities. In this context, numerical modeling plays an important role in the search of new solutions to existing material and engineering issues. The time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau (TDGL) theory is a powerful predictive tool for modeling the macroscopic behavior of superconductors. However most of the numerical algorithms developed so far are incapable of describing many basic properties of real superconducting devices, and are too slow on current hardware for large-scale numerical simulations necessary for their accurate description. Therefore, the purpose of this thesis is to develop high-performing numerical solutions that can correctly describe material features to be used as modeling tools of laboratory experiments. Some important innovations introduced in this work include the numerical modeling of nonrectangular geometrical shapes with complex electrical and insulating components, the inclusion of dynamic heating of the material, and the description of different types of material inhomogeneities. These encompass the principal features necessary for a complete description of the superconductive physics in real material samples. In this thesis a numerical solution is developed for modeling superconducting thin films and used to study the superconductive properties of three experimental configurations: the dynamics of vortex matter in a Corbino disk, the motion of ultrafast vortices in an hourglass-shaped microbridge, and the photon detection process in a meander-patterned nanowire. Moreover, a numerical solution is developed for modeling three-dimensional superconductors which are studied here for the first time in the type-I superconducting regime. These numerical algorithms are optimized to exploit the computational horsepower of graphics processing units (GPUs) and multicore central-processing unit (CPU) clusters such that they can achieve high-performance and be used to model large-scale problems previously impossible on conventional machines. Several computational tools are also designed to assist with the modeling of superconducting devices. These include a numerical library of the TDGL equations, a novel mechanism for the generation of complex geometries, a closed-form solver to conduct numerical simulations, and a graphics user interface (GUI) to visualize the dynamic behavior of superconductors. The contributions in this thesis ultimately push the boundaries on what is possible in state-of-the-art numerical modeling of superconductivity.
Keywords: Doctoral thesis; Condensed Matter Theory (CMT)
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“High-resolution desktop microcomputed tomography for the evaluation of reducing treatments on historical glass suffering from manganese browning”. Nuyts G, Cagno S, Jaroszewicz J, Wouters H, De Vis K, Caen J, Janssens K page 201 (2013).
Abstract: Historical glass, especially non-durable mediaeval glass, can undergo corrosion. This sometimes results in the formation of dark-coloured manganese-rich inclusions or stains that reduce the transparency of the glass. A conservation treatment with reducing or chelating agents may be considered with the aim of improving the transparency. In this paper, high-resolution desktop microcomputed tomography (µCT) is used in combination with element-specific twodimensional imaging methods for in situ monitoring of manganese removal by hydroxylamine hydrochloride from an archaeological stained-glass sample suffering from manganese browning and from artificially corroded model glass samples. µCT also proved itself useful for the study of the (re-)penetration of manganese into the gel layer during artificial corrosion of a model glass.
Keywords: H2 Book chapter; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation); Antwerp Cultural Heritage Sciences (ARCHES)
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“High-resolution electron microscopy for semiconducting materials science”. van Landuyt J, Vanhellemont J Elsevier, Amsterdam, page 1109 (1994).
Keywords: H3 Book chapter; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“High-resolution visualization techniques : structural aspects”. Schryvers D, Van Aert S Springer, Berlin, page 135 (2012).
Keywords: H1 Book chapter; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“High-resolution X-ray fluorescence micro-tomography on single sediment particles”. Vincze L, Vekemans B, Szalóki I, Janssens K, Van Grieken R, Feng H, Jones KW, Adams F page 240 (2002).
Keywords: H1 Book chapter; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation)
Times cited: 11
DOI: 10.1117/12.452865
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Vanmeert F (2019) Highly specific X-ray powder diffraction imaging at the macroscopic and microscopic scale
Abstract: At or below the surface of painted works of art, valuable information is present that provides insights into an object’s past, such as the artist’s technique and the creative process that was followed or its conservation history, but also on its current state of preservation. Typically, a (very) limited set of small paint samples is taken which provide direct access to the individual paint layers. The chemical build-up of these layers can then be investigated in great detail using various microscopic analytical methods. However, in recent years a new trend towards both elemental and chemical imaging techniques has been set which are capable of visualizing the (often) heterogeneous composition of painted objects on a macroscopic scale. In this dissertation, various forms of specificity attainable with X‑ray powder diffraction (XRPD) imaging are explored: at the chemical, material and spatial level. This high specificity is illustrated throughout several applications stemming from the field of cultural heritage, both at the macroscopic (MA) and microscopic (µ) scale. As a first step, XRPD imaging was transformed to a transportable instrument that can be employed for the in situ investigation of artworks, e.g., inside museums and conservation workshops. With this unique instrument large‑scale maps (cm2 – dm2) reflecting the distribution of crystalline phases on/below the surface of flat painted artefacts can be visualized in a noninvasive manner. In this way compound-specific information was attained which can be related to original pigments or materials that have been added in a later stage and even degradation/secondary products that have formed spontaneously inside the paint layers. Additionally, with MA‑XRPD imaging it was possible to link quantitative information of pigment compositions and preferred orientation effects to the 2D compound‑specific distribution images, allowing for a further distinction between very similar artists’ materials. Furthermore, promising results for the limited depth-selectivity of this technique, obtained by exploiting the small shift in the position of the diffraction signals originating from the layered sequence of the pigments, are shown. Finally, a minute paint sample from Wheat stack under a cloudy sky by Van Gogh was investigated at a synchrotron radiation facility with tomographic µ‑XRPD imaging at the microscopic scale. The high chemical and spatial specificity of this imaging method was exploited to further elucidate the degradation pathway of the red lead pigment.
Keywords: Doctoral thesis; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation)
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“Hole band engineering in self-assembled quantum dots and molecules”. Peeters FM, Tadić M, Janssens KL, Partoens B s.l., page 191 (2004).
Keywords: H1 Book chapter; Condensed Matter Theory (CMT)
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Chekol Zewdie M (2021) How irrigation water impacts Ethiopian agriculture : an applied economics study. xiv, 152 p
Abstract: In recent decades, as crop production has increased in many areas where irrigation projects have been implemented, the global agricultural development community has promoted irrigation investments. However, due to the disappointing performance of irrigation farming in developing countries, irrigation intervention in Africa South of the Sahara including Ethiopia is an issue of debate. Moreover, several gaps exist in the Ethiopian irrigation farming literature. For instance, evidence about the direct and indirect effects of irrigation water on agriculture is not well documented. The irrigation farming literature has not disentangled the indirect effects of having access to irrigation water from the direct effect and the indirect effects have been underrepresented. Furthermore, most previous studies have applied either a quantitative or qualitative approach and have relied only on revealed data as main type of methodology, making studies that combine qualitative and quantitative research and that use both stated and revealed data underrepresented. In this study, different approaches have been applied to investigate how irrigation water impacts Ethiopia agriculture with special attention being given to disentangling the direct and indirect effects of irrigation water on Ethiopian agriculture. Using a structural equation model, a stochastic production frontier approach, and a discrete choice experiment, I drew evidence regarding the direct and indirect effects of irrigation water on crop revenue of smallholder farmers, the technical efficiency of irrigation user farmers, and the farmers’ willingness to pay to improve poor irrigation schemes from field observations, semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions with farmers, and key informant interviews with the local agricultural agents from the Koga and Fogera Districts of Amhara Region Ethiopia. The results indicate that irrigation water in general has both direct and indirect positive effects on agriculture, and the indirect effect is mediated by both improved farm inputs and the type of crops produced. The results also show that – due to poor extension services and backward agronomic practices, the mean technical efficiency of farmers in Ethiopia is very low, and that large-scale irrigation users are less technically efficient than small-scale irrigation users. Moreover, the results show that improving irrigation schemes shifts the frontier up, and smallholder farmers are strongly willing to contribute financially to the maintenance costs of irrigation schemes. The results offer relevant lessons for policymakers that providing irrigation water supply must be embedded in a comprehensive support package including access to extension services, improved input supply, and access to stable markets.
Keywords: Doctoral thesis; Economics; Engineering Management (ENM)
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“How to interpret short-range order HREM images”. De Meulenaere P, Van Tendeloo G, van Landuyt J, (1996)
Keywords: P3 Proceeding; Engineering sciences. Technology; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“HREM for characterisation of nanoscale microstructures”. van Landuyt J, Van Tendeloo G, , 15 (1998)
Keywords: P3 Proceeding; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“HREM imaging analysis in the study of pretransition and nucleation phenomena in alloys (Invited)”. Schryvers D, Van Tendeloo G, van Landuyt J, Le Tanner, , 659 (1994)
Keywords: P1 Proceeding; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“HREM investigation of La(1-x)Ca(x)MnO3-delta thin films”. Lebedev O, Van Tendeloo G, Amelinckx S, Leibold B, Habermeier HU, , 517 (1998)
Keywords: P1 Proceeding; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“HREM of defects in cubic boron nitride single crystals”. Nistor LC, van Landuyt J, Dincã, G, , 695 (1998)
Keywords: P1 Proceeding; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“HREM study of short-range order in Cu-Pd alloys”. Rodewald M, Rodewald K, De Meulenaere P, Van Tendeloo G, (1996)
Keywords: P3 Proceeding; Electron microscopy for materials research (EMAT)
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“Hybrid magnetic-semiconductor nanostructures”. Peeters FM, de Boeck J Academic Press, New York, page 345 (1999).
Keywords: H3 Book chapter; Condensed Matter Theory (CMT)
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Pentcheva EN, Van 't dack L, Veldeman E, Hristov V, Gijbels R (1997) Hydrochemical characteristics of geothermal systems in South Bulgaria. University of Antwerp. Department of Chemistry, Antwerp
Keywords: MA3 Book as author; Plasma Lab for Applications in Sustainability and Medicine – Antwerp (PLASMANT)
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Abreu Alfonso Y (2014) Hyperfine parameters and radiation damage in semiconductors and superconducting materials. 126 p
Keywords: Doctoral thesis; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation)
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“IDAS: a new Windows based software for multivariate analysis of atmospheric aerosol composition data bases”. Bondarenko I, Treiger B, Van Grieken R, van Espen P page 308 (1995).
Keywords: H3 Book chapter; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation); Chemometrics (Mitac 3)
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“Identification and distribution of metal soaps and oxalates in oil and tempera paint layers in fifteenth-century altarpieces using synchrotron radiation Techniques”. Salvadó N, Butí S, Pradell T, Beltran V, Cinque G, Juanhuix J page 195 (2019).
Abstract: The formation and distribution of metal soaps produced as a result of the reactivity and aging of the materials in a fifteenth-century egg tempera and oil paintings on wood are presented. The painting technique involves the application of several paint layers over a ground using, sometimes in the same paint layer sequence, drying oil and egg yolk binders. We show, with a selection of examples, how the use of thin sections and a combination of various micro-sensitive analytical techniques is adequate to obtain the high-quality data necessary for the unambiguous identification of metal soaps and metal oxalates as well as their distribution in the paint layers. The techniques include micro infrared spectroscopy (μSR-FTIR) and micro X-ray diffraction (μSR-XRD) with synchrotron radiation, optical microscopy (OM), and scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDS). The data obtained sheds light about the underlying reaction and aging mechanisms happening in each paint layer and among them. This helps to define the state of conservation of the artworks.
Keywords: H1 Book chapter; AXES (Antwerp X-ray Analysis, Electrochemistry and Speciation)
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-90617-1_11
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