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Creators/Authors contains: "Smith, David J"

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  1. We report the growth of AlBN/β‐Nb2N nitride epitaxial heterostructures in which the AlBN is ferroelectric, and β‐Nb2N with metallic resistivity ≈40 μ at 300 K becomes superconducting belowTC ≈ 0.5 K. Using nitrogen plasma molecular beam epitaxy, we grow hexagonal β‐Nb2N films on c‐plane Al2O3substrates, followed by wurtzite AlBN. The AlBN is in epitaxial registry and rotationally aligned with the β‐Nb2N, and the hexagonal lattices of both nitride layers make angles of 30° with the hexagonal lattice of the Al2O3substrate. The B composition of the AlBN layer is varied from 0 to 14.7%. It is found to depend weakly on the B flux, but increases strongly with decreasing growth temperature, indicating a reaction rate‐controlled growth. The increase in B content causes a non‐monotonic change in the a‐lattice constant and a monotonic decrease in the c‐lattice constant of AlBN. Sharp, abrupt epitaxial AlBN/β‐Nb2N/Al2O3heterojunction interfaces and close symmetry matching are observed by transmission electron microscopy. The observation of ferroelectricity and superconductivity in epitaxial nitride heterostructures opens avenues for novel electronic and quantum devices. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
  2. Cubic boron nitride (c-BN), with a small 1.4% lattice mismatch with diamond, presents a heterostructure with multiple opportunities for electronic device applications. However, the formation of c-BN/diamond heterostructures has been limited by the tendency to form hexagonal BN at the interface. In this study, c-BN has been deposited on free standing polycrystalline and single crystal boron-doped diamond substrates via electron cyclotron resonance plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (ECR-PECVD), employing fluorine chemistry. In situ x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) is used to characterize the nucleation and growth of boron nitride (BN) films as a function of hydrogen gas flow rates during deposition. The PECVD growth rate of BN was found to increase with increased hydrogen gas flow. In the absence of hydrogen gas flow, the BN layer was reduced in thickness or etched. The XPS results show that an excess of hydrogen gas significantly increases the percent of sp2 bonding, characteristic of hexagonal BN (h-BN), particularly during initial layer growth. Reducing the hydrogen flow, such that hydrogen gas is the limiting reactant, minimizes the sp2 bonding during the nucleation of BN. TEM results indicate the partial coverage of the diamond with thin epitaxial islands of c-BN. The limited hydrogen reaction is found to be a favorable growth environment for c-BN on boron-doped diamond. 
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  3. The method of regularised stokeslets is widely used to model microscale biological propulsion. The method is usually implemented with only the single-layer potential, the double-layer potential being neglected, despite this formulation often not being justified a priori due to nonrigid surface deformation. We describe a meshless approach enabling the inclusion of the double layer which is applied to several Stokes flow problems in which neglect of the double layer is not strictly valid: the drag on a spherical droplet with partial-slip boundary condition, swimming velocity and rate of working of a force-free spherical squirmer, and trajectory, swimmer-generated flow and rate of working of undulatory swimmers of varying slenderness. The resistance problem is solved accurately with modest discretisation on a notebook computer with the inclusion of the double layer ranging from no-slip to free-slip limits; the neglect of the double-layer potential results in up to 24% error, confirming the importance of the double layer in applications such as nanofluidics, in which partial slip may occur. The squirming swimmer problem is also solved for both velocity and rate of working to within a small percent error when the double-layer potential is included, but the error in the rate of working is above 250% when the double layer is neglected. The undulating swimmer problem by contrast produces a very similar value of the velocity and rate of working for both slender and nonslender swimmers, whether or not the double layer is included, which may be due to the deformation’s ‘locally rigid body’ nature, providing empirical evidence that its neglect may be reasonable in many problems of interest. The inclusion of the double layer enables us to confirm robustly that slenderness provides major advantages in efficient motility despite minimal qualitative changes to the flow field and force distribution. 
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