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D. J. Antonio et al. report an x-ray diffraction experiment on uranium dioxide at high-magnetic field and low temperature. The authors have apparently not realized that the diffraction data actually shows unambiguously the presence of a rhombohedral distortion induced by the field at low temperature and the presence of more than one domain. Our note correctly analyses their data. The crystallographic analysis we perform is based on simple arguments with respect to plane spacings in slightly distorted cubic materials. Similar studies have been reported in many materials over the last 50 years. Our analysis explains quantitatively the observations, the presence of the two peaks (the appearance of which the authors regard as unexpected) and their different variations with respect to the applied field, which is a simple consequence of the conservation of atomic volume.
We have investigated the grain boundary scattering effect on the thermal transport behavior of uranium dioxide (UO$_2$). The polycrystalline samples having different grain-sizes (0.125, 1.8, and 7.2 $mu$m) have been prepared by spark plasma sintering
Uranium mononitride, UN, is considered a potential accident tolerant fuel due to its high uranium density, high thermal conductivity, and high melting point. Compared with the relatively inert UO2, UN has a high reactivity in water, however, studies
The equation of state, structural behavior and phase stability of {alpha}-uranium have been investigated up to 1.3 TPa using density functional theory, adopting a simple description of electronic structure that neglects the spin-orbit coupling and st
Experiments have been performed to measure magnetoelectric properties of room temperature spirally ordered Sr3Co2Fe24O41 hexaferrite slabs. The measured properties include the magnetic permeability, the magnetization and the strain all as a function
Vanadium dioxide (VO$_2$) undergoes a metal-insulator transition (MIT) at 340 K with the structural change between tetragonal and monoclinic crystals as the temperature is lowered. The conductivity $sigma$ drops at MIT by four orders of magnitude. Th