87 research outputs found
Letter to Sonora Dodd from Luther S. Beard, May 23, 1911
Letter to Sonora Dodd, from Luther S. Beard, News Editor for The North American.https://digitalcommons.whitworth.edu/fathers-day-correspondence/1011/thumbnail.jp
Evidence of Hot Carrier Extraction in Metal Halide Perovskite Solar Cells
The presence of hot carriers is presented in the operational properties of an
(FA,Cs)Pb(I, Br, Cl)3 solar cell at ambient temperatures and under practical
solar concentration. At 100 K, clear evidence of hot carriers is observed in
both the high energy tail of the photoluminescence spectra and from the
appearance of a non-equilibrium photocurrent at higher fluence in light J-V
measurements. At room temperature, however, the presence of hot carriers in the
emission at elevated laser fluence are shown to compete with a gradual red
shift in the PL peak energy as photo induced halide segregation begins to occur
at higher lattice temperature. The effects of thermionic emission of hot
carriers and the presence of a non-equilibrium carrier distribution are also
shown to be distinct from simple lattice heating. This results in large
unsaturated photocurrents at high powers as the Fermi distribution exceeds that
of the heterointerface controlling carrier transport and rectification
Thermodynamic properties of the two-dimensional S=1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet coupled to bond phonons
By applying a quantum Monte Carlo procedure based on the loop algorithm we
investigate thermodynamic properties of the two-dimensional antiferromagnetic
S=1/2 Heisenberg model coupled to Einstein phonons on the bonds. The
temperature dependence of the magnetic susceptibility, mean phonon occupation
numbers and the specific heat are discussed in detail. We study the spin
correlation function both in the regime of weak and strong spin phonon coupling
(coupling constants g=0.1, w=8J and g=2, w=2J, respectively). A finite size
scaling analysis of the correlation length indicates that in both cases long
range Neel order is established in the ground state.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
Carrier multiplication in germanium nanocrystals
Carrier multiplication is demonstrated in a solid-state dispersion of germanium nanocrystals in a silicon-dioxide matrix. This is performed by comparing ultrafast photo-induced absorption transients at different pump photon energies below and above the threshold energy for this process. The average germanium nanocrystal size is approximately 5-6 nm, as inferred from photoluminescence and Raman spectra. A carrier multiplication efficiency of approximately 190% is measured for photo-excitation at 2.8 times the optical bandgap of germanium nanocrystals, deduced from their photoluminescence spectra.Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM)info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Probing Interband Coulomb Interactions in Semiconductor Nanocrystals with 2D Double-Quantum Coherence Spectroscopy
Using previously developed exciton scattering model accounting for the
interband, i.e., exciton-biexciton, Coulomb interactions in semiconductor
nanocrystals (NCs), we derive a closed set of equations for 2D double-quantum
coherence signal. The signal depends on the Liouville space pathways which
include both the interband scattering processes and the inter- and intraband
optical transitions. These processes correspond to the formation of different
cross-peaks in the 2D spectra. We further report on our numerical calculations
of the 2D signal using reduced level scheme parameterized for PbSe NCs. Two
different NC excitation regimes considered and unique spectroscopic features
associated with the interband Coulomb interactions are identified.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Quantum Monte Carlo with Directed Loops
We introduce the concept of directed loops in stochastic series expansion and
path integral quantum Monte Carlo methods. Using the detailed balance rules for
directed loops, we show that it is possible to smoothly connect generally
applicable simulation schemes (in which it is necessary to include
back-tracking processes in the loop construction) to more restricted loop
algorithms that can be constructed only for a limited range of Hamiltonians
(where back-tracking can be avoided). The "algorithmic discontinuities" between
general and special points (or regions) in parameter space can hence be
eliminated. As a specific example, we consider the anisotropic S=1/2 Heisenberg
antiferromagnet in an external magnetic field. We show that directed loop
simulations are very efficient for the full range of magnetic fields (zero to
the saturation point) and anisotropies. In particular for weak fields and
anisotropies, the autocorrelations are significantly reduced relative to those
of previous approaches. The back-tracking probability vanishes continuously as
the isotropic Heisenberg point is approached. For the XY-model, we show that
back-tracking can be avoided for all fields extending up to the saturation
field. The method is hence particularly efficient in this case. We use directed
loop simulations to study the magnetization process in the 2D Heisenberg model
at very low temperatures. For LxL lattices with L up to 64, we utilize the
step-structure in the magnetization curve to extract gaps between different
spin sectors. Finite-size scaling of the gaps gives an accurate estimate of the
transverse susceptibility in the thermodynamic limit: chi_perp = 0.0659 +-
0.0002.Comment: v2: Revised and expanded discussion of detailed balance, error in
algorithmic phase diagram corrected, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Microgenomic Analysis in Skeletal Muscle: Expression Signatures of Individual Fast and Slow Myofibers
BACKGROUND: Skeletal muscle is a complex, versatile tissue composed of a variety of functionally diverse fiber types. Although the biochemical, structural and functional properties of myofibers have been the subject of intense investigation for the last decades, understanding molecular processes regulating fiber type diversity is still complicated by the heterogeneity of cell types present in the whole muscle organ.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have produced a first catalogue of genes expressed in mouse slow-oxidative (type 1) and fast-glycolytic (type 2B) fibers through transcriptome analysis at the single fiber level (microgenomics). Individual fibers were obtained from murine soleus and EDL muscles and initially classified by myosin heavy chain isoform content. Gene expression profiling on high density DNA oligonucleotide microarrays showed that both qualitative and quantitative improvements were achieved, compared to results with standard muscle homogenate. First, myofiber profiles were virtually free from non-muscle transcriptional activity. Second, thousands of muscle-specific genes were identified, leading to a better definition of gene signatures in the two fiber types as well as the detection of metabolic and signaling pathways that are differentially activated in specific fiber types. Several regulatory proteins showed preferential expression in slow myofibers. Discriminant analysis revealed novel genes that could be useful for fiber type functional classification.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: As gene expression analyses at the single fiber level significantly increased the resolution power, this innovative approach would allow a better understanding of the adaptive transcriptomic transitions occurring in myofibers under physiological and pathological condition
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