2,447 research outputs found
Multi-speckle diffusing wave spectroscopy with a single mode detection scheme
We present a detection scheme for diffusing wave spectroscopy (DWS) based on
a two cell geometry that allows efficient ensemble averaging. This is achieved
by putting a fast rotating diffuser in the optical path between laser and
sample. We show that the recorded (multi-speckle) correlation echoes provide an
ensemble averaged signal that does not require additional time averaging. We
find the performance of our experimental scheme comparable or even superior to
camera based multi-speckle techniques that rely on direct spatial averaging.
Furthermore, combined with traditional two-cell DWS, the full intensity
autocorrelation function can be measured with a single experimental setup
covering more than 10 decades in correlation time.Comment: Submitted to PR
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and molecular hydrogen in oxygen-rich planetary nebulae: the case of NGC6720
Evolved stars are primary sources for the formation of polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs) and dust grains. Their circumstellar chemistry is usually
designated as either oxygen-rich or carbon-rich, although dual-dust chemistry
objects, whose infrared spectra reveal both silicate- and carbon-dust features,
are also known. The exact origin and nature of this dual-dust chemistry is not
yet understood. Spitzer-IRS mid-infrared spectroscopic imaging of the nearby,
oxygen-rich planetary nebula NGC6720 reveals the presence of the 11.3 micron
aromatic (PAH) emission band. It is attributed to emission from neutral PAHs,
since no band is observed in the 7 to 8 micron range. The spatial distribution
of PAHs is found to closely follow that of the warm clumpy molecular hydrogen
emission. Emission from both neutral PAHs and warm H2 is likely to arise from
photo-dissociation regions associated with dense knots that are located within
the main ring. The presence of PAHs together with the previously derived high
abundance of free carbon (relative to CO) suggest that the local conditions in
an oxygen-rich environment can also become conducive to in-situ formation of
large carbonaceous molecules, such as PAHs, via a bottom-up chemical pathway.
In this scenario, the same stellar source can enrich the interstellar medium
with both oxygen-rich dust and large carbonaceous molecules.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 5 page
Monitoring spatially heterogeneous dynamics in a drying colloidal thin film
We report on a new type of experiment that enables us to monitor spatially
and temporally heterogeneous dynamic properties in complex fluids. Our approach
is based on the analysis of near-field speckles produced by light diffusely
reflected from the superficial volume of a strongly scattering medium. By
periodic modulation of an incident speckle beam we obtain pixel-wise ensemble
averages of the structure function coefficient, a measure of the dynamic
activity. To illustrate the application of our approach we follow the different
stages in the drying process of a colloidal thin film. We show that we can
access ensemble averaged dynamic properties on length scales as small as ten
micrometers over the full field of view.Comment: To appear in Soft Material
Dynamic Monte Carlo Simulations of Anisotropic Colloids
We put forward a simple procedure for extracting dynamical information from
Monte Carlo simulations, by appropriate matching of the short-time diffusion
tensor with its infinite-dilution limit counterpart, which is supposed to be
known. This approach --discarding hydrodynamics interactions-- first allows us
to improve the efficiency of previous Dynamic Monte Carlo algorithms for
spherical Brownian particles. In a second step, we address the case of
anisotropic colloids with orientational degrees of freedom. As an illustration,
we present a detailed study of the dynamics of thin platelets, with emphasis on
long-time diffusion and orientational correlations.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Aging of rotational diffusion in colloidal gels and glasses
We study the rotational diffusion of aging Laponite suspensions for a wide
range of concentrations using depolarized dynamic light scattering. The
measured orientational correlation functions undergo an ergodic to non-ergodic
transition that is characterized by a concentration-dependent
ergodicity-breaking time. We find that the relaxation times associated with
rotational degree of freedom as a function of waiting time, when scaled with
their ergodicity-breaking time, collapse on two distinct master curves. These
master curves are similar to those previously found for the translational
dynamics; The two different classes of behavior were attributed to colloidal
gels and glasses. Therefore, the aging dynamics of rotational degree of freedom
provides another signature of the distinct dynamical behavior of colloidal gels
and glasses.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Multiangle static and dynamic light scattering in the intermediate scattering angle range
We describe a light scattering apparatus based on a novel optical scheme
covering the scattering angle range 0.5\dg \le \theta \le 25\dg, an
intermediate regime at the frontier between wide angle and small angle setups
that is difficult to access by existing instruments. Our apparatus uses
standard, readily available optomechanical components. Thanks to the use of a
charge-coupled device detector, both static and dynamic light scattering can be
performed simultaneously at several scattering angles. We demonstrate the
capabilities of our apparatus by measuring the scattering profile of a variety
of samples and the Brownian dynamics of a dilute colloidal suspension
Quantum limited particle sensing in optical tweezers
Particle sensing in optical tweezers systems provides information on the
position, velocity and force of the specimen particles. The conventional
quadrant detection scheme is applied ubiquitously in optical tweezers
experiments to quantify these parameters. In this paper we show that quadrant
detection is non-optimal for particle sensing in optical tweezers and propose
an alternative optimal particle sensing scheme based on spatial homodyne
detection. A formalism for particle sensing in terms of transverse spatial
modes is developed and numerical simulations of the efficacy of both quadrant
and spatial homodyne detection are shown. We demonstrate that an order of
magnitude improvement in particle sensing sensitivity can be achieved using
spatial homodyne over quadrant detection.Comment: Submitted to Biophys
Differential Dynamic Microscopy to characterize Brownian motion and bacteria motility
We have developed a lab work module where we teach undergraduate students how
to quantify the dynamics of a suspension of microscopic particles, measuring
and analyzing the motion of those particles at the individual level or as a
group. Differential Dynamic Microscopy (DDM) is a relatively recent technique
that precisely does that and constitutes an alternative method to more
classical techniques such as dynamics light scattering (DLS) or video particle
tracking (VPT). DDM consists in imaging a particle dispersion with a standard
light microscope and a camera. The image analysis requires the students to code
and relies on digital Fourier transform to obtain the intermediate scattering
function, an autocorrelation function that characterizes the dynamics of the
dispersion. We first illustrate DDM on the textbook case of colloids where we
measure the diffusion coefficient. Then we show that DDM is a pertinent tool to
characterize biologic systems such as motile bacteria i.e.bacteria that can
self propel, where we not only determine the diffusion coefficient but also the
velocity and the fraction of motile bacteria. Finally, so that our paper can be
used as a tutorial to the DDM technique, we have joined to this article movies
of the colloidal and bacterial suspensions and the DDM algorithm in both Matlab
and Python to analyze the movies
Orientational relaxation in a discotic liquid crystal
We investigate orientational relaxation of a model discotic liquid crystal,
consists of disc-like molecules, by molecular dynamics simulations along two
isobars starting from the high temperature isotropic phase. The two isobars
have been so chosen that (A) the phase sequence isotropic (I)-nematic
(N)-columnar (C) appears upon cooling along one of them and (B) the sequence
isotropic (I)-columnar (C) along the other. While the orientational relaxation
in the isotropic phase near the I-N phase transition in system (A) shows a
power law decay at short to intermediate times, such power law relaxation is
not observed in the isotropic phase near the I-C phase boundary in system (B).
In order to understand this difference (the existence or the absence of the
power law decay), we calculated the the growth of the orientational pair
distribution functions (OPDF) near the I-N phase boundary and also near the I-C
phase boundary. We find that OPDF shows a marked growth in long range
correlation as the I-N phase boundary is approached in the I-N-C system (A),
but such a growth is absent in the I-C system, which appears to be consistent
with the result that I-N phase transition in the former is weakly first order
while the the I-C phase transition in the later is not weak. As the system
settles into the nematic phase, the decay of the single-particle second-rank
orientational OTCF follows a pattern that is similar to what is observed with
calamitic liquid crystals and supercooled molecular liquids.Comment: 16 pages and 4 figure
Binding branched and linear DNA structures: from isolated clusters to fully bonded gels
The proper design of DNA sequences allows for the formation of well defined
supramolecular units with controlled interactions via a consecution of
self-assembling processes. Here, we benefit from the controlled DNA
self-assembly to experimentally realize particles with well defined valence,
namely tetravalent nanostars (A) and bivalent chains (B). We specifically focus
on the case in which A particles can only bind to B particles, via
appropriately designed sticky-end sequences. Hence AA and BB bonds are not
allowed. Such a binary mixture system reproduces with DNA-based particles the
physics of poly-functional condensation, with an exquisite control over the
bonding process, tuned by the ratio, r, between B and A units and by the
temperature, T. We report dynamic light scattering experiments in a window of
Ts ranging from 10{\deg}C to 55{\deg}C and an interval of r around the
percolation transition to quantify the decay of the density correlation for the
different cases. At low T, when all possible bonds are formed, the system
behaves as a fully bonded network, as a percolating gel and as a cluster fluid
depending on the selected r.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure
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