83 research outputs found
Distortions of C-60(4-) studied by infrared spectroscopy
The Jahn-Teller effect plays a crucial role in the explanation of the insulating character of
A(4)C(60) (A = K, Rb, Cs). To detect possible phase transitions arising from the interplay between the
molecular Jahn-Teller distortion and the distorting potential field of the counterions, we measured
the mid-IR spectra of A(4)C(60) compounds in the temperature range 90 - 300 K and found significant
spectral changes with temperature in all three compounds. We also compare these spectra to that
of Na(4)C(60) in its room-temperature polymeric phase, where the distortion is more pronounced and
evident from the structure
Study of charge dynamics in transparent single-walled carbon nanotube films
We report the transmission over a wide frequency range (far infrared -
visible) of pristine and hole-doped, free-standing carbon nanotube films at
temperatures between 50 K and 300 K. Optical constants are estimated by
Kramers-Kronig analysis of transmittance. We see evidence in the far infrared
for a gap below 10 meV. Hole doping causes a shift of spectral weight from the
first interband transition into the far infrared. Temperature dependence in
both the doped and undoped samples is restricted to the far-infrared region.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B v3: Fig. 2 replaced,
changes in caption of Table II, minor changes in tex
Broadband electromagnetic response and ultrafast dynamics of few-layer epitaxial graphene
We study the broadband optical conductivity and ultrafast carrier dynamics of
epitaxial graphene in the few-layer limit. Equilibrium spectra of nominally
buffer, monolayer, and multilayer graphene exhibit significant terahertz and
near-infrared absorption, consistent with a model of intra- and interband
transitions in a dense Dirac electron plasma. Non-equilibrium terahertz
transmission changes after photoexcitation are shown to be dominated by excess
hole carriers, with a 1.2-ps mono-exponential decay that reflects the
minority-carrier recombination time.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, final versio
Structure and properties of the stable two-dimensional conducting polymer Mg5C60
We present a study on the structural, spectroscopic, conducting,
and
magnetic properties of Mg5C60, which is a two-dimensional (2D)
fulleride polymer. The polymer phase is stable up to the
exceptionally
high temperature of 823 K. The infrared and Raman studies
suggest the
formation of single bonds between the fulleride ions and
possibly
Mg-C-60 covalent bonds. Mg5C60 is a metal at ambient
temperature, as
shown by electron spin resonance and microwave conductivity
measurements. The smooth transition from a metallic to a
paramagnetic
insulator state below 200 K is attributed to Anderson
localization
driven by structural disorder
BiTeCl and BiTeBr: a comparative high-pressure optical study
We here report a detailed high-pressure infrared transmission study of BiTeCl
and BiTeBr. We follow the evolution of two band transitions: the optical
excitation between two Rashba-split conduction bands, and the
absorption across the band gap. In the low pressure range, ~GPa,
for both compounds is approximately constant with pressure and
decreases, in agreement with band structure calculations. In BiTeCl, a clear
pressure-induced phase transition at 6~GPa leads to a different ground state.
For BiTeBr, the pressure evolution is more subtle, and we discuss the
possibility of closing and reopening of the band gap. Our data is consistent
with a Weyl phase in BiTeBr at 56~GPa, followed by the onset of a structural
phase transition at 7~GPa.Comment: are welcom
Charge transfer and Fermi level shift in p-doped single-walled carbon nanotubes
The electronic properties of p-doped single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) bulk samples were studied by temperature-dependent resistivity and thermopower, optical reflectivity and Raman spectroscopy. These all give consistent results for the Fermi level downshift (δ EF) induced by doping. We find δ EF ≈ 0.35 eV and 0.50 eV for concentrated nitric and sulfuric acid doping respectively. With these values, the evolution of Raman spectra can be explained by variations in the resonance condition as EF moves down into the valence band. Furthermore, we find no evidence for diameter-selective doping, nor any distinction between doping responses of metallic and semiconducting tubes
Charge transfer and Fermi level shift in p-doped single-walled carbon nanotubes
The electronic properties of p-doped single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) bulk samples were studied by temperature-dependent resistivity and thermopower, optical reflectivity, and Raman spectroscopy. These all give consistent results for the Fermi level downshift (Delta E(F)) induced by doping. We find Delta E(F) approximate to 0.35 eV and 0.50 eV for concentrated nitric and sulfuric acid doping respectively. With these values, the evolution of Raman spectra can be explained by variations in the resonance condition as E(F) moves down into the valence band. Furthermore, we find no evidence for diameter-selective doping, nor any distinction between doping responses of metallic and semiconducting tubes
Performance comparison of aperture-less and confocal infrared microscopes
We compared hyperspectral infrared raster maps and images for contrast, definition and resolution of the same samples recorded with a confocal microscope coupled with a synchrotron radiation source vs a Focal Plane Array (FPA) detector equipped microscope. Biological samples (hair and skin sections) and astrophysics samples (meteoritic grains) were used. The samples presented are a few microns in size, such as embedded particles, a single unique cell or thin layer. Our results show that the actual spatial resolution and contrast of FPA images were lower than spectral maps from the confocal microscope. The FPA microscope also produced measurements that lacked accuracy: size of sample features and peak intensity were inaccurately estimated. More surprisingly, the intensity of absorption peaks in the FPA images was lower than the intensity measured from the same sample with a confocal microscope. Our measurements underlined the complementarity of FPA and confocal microscopes. FPA can be used to quickly measure the overall composition of a sample and detect the distribution of its components, but may fail measuring the exact chemical composition of the small features and may not detect weak spectral differences between adjacent positions. The averaging effect of aperture-less systems not only affects image resolution but also lowers their spectral accuracy. Confocal microscopes are inherently slower but give a more accurate measurement of the local composition at the diffraction limit
Size-Dependent Dissociation of Carbon Monoxide on Cobalt Nanoparticles
[[abstract]]In situ soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) was employed to study the adsorption and dissociation of carbon monoxide molecules on cobalt nanoparticles with sizes ranging from 4 to 15 nm. The majority of CO molecules adsorb molecularly on the surface of the nanoparticles, but some undergo dissociative adsorption, leading to oxide species on the surface of the nanoparticles. We found that the tendency of CO to undergo dissociation depends critically on the size of the Co nanoparticles. Indeed, CO molecules dissociate much more efficiently on the larger nanoparticles (15 nm) than on the smaller particles (4 nm). We further observed a strong increase in the dissociation rate of adsorbed CO upon exposure to hydrogen, clearly demonstrating that the CO dissociation on cobalt nanoparticles is assisted by hydrogen. Our results suggest that the ability of cobalt nanoparticles to dissociate hydrogen is the main parameter determining the reactivity of cobalt nanoparticles in Fischer–Tropsch synthesis.[[notice]]補正完畢[[incitationindex]]SCI[[booktype]]紙本[[booktype]]電子
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