184 research outputs found
Second-Order Nonlinear Optical Properties of Multiaddressable Indolinooxazolidine Derivatives: Joint Computational and Hyper-Rayleigh Scattering Investigations
The linear and nonlinear optical (NLO) properties of two indolinooxazolidine derivatives acting as multiaddressable switches are reported. The second-order hyperpolarizability contrasts upon commutation between their closed and open forms are characterized using hyper-Rayleigh scattering (HRS) measurements, and rationalized by means of density functional theory and post Hartree–Fock ab initio calculations. It is evidenced that the addition of a withdrawing substituent on the indolinic subunit leads to a more effective photoinduced charge transfer while decreasing the transition energy of the S0 → S1 transition, which induces a significant enhancement of the HRS response of the open form. This substitution is however detrimental to the NLO contrast, due to the concomitant increase of the HRS response of the closed form
Dielectric response of charge induced correlated state in the quasi-one-dimensional conductor (TMTTF)2PF6
Conductivity and permittivity of the quasi-one-dimensionsional organic
transfer salt (TMTTF)2PF6 have been measured at low frequencies (10^3-10^7 Hz)
between room temperature down to below the temperature of transition into the
spin-Peierls state. We interpret the huge real part of the dielectric
permittivity (up to 10^6) in the localized state as the realization in this
compound of a charge ordered state of Wigner crystal type due to long range
Coulomb interaction.Comment: 11 pages, 3 .eps figure
Antiferromagnetic Phases of One-Dimensional Quarter-Filled Organic Conductors
The magnetic structure of antiferromagnetically ordered phases of
quasi-one-dimensional organic conductors is studied theoretically at absolute
zero based on the mean field approximation to the quarter-filled band with
on-site and nearest-neighbor Coulomb interaction. The differences in magnetic
properties between the antiferromagnetic phase of (TMTTF)X and the spin
density wave phase in (TMTSF)X are seen to be due to a varying degrees of
roles played by the on-site Coulomb interaction. The nearest-neighbor Coulomb
interaction introduces charge disproportionation, which has the same spatial
periodicity as the Wigner crystal, accompanied by a modified antiferromagnetic
phase. This is in accordance with the results of experiments on (TMTTF)Br
and (TMTTF)SCN. Moreover, the antiferromagnetic phase of (DI-DCNQI)Ag
is predicted to have a similar antiferromagnetic spin structure.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures, uses jpsj.sty, to be published in J. Phys.
Soc. Jpn. 66 No. 5 (1997
Novel Charge Order and Superconductivity in Two-Dimensional Frustrated Lattice at Quarter Filling
Motivated by the various physical properties observed in
-(BEDT-TTF)X, we study the ground state of extended Hubbard model
on two-dimensional anisotropic triangular lattice at 1/4-filling with
variational Monte Carlo method. It is shown that the nearest-neighbor Coulomb
interaction enhances the charge fluctuation and it induces the anomalous state
such as charge-ordered metallic state and the triplet next-nearest-neighbor
-wave superconductivity. We discuss the relation to the real materials and
propose the unified view of the family of -(BEDT-TTF)X.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Evaluation of the impact of pharmaceutical trainings and tools on the proper use of medicines in pediatrics
Introduction: After six years of medication errors’ (MEs) collection and analysis in a pediatric unit of a French University Hospital, the number of MEs was no longer decreasing. We then decided to set up pharmaceutical training and tools and evaluate their impact on the occurrence of ME.Materials and methods: This monocentric prospective study was carried out in the form of audits of prescriptions, preparations, and administrations before and after intervention (A1 and A2). After the analysis of A1 results, feedback was given to the teams, some tools for the proper use of medication (PUM) were distributed, and A2 was conducted. Finally, A1 and A2 results were compared.Results: Each audit included 202 observations. A total of 120 MEs were identified during A1 and 54 for A2 (p < 0.0001). The observation rate with at least 1 ME decreased from 39.11% to 21.29% (p < 0.0001), and no observation had more than two MEs during A2 in contrast to A1 (n = 12). Human factors were responsible for the majority of MEs. The audit feedback allowed professionals to feel concerned about ME. The PUM tools received an average satisfaction rating of 9/10. The staff had never participated in this type of training, and all felt it was useful to apply PUM.Conclusion: This study showed a significant impact of pharmaceutical training and tools on the pediatric PUM. Clinical pharmaceutic actions allowed us to reach our objectives and satisfied all the staff. They must, therefore, be continued to limit human factors’ impact and thus contribute to the safety of drug management in pediatrics
Large-N solutions of the Heisenberg and Hubbard-Heisenberg models on the anisotropic triangular lattice: application to CsCuCl and to the layered organic superconductors -(BEDT-TTF)X
We solve the Sp(N) Heisenberg and SU(N) Hubbard-Heisenberg models on the
anisotropic triangular lattice in the large-N limit. These two models may
describe respectively the magnetic and electronic properties of the family of
layered organic materials -(BEDT-TTF)X. The Heisenberg model is
also relevant to the frustrated antiferromagnet, CsCuCl. We find rich
phase diagrams for each model. The Sp(N) antiferromagnet is shown to have five
different phases as a function of the size of the spin and the degree of
anisotropy of the triangular lattice. The effects of fluctuations at finite-N
are also discussed. For parameters relevant to CsCuCl the ground state
either exhibits incommensurate spin order, or is in a quantum disordered phase
with deconfined spin-1/2 excitations and topological order. The SU(N)
Hubbard-Heisenberg model exhibits an insulating dimer phase, an insulating box
phase, a semi-metallic staggered flux phase (SFP), and a metallic uniform
phase. The uniform and SFP phases exhibit a pseudogap. A metal-insulator
transition occurs at intermediate values of the interaction strength.Comment: Typos corrected, one reference added. 20 pages, 17 figures, RevTeX
3.
An Atomistic Description of Polymer Dielectrics/Pentacene Interfaces: Influence of Electrostatic Interactions on Charge Mobility Values
peer reviewedForce-field and quantum-chemical calculations are combined to model the packing of pentacene molecules at the atomic level on two polymer dielectric layers (poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) versus polystyrene (PS)) widely used in field-effect transistors and to assess the impact of electrostatic interactions at the interface on the charge mobility values in the pentacene layers. The results show unambiguously that the electrostatic interactions introduce a significant energetic disorder in the pentacene layer in contact with the polymer chains; a drop in the hole mobility by a factor of 5 is predicted with PS chains while a factor of 60 is obtained for PMMA due to the presence of polar carbonyl groups
Superconductivity and Density Wave in the Quasi-One-Dimensional Systems: Renormalization Group Study
The anisotropic superconductivity and the density wave have been investigated
by applying the Kadanoff-Wilson renormalization group technique to the
quasi-one-dimensional system with finite-range interactions. It is found that a
temperature (T) dependence of response functions is proportional to exp(1/T) in
a wide region of temperature even within the one-loop approximation. Transition
temperatures are calculated to obtain the phase diagram of the
quasi-one-dimensional system, which is compared with that of the
pure-one-dimensional system. Next-nearest neighbor interactions (V_2) induce
large charge fluctuations, which suppress the d_{x^2 -y^2}-wave singlet
superconducting (dSS) state and enhance the f-wave triplet superconducting
(fTS) state. From this effect, the transition temperature of fTS becomes
comparable to that of dSS for large V_2, so that field-induced f-wave triplet
pairing could be possible. These features are discussed to comprehend the
experiments on the (TMTSF)_2PF_6 salt.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Effect of nearest- and next-nearest neighbor interactions on the spin-wave velocity of one-dimensional quarter-filled spin-density-wave conductors
We study spin fluctuations in quarter-filled one-dimensional
spin-density-wave systems in presence of short-range Coulomb interactions. By
applying a path integral method, the spin-wave velocity is calculated as a
function of on-site (U), nearest (V) and next-nearest (V_2) neighbor-site
interactions. With increasing V or V_2, the pure spin-density-wave state
evolves into a state with coexisting spin- and charge-density waves. The
spin-wave velocity is reduced when several density waves coexist in the ground
state, and may even vanish at large V. The effect of dimerization along the
chain is also considered.Comment: REVTeX, 11 pages, 9 figure
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