173 research outputs found

    Effect of pulsed electric field pretreatment on shrinkage, rehydration capacity and texture of freeze-dried plant materials

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    Abstract For this study, strawberries and red bell peppers were pre-treated with pulsed electric fields (PEF) to reduce the negative effects on physical properties of the products after freeze-drying. PEF treatment was carried out at constant electric field strength of E = 1.0 kV/cm and specific energy input was varied between 0.3 and 6.0 kJ/kg (treatment time 2.0–28.6 ms). Additionally, the impact of different pre-freezing temperatures (−4 and −40 °C) on the final product quality was described. Investigations showed that due to PEF treatment a significant reduction of the shrinkage phenomena for both bell peppers and strawberries was detected compared to untreated samples with 30% and 50% lower volume losses, respectively. The rehydration capacity of PEF pre-treated freeze-dried samples increased for both matrices up to 50%. Furthermore, the mechanical properties of the final product were improved for both matrices with a significant firmness reduction up to 60%. The results of this study suggest that PEF can be an effective pretreatment with low energy requirements to improve the quality of freeze-dried fruits and vegetables

    Influence of pulsed electric field and ohmic heating pretreatments on enzyme and antioxidant activity of fruit and vegetable juices

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    The objective of this work was to optimize pulsed electric field (PEF) or ohmic heating (OH) application for carrot and apple mashes treatment at different preheating temperatures (40, 60 or 80 \ub0C). The effect of tissue disintegration on the properties of recovered juices was quantified, taking into account the colour change, the antioxidant activity and the enzyme activity of peroxidase (POD) in both carrot and apple juice and polyphenol oxidase (PPO) in apple juice. Lower \u394E and an increase of the antioxidant activity were obtained for juice samples treated with temperature at 80 \ub0C with or without PEF and OH pretreatment compared with those of untreated samples. The inactivation by 90% for POD and PPO was achieved when a temperature of 80 \ub0C was applied for both carrot and apple mash. A better retention of plant secondary metabolites from carrot and apple mashes could be achieved by additional PEF or OH application. Obtained results are the basis for the development of targeted processing concepts considering the release, inactivation and retention of ingredients

    Ultrafast Optical Excitation of a Persistent Surface-State Population in the Topological Insulator Bi2Se3

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    Using femtosecond time- and angle- resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we investigated the nonequilibrium dynamics of the topological insulator Bi2Se3. We studied p-type Bi2Se3, in which the metallic Dirac surface state and bulk conduction bands are unoccupied. Optical excitation leads to a meta-stable population at the bulk conduction band edge, which feeds a nonequilibrium population of the surface state persisting for >10ps. This unusually long-lived population of a metallic Dirac surface state with spin texture may present a channel in which to drive transient spin-polarized currents

    Unoccupied Topological States on Bismuth Chalcogenides

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    The unoccupied part of the band structure of topological insulators Bi2_2Tex_{x}Se3x_{3-x} (x=0,2,3x=0,2,3) is studied by angle-resolved two-photon photoemission and density functional theory. For all surfaces linearly-dispersing surface states are found at the center of the surface Brillouin zone at energies around 1.3 eV above the Fermi level. Theoretical analysis shows that this feature appears in a spin-orbit-interaction induced and inverted local energy gap. This inversion is insensitive to variation of electronic and structural parameters in Bi2_2Se3_3 and Bi2_2Te2_2Se. In Bi2_2Te3_3 small structural variations can change the character of the local energy gap depending on which an unoccupied Dirac state does or does not exist. Circular dichroism measurements confirm the expected spin texture. From these findings we assign the observed state to an unoccupied topological surface state

    Adiabatic-Connection-Fluctuation-Dissipation approach to the long-range behavior of the exchange-correlation energy at metal surfaces: A numerical study for jellium slabs

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    A still open issue in many-body theory is the asymptotic behavior of the exchange-correlation energy and potential in the vacuum region of a metal surface. Here we report a numerical study of the position-dependent exchange-correlation energy for jellium slabs, as obtained by combining the formally exact adiabatic-connection-fluctuation-dissipation theorem with either time-dependent density-functional theory or an inhomogeneous Singwi-Tosi-Land-Sj\"olander approach. We find that the inclusion of correlation allows to obtain well-converged semi-infinite-jellium results (independent of the slab thickness) that exhibit an image-like asymptotic behavior close to the classical image potential Vim(z)=e2/4zV_{im}(z)=-e^2/4z.Comment: 6 pages, 4 Figure

    Electronic structure of superconducting graphite intercalate compounds: The role of the interlayer state

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    Although not an intrinsic superconductor, it has been long--known that, when intercalated with certain dopants, graphite is capable of exhibiting superconductivity. Of the family of graphite--based materials which are known to superconduct, perhaps the most well--studied are the alkali metal--graphite intercalation compounds (GIC) and, of these, the most easily fabricated is the C8{}_8K system which exhibits a transition temperature Tc0.14\bm{T_c\simeq 0.14} K. By increasing the alkali metal concentration (through high pressure fabrication techniques), the transition temperature has been shown to increase to as much as 5\bm 5 K in C2{}_2Na. Lately, in an important recent development, Weller \emph{et al.} have shown that, at ambient conditions, the intercalated compounds \cyb and \cca exhibit superconductivity with transition temperatures Tc6.5\bm{T_c\simeq 6.5} K and 11.5\bm{11.5} K respectively, in excess of that presently reported for other graphite--based compounds. We explore the architecture of the states near the Fermi level and identify characteristics of the electronic band structure generic to GICs. As expected, we find that charge transfer from the intercalant atoms to the graphene sheets results in the occupation of the π\bm\pi--bands. Yet, remarkably, in all those -- and only those -- compounds that superconduct, we find that an interlayer state, which is well separated from the carbon sheets, also becomes occupied. We show that the energy of the interlayer band is controlled by a combination of its occupancy and the separation between the carbon layers.Comment: 4 Figures. Please see accompanying experimental manuscript "Superconductivity in the Intercalated Graphite Compounds C6Yb and C6Ca" by Weller et a

    Electronic and structural properties of superconducting MgB2_2, CaSi2_2 and related compounds

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    We report a detailed study of the electronic and structural properties of the 39K superconductor \mgbtwo and of several related systems of the same family, namely \mgalbtwo, \bebtwo, \casitwo and \cabesi. Our calculations, which include zone-center phonon frequencies and transport properties, are performed within the local density approximation to the density functional theory, using the full-potential linearized augmented plane wave (FLAPW) and the norm-conserving pseudopotential methods. Our results indicate essentially three-dimensional properties for these compounds; however, strongly two-dimensional σ\sigma-bonding bands contribute significantly at the Fermi level. Similarities and differences between \mgbtwo and \bebtwo (whose superconducting properties have not been yet investigated) are analyzed in detail. Our calculations for \mgalbtwo show that metal substitution cannot be fully described in a rigid band model. \casitwo is studied as a function of pressure, and Be substitution in the Si planes leads to a stable compound similar in many aspects to diborides.Comment: Revised version, Phys.Rev.B in pres

    Ab initio simulation of photoemission spectroscopy in solids: Plane-wave pseudopotential approach, with applications to normal-emission spectra of Cu(001) and Cu(111)

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    We introduce a new method for simulating photoemission spectra from bulk crystals in the ultra-violet energy range, within a three-step model. Our method explicitly accounts for transmission and matrix-element effects, as calculated from state-of-the-art plane-wave pseudopotential techniques within density-functional theory. Transmission effects, in particular, are included by extending to the present problem a technique previously employed with success to deal with ballistic conductance in metal nanowires. The spectra calculated for normal emission in Cu(001) and Cu(111) are in fair agreement with previous theoretical results and with experiments, including a newly determined spectrum. The residual discrepancies between our results and the latter are mainly due to the well-known deficiencies of density-functional theory in accounting for correlation effects in quasi-particle spectra. A significant improvement is obtained by the LDA+U method. Further improvements are obtained by including surface-optics corrections, as described by Snell's law and Fresnel's equations.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, accepted in PR

    Lifetimes of image-potential states on copper surfaces

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    The lifetime of image states, which represent a key quantity to probe the coupling of surface electronic states with the solid substrate, have been recently determined for quantum numbers n6n\le 6 on Cu(100) by using time-resolved two-photon photoemission in combination with the coherent excitation of several states (U. H\"ofer et al, Science 277, 1480 (1997)). We here report theoretical investigations of the lifetime of image states on copper surfaces. We evaluate the lifetimes from the knowledge of the self-energy of the excited quasiparticle, which we compute within the GW approximation of many-body theory. Single-particle wave functions are obtained by solving the Schr\"odinger equation with a realistic one-dimensional model potential, and the screened interaction is evaluated in the random-phase approximation (RPA). Our results are in good agreement with the experimentally determined decay times.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Quantum point contact on graphite surface

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    The conductance through a quantum point contact created by a sharp and hard metal tip on the graphite surface has features which to our knowledge have not been encountered so far in metal contacts or in nanowires. In this paper we first investigate these features which emerge from the strongly directional bonding and electronic structure of graphite, and provide a theoretical understanding for the electronic conduction through quantum point contacts. Our study involves the molecular-dynamics simulations to reveal the variation of interlayer distances and atomic structure at the proximity of the contact that evolves by the tip pressing toward the surface. The effects of the elastic deformation on the electronic structure, state density at the Fermi level, and crystal potential are analyzed by performing self-consistent-field pseudopotential calculations within the local-density approximation. It is found that the metallicity of graphite increases under the uniaxial compressive strain perpendicular to the basal plane. The quantum point contact is modeled by a constriction with a realistic potential. The conductance is calculated by representing the current transporting states in Laue representation, and the variation of conductance with the evolution of contact is explained by taking the characteristic features of graphite into account. It is shown that the sequential puncturing of the layers characterizes the conductance.Comment: LaTeX, 11 pages, 9 figures (included), to be published in Phys. Rev. B, tentatively scheduled for 15 September 1998 (Volume 58, Number 12
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