67,733 research outputs found
Polarization-dependent discharge in fibers of semiconducting ladder-type polymer
We report results on polarization-dependent photoinduced discharge in
oriented fibers and films of ladder-type, electron-transporting polymer poly
(benzimidazobenzophenanthroline), BBL. The photocarrier generation efficiency
in the fiber which is indicated by the rate of discharge, is found to be
distinctly higher for light polarized parallel to the fiber axis as compared to
the radially perpendicular direction . Similar results, with photocarrier
generation efficiency anisotropy ~ 10 are obtained for oriented films. These
observations are different from previously obtained results on
polyparaphenylenevinylene (PPV). The results are compared with the
polarization-dependent steady- state photoconductivity measurements. We
interpret these results on the basis of molecular and macroscopic features of
the material.Comment: This article has been accepted for publication in applied physics
letters and tentatively to be published in March 12, 2001 issu
Marketing of Library Services and Products through Social Media: An Evaluation
Social media has a great impact on information promotional activities by bringing tremendous changes in the field of marketing. Social networking applications help the users to possess interconnections among the community members and remix the library services and products to brand them visible in a broader way. This paper gives an overview of the concept of marketing of library services and products in the pretext of handiness of social networking technologies (SNT). The paper also discusses various social networking sites (SNS) such as Facebook, Twitter, Delicious, Youtube, Flickr etc. An outline of how the social media may successfully be applied to enhance the effectiveness in marketing library services and products is observed. Relative merits and challenges with adoption of SNS are also examined
Femtosecond Photoexcited Carrier Dynamics in Reduced Graphene Oxide Suspensions and Films
We report ultrafast response of femtosecond photoexcited carriers in single
layer reduced graphene oxide flakes suspended in water as well as few layer
thick film deposited on indium tin oxide coated glass plate using pump-probe
differential transmission spectroscopy at 790 nm. The carrier relaxation
dynamics has three components: ~200 fs, 1 to 2 ps, and ~25 ps, all of them
independent of pump fluence. It is seen that the second component (1 to 2 ps)
assigned to the lifetime of hot optical phonons is larger for graphene in
suspensions whereas other two time constants are the same for both the
suspension and the film. The value of third order nonlinear susceptibility
estimated from the pump-probe experiments is compared with that obtained from
the open aperture Z-scan results for the suspension.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in International Journal of Nanoscience
(IJN), 201
Classical Langevin dynamics of a charged particle moving on a sphere and diamagnetism: A surprise
It is generally known that the orbital diamagnetism of a classical system of
charged particles in thermal equilibrium is identically zero -- the Bohr-van
Leeuwen theorem. Physically, this null result derives from the exact
cancellation of the orbital diamagnetic moment associated with the complete
cyclotron orbits of the charged particles by the paramagnetic moment subtended
by the incomplete orbits skipping the boundary in the opposite sense. Motivated
by this crucial, but subtle role of the boundary, we have simulated here the
case of a finite but \emph{unbounded} system, namely that of a charged particle
moving on the surface of a sphere in the presence of an externally applied
uniform magnetic field. Following a real space-time approach based on the
classical Langevin equation, we have computed the orbital magnetic moment which
now indeed turns out to be non-zero, and has the diamagnetic sign. To the best
of our knowledge, this is the first report of the possibility of finite
classical diamagnetism in principle, and it is due to the avoided cancellation.Comment: Accepted for publication in EP
Density excitations of a harmonically trapped ideal gas
The dynamic structure factor of a harmonically trapped Bose gas has been
calculated well above the Bose-Einstein condensation temperature by treating
the gas cloud as a canonical ensemble of noninteracting classical particles.
The static structure factor is found to vanish as wavenumber squared in the
long-wavelength limit. We also incorporate a relaxation mechanism
phenomenologically by including a stochastic friction force to study the
dynamic structure factor. A significant temperature dependence of the
density-fluctuation spectra is found. The Debye-Waller factor has been
calculated for the trapped thermal cloud as function of wavenumber and of
particle number. A substantial difference is found between clouds of small and
large particle number
The Effect of Configurational Entropy of Mixing on the Design and Development of Novel Materials
The configurational entropy of mixing (∆Smix) has a profound influence on the stability of various phases in different
materials at intermediate and high temperatures. Recently, it has been observed that ∆Smix can be used as an important tool
to design novel multicomponent materials with fascinating properties. ∆Smix affects ∆Gmix and tends to stabilize the FCC/
BCC/HCP multicomponent solid solutions over brittle phases including compounds. This opens up vistas to design novel
solid solution-based materials with improved mechanical, functional properties. Accordingly, multicomponent and
multiprinciple alloys were developed in 2004, and subsequently, novel ceramics and polymers have been designed. The
present paper is intended to provide an insight into the role of ∆Smix to design novel metallic, ceramic as well as polymeric
materials
- …