66 research outputs found

    Spectroscopy data for the time and frequency characterization of vibrational coherences in bacteriochlorophyll a

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    Bacteriochlorophyll is the primary pigment in the light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes (PPCs) of the bacterial photosynthetic apparatus. 2D electronic spectroscopy (2DES) represents one of the most exploited and powerful techniques to characterize the ultrafast relaxation dynamics in PPCs, in particular, to assess the presence of coherent mechanisms during energy transport.The data reported in this work and the associated research article, “Characterization of the coherent dynamics of bacteriochlorophyll a in solution” [Meneghin et al., 2019] are an important contribution to the literature on coherent dynamics of light-harvesting complexes and can be useful in the interpretation of coherent motion in more complex systems with bacteriochlorophyll a (BChla) as a basic unit. The analysis of the provided data allows the identification of vibrational coherences associated with several Franck-Condon active modes and the characterization of their frequencies and dephasing times.Here we report additional data analysis and additional measures that complement the associated research article [Meneghin et al., 2019] and support its main conclusions. In particular, we compare vibrational coherences extracted from 2DES response with Raman modes detected for BChla powders at cryogenic temperature in resonant and non-resonant conditions. Finally, we show the time-resolved fluorescence decay of the chromophore to support the interpretation of non-coherent dynamics discussed in Ref. [Meneghin et al., 2019]

    Soil Remediation: Towards a Resilient and Adaptive Approach to Deal with the Ever-Changing Environmental Challenges

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    Pollution from numerous contaminants due to many anthropogenic activities affects soils quality. Industrialized countries have many contaminated sites; their remediation is a priority in environmental legislation. The aim of this overview is to consider the evolution of soil remediation from consolidated invasive technologies to environmentally friendly green strategies. The selection of technology is no longer exclusively based on eliminating the source of pollution but aims at remediation, which includes the recovery of soil quality. \u201cGreen remediation\u201d appears to be the key to addressing the issue of remediation of contaminated sites as it focuses on environmental quality, including the preservation of the environment. Further developments in green remediation reflect the aim of promoting clean-up strategies that also address the effects of climate change. Sustainable and resilient remediation faces the environmental challenge of achieving targets while reducing the environmental damage caused by clean-up interventions and must involve an awareness that social systems and environmental systems are closely connected

    Finite-Temperature Transport in Finite-Size Hubbard Rings in the Strong-Coupling Limit

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    We study the current, the curvature of levels, and the finite temperature charge stiffness, D(T,L), in the strongly correlated limit, U>>t, for Hubbard rings of L sites, with U the on-site Coulomb repulsion and t the hopping integral. Our study is done for finite-size systems and any band filling. Up to order t we derive our results following two independent approaches, namely, using the solution provided by the Bethe ansatz and the solution provided by an algebraic method, where the electronic operators are represented in a slave-fermion picture. We find that, in the U=\infty case, the finite-temperature charge stiffness is finite for electronic densities, n, smaller than one. These results are essencially those of spinless fermions in a lattice of size L, apart from small corrections coming from a statistical flux, due to the spin degrees of freedom. Up to order t, the Mott-Hubbard gap is \Delta_{MH}=U-4t, and we find that D(T) is finite for n<1, but is zero at half-filling. This result comes from the effective flux felt by the holon excitations, which, due to the presence of doubly occupied sites, is renormalized to \Phi^{eff}=\phi(N_h-N_d)/(N_d+N_h), and which is zero at half-filling, with N_d and N_h being the number of doubly occupied and empty lattice sites, respectively. Further, for half-filling, the current transported by any eigenstate of the system is zero and, therefore, D(T) is also zero.Comment: 15 pages and 6 figures; accepted for PR
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