215 research outputs found
Exact numerical diagonalization of one-dimensional interacting electrons nonadiabatically coupled to phonons
We study the role of non-adiabatic Holstein electron-phonon coupling on the
neutral-ionic phase transition of charge transfer crystals which can be tuned
from continuous to discontinuous, using exact numerical diagonalization. The
variation of electronic properties through the transition is smoothed by
nonadiabaticity. Lattice properties are strongly affected, and we observe both
squeezing and antisqueezing, depending on details of the adiabatic potentials,
and identify the quantum uncertainty of the phonons as the most sensitive
measure of nonadiabaticity. The adiabatic limit is regular for a continuous
transition but turns out completely inadequate near a discontinuous transition.
The relevance of coherent state approaches is assessed critically.Comment: latex manuscript (7 pages), 3 eps figures; revised version, better
discussion, one figure replaced; to be published in Europhys. Let
Symmetry crossover and excitation thresholds at the neutral-ionic transition of the modified Hubbard model
Exact ground states, charge densities and excitation energies are found using
valence bond methods for N-site modified Hubbard models with uniform spacing.
At the neutral-ionic transition (NIT), the ground state has a symmetry
crossover in 4n, 4n+2 rings with periodic and antiperiodic boundary conditions,
respectively. The modified Hubbard model has a continuous NIT between a
diamagnetic band insulator on the paired side and a paramagnetic Mott insulator
on the covalent side. The singlet-triplet (ST), singlet-singlet (SS) and charge
gaps for finite N indicate that the ST and SS gaps close at the NIT with
increasing U and that the charge gap vanishes only there. Finite-N excitations
constrain all singularities to about 0.1t of the symmetry crossover. The NIT is
interpreted as a localized ground state (gs) with finite gaps on the paired
side and an extended gs with vanishing ST and SS gaps on the covalent side. The
charge gap and charge stiffness indicate a metallic gs at the transition that,
however, is unconditionally unstable to dimerization.Comment: 12 pages, including 8 figure
Dielectric response of modified Hubbard models with neutral-ionic and Peierls transitions
The dipole P(F) of systems with periodic boundary conditions (PBC) in a
static electric field F is applied to one-dimensional Peierls-Hubbard models
for organic charge-transfer (CT) salts. Exact results for P(F) are obtained for
finite systems of N = 14 and 16 sites that are almost converged to infinite
chains in deformable lattices subject to a Peierls transition. The electronic
polarizability per site, \alpha_{el} = (\partial P/\partial F)_0, of rigid
stacks with alternating transfer integrals t(1 +/- \delta) diverges at the
neutral-ionic transition for \delta = 0 but remains finite for \delta > 0 in
dimerized chains. The Peierls or dimerization mode couples to charge
fluctuations along the stack and results in large vibrational contributions,
\alpha_{vib}, that are related to \partial P/\partial \delta and that peak
sharply at the Peierls transition. The extension of P(F) to correlated
electronic states yields the dielectric response \kappa of models with
neutral-ionic or Peierls transitions, where \kappa peaks >100 are found with
parameters used previously for variable ionicity \rho and vibrational spectra
of CT salts. The calculated \kappa accounts for the dielectric response of CT
salts based on substituted TTFs (tetrathiafulvalene) and substituted CAs
(chloranil). The role of lattice stiffness appears clearly in models: soft
systems have a Peierls instability at small \rho and continuous crossover to
large \rho, while stiff stacks such as TTF-CA have a first-order transition
with discontinuous \rho that is both a neutral-ionic and Peierls transition.
The transitions are associated with tuning the electronic ground state of
insulators via temperature or pressure in experiments, or via model parameters
in calculations.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures; J.Chem.Phys., in pres
Supramolecular interactions in clusters of polar and polarizable molecules
We present a model for molecular materials made up of polar and polarizable
molecular units. A simple two state model is adopted for each molecular site
and only classical intermolecular interactions are accounted for, neglecting
any intermolecular overlap. The complex and interesting physics driven by
interactions among polar and polarizable molecules becomes fairly transparent
in the adopted model. Collective effects are recognized in the large variation
of the molecular polarity with supramolecular interactions, and cooperative
behavior shows up with the appearance, in attractive lattices, of discontinuous
charge crossovers. The mean-field approximation proves fairly accurate in the
description of the gs properties of MM, including static linear and non-linear
optical susceptibilities, apart from the region in the close proximity of the
discontinuous charge crossover. Sizeable deviations from the excitonic
description are recognized both in the excitation spectrum and in linear and
non-linear optical responses. New and interesting phenomena are recognized near
the discontinuous charge crossover for non-centrosymmetric clusters, where the
primary photoexcitation event corresponds to a multielectron transfer.Comment: 14 pages, including 11 figure
The Dimer Model for k-phase Organic Superconductors
We prove that the upper electronic bands of k-phase BEDT-TTF salts are
adequately modeled by an half-filled tight-binding lattice with one site per
cell. The band parameters are derived from recent ab-initio calculations,
getting a very simple but extremely accurate one-electron picture. This picture
allows us to solve the BCS gap equation adopting a real-space pairing
potential. Comparison of the calculated superconducting properties with the
experimental data points to isotropic s_0-pairing. Residual many-body or
phonon-mediated interactions offer a plausible explanation of the large variety
of physical properties observed in k-phase BEDT-TTF salts.Comment: 8 pages, 6 PostScript figures, uses RevTe
Vibronic contributions to resonant NLO responses: two-photon absorption in push-pull chromophores
Two-photon absorption (TPA) spectra of push-pull chromophores are described in terms of a two-state model accounting for electron-vibration coupling. Vibrations have two main effects in TPA spectra. The most obvious one is the appearance of a vibrational structure in the spectrum; in this respect we find large Herzberg-Teller contributions. The second effect was not recognized so far: vibrational states contribute a new channel to TPA process, that shows up with a blue-shift and a distortion of the spectrum. Vibrational-channel contributions to other NLO responses are shortly discussed
Charge fluctuations and electron-phonon coupling in organic charge-transfer salts with neutral-ionic and Peierls transitions
The first-order transition of the charge-transfer complex TTF-CA
(tetrathiafulvalene-chloranil) is both a neutral-ionic and a Peierls
transition. In related organic charge transfer complexes, cooling at ambient
pressure increases the ionicity in strikingly different ways, and is
sometimes accompanied by a dielectric peak, that we relate to lattice
stiffness, to structural and energetic disorder, and to the softening of the
Peierls mode in the far-IR. The position operator for systems with periodic
boundary conditions makes possible a systematic treatment of electron-phonon
interactions in extended donor-acceptor stacks in terms of correlated
Peierls-Hubbard models. The IR intensity of the Peierls mode peaks at the
Peierls transition at small in soft lattices, where the dielectric
constant also has a large peak. In dimerized stacks, the IR intensity of
totally symmetric, Raman active, molecular vibrations is related to charge
fluctuations that modulate site energies. Combination bands of molecular and
Peierls modes are identified in regular TTF-CA stacks above Tc. Energetic
disorder can suppress the Peierls transition and rationalize a continuous
crossover from small to large . The TTF-CA scenario of a neutral-regular
to ionic-dimerized transition must be broadened considerably in view of charge
transfer salts that dimerize on the neutral side, that become ionic without a
structural change, or that show vibrational evidence for dimerization at
constant .Comment: 26 pages including figure
Mean-Field Effects on the Phosphorescence of Dinuclear Re(I) Complex Polymorphs
A computational study rationalizes the different phosphorescence colors of two highly emitting crystal polymorphs of a dinuclear Re(I) complex, [Re2(μ-Cl)2(CO)6(μ-4,5-(Me3Si)2pyridazine)]. The electrostatic interactions between the charge distributions on neighboring molecules inside the crystal are responsible for the different stabilization of the emitting triplet state because of the different molecular packing. These self-consistent effects play a major role in the phosphorescence of crystals made of polar and polarizable molecular units, offering a powerful handle to tune the luminescence wavelength in the solid state through supramolecular engineering
Giant infrared intensity of the Peierls mode at the neutral-ionic phase transition
We present exact diagonalization results on a modified Peierls-Hubbard model
for the neutral-ionic phase transition. The ground state potential energy
surface and the infrared intensity of the Peierls mode point to a strong,
non-linear electron-phonon coupling, with effects that are dominated by the
proximity to the electronic instability rather than by electronic correlations.
The huge infrared intensity of the Peierls mode at the ferroelectric
transition is related to the temperature dependence of the dielectric constant
of mixed-stack organic crystals.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Which are the main fluorophores in skin and oral mucosa? A review with emphasis on clinical applications of tissue autofluorescence
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:
The present review provides information about which molecules appear to be the main fluorophores in skin and oral mucosa, together with their clinical applications.
DESIGN:
The MEDLINE database was searched, using "oral mucosa AND fluorophores", "skin AND fluorophores", "epidermal AND fluorophores", "dermal AND fluorophores" and "cutaneous AND fluorophores" as entry terms. We searched the literature following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. The level of evidence in the studies was assessed using the Classification of the Oxford Centre for Evidence-based Medicine (CEBM) Levels for Diagnosis.
RESULTS:
Five papers and 17 were primarily focused on description of fluorophores in oral mucosa and skin Evidence exists that fluorophores of oral mucosa and skin are mainly proteins such as collagen, elastin, keratin and tryptophan. Other possible fluorophores identified are: porphyrins, advanced glycation end products, flavins, lipopigment, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, flavin adenine dinucleotide, pheomelanin, eumelanin and components of lipofuscin. Clinical applications of oral mucosal autofluorescence (AF) are related to management of malignant and potentially malignant lesions. In the skin, AF has been used for acne assessment, diagnosis of sweat-gland pathologies, glycemic control and management of malignant lesions and as a marker for skin aging.
CONCLUSION:
Fluorophores stimulated through AF devices are implied in different physiologic and pathologic processes. AF seems to be useful for several clinical applications, especially in skin department. Because most of the studies show a low level of evidence, further studies are necessary in such a promising and fascinating field
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