114 research outputs found
Measurement of exciton correlations using electrostatic lattices
We present a method for determining correlations in a gas of indirect
excitons in a semiconductor quantum well structure. The method involves
subjecting the excitons to a periodic electrostatic potential that causes
modulations of the exciton density and photoluminescence (PL). Experimentally
measured amplitudes of energy and intensity modulations of exciton PL serve as
an input to a theoretical estimate of the exciton correlation parameter and
temperature. We also present a proof-of-principle demonstration of the method
for determining the correlation parameter and discuss how its accuracy can be
improved.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
Sub-10 nanometre fabrication: molecular templating, electron-beam sculpting and crystallization of metallic nanowires
Abstract Homogeneous metallic nanowires with diameters below 10 nm are produced by sputter coating suspended DNA molecules and/or carbon nanotubes. A fabrication method is described that allows 'e-beam nanosculpting', i.e. local modification of the shape of nanowires, with a resolution of ∼3 nm. The process is performed with a focused electron beam (e-beam) in a transmission electron microscope, under direct visual control. We also demonstrate that e-beam radiation can induce local crystallization of nanowires. This method could be used to fabricate novel electronic devices, e.g. single-electron tunnelling transistors, with dimensions below 10 nm, possibly operating at room temperature
Transport of Indirect Excitons in a Potential Energy Gradient
We realized a potential energy gradient - a ramp - for indirect excitons
using a shaped electrode at constant voltage. We studied transport of indirect
excitons along the ramp and observed that the exciton transport distance
increases with increasing density and temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Collection of indirect excitons in a diamond-shaped electrostatic trap
We report on the principle and realization of a new trap for excitons -- the
diamond electrostatic trap -- which uses a single electrode to create a
confining potential for excitons. We also create elevated diamond traps which
permit evaporative cooling of the exciton gas. We observe collection of
excitons towards the trap center with increasing exciton density. This effect
is due to screening of disorder in the trap by the excitons. As a result, the
diamond trap behaves as a smooth parabolic potential which realizes a cold and
dense exciton gas at the trap center.Comment: 4 Pages, 5 figure
Optically Controlled Excitonic Transistor
Optical control of exciton fluxes is realized for indirect excitons in a
crossed-ramp excitonic device. The device demonstrates experimental proof of
principle for all-optical excitonic transistors with a high ratio between the
excitonic signal at the optical drain and the excitonic signal due to the
optical gate. The device also demonstrates experimental proof of principle for
all-optical excitonic routers
Electrostatic Conveyer for Excitons
We report on the study of indirect excitons in moving lattices - conveyers
created by a set of AC voltages applied to the electrodes on the sample
surface. The wavelength of this moving lattice is set by the electrode
periodicity, the amplitude is controlled by the applied voltage, and the
velocity is controlled by the AC frequency. We observed the dynamical
localization-delocalization transition for excitons in the conveyers and
measured its dependence on the exciton density and conveyer amplitude and
velocity. We considered a model for exciton transport via conveyers. The
theoretical simulations are in agreement with the experimental data.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures + supplemental material including two video
Localization-Delocalization Transition of Indirect Excitons in Lateral Electrostatic Lattices
We study transport of indirect excitons in GaAs/AlGaAs coupled quantum wells
in linear lattices created by laterally modulated gate voltage. The
localization-delocalization transition (LDT) for transport across the lattice
was observed with reducing lattice amplitude or increasing exciton density. The
exciton interaction energy at the transition is close to the lattice amplitude.
These results are consistent with the model, which attributes the LDT to the
interaction-induced percolation of the exciton gas through the external
potential. We also discuss applications of the lattice potentials for
estimating the strength of disorder and exciton interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Pattern formation in the exciton inner ring
We report on the two-beam study of indirect excitons in the inner ring in the exciton emission pattern. One laser beam generates the inner ring and a second weaker beam is positioned in the inner ring. The beam positioned in the inner ring is found to locally suppress the exciton emission intensity. We also report on the inner ring fragmentation and formation of multiple rings in the inner ring region. These features are found to originate from a weak spatial modulation of the excitation beam intensity in the inner ring region. The modulation of exciton emission intensity anticorrelates with the modulation of the laser excitation intensity. The three phenomena—inner ring fragmentation, formation of multiple rings in the inner ring region, and emission suppression by a weak laser beam in the inner ring—have a common feature: a reduction of exciton emission intensity in the region of enhanced laser excitation. This effect is explained in terms of exciton transport and thermalization
Effects of Zirconium Doping Into a Monoclinic Scheelite BiVO4 Crystal on Its Structural, Photocatalytic, and Photoelectrochemical Properties
Effects of zirconium (Zr) doping into BiVO4 powder on its structural properties and photocatalytic activity for O2 evolution were examined. The formation of BiVO4 powder crystallized in a monoclinic scheelite structure (ms-BiVO4) was achieved when the sample was doped with a relatively small amount of Zr. The photocatalytic activity of Zr-doped ms-BiVO4 powder was much higher than that of non-doped ms-BiVO4. However, further doping caused a reduction of photocatalytic activity for O2 evolution due to the occurrence of structural alterations into tetragonal scheelite and tetragonal zircon structures. Similar effects of Zr doping were also observed for the photoelectrochemical (PEC) system based on BiVO4 thin films doped with various amounts of Zr. Thus, Zr doping was confirmed to be effective for improvements of photocatalytic and PEC functions of BiVO4 for water oxidation
Freezing of spin and charge in La_(2-x)Sr_xCuO_4
Zero- and longitudinal-field muon-spin relaxation μ+SR measurements have been performed on La_(2-x)Sr_xCuO_4 alloys in both single-crystal and sintered powder forms above and below their magnetic transition temperatures, T_f. The μ+ precession frequency v depends only weakly on x and T_f, an observation which together with resistivity data implies classical freezing of magnetic moments in the regime where the carriers are localized. For x=0.05, critical dynamics are observed near T_f. The μ^+SR technique is shown to be very sensitive to ferromagnetically aligned pairs of Cu^(2+) moments; the population of such pairs increases greatly with x
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