235 research outputs found
Ultrafast Acousto-Plasmonics in Gold Nanoparticles Superlattice
We report the investigation of the generation and detection of GHz coherent
acoustic phonons in plasmonic gold nanoparticles superlattices (NPS). The
experiments have been performed from an optical femtosecond pump-probe scheme
across the optical plasmon resonance of the superlattice. Our experiments allow
to estimate the collective elastic response (sound velocity) of the NPS as well
as an estimate of the nano-contact elastic stiffness. It appears that the
light-induced coherent acoustic phonon pulse has a typical in-depth spatial
extension of about 45 nm which is roughly 4 times the optical skin depth in
gold. The modeling of the transient optical reflectivity indicates that the
mechanism of phonon generation is achieved through ultrafast heating of the NPS
assisted by light excitation of the volume plasmon. These results demonstrate
how it is possible to map the photon-electron-phonon interaction in
subwavelength nanostructures
Prediction of Persistent Organic Pollutants Biodegradation in Contaminated Marine Sediments Using Passive Sampling Probes
The aim of this study is to evaluate a new configuration (new materials) of the commercial passive sampler Chemcatcher as probe for predicting the bioavailability of persistent organic pollutants in marine sediments. To predict the availability of pollutants to biota, it is important to understand both solution- and solid-phase processes in the sediment, including the kinetics of pollutants release from its binding agent (ligand and/or particle). The present study examined the kinetic of desorption and biodegradation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) in two different marine sediments sampled in the Adriatic Sea. The sediments were spiked with a standard mix of 16 PAHs in the range of 11-12 mg/Kg (dry sediment). Formaldehyde was added into the sediments to prevent biodegradation. After equilibration, the passive probes were placed in the specimens with prevented biodegradation, recovered and analyzed at prefixed time slots (in the range of 50 days) for the assessment of the accumulated PAHs; in parallel a little amount of sediments was collected and the residual concentration of PAHs was measured. Free PAHs in the sediment pore waters were also determined. The results suggest that the kinetically labile solid-phase pool of PAHs, which is included in the DGT measurement, played an important role in biodegradation processes along with the free PAHs in sediment pore water
Prediction of Persistent Organic Pollutants Biodegradation in Contaminated Marine Sediments Using Passive Sampling Probes
The aim of this study is to evaluate a new configuration (new materials) of the commercial passive sampler Chemcatcher as probe for predicting the bioavailability of persistent organic pollutants in marine sediments. To predict the availability of pollutants to biota, it is important to understand both solution- and solid-phase processes in the sediment, including the kinetics of pollutants release from its binding agent (ligand and/or particle). The present study examined the kinetic of desorption and biodegradation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) in two different marine sediments sampled in the Adriatic Sea. The sediments were spiked with a standard mix of 16 PAHs in the range of 11-12 mg/Kg (dry sediment). Formaldehyde was added into the sediments to prevent biodegradation. After equilibration, the passive probes were placed in the specimens with prevented biodegradation, recovered and analyzed at prefixed time slots (in the range of 50 days) for the assessment of the accumulated PAHs; in parallel a little amount of sediments was collected and the residual concentration of PAHs was measured. Free PAHs in the sediment pore waters were also determined. The results suggest that the kinetically labile solid-phase pool of PAHs, which is included in the DGT measurement, played an important role in biodegradation processes along with the free PAHs in sediment pore water
Anisotropy in the dielectric function of BiTe from first principles: From the UV-visible to the infrared range
The dielectric properties of BiTe, a layered compound crystallizing
in a rhombohedral structure, are investigated by means of first-principles
calculations at the random phase approximation level. A special attention is
devoted to the anisotropy in the dielectric function and to the local field
effects that strongly renormalize the optical properties in the UV-visible
range when the electric field is polarized along the stacking axis.
Furthermore, both the Born effective charges for each atom and the zone center
phonon frequencies and eigenvectors needed to describe the dielectric response
in the infrared range are computed. Our theoretical near-normal incidence
reflectivity spectras in both the UV-visible and infrared range are in fairly
good agreement with the experimental spectras, provided that the free carriers
Drude contribution arising from defects is included in the infrared response.
The anisotropic plasmon frequencies entering the Drude model are computed
within the rigid band approximation, suggesting that a measurement of the
reflectivity in the infrared range for both polarizations might allow to infer
not only the type of doping but also the level of doping.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figure
Non-Destructive Characterization of Magnetic Polymeric Scaffolds using Terahertz Time-of-Flight Imaging
Magnetic Scaffolds MagS are 3D composite materials, in which magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) are used to load a polymeric matrix. Due to their wide use in various medical applications, there is an increasing demand of advanced techniques for non-destructive quality assessment procedures aimed at verifying the absence of defects and, more generally, dedicated to the characterization of MagS. In this framework, the use of TeraHertz (THz) waves for the non-destructive characterization of multifunctional scaffolds represents an open challenge for the scientific community. This paper deals with an approach for the characterization of MagS by means of a THz time-domain system used in reflection mode. THz analyses are performed on poly( - capprolactone) (PCL) scaffolds magnetized with iron oxide (Fe O) MNPs through a drop-casting deposition and tuned to obtain different distributions of MNP in the biomaterial. The proposed data processing approach allows a quantitative characterization MagS, in terms of their (estimated) thickness and refractive index. Moreover, the proposed procedure allows to identify the areas of the scaffold wherein MNP are mainly concentrated and thus, it gives us information about MNP spatial distribution
Quantum size effect on charges and phonons ultrafast dynamics in atomically controlled nanolayers of topological insulators Bi2Te3
This work was supported by the French Ministry of Education and Research, the CNRS, Region Pays de la Loire (CPER Femtosecond Spectroscopy equipment program) and the LIA-CNRS (Laboratoire International Associé) IM-LED. The partial financial support from National Science Center under project 2016/21/B/ST5/02531 is acknowledged. R. Rapacz was supported by FORSZT PhD fellowship.Heralded as one of the key elements for next generation spintronics devices, topological insulators (TIs) are now step by step envisioned as nanodevices like charge-to-spin current conversion or as Dirac fermions based nanometer Schottky diode for example. However, reduced to few nanometers, TIs layers exhibit a profound modification of the electronic structure and the consequence of this quantum size effect on the fundamental carriers and phonons ultrafast dynamics has been poorly investigated so far. Here, thanks to a complete study of a set of high quality molecular beam epitaxy grown nanolayers, we report the existence of a critical thickness of around ~6 nm, below which a spectacular reduction of the carrier relaxation time by a factor of ten is found in comparison to bulk Bi2 Te3 In addition, we also evidence an A1g optical phonon mode softening together with the appearance of a thickness dependence of the photoinduced coherent acoustic phonons signals. This drastic evolution of the carriers and phonons dynamics might be due an important electron-phonon coupling evolution due to the quantum confinement. These properties have to be taken into account for future TIs-based spintronic devices.Centre National de la Recherche Scientifiqu
Coherent acoustic phonons generated by ultrashort terahertz pulses in nanofilms of metals and topological insulators
We report the generation of coherent acoustic phonons in materials with terahertz ultrashort pulses. This
is demonstrated in metals and topological insulators by exciting an acoustic eigenmode in nanometric-sized
thin films. The efficiency of the coupling is quadratic in the terahertz electric field strength within the range
of investigation. Owing to a quantitative comparison between terahertz and near-infrared ultrashort pulse
excitations, we show that the process of acoustic phonon generation by terahertz radiation is mainly driven
by thermoelastic stress. While for the near-infrared light excitation the lattice temperature increase comes
from a rapid energy transfer from the hot carriers to the phonon bath during carrier intraband relaxation, the
thermoelastic stress induced by the terahertz electric field is linked to the scattering of the accelerated electrons
leading to an ultrafast Joule effect
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