389 research outputs found
Probing the electron-phonon coupling in ozone-doped graphene by Raman spectroscopy
We have investigated the effects of ozone treatment on graphene by Raman
scattering. Sequential ozone short-exposure cycles resulted in increasing the
doping levels as inferred from the blue shift of the 2 and peak
frequencies, without introducing significant disorder. The two-phonon 2 and
2 Raman peak intensities show a significant decrease, while, on the
contrary, the one-phonon G Raman peak intensity remains constant for the whole
exposure process. The former reflects the dynamics of the photoexcited
electrons (holes) and, specifically, the increase of the electron-electron
scattering rate with doping. From the ratio of 2 to 2 intensities, which
remains constant with doping, we could extract the ratio of electron-phonon
coupling parameters. This ratio is found independent on the number of layers up
to ten layers. Moreover, the rate of decrease of 2 and 2 intensities
with doping was found to slowdown inversely proportional to the number of
graphene layers, revealing the increase of the electron-electron collision
probability
Mechanical oscillations in lasing microspheres
We investigate the feasibility of activating coherent mechanical oscillations
in lasing microspheres by modulating the laser emission at a mechanical
eigenfrequency. To this aim, 1.5% Nd3+:Barium-Titanium-Silicate microspheres
with diameters around 50 {\mu}m were used as high quality factor (Q>10^6)
whispering gallery mode lasing cavities. We have implemented a pump-and-probe
technique in which the pump laser used to excite the Nd3+ ions is focused on a
single microsphere with a microscope objective and a probe laser excites a
specific optical mode with the evanescent field of a tapered fibre. The studied
microspheres show monomode and multi-mode lasing action, which can be modulated
in the best case up to 10 MHz. We have optically transduced thermally-activated
mechanical eigenmodes appearing in the 50-70 MHz range, the frequency of which
decreases with increasing the size of the microspheres. In a pump-and-probe
configuration we observed modulation of the probe signal up to the maximum pump
modulation frequency of our experimental setup, i.e., 20 MHz. This modulation
decreases with frequency and is unrelated to lasing emission, pump scattering
or thermal effects. We associate this effect to free-carrier-dispersion induced
by multiphoton pump light absorption. On the other hand, we conclude that, in
our current experimental conditions, it was not possible to resonantly excite
the mechanical modes. Finally, we discuss on how to overcome these limitations
by increasing the modulation frequency of the lasing emission and decreasing
the frequency of the mechanical eigenmodes displaying a strong degree of
optomechanical coupling.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Electron beam induced electronic transport in alkyl amine-intercalated VOx nanotubes
The electron beam induced electronic transport in primary alkyl amine-intercalated V2O5 nanotubes is investigated where the organic amine molecules are employed as molecular conductive wires to an aminosilanized substrate surface and contacted to Au interdigitated electrode contacts. The results demonstrate that the high conductivity of the nanotubes is related to the non-resonant tunnelling through the amine molecules and a reduced polaron hopping conduction through the vanadium oxide itself. Both nanotube networks and individual nanotubes exhibit similarly high conductivities where the minority carrier transport is bias dependent and nanotube diameter invariant
(2+1)-dimensional photonic crystals from Langmuir-Blodgett colloidal multilayers
Angle-resolved transmission spectra of multilayers of two-dimensional colloidal crystals prepared by the Langmuir-Blodgett technique have been studied. In contrast to the light diffraction in three-dimensional colloidal crystals, optical spectra revealed only very weak correlation between layers in the Langmuir-Blodgett multilayers. Two reasons for the observed transmission minima have been identified: the diffraction at a stack of layers and the scattering of the incident beam by guided modes of the two-dimensional colloidal crystals. (c) 2006 American Institute of Physics. (DOI:10.1063/1.2234568
A novel high resolution contactless technique for thermal field mapping and thermal conductivity determination: Two-Laser Raman Thermometry
We present a novel high resolution contactless technique for thermal
conductivity determination and thermal field mapping based on creating a
thermal distribution of phonons using a heating laser, while a second laser
probes the local temperature through the spectral position of a Raman active
mode. The spatial resolution can be as small as nm, whereas its
temperature accuracy is K. We validate this technique investigating the
thermal properties of three free-standing single crystalline Si membranes with
thickness of 250, 1000, and 2000 nm. We show that for 2-dimensional materials
such as free-standing membranes or thin films, and for small temperature
gradients, the thermal field decays as in the diffusive
limit. The case of large temperature gradients within the membranes leads to an
exponential decay of the thermal field, . The
results demonstrate the full potential of this new contactless method for
quantitative determination of thermal properties. The range of materials to
which this method is applicable reaches far beyond the here demonstrated case
of Si, as the only requirement is the presence of a Raman active mode
Tensile strain mapping in flat germanium membranes
Under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license to their work.-- et al.Scanning X-ray micro-diffraction has been used as a non-destructive probe of the local crystalline quality of a thin suspended germanium (Ge) membrane. A series of reciprocal space maps were obtained with ~4 μm spatial resolution, from which detailed information on the strain distribution, thickness, and crystalline tilt of the membrane was obtained. We are able to detect a systematic strain variation across the membranes, but show that this is negligible in the context of using the membranes as platforms for further growth. In addition, we show evidence that the interface and surface quality is improved by suspending the Ge.This work was carried out under the RCUK Basic Technology Programme supported by research Grant Nos. EP/F040784/1, EP/J001074/1, EP/L007010/1, by the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under Grant Agreement NANOFUNCTION No. 257375, by TAPHOR (MAT2012–31392), and by FP7 project MERGING (Grant No. 309150). This research used equipment funded by AWM and ERDF through the Science City Energy Efficiency project.Peer Reviewe
Defect analysis and alignment quantification of line arrays prepared by directed self-assembly of a block copolymer
Trabajo presentado al XXVIII Metrology, Inspection, and Process Control for Microlithography, celebrado en California (US) en 2014.Different linear patterns obtained from the directed self-assembly of the block copolymer (BCP) polystyrene-b-polyethylene oxide (PS-b-PEO) were analysed and compared. The hexagonal phase PS-b-PEO in a thin film exhibits linear pattern morphology, by conventional solvent annealing in an atmosphere saturated in chloroform. The surface energy of the silicon substrates was varied using surface functionalization of a self-assembly monolayer (SAM) and a polymer brush, chosen to investigate the influence of the surface energy on the self-assembly of the BCP. The linear patterns formed were analyzed with innovative image analysis software specifically developed in our laboratory to identify elements and defects of line arrays from block copolymer self-assembly. The technique starts by performing dimensional metrology to calculate the pitch size and estimate the linewidth of the lines. Secondly, the methodology allows identification and quantification of typical defects observable in BCP systems, such as turning points, disclination or branching points, break or lone points and end points. The defect density and the quantification of the alignment were estimated using our technique. The methodology presented here represents a step forward in dimensional metrology and defect analysis of BCP DSA systems and can be readily used to analyze other lithographic or non-lithographic patterns.The research leading to these results received funding from the European Union FP7 under the project LAMAND (grant agreement n° 245565), the Spanish MICIN under the project TAPHOR (contract nr. MAT2012-31392) and the Science Foundation Ireland under grant number 09/SIRG/I1615.Peer Reviewe
Lifetimes of Confined Acoustic Phonons in Ultra-Thin Silicon Membranes
We study the relaxation of coherent acoustic phonon modes with frequencies up
to 500 GHz in ultra-thin free-standing silicon membranes. Using an ultrafast
pump-probe technique of asynchronous optical sampling, we observe that the
decay time of the first-order dilatational mode decreases significantly from
\sim 4.7 ns to 5 ps with decreasing membrane thickness from \sim 194 to 8 nm.
The experimental results are compared with theories considering both intrinsic
phonon-phonon interactions and extrinsic surface roughness scattering including
a wavelength-dependent specularity. Our results provide insight to understand
some of the limits of nanomechanical resonators and thermal transport in
nanostructures
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