187 research outputs found

    Optical excitation and external photoluminescence quantum efficiency of Eu3+ in GaN

    Get PDF
    We investigate photoluminescence of Eu-related emission in a GaN host consisting of thin layers grown by organometallic vapor-phase epitaxy. By comparing it with a reference sample of Eu-doped Y2O3, we find that the fraction of Eu3+ ions that can emit light upon optical excitation is of the order of 1%. We also measure the quantum yield of the Eu-related photoluminescence and find this to reach (similar to 10%) and (similar to 3%) under continuous wave and pulsed excitation, respectively.Stichting voor de Technologische Wetenschappen (STW); Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [19GS1209, 24226009]; Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japaninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Provenance-enhanced Root Cause Analysis for Jupyter Notebooks

    Get PDF
    With Jupyter notebooks becoming more commonly used within scientific research, more Jupyter notebook-based use cases have evolved to be distributed. This trend makes it more challenging to analyze anomalies and debug notebooks. Provenance data is an ideal option that can create more context around anomalies and make it easier to find the root cause of the anomaly. However, provenance rarely gets investigated in the context of distributed Jupyter notebooks. In this paper, we propose a framework that integrates two data types, provenance and detected performance anomalies based on performance data. We use the combined information to visually show the enduser the provenance at the time of the anomaly and the root cause of the anomaly. We build and evaluate the framework with a notebook extended with anomaly-generating functions. The generated anomalies were automatically detected, and the combined information of provenance and anomaly creates a valuable subset of the provenance data around the time an anomaly occurred. Our experiments create a clear and confined context for the anomaly and enable the framework to find the root cause of performance anomalies in Jupyter notebooks.</p

    High NA diffractive array illuminators and application in a multi-spot scanning microscope

    Get PDF
    Array illuminators generating spots with high NA at high efficiency are presented. They are designed via application of high-NA scalar optics methods, and implemented as periodic binary phase structures. These array illuminators are used in a multi-spot scanning microscope for scanning large sample areas at high resolution with a relatively high resolution

    Nanocomposite field effect transistors based on zinc oxide/polymer blends

    Get PDF
    The authors have examined the field effect behavior of nanocomposite field effect transistors containing ZnO (zinc oxide) tetrapods or nanocrystals dispersed in a polymer matrix of poly[2-methoxy,5-(2-ethylhexyloxy)-1,4- phenylenevinylene] (MEH-PPV). The electrical characteristics of ZnO tetrapods/MEH-PPV composite devices exhibit an increase in hole mobility up to three orders of magnitude higher than the polymer MEH-PPV device. © 2007 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio

    Momentum of an electromagnetic wave in dielectric media

    Get PDF
    Almost a hundred years ago, two different expressions were proposed for the energy--momentum tensor of an electromagnetic wave in a dielectric. Minkowski's tensor predicted an increase in the linear momentum of the wave on entering a dielectric medium, whereas Abraham's tensor predicted its decrease. Theoretical arguments were advanced in favour of both sides, and experiments proved incapable of distinguishing between the two. Yet more forms were proposed, each with their advocates who considered the form that they were proposing to be the one true tensor. This paper reviews the debate and its eventual conclusion: that no electromagnetic wave energy--momentum tensor is complete on its own. When the appropriate accompanying energy--momentum tensor for the material medium is also considered, experimental predictions of all the various proposed tensors will always be the same, and the preferred form is therefore effectively a matter of personal choice.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX 4. Removed erroneous factor of mu/mu_0 from Eq.(44

    Electronic transport in field-effect transistors of sexithiophene

    Get PDF
    The electronic conduction of thin-film field-effect-transistors (FETs) of sexithiophene was studied. In most cases the transfer curves deviate from standard FET theory; they are not linear, but follow a power law instead. These results are compared to conduction models of "variable-range hopping" and "multi-trap-and-release". The accompanying IV curves follow a Poole-Frenkel (exponential) dependence on the drain voltage. The results are explained assuming a huge density of traps. Below 200 K, the activation energy for conduction was found to be ca. 0.17 eV. The activation energies of the mobility follow the Meyer-Neldel rule. A sharp transition is seen in the behavior of the devices at around 200 K. The difference in behavior of a micro-FET and a submicron FET is shown. (C) 2004 American Institute of Physics

    Transport properties of copper phthalocyanine based organic electronic devices

    Get PDF
    Ambipolar charge carrier transport in Copper phthalocyanine (CuPc) is studied experimentally in field-effect transistors and metal-insulator-semiconductor diodes at various temperatures. The electronic structure and the transport properties of CuPc attached to leads are calculated using density functional theory and scattering theory at the non-equilibrium Green's function level. We discuss, in particular, the electronic structure of CuPc molecules attached to gold chains in different geometries to mimic the different experimental setups. The combined experimental and theoretical analysis explains the dependence of the mobilityand the transmission coefficient on the charge carrier type (electrons or holes) and on the contact geometry. We demonstrate the correspondence between our experimental results on thick films and our theoretical studies of single molecule contacts. Preliminary results for fluorinated CuPc are discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures; to be published in Eur. Phys. J. Special Topic

    Semantics in active surveillance for men with localized prostate cancer - results of a modified Delphi consensus procedure

    Get PDF
    Active surveillance (AS) is broadly described as a management option for men with low-risk prostate cancer, but semantic heterogeneity exists in both the literature and in guidelines. To address this issue, a panel of leading prostate cancer specialists in the field of AS participated in a consensus-forming project using a modified Delphi method to reach international consensus on definitions of terms related to this management option. An iterative three-round sequence of online questionnaires designed to address 61 individual items was completed by each panel member. Consensus was considered to be reached if >= 70% of the experts agreed on a definition. To facilitate a common understanding among all experts involved and resolve potential ambiguities, a face-to-face consensus meeting was held between Delphi survey rounds two and three. Convenience sampling was used to construct the panel of experts. In total, 12 experts from Australia, France, Finland, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan, the UK, Canada and the USA participated. By the end of the Delphi process, formal consensus was achieved for 100% (n = 61) of the terms and a glossary was then developed. Agreement between international experts has been reached on relevant terms and subsequent definitions regarding AS for patients with localized prostate cancer. This standard terminology could support multidisciplinary communication, reduce the extent of variations in clinical practice and optimize clinical decision making.Peer reviewe

    Removing orientation-induced localization biases in single-molecule microscopy using a broadband metasurface mask

    Get PDF
    Nanoscale localization of single molecules is a crucial function in several advanced microscopy techniques, including single-molecule tracking and wide-field super-resolution imaging. Until now, a central consideration of such techniques is how to optimize the precision of molecular localization. However, as these methods continue to push towards the nanometre size scale, an increasingly important concern is the localization accuracy. In particular, single fluorescent molecules emit with an anisotropic radiation pattern of an oscillating electric dipole, which can cause significant localization biases using common estimators. Here we present the theory and experimental demonstration of a solution to this problem based on azimuthal filtering in the Fourier plane of the microscope. We do so using a high-efficiency dielectric metasurface polarization/phase device composed of nanoposts with subwavelength spacing. The method is demonstrated both on fluorophores embedded in a polymer matrix and in dL5 protein complexes that bind malachite green

    Engineering Schottky contacts in open-air fabricated heterojunction solar cells to enable high performance and ohmic charge transport.

    Get PDF
    The efficiencies of open-air processed Cu2O/Zn(1-x)Mg(x)O heterojunction solar cells are doubled by reducing the effect of the Schottky barrier between Zn(1-x)Mg(x)O and the indium tin oxide (ITO) top contact. By depositing Zn(1-x)Mg(x)O with a long band-tail, charge flows through the Zn(1-x)Mg(x)O/ITO Schottky barrier without rectification by hopping between the sub-bandgap states. High current densities are obtained by controlling the Zn(1-x)Mg(x)O thickness to ensure that the Schottky barrier is spatially removed from the p-n junction, allowing the full built-in potential to form, in addition to taking advantage of the increased electrical conductivity of the Zn(1-x)Mg(x)O films with increasing thickness. This work therefore shows that the Zn(1-x)Mg(x)O window layer sub-bandgap state density and thickness are critical parameters that can be engineered to minimize the effect of Schottky barriers on device performance. More generally, these findings show how to improve the performance of other photovoltaic system reliant on transparent top contacts, e.g., CZTS and CIGS.This work was supported by EPSRC of the UK (award number RG3717)This is the accepted manuscript. The final version is available from ACS at http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/am5058663
    • …
    corecore