1,457 research outputs found
Prediction of infrared light emission from pi-conjugated polymers: a diagrammatic exciton basis valence bond theory
There is currently a great need for solid state lasers that emit in the
infrared, as this is the operating wavelength regime for applications in
telecommunications. Existing --conjugated polymers all emit in the visible
or ultraviolet, and whether or not --conjugated polymers that emit in the
infrared can be designed is an interesting challenge. On the one hand, the
excited state ordering in trans-polyacetylene, the --conjugated polymer
with relatively small optical gap, is not conducive to light emission because
of electron-electron interaction effects. On the other hand, excited state
ordering opposite to that in trans-polyacetylene is usually obtained by
chemical modification that increases the effective bond-alternation, which in
turn increases the optical gap. We develop a theory of electron correlation
effects in a model -conjugated polymer that is obtained by replacing the
hydrogen atoms of trans-polyacetylene with transverse conjugated groups, and
show that the effective on-site correlation in this system is smaller than the
bare correlation in the unsubstituted system. An optical gap in the infrared as
well as excited state ordering conducive to light emission is thereby predicted
upon similar structural modifications.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, 1 tabl
Development policy planning in Ghana: The case of health care provision
This paper examines the historical development of health policy in
Ghana within the framework of financial, geographical accessibility and the
availability of health care. Historically, health policy has been
urban biased, and largely focused on financial accessibility. Even Nkrumah's
free health care policy could not adequately address the problem of
inadequate health professionals and facilities in the rural areas.The study also
established that poverty is also largely a rural phenomenon.The poor benefit
less from the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS). This situation
makes the NHIS lack social equity, the very reason for its being. We
recommend that government should expand health facilities in the rural areas,
and introduce attractive incentive packages to attract and retain health
professionals in such areas. There is an urgent need for rigorous criteria
to be developed by the NHIS to identify the very poor for health insurance
premium exemptions
Correlated theory of triplet photoinduced absorption in phenylene-vinylene chains
In this paper we present results of large-scale correlated calculations of
triplet photoinduced absorption (PA) spectrum of oligomers of
poly-(para)phenylenevinylene (PPV) containing up to five phenyl rings. In
particular, the high-energy features in the triplet PA spectrum of oligo-PPVs
are the focus of this study, which, so far, have not been investigated
theoretically, or experimentally. The calculations were performed using the
Pariser-Parr-Pople (PPP) model Hamiltonian, and many-body effects were taken
into account by means of multi-reference singles-doubles configuration
interaction procedure (MRSDCI), without neglecting any molecular orbitals. The
computed triplet PA spectrum of oligo-PPVs exhibits rich structure consisting
of alternating peaks of high and low intensities. The predicted higher energy
features of the triplet spectrum can be tested in future experiments.
Additionally, theoretical estimates of exciton binding energy are also
presented.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev.
Stellar ArAr reactions and their effect on light neutron-rich nuclide synthesis
The ArAr ( = 35 d) and
ArAr (269 y) reactions were studied for the first time
with a quasi-Maxwellian ( keV) neutron flux for Maxwellian Average
Cross Section (MACS) measurements at stellar energies. Gas samples were
irradiated at the high-intensity Soreq applied research accelerator
facility-liquid-lithium target neutron source and the Ar/Ar and
Ar/Ar ratios in the activated samples were determined by
accelerator mass spectrometry at the ATLAS facility (Argonne National
Laboratory). The Ar activity was also measured by low-level counting at
the University of Bern. Experimental MACS of Ar and Ar, corrected
to the standard 30 keV thermal energy, are 1.9(3) mb and 1.3(2) mb,
respectively, differing from the theoretical and evaluated values published to
date by up to an order of magnitude. The neutron capture cross sections of
Ar are relevant to the stellar nucleosynthesis of light neutron-rich
nuclides; the two experimental values are shown to affect the calculated mass
fraction of nuclides in the region A=36-48 during the weak -process. The new
production cross sections have implications also for the use of Ar and
Ar as environmental tracers in the atmosphere and hydrosphere.Comment: 18 pages + Supp. Mat. (13 pages) Accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev. Let
Size dependent tunneling and optical spectroscopy of CdSe quantum rods
Photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy and scanning tunneling spectroscopy
are used to study the electronic states in CdSe quantum rods that manifest a
transition from a zero dimensional to a one dimensional quantum confined
structure. Both optical and tunneling spectra show that the level structure
depends primarily on the rod diameter and not on length. With increasing
diameter, the band-gap and the excited state level spacings shift to the red.
The level structure was assigned using a multi-band effective-mass model,
showing a similar dependence on rod dimensions.Comment: Accepted to PRL (nearly final version). 4 pages in revtex, 4 figure
Relationship between photonic band structure and emission characteristics of a polymer distributed feedback laser
G. A. Turnbull, P. Andrew, M. J. Jory, William L. Barnes, and I. D. W. Samuel, Physical Review B, Vol. 64, article 125122 (2001). "Copyright © 2001 by the American Physical Society."We present an experimental study of the emission characteristics and photonic band structure of a distributed feedback polymer laser, based on the material poly[2-methoxy-5-(2′-ethylhexyloxy)-1,4-phenylene vinylene]. We use measurements of the photonic band dispersion to explain how the substrate microstructure modifies both spontaneous and stimulated emission. The lasing structure exhibits a one-dimensional photonic band gap around 610 nm, with lasing occurring at one of the two associated band edges. The band edge (frequency) selection mechanism is found to be a difference in the level of output coupling of the modes associated with the two band edges. This is a feature of the second-order distributed feedback mechanism we have employed and is clearly evident in the measured photonic band structur
Photonic mode dispersion of a two-dimensional distributed feedback polymer laser
G. A. Turnbull, P. Andrew, William L. Barnes, and I. D. W. Samuel, Physical Review B, Vol. 67, article 165107 (2003). "Copyright © 2003 by the American Physical Society."We present an analysis of the photonic mode dispersion of a two-dimensional (2D) distributed feedback polymer laser based on the conjugated polymer poly[2-methoxy-5-(2′-ethylhexyloxy)-1,4-phenylene vinylene]. We use a combination of a simple model, together with experimental measurements of the photonic mode dispersion in transmission and emission, to explain the operating characteristics of the laser. The laser was found to oscillate at 636 nm on one edge of a photonic stop band in the photonic dispersion. A 2D coupling of modes traveling perpendicular to the orthogonal gratings was found to lead to a low divergence laser emission normal to the waveguide. At pump energies well above the oscillation threshold for this mode, a divergent, cross-shaped far-field emission was observed, resulting from a distributed feedback occurring over a wide range of wave vectors in one band of the photonic dispersion
Sustainable deltas in the Anthropocene
What are the possible trajectories of delta development over the coming decades? Trajectories will be determined by the interactions of biophysical trends such as changing sediment supplies, subsidence due to compaction of sediment and climate change, along with key socio-economic trends of migration and urbanisation, agricultural intensification, demographic transition, economic growth and structural change of the economy. Knowledge and understanding of plausible trajectories can inform management choices for deltas in the Anthropocene, including new policy perspectives and innovative adaptation. The emergence of visionary delta management plans in some large deltas, such as the Bangladesh Delta Plan 2100, is an important and necessary component. This chapter synthesises the state of knowledge and highlights key elements of science that will inform decisions on future management of deltas.<br/
Isoperimetric Inequalities in Simplicial Complexes
In graph theory there are intimate connections between the expansion
properties of a graph and the spectrum of its Laplacian. In this paper we
define a notion of combinatorial expansion for simplicial complexes of general
dimension, and prove that similar connections exist between the combinatorial
expansion of a complex, and the spectrum of the high dimensional Laplacian
defined by Eckmann. In particular, we present a Cheeger-type inequality, and a
high-dimensional Expander Mixing Lemma. As a corollary, using the work of Pach,
we obtain a connection between spectral properties of complexes and Gromov's
notion of geometric overlap. Using the work of Gunder and Wagner, we give an
estimate for the combinatorial expansion and geometric overlap of random
Linial-Meshulam complexes
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