24 research outputs found

    High-frequency conductivity of optically excited charge carriers in hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon investigated by spectroscopic femtosecond pump-probe reflectivity measurements

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    We report an investigation into the high-frequency conductivity of optically excited charge carriers far from equilibrium with the lattice. The investigated samples consist of hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon films grown on a thin film of silicon oxide on top of a silicon substrate. For the investigation, we used an optical femtosecond pump-probe setup to measure the reflectance change of a probe beam. The pump beam ranged between 580 and 820nm, whereas the probe wavelength spanned 770 to 810nm. The pump fluence was fixed at 0.6mJ/cm2. We show that at a fixed delay time of 300fs, the conductivity of the excited electron-hole plasma is described well by a classical conductivity model of a hot charge carrier gas found at Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, while Fermi-Dirac statics is not suitable. This is corroborated by values retrieved from pump-probe reflectance measurements of the conductivity and its dependence on the excitation wavelength and carrier temperature. The conductivity decreases monotonically as a function of the excitation wavelength, as expected for a nondegenerate charge carrier gas

    Differentielle Kapazität der elektrolytischen Doppelschicht in Anwesenheit einiger Purin- und Pyrimidinderivate

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    Adsorption of peptide nucleic acid and DNA decamers at electrically charged surfaces.

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    Adsorption behavior of peptide nucleic acid (PNA) and DNA decamers (GTAGATCACT and the complementary sequence) on a mercury surface was studied by means of AC impedance measurements at a hanging mercury drop electrode. The nucleic acid was first attached to the electrode by adsorption from a 5-microliter drop of PNA (or DNA) solution, and the electrode with the adsorbed nucleic acid layer was then washed and immersed in the blank background electrolyte where the differential capacity C of the electrode double layer was measured as a function of the applied potential E. It was found that the adsorption behavior of the PNA with an electrically neutral backbone differs greatly from that of the DNA (with a negatively charged backbone), whereas the DNA-PNA hybrid shows intermediate behavior. At higher surface coverage PNA molecules associate at the surface, and the minimum value of C is shifted to negative potentials because of intermolecular interactions of PNA at the surface. Prolonged exposure of PNA to highly negative potentials does not result in PNA desorption, whereas almost all of the DNA is removed from the surface at these potentials. Adsorption of PNA decreases with increasing NaCl concentration in the range from 0 to 50 mM NaCl, in contrast to DNA, the adsorption of which increases under the same conditions

    Synthetic oligonucleotides: AFM characterisation and electroanalytical studies

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    One of the most important steps in designing more sensitive and stable DNA based biosensors is the immobilisation procedure of the nucleic acid probes on the transducer surface, while maintaining their conformational flexibility. MAC Mode AFM images in air demonstrated that the oligonucleotide sequences adsorb spontaneously on the electrode surface, showing the existence of pores in the adsorbed layer that reveal big parts of the electrode surface, which enables non-specific adsorption of other molecules on the uncovered areas. The electrostatic immobilisation onto a glassy carbon electrode followed by hybridisation with a complementary sequence and control with a non-complementary sequence was studied using differential pulse voltammetry and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. Changes in the oxidation currents of guanosine and adenosine were observed after hybridisation events as well as after control experiments. Modification of the double layer capacitance that took place after hybridisation or control experiments showed that non-specific adsorption of complementary or non-complementary sequences occur allowing the formation of a mixed multilayer.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6W72-4GP1VK1-1/1/c44e3d2a4c722d5cec59a4d09d0a744

    POLAROGRAPHY OF BIOLOGICAL PURINES AND PYRIMIDINES

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74475/1/j.1749-6632.1969.tb56218.x.pd
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