184 research outputs found
A scanning probe-based pick-and-place procedure for assembly of integrated quantum optical hybrid devices
Integrated quantum optical hybrid devices consist of fundamental constituents
such as single emitters and tailored photonic nanostructures. A reliable
fabrication method requires the controlled deposition of active nanoparticles
on arbitrary nanostructures with highest precision. Here, we describe an easily
adaptable technique that employs picking and placing of nanoparticles with an
atomic force microscope combined with a confocal setup. In this way, both the
topography and the optical response can be monitored simultaneously before and
after the assembly. The technique can be applied to arbitrary particles. Here,
we focus on nanodiamonds containing single nitrogen vacancy centers, which are
particularly interesting for quantum optical experiments on the single photon
and single emitter level.Comment: The following article has been submitted to Review of Scientific
Instruments. After it is published, it will be found at http://rsi.aip.org
Mode-coupling theory for structural and conformational dynamics of polymer melts
A mode-coupling theory for dense polymeric systems is developed which
unifyingly incorporates the segmental cage effect relevant for structural
slowing down and polymer chain conformational degrees of freedom. An ideal
glass transition of polymer melts is predicted which becomes molecular-weight
independent for large molecules. The theory provides a microscopic
justification for the use of the Rouse theory in polymer melts, and the results
for Rouse-mode correlators and mean-squared displacements are in good agreement
with computer simulation results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Phys. Rev. Lett. in pres
Publisher’s Note: “Polymer-specific effects of bulk relaxation and stringlike correlated motion in the dynamics of a supercooled polymer melt” [J. Chem. Phys. 119, 5290 (2003)]
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70462/2/JCPSA6-120-14-6798-1.pd
Polymer-specific effects of bulk relaxation and stringlike correlated motion in the dynamics of a supercooled polymer melt
We analyze dynamical heterogeneities in a simulated “bead-spring” model of a nonentangled, supercooled polymer melt. We explore the importance of chain connectivity on the spatially heterogeneous motion of the monomers. We find that when monomers move, they tend to follow each other in one-dimensional paths, forming strings as previously reported in atomic liquids and colloidal suspensions. The mean string length is largest at a time close to the peak time of the mean cluster size of mobile monomers. This maximum string length increases, roughly in an exponential fashion, on cooling toward the critical temperature TMCTTMCT of the mode-coupling theory, but generally remains small, although large strings involving ten or more monomers are observed. An important contribution to this replacement comes from directly bonded neighbors in the chain. However, mobility is not concentrated along the backbone of the chains. Thus, a relaxation mechanism in which neighboring mobile monomers along the chain move predominantly along the backbone of the chains, seems unlikely for the system studied. © 2003 American Institute of Physics.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/69784/2/JCPSA6-119-10-5290-1.pd
Efficient single-photon emission from electrically driven InP quantum dots epitaxially grown on Si(001)
The heteroepitaxy of III-V semiconductors on silicon is a promising approach
for making silicon a photonic platform for on-chip optical interconnects and
quantum optical applications. Monolithic integration of both material systems
is a long-time challenge, since different material properties lead to high
defect densities in the epitaxial layers. In recent years, nanostructures
however have shown to be suitable for successfully realising light emitters on
silicon, taking advantage of their geometry. Facet edges and sidewalls can
minimise or eliminate the formation of dislocations, and due to the reduced
contact area, nanostructures are little affected by dislocation networks. Here
we demonstrate the potential of indium phosphide quantum dots as efficient
light emitters on CMOS-compatible silicon substrates, with luminescence
characteristics comparable to mature devices realised on III-V substrates. For
the first time, electrically driven single-photon emission on silicon is
presented, meeting the wavelength range of silicon avalanche photo diodes'
highest detection efficiency
Structural and conformational dynamics of supercooled polymer melts: Insights from first-principles theory and simulations
We report on quantitative comparisons between simulation results of a
bead-spring model and mode-coupling theory calculations for the structural and
conformational dynamics of a supercooled, unentangled polymer melt. We find
semiquantitative agreement between simulation and theory, except for processes
that occur on intermediate length scales between the compressibility plateau
and the amorphous halo of the static structure factor. Our results suggest that
the onset of slow relaxation in a glass-forming melt can be described in terms
of monomer-caging supplemented by chain connectivity. Furthermore, a unified
atomistic description of glassy arrest and of conformational fluctuations that
(asymptotically) follow the Rouse model, emerges from our theory.Comment: 54 pages, 10 figure
Simulation study of Non-ergodicity Transitions: Gelation in Colloidal Systems with Short Range Attractions
Computer simulations were used to study the gel transition occurring in
colloidal systems with short range attractions. A colloid-polymer mixture was
modelled and the results were compared with mode coupling theory expectations
and with the results for other systems (hard spheres and Lennard Jones). The
self-intermediate scattering function and the mean squared displacement were
used as the main dynamical quantities. Two different colloid packing fractions
have been studied. For the lower packing fraction, -scaling holds and
the wave-vector analysis of the correlation function shows that gelation is a
regular non-ergodicity transition within MCT. The leading mechanism for this
novel non-ergodicity transition is identified as bond formation caused by the
short range attraction. The time scale and diffusion coefficient also show
qualitatively the expected behaviour, although different exponents are found
for the power-law divergences of these two quantities. The non-Gaussian
parameter was also studied and very large correction to Gaussian behaviour
found. The system with higher colloid packing fraction shows indications of a
nearby high-order singularity, causing -scaling to fail, but the
general expectations for non-ergodicity transitions still hold.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figure
Conformational and Structural Relaxations of Poly(ethylene oxide) and Poly(propylene oxide) Melts: Molecular Dynamics Study of Spatial Heterogeneity, Cooperativity, and Correlated Forward-Backward Motion
Performing molecular dynamics simulations for all-atom models, we
characterize the conformational and structural relaxations of poly(ethylene
oxide) and poly(propylene oxide) melts. The temperature dependence of these
relaxation processes deviates from an Arrhenius law for both polymers. We
demonstrate that mode-coupling theory captures some aspects of the glassy
slowdown, but it does not enable a complete explanation of the dynamical
behavior. When the temperature is decreased, spatially heterogeneous and
cooperative translational dynamics are found to become more important for the
structural relaxation. Moreover, the transitions between the conformational
states cease to obey Poisson statistics. In particular, we show that, at
sufficiently low temperatures, correlated forward-backward motion is an
important aspect of the conformational relaxation, leading to strongly
nonexponential distributions for the waiting times of the dihedrals in the
various conformational statesComment: 13 pages, 13 figure
Path integral for half-binding potentials as quantum mechanical analog for black hole partition functions
The semi-classical approximation to black hole partition functions is not
well-defined, because the classical action is unbounded and the first variation
of the uncorrected action does not vanish for all variations preserving the
boundary conditions. Both problems can be solved by adding a Hamilton-Jacobi
counterterm. I show that the same problem and solution arises in quantum
mechanics for half-binding potentials.Comment: 6 pages, proceedings contribution to "Path integrals - New Trends and
Perspectives", Dresden, September 200
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