204,310 research outputs found
Femtosecond electron and spin dynamics probed by nonlinear optics
A theoretical calculation is performed for the ultrafast spin dynamics in
nickel using an exact diagonalization method. The present theory mainly focuses
on a situation where the intrinsic charge and spin dynamics is probed by the
nonlinear (magneto-)optical responses on the femtosecond time scale, i.e.
optical second harmonic generation (SHG) and the nonlinear magneto-optical Kerr
effect (NOLIMOKE). It is found that the ultrafast charge and spin dynamics are
observable on the time scale of 10 fs. The charge dynamics proceeds ahead of
the spin dynamics, which indicates the existence of a spin memory time. The
fast decay results from the loss of coherence in the initial excited state.
Both the material specific and experimental parameters affect the dynamics. We
find that the increase of exchange interaction mainly accelerates the spin
dynamics rather than the charge dynamics. A reduction of the hopping integrals,
such as present at interfaces, slows down the spin dynamics significantly.
Besides, it is found that a spectrally broad excitation yields the intrinsic
speed limit of the charge (SHG) and spin dynamics (NOLIMOKE) while a narrower
width prolongs the dynamics. This magnetic interface dynamics then should
become accessible to state of art time resolved nonlinear-optical experiments.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures, to appear in Applied. Phys. B 68, (1999
Visible light driven photocatalysis mediated via ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT): An alternative approach to solar activation of titania
Visible light harvesting or utilization through semiconductor photocatalysis is a key technology for solar chemical conversion processes. Although titania nanoparticles are popular as a base material of photocatalysis, the lack of visible light activity needs to be overcome. This mini-review is focused on an uncommon approach to visible light activation of titania: the ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) that takes place between TiO2 nanoparticles and surface adsorbates under visible light irradiation. We discuss a basic concept of photoinduced LMCT and the recent advances in LMCT-mediated visible light photocatalysis which has been applied in environmental remediation and solar energy conversion. Although the LMCT processes have been less investigated and limited in photocatalytic applications compared with other popular visible light activation methods such as impurity doping and dye sensitization, they provide lots of possibilities and flexibility in that a wide variety of organic or inorganic compounds can form surface complexes with TiO2 and introduce a new absorption band in the visible light region. The LMCT complexes may serve as a visible light sensitizer that initiates the photocatalytic conversion of various substrates or the self-degradation of the ligand complexes (usually pollutants) themselves. We summarized and discussed various LMCT photocatalytic systems and their characteristics. The LMCT-mediated activation of titania and other wide bandgap semiconductors has great potential to be developed as a more general method of solar energy utilization in photocatalytic systems. More systematic design and utilization of LMCT complexes on semiconductors are warranted to advance the solar-driven chemical conversion processes.open11144136Ysciescopu
Measurement of surface potential decay of corona-charged polymer films using the pulsed electroacoustic method
In this paper, the pulsed electroacoustic (PEA) technique that allows the determination of space charge in a dielectric material has been used to monitor the electrical potential decay of corona-charged polyethylene films of different thicknesses. To prevent possible disturbance on the surface charge during the PEA measurements, two thin polyethylene films were placed on both sides of the corona-charged sample. Charge profiles measured at different times were used to calculate the potential across the sample. The obtained potential decay was compared with the potential measured using the conventional method. A good agreement has been obtained. More importantly, the charge profile obtained using the PEA technique indicates that bipolar charge injection has taken place
NLTE study of scandium in the Sun
We investigate the formation of neutral and singly ionized scandium lines in
the solar photospheres. The research is aimed derive solar (Sc) values for scandium lines, which will later be used in
differential abundance analyses of metal-poor stars. Extensive statistical
equilibrium calculations were carried out for a model atom, which comprises 92
terms for \ion{Sc}{i} and 79 for \ion{Sc}{ii}. Photoionization cross-sections
are assumed to be hydrogenic. Synthetic line profiles calculated from the level
populations according to the NLTE departure coefficients were compared with the
observed solar spectral atlas. Hyperfine structure (HFS) broadening is taken
into account. The statistical equilibrium of scandium is dominated by a strong
underpopulation of \ion{Sc}{i} caused by missing strong lines. It is nearly
unaffected by the variation in interaction parameters and only marginally
sensitive to the choice of the solar atmospheric model. Abundance
determinations using the ODF model lead to a solar Sc abundance of between
and 3.13, depending on the choice of values.
The long known difference between photospheric and meteoritic scandium
abundances is confirmed for the experimental -values.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, A&A accepte
Kilohertz QPO Frequency and Flux Decrease in AQL X-1 and Effect of Soft X-ray Spectral Components
We report on an RXTE/PCA observation of Aql X-1 during its outburst in March
1997 in which, immediately following a Type-I burst, the broad-band 2-10 keV
flux decreased by about 10% and the kilohertz QPO frequency decreased from
813+-3 Hz to 776+-4 Hz. This change in kHz QPO frequency is much larger than
expected from a simple extrapolation of a frequency-flux correlation
established using data before the burst. Meanwhile a very low frequency noise
(VLFN) component in the broad-band FFT power spectra with a fractional
root-mean-square (rms) amplitude of 1.2% before the burst ceased to exist after
the burst. All these changes were accompanied by a change in the energy
spectral shape. If we characterize the energy spectra with a model composed of
two blackbody (BB) components and a power law component, almost all the
decrease in flux was in the two BB components. We attribute the two BB
components to the contributions from a region very near the neutron star or
even the neutron star itself and from the accretion disk, respectively.Comment: 12 pages with 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters,
typos corrected and references update
NMR Probing Spin Excitations in the Ring-Like Structure of a Two-Subband System
Resistively detected nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is observed inside the
ring-like structure, with a quantized Hall conductance of 6e^2/h, in the phase
diagram of a two subband electron system. The NMR signal persists up to 400 mK
and is absent in other states with the same quantized Hall conductance. The
nuclear spin-lattice relaxation time, T1, is found to decrease rapidly towards
the ring center. These observations are consistent with the assertion of the
ring-like region being a ferromagnetic state that is accompanied by collective
spin excitations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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