8,918 research outputs found

    2D materials coated plasmonic structures for SERS applications

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    Two-dimensional (2D) materials, such as graphene and hexagonal boron nitride, are new kind of materials that can serve as substrates for surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). When combined with traditional metallic plasmonic structures, the hybrid 2D materials/metal SERS platform brings extra benefits, including higher SERS enhancement factors, oxidation protection of metal surface, and protection of molecules from photo-induced damage. This perspective gives an overview of recent progress in 2D materials coated plasmonic structure in SERS application. This paper focuses on the fabrication of the hybrid 2D materials/metal SERS platform and their applications for Raman enhancement.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1707.0546

    Spatial damping of propagating sausage waves in coronal cylinders

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    Sausage modes are important in coronal seismology. Spatially damped propagating sausage waves were recently observed in the solar atmosphere. We examine how wave leakage influences the spatial damping of sausage waves propagating along coronal structures modeled by a cylindrical density enhancement embedded in a uniform magnetic field. Working in the framework of cold magnetohydrodynamics, we solve the dispersion relation (DR) governing sausage waves for complex-valued longitudinal wavenumber kk at given real angular frequencies ω\omega. For validation purposes, we also provide analytical approximations to the DR in the low-frequency limit and in the vicinity of ωc\omega_{\rm c}, the critical angular frequency separating trapped from leaky waves. In contrast to the standing case, propagating sausage waves are allowed for ω\omega much lower than ωc\omega_{\rm c}. However, while able to direct their energy upwards, these low-frequency waves are subject to substantial spatial attenuation. The spatial damping length shows little dependence on the density contrast between the cylinder and its surroundings, and depends only weakly on frequency. This spatial damping length is of the order of the cylinder radius for ω≲1.5vAi/a\omega \lesssim 1.5 v_{\rm Ai}/a, where aa and vAiv_{\rm Ai} are the cylinder radius and the Alfv\'en speed in the cylinder, respectively. We conclude that if a coronal cylinder is perturbed by symmetric boundary drivers (e.g., granular motions) with a broadband spectrum, wave leakage efficiently filters out the low-frequency components.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysic
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