1,243 research outputs found
Electrically Tunable Excitonic Light Emitting Diodes based on Monolayer WSe2 p-n Junctions
Light-emitting diodes are of importance for lighting, displays, optical
interconnects, logic and sensors. Hence the development of new systems that
allow improvements in their efficiency, spectral properties, compactness and
integrability could have significant ramifications. Monolayer transition metal
dichalcogenides have recently emerged as interesting candidates for
optoelectronic applications due to their unique optical properties.
Electroluminescence has already been observed from monolayer MoS2 devices.
However, the electroluminescence efficiency was low and the linewidth broad due
both to the poor optical quality of MoS2 and to ineffective contacts. Here, we
report electroluminescence from lateral p-n junctions in monolayer WSe2 induced
electrostatically using a thin boron nitride support as a dielectric layer with
multiple metal gates beneath. This structure allows effective injection of
electrons and holes, and combined with the high optical quality of WSe2 it
yields bright electroluminescence with 1000 times smaller injection current and
10 times smaller linewidth than in MoS2. Furthermore, by increasing the
injection bias we can tune the electroluminescence between regimes of
impurity-bound, charged, and neutral excitons. This system has the required
ingredients for new kinds of optoelectronic devices such as spin- and
valley-polarized light-emitting diodes, on-chip lasers, and two-dimensional
electro-optic modulators.Comment: 13 pages main text with 4 figures + 4 pages upplemental material
Theoretical Aspects of Transient Electromagnetic Field in Finite Sized Conducting Media
It is generally accepted that electromagnetic disturbances diffuse into the bulk region of highly conducting media instead of propagating with wave-like characteristics [1]. This can be explained based on the fact that the high frequency components of the electromagnetic field decay rapidly, leaving the electromagnetic state in the bulk material quasistatic. For the application of this phenomena to practical testing, Ross et al. developed a formalism describing the diffusion of electromagnetic field in a finite thickness conductor and demonstrated the effect of thickness on the time rate of damping of field amplitude [2]
Modulating attentional load affects numerosity estimation: evidence against a pre-attentive subitizing mechanism
Traditionally, the visual enumeration of a small number of items (1 to about 4), referred to as subitizing, has been thought of as a parallel and pre-attentive process and functionally different from the serial attentive enumeration of larger numerosities. We tested this hypothesis by employing a dual task paradigm that systematically manipulated the attentional resources available to an enumeration task. Enumeration accuracy for small numerosities was severely decreased as more attentional resources were taken away from the numerical task, challenging the traditionally held notion of subitizing as a pre-attentive, capacity-independent process. Judgement of larger numerosities was also affected by dual task conditions and attentional load. These results challenge the proposal that small numerosities are enumerated by a mechanism separate from large numerosities and support the idea of a single, attention-demanding enumeration mechanism
Sri Lankan tsunami refugees: a cross sectional study of the relationships between housing conditions and self-reported health
BACKGROUND: On the 26th December 2004 the Asian tsunami devastated the Sri Lankan coastline. More than two years later, over 14,500 families were still living in transitional shelters. This study compares the health of the internally displaced people (IDP), living in transitional camps with those in permanent housing projects provided by government and non-government organisations in Sri Lanka. METHODS: This study was conducted in seven transitional camps and five permanent housing projects in the south west of Sri Lanka. Using an interviewer-led questionnaire, data on the IDPs' self-reported health and housing conditions were collected from 154 participants from transitional camps and 147 participants from permanent housing projects. Simple tabulation with non-parametric tests and logistic regression were used to identify and analyse relationships between housing conditions and the reported prevalence of specific symptoms. RESULTS: Analysis showed that living conditions were significantly worse in transitional camps than in permanent housing projects for all factors investigated, except 'having a leaking roof'. Transitional camp participants scored significantly lower on self-perceived overall health scores than those living in housing projects. After controlling for gender, age and marital status, living in a transitional camp compared to a housing project was found to be a significant risk factor for the following symptoms; coughs OR: 3.53 (CI: 2.11-5.89), stomach ache 4.82 (2.19-10.82), headache 5.20 (3.09-8.76), general aches and pains 6.44 (3.67-11.33) and feeling generally unwell 2.28 (2.51-7.29). Within transitional camp data, the only condition shown to be a significant risk factor for any symptom was household population density, which increased the risk of stomach aches 1.40 (1.09-1.79) and headaches 1.33 (1.01-1.77). CONCLUSION: Internally displaced people living in transitional camps are a vulnerable population and specific interventions need to be targeted at this population to address the health inequalities that they report to be experiencing. Further studies need to be conducted to establish which aspects of their housing environment predispose them to poorer health
Bright excitons in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides: from Dirac cones to Dirac saddle points
In monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides, tightly bound excitons have
been discovered with a valley pseudospin that can be optically addressed
through polarization selection rules. Here, we show that this valley pseudospin
is strongly coupled to the exciton center-of-mass motion through electron-hole
exchange. This coupling realizes a massless Dirac cone with chirality index I=2
for excitons inside the light cone, i.e. bright excitons. Under moderate
strain, the I=2 Dirac cone splits into two degenerate I=1 Dirac cones, and
saddle points with a linear Dirac spectrum emerge in the bright exciton
dispersion. Interestingly, after binding an extra electron, the charged exciton
becomes a massive Dirac particle associated with a large valley Hall effect
protected from intervalley scattering. Our results point to unique
opportunities to study Dirac physics, with exciton's optical addressability at
specifiable momentum, energy and pseudospin. The strain-tunable valley-orbit
coupling also implies new structures of exciton condensates, new
functionalities of excitonic circuits, and possibilities for mechanical control
of valley pseudospin
Light-emitting diodes by band-structure engineering in van der Waals heterostructures
The advent of graphene and related 2D materials has recently led to a new technology: heterostructures based on these atomically thin crystals.The paradigm proved itself extremely versatile and led to rapid demonstration
of tunnelling diodes with negative di�erential resistance tunnelling transistors photovoltaic devices and so on. Here, we take the complexity and functionality of such van der Waals heterostructures to the next level by introducing quantum wells (QWs) engineered with one atomic plane precision. We describe light-emitting diodes (LEDs) made by stacking metallic graphene, insulating hexagonal boron nitride and various semiconducting monolayers into complex but carefully designed sequences. Our first devices already exhibit an extrinsic quantum e�ciency of nearly 10% and the emission can be tuned over a wide range of frequencies by appropriately choosing and combining 2D semiconductors (monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides). By preparing the heterostructures on elastic and transparent substrates, we show that they can also provide the basis for flexible and semi-transparent electronics. The range of functionalities for the demonstrated heterostructures is expected to grow further on increasing the number of available 2D crystals and improving their electronic quality
Electrical Tuning of Valley Magnetic Moment via Symmetry Control
Crystal symmetry governs the nature of electronic Bloch states. For example,
in the presence of time reversal symmetry, the orbital magnetic moment and
Berry curvature of the Bloch states must vanish unless inversion symmetry is
broken. In certain 2D electron systems such as bilayer graphene, the intrinsic
inversion symmetry can be broken simply by applying a perpendicular electric
field. In principle, this offers the remarkable possibility of switching on/off
and continuously tuning the magnetic moment and Berry curvature near the Dirac
valleys by reversible electrical control. Here we demonstrate this principle
for the first time using bilayer MoS2, which has the same symmetry as bilayer
graphene but has a bandgap in the visible that allows direct optical probing of
these Berry-phase related properties. We show that the optical circular
dichroism, which reflects the orbital magnetic moment in the valleys, can be
continuously tuned from -15% to 15% as a function of gate voltage in bilayer
MoS2 field-effect transistors. In contrast, the dichroism is gate-independent
in monolayer MoS2, which is structurally non-centrosymmetric. Our work
demonstrates the ability to continuously vary orbital magnetic moments between
positive and negative values via symmetry control. This represents a new
approach to manipulating Berry-phase effects for applications in quantum
electronics associated with 2D electronic materials.Comment: 13 pages main text + 4 pages supplementary material
A review of information flow diagrammatic models for product-service systems
A product-service system (PSS) is a combination of products and services to
create value for both customers and manufacturers. Modelling a PSS based on
function orientation offers a useful way to distinguish system inputs and
outputs with regards to how data are consumed and information is used, i.e.
information flow. This article presents a review of diagrammatic information
flow tools, which are designed to describe a system through its functions. The
origin, concept and applications of these tools are investigated, followed by an
analysis of information flow modelling with regards to key PSS properties. A
case study of selection laser melting technology implemented as PSS will then be
used to show the application of information flow modelling for PSS design. A
discussion based on the usefulness of the tools in modelling the key elements of
PSS and possible future research directions are also presented
Electron quantum metamaterials in van der Waals heterostructures
In recent decades, scientists have developed the means to engineer synthetic
periodic arrays with feature sizes below the wavelength of light. When such
features are appropriately structured, electromagnetic radiation can be
manipulated in unusual ways, resulting in optical metamaterials whose function
is directly controlled through nanoscale structure. Nature, too, has adopted
such techniques -- for example in the unique coloring of butterfly wings -- to
manipulate photons as they propagate through nanoscale periodic assemblies. In
this Perspective, we highlight the intriguing potential of designer
sub-electron wavelength (as well as wavelength-scale) structuring of electronic
matter, which affords a new range of synthetic quantum metamaterials with
unconventional responses. Driven by experimental developments in stacking
atomically layered heterostructures -- e.g., mechanical pick-up/transfer
assembly -- atomic scale registrations and structures can be readily tuned over
distances smaller than characteristic electronic length-scales (such as
electron wavelength, screening length, and electron mean free path). Yet
electronic metamaterials promise far richer categories of behavior than those
found in conventional optical metamaterial technologies. This is because unlike
photons that scarcely interact with each other, electrons in subwavelength
structured metamaterials are charged, and strongly interact. As a result, an
enormous variety of emergent phenomena can be expected, and radically new
classes of interacting quantum metamaterials designed
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