3,172 research outputs found
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Universal slow plasmons and giant field enhancement in atomically thin quasi-two-dimensional metals
Plasmons depend strongly on dimensionality: while plasmons in three-dimensional systems start with finite energy at wavevector q = 0, plasmons in traditional two-dimensional (2D) electron gas disperse as ωp∼q√. However, besides graphene, plasmons in real, atomically thin quasi-2D materials were heretofore not well understood. Here we show that the plasmons in real quasi-2D metals are qualitatively different, being virtually dispersionless for wavevectors of typical experimental interest. This stems from a broken continuous translational symmetry which leads to interband screening; so, dispersionless plasmons are a universal intrinsic phenomenon in quasi-2D metals. Moreover, our ab initio calculations reveal that plasmons of monolayer metallic transition metal dichalcogenides are tunable, long lived, able to sustain field intensity enhancement exceeding 107, and localizable in real space (within ~20 nm) with little spreading over practical measurement time. This opens the possibility of tracking plasmon wave packets in real time for novel imaging techniques in atomically thin materials
Germanene: a novel two-dimensional Germanium allotrope akin to Graphene and Silicene
Using a gold (111) surface as a substrate we have grown in situ by molecular
beam epitaxy an atom-thin, ordered, two-dimensional multi-phase film. Its
growth bears strong similarity with the formation of silicene layers on silver
(111) templates. One of the phases, forming large domains, as observed in
Scanning Tunneling Microscopy, shows a clear, nearly flat, honeycomb structure.
Thanks to thorough synchrotron radiation core-level spectroscopy measurements
and advanced Density Functional Theory calculations we can identify it to a
xR(30{\deg}) germanene layer in coincidence with a
xR(19.1{\deg}) Au(111) supercell, thence, presenting the
first compelling evidence of the birth of a novel synthetic germanium-based
cousin of graphene.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Electro-diffusion in a plasma with two ion species
Electric field is a thermodynamic force that can drive collisional
inter-ion-species transport in a multicomponent plasma. In an inertial
confinement fusion (ICF) capsule, such transport causes fuel ion separation
even with a target initially prepared to have equal number densities for the
two fuel ion species. Unlike the baro-diffusion driven by ion pressure gradient
and the thermo-diffusion driven by ion and electron temperature gradients,
electro-diffusion has a critical dependence on the charge-to-mass ratio of the
ion species. Specifically, it is shown here that electro-diffusion vanishes if
the ion species have the same charge-to-mass ratio. An explicit expression for
the electro-diffusion ratio is obtained and used to investigate the relative
importance of electro- and baro-diffusion mechanisms. In particular, it is
found that electro-diffusion reinforces baro-diffusion in the deuterium and
tritium mix, but tends to cancel it in the deuterium and helium-3 mix.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Plasmas on 2012-03-06 (revised version 05/13/2012
Hybrid exciton-polaritons in a bad microcavity containing the organic and inorganic quantum wells
We study the hybrid exciton-polaritons in a bad microcavity containing the
organic and inorganic quantum wells. The corresponding polariton states are
given. The analytical solution and the numerical result of the stationary
spectrum for the cavity field are finishedComment: 3 pages, 1 figure. appear in Communications in Theoretical Physic
Relating Quantum Information to Charged Black Holes
Quantum non-cloning theorem and a thought experiment are discussed for
charged black holes whose global structure exhibits an event and a Cauchy
horizon. We take Reissner-Norstr\"{o}m black holes and two-dimensional dilaton
black holes as concrete examples. The results show that the quantum non-cloning
theorem and the black hole complementarity are far from consistent inside the
inner horizon. The relevance of this work to non-local measurements is briefly
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Quasienergy spectra of a charged particle in planar honeycomb lattices
The low energy spectrum of a particle in planar honeycomb lattices is
conical, which leads to the unusual electronic properties of graphene. In this
letter we calculate the quasienergy spectra of a charged particle in honeycomb
lattices driven by a strong AC field, which is of fundamental importance for
its time-dependent dynamics. We find that depending on the amplitude, direction
and frequency of external field, many interesting phenomena may occur,
including band collapse, renormalization of velocity of ``light'', gap opening
etc.. Under suitable conditions, with increasing the magnitude of the AC field,
a series of phase transitions from gapless phases to gapped phases appear
alternatively. At the same time, the Dirac points may disappear or change to a
line. We suggest possible realization of the system in Honeycomb optical
lattices.Comment: 4+ pages, 5 figure
Mesoscopic Electron and Phonon Transport through a Curved Wire
There is great interest in the development of novel nanomachines that use
charge, spin, or energy transport, to enable new sensors with unprecedented
measurement capabilities. Electrical and thermal transport in these mesoscopic
systems typically involves wave propagation through a nanoscale geometry such
as a quantum wire. In this paper we present a general theoretical technique to
describe wave propagation through a curved wire of uniform cross-section and
lying in a plane, but of otherwise arbitrary shape. The method consists of (i)
introducing a local orthogonal coordinate system, the arclength and two locally
perpendicular coordinate axes, dictated by the shape of the wire; (ii)
rewriting the wave equation of interest in this system; (iii) identifying an
effective scattering potential caused by the local curvature; and (iv), solving
the associated Lippmann-Schwinger equation for the scattering matrix. We carry
out this procedure in detail for the scalar Helmholtz equation with both
hard-wall and stress-free boundary conditions, appropriate for the mesoscopic
transport of electrons and (scalar) phonons. A novel aspect of the phonon case
is that the reflection probability always vanishes in the long-wavelength
limit, allowing a simple perturbative (Born approximation) treatment at low
energies. Our results show that, in contrast to charge transport, curvature
only barely suppresses thermal transport, even for sharply bent wires, at least
within the two-dimensional scalar phonon model considered. Applications to
experiments are also discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, RevTe
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A toolbox of nanobodies developed and validated for use as intrabodies and nanoscale immunolabels in mammalian brain neurons.
Nanobodies (nAbs) are small, minimal antibodies that have distinct attributes that make them uniquely suited for certain biomedical research, diagnostic and therapeutic applications. Prominent uses include as intracellular antibodies or intrabodies to bind and deliver cargo to specific proteins and/or subcellular sites within cells, and as nanoscale immunolabels for enhanced tissue penetration and improved spatial imaging resolution. Here, we report the generation and validation of nAbs against a set of proteins prominently expressed at specific subcellular sites in mammalian brain neurons. We describe a novel hierarchical validation pipeline to systematically evaluate nAbs isolated by phage display for effective and specific use as intrabodies and immunolabels in mammalian cells including brain neurons. These nAbs form part of a robust toolbox for targeting proteins with distinct and highly spatially-restricted subcellular localization in mammalian brain neurons, allowing for visualization and/or modulation of structure and function at those sites
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