2 resultados para BALLISTIC-ELECTRON-TRANSPORT
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
La Teoria di Densità Funzionale (DFT) e la sua versione dipendente dal tempo (TDDFT) sono strumenti largamente usati per simulare e calcolare le proprietà statiche e dinamiche di sistemi con elettroni interagenti. La precisione del metodo si basa su una serie di approssimazioni degli effetti di exchange correlation fra gli elettroni, descritti da un funzionale della sola densità di carica. Nella presente tesi viene testata l'affidabilità del funzionale Mixed Localization Potential (MLP), una media pesata fra Single Orbital Approximation (SOA) e un potenziale di riferimento, ad esempio Local Density Approximation (LDA). I risultati mostrano capacità simulative superiori a LDA per i sistemi statici (curando anche un limite di LDA noto in letteratura come fractional dissociation) e dei progressi per sistemi dinamici quando si sviluppano correnti di carica. Il livello di localizzazione del sistema, inteso come la capacità di un elettrone di tenere lontani da sé altri elettroni, è descritto dalla funzione Electron Localization Function (ELF). Viene studiato il suo ruolo come guida nella costruzione e ottimizzazione del funzionale MLP.
Resumo:
The demand for novel renewable energy sources, together with the new findings on bacterial electron transport mechanisms and the progress in microbial fuel cell design, have raised a noticeable interest in microbial power generation. Microbial fuel cell (MFC) is an electrochemical device that converts organic substrates into electricity via catalytic conversion by microorganism. It has represented a continuously growing research field during the past few years. The great advantage of this device is the direct conversion of the substrate into electricity and in the future, MFC may be linked to municipal waste streams or sources of agricultural and animal waste, providing a sustainable system for waste treatment and energy production. However, these novel green technologies have not yet been used for practical applications due to their low power outputs and challenges associated with scale-up, so in-depth studies are highly necessary to significantly improve and optimize the device working conditions. For the time being, the micro-scale MFCs show great potential in the rapid screening of electrochemically active microbes. This thesis presents how it will be possible to optimize the properties and design of the micro-size microbial fuel cell for maximum efficiency by understanding the MFC system. So it will involve designing, building and testing a miniature microbial fuel cell using a new species of microorganisms that promises high efficiency and long lifetime. The new device offer unique advantages of fast start-up, high sensitivity and superior microfluidic control over the measured microenvironment, which makes them good candidates for rapid screening of electrode materials, bacterial strains and growth media. It will be made in the Centre of Hybrid Biodevices (Faculty of Physical Sciences and Engineering, University of Southampton) from polymer materials like PDMS. The eventual aim is to develop a system with the optimum combination of microorganism, ion exchange membrane and growth medium. After fabricating the cell, different bacteria and plankton species will be grown in the device and the microbial fuel cell characterized for open circuit voltage and power. It will also use photo-sensitive organisms and characterize the power produced by the device in response to optical illumination.