19 resultados para ONE-DIMENSIONAL SYSTEMS
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
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In this thesis we have extended the methods for microscopic charge-transport simulations for organic semiconductors. In these materials the weak intermolecular interactions lead to spatially localized charge carriers, and the charge transport occurs as an activated hopping process between diabatic states. In addition to weak electronic couplings between these states, different electrostatic environments in the organic material lead to a broadening of the density of states for the charge energies which limits carrier mobilities.rnThe contributions to the method development includern(i) the derivation of a bimolecular charge-transfer rate,rn(ii) the efficient evaluation of intermolecular (outer-sphere) reorganization energies,rn(iii) the investigation of effects of conformational disorder on intramolecular reorganization energies or internal site energiesrnand (iv) the inclusion of self-consistent polarization interactions for calculation of charge energies.These methods were applied to study charge transport in amorphous phases of small molecules used in the emission layer of organic light emitting diodes (OLED).rnWhen bulky substituents are attached to an aromatic core in order to adjust energy levels or prevent crystallization, a small amount of delocalization of the frontier orbital to the substituents can increase electronic couplings between neighboring molecules. This leads to improved charge-transfer rates and, hence, larger charge-mobility. We therefore suggest using the mesomeric effect (as opposed to the inductive effect) when attaching substituents to aromatic cores, which is necessary for example in deep blue OLEDs, where the energy levels of a host molecule have to be adjusted to those of the emitter.rnFurthermore, the energy landscape for charges in an amorphous phase cannot be predicted by mesoscopic models because they approximate the realistic morphology by a lattice and represent molecular charge distributions in a multipole expansion. The microscopic approach shows that a polarization-induced stabilization of a molecule in its charged and neutral states can lead to large shifts, broadening, and traps in the distribution of charge energies. These results are especially important for multi-component systems (the emission layer of an OLED or the donor-acceptor interface of an organic solar cell), if the change in polarizability upon charging (or excitation in case of energy transport) is different for the components. Thus, the polarizability change upon charging or excitation should be added to the set of molecular parameters essential for understanding charge and energy transport in organic semiconductors.rnWe also studied charge transport in self-assembled systems, where intermolecular packing motives induced by side chains can increase electronic couplings between molecules. This leads to larger charge mobility, which is essential to improve devices such as organic field effect transistors, where low carrier mobilities limit the switching frequency.rnHowever, it is not sufficient to match the average local molecular order induced by the sidernchains (such as the pitch angle between consecutive molecules in a discotic mesophase) with maxima of the electronic couplings.rnIt is also important to make the corresponding distributions as narrow as possible compared to the window determined by the closest minima of thernelectronic couplings. This is especially important in one-dimensional systems, where charge transport is limited by the smallest electronic couplings.rnThe immediate implication for compound design is that the side chains should assist the self-assemblingrnprocess not only via soft entropic interactions, but also via stronger specific interactions, such as hydrogen bonding.rnrnrnrn
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We investigate the statics and dynamics of a glassy,non-entangled, short bead-spring polymer melt with moleculardynamics simulations. Temperature ranges from slightlyabove the mode-coupling critical temperature to the liquidregime where features of a glassy liquid are absent. Ouraim is to work out the polymer specific effects on therelaxation and particle correlation. We find the intra-chain static structure unaffected bytemperature, it depends only on the distance of monomersalong the backbone. In contrast, the distinct inter-chainstructure shows pronounced site-dependence effects at thelength-scales of the chain and the nearest neighbordistance. There, we also find the strongest temperaturedependence which drives the glass transition. Both the siteaveraged coupling of the monomer and center of mass (CM) andthe CM-CM coupling are weak and presumably not responsiblefor a peak in the coherent relaxation time at the chain'slength scale. Chains rather emerge as soft, easilyinterpenetrating objects. Three particle correlations arewell reproduced by the convolution approximation with theexception of model dependent deviations. In the spatially heterogeneous dynamics of our system weidentify highly mobile monomers which tend to follow eachother in one-dimensional paths forming ``strings''. Thesestrings have an exponential length distribution and aregenerally short compared to the chain length. Thus, arelaxation mechanism in which neighboring mobile monomersmove along the backbone of the chain seems unlikely.However, the correlation of bonded neighbors is enhanced. When liquids are confined between two surfaces in relativesliding motion kinetic friction is observed. We study ageneric model setup by molecular dynamics simulations for awide range of sliding speeds, temperatures, loads, andlubricant coverings for simple and molecular fluids. Instabilities in the particle trajectories are identified asthe origin of kinetic friction. They lead to high particlevelocities of fluid atoms which are gradually dissipatedresulting in a friction force. In commensurate systemsfluid atoms follow continuous trajectories for sub-monolayercoverings and consequently, friction vanishes at low slidingspeeds. For incommensurate systems the velocity probabilitydistribution exhibits approximately exponential tails. Weconnect this velocity distribution to the kinetic frictionforce which reaches a constant value at low sliding speeds. This approach agrees well with the friction obtaineddirectly from simulations and explains Amontons' law on themicroscopic level. Molecular bonds in commensurate systemslead to incommensurate behavior, but do not change thequalitative behavior of incommensurate systems. However,crossed chains form stable load bearing asperities whichstrongly increase friction.
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A one-dimensional multi-component reactive fluid transport algorithm, 1DREACT (Steefel, 1993) was used to investigate different fluid-rock interaction systems. A major short coming of mass transport calculations which include mineral reactions is that solid solutions occurring in many minerals are not treated adequately. Since many thermodynamic models of solid solutions are highly non-linear, this can seriously impact on the stability and efficiency of the solution algorithms used. Phase petrology community saw itself faced with a similar predicament 10 years ago. To improve performance and reliability, phase equilibrium calculations have been using pseudo compounds. The same approach is used here in the first, using the complex plagioclase solid solution as an example. Thermodynamic properties of a varying number of intermediate plagioclase phases were calculated using ideal molecular, Al-avoidance, and non-ideal mixing models. These different mixing models can easily be incorporated into the simulations without modification of the transport code. Simulation results show that as few as nine intermediate compositions are sufficient to characterize the diffusional profile between albite and anorthite. Hence this approach is very efficient, and can be used with little effort. A subsequent chapter reports the results of reactive fluid transport modeling designed to constrain the hydrothermal alteration of Paleoproterozoic sediments of the Southern Lake Superior region. Field observations reveal that quartz-pyrophyllite (or kaolinite) bearing assemblages have been transformed into muscovite-pyrophyllite-diaspore bearing assemblages due to action of fluids migrating along permeable flow channels. Fluid-rock interaction modeling with an initial qtz-prl assemblage and a K-rich fluid simulates the formation of observed mineralogical transformation. The bulk composition of the system evolves from an SiO2-rich one to an Al2O3+K2O-rich one. Simulations show that the fluid flow was up-temperature (e.g. recharge) and that fluid was K-rich. Pseudo compound approach to include solid solutions in reactive transport models was tested in modeling hydrothermal alteration of Icelandic basalts. Solid solutions of chlorites, amphiboles and plagioclase were included as the secondary mineral phases. Saline and fresh water compositions of geothermal fluids were used to investigate the effect of salinity on alteration. Fluid-rock interaction simulations produce the observed mineral transformations. They show that roughly the same alteration minerals are formed due to reactions with both types of fluid which is in agreement with the field observations. A final application is directed towards the remediation of nitrate rich groundwaters. Removal of excess nitrate from groundwater by pyrite oxidation was modeled using the reactive fluid transport algorithm. Model results show that, when a pyrite-bearing, permeable zone is placed in the flow path, nitrate concentration in infiltrating water can be significantly lowered, in agreement with proposals from the literature. This is due to nitrogen reduction. Several simulations investigate the efficiency of systems with different mineral reactive surface areas, reactive barrier zone widths, and flow rates to identify the optimum setup.
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Zusammenfassung: 'Von zwei- zu dreidimensionalen Graphitausschnitten'Dissertation Florian Dötz Die vorliegende Arbeit zeichnet den synthetischen Weg von zwei- zu dreidimensionalen Graphitausschnitten nach und thematisiert insbesondere die Schnittstelle dieser beiden Bereiche, die durch den Übergang von planaren Systemen zu räumlichen Strukturen verkörpert wird und daher die Darstellung nicht-planarer polycyclischer aromatischer Kohlenwasserstoffe (PAH) vorsieht. Diese Zielsetzung mündet in einer dreiteiligen Gliederung der angefertigten Dissertation und sieht im ersten Teil die Synthese planarer Graphitsegmente durch oxidative Cyclodehydrierung entsprechender Oligophenylvorläufer mit Eisen(III)chlorid vor, gefolgt von der Darstellung nicht-planarer PAHs mit denselben oxidativen Methoden sowie der Präparation und Charakterisierung dreidimensionaler, supramolekularer PAH-Aggregate.Der erste Abschnitt beschreibt die Synthese von kleineren PAHs als Modellverbindung für größere Systeme und ihre UV-spektroskopische Charakterisierung. Daran anknüpfend wird die Synthese mehrerer heteroatomsubstituierter Derivate des Hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronens (HBC) vorgestellt und ihre flüssigkristallinen Eigenschaften eingehend untersucht. Dabei wurde mit der oxidativen Cyclodehydrierung geeigneter Vorläufer auf Einkristalloberflächen ein neuer Weg zur Synthese dieser Verbindungen etabliert.Im Zentrum des zweiten Teils dieser Arbeit stand die Induktion von Nichtplanarität in ausgedehnten PAHs mit den im ersten Abschnitt entwickelten Synthesekonzepten. Hier konnte mit der erfolgreichen Darstellung eines 18fach methoxysubstituierten HBC-Derivats eine erstaunliche Krümmung des aromatischen Systems erreicht werden, wie durch Kristallstrukturanalyse gezeigt wurde. Anhand mehrerer Beispiele wurde ebenso die Leistungsfähigkeit der verwendeten Cyclodehydrierungsmethode verdeutlicht, da viele Vorläufermoleküle gegenüber den Reaktionsbedingungen nicht inert sind.Der letzte Teil dieser Arbeit beschreibt schließlich die Präparation und Charakterisierung dreidimensionaler, supramolekularer PAH-Aggregate auf der Basis von HBC-Amiden, deren Eigenschaften sich durch eine sorgfältige Wahl der jeweiligen Monomerbausteine manipulieren lassen. Bei Verwendung von chiralen Monomeren wird hier die Expression von supramolekularer Chiralität erreicht und durch spektroskopische und chiroptische Methoden belegt.
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Wir betrachten die eindimensionale Heisenberg-Spinkette aus einem neuen und aktuelleren Blickwinkel. Experimentelle Techniken der Herstellung und selbstverständlich auch experimentelle Meßmethoden erlauben nicht nur die Herstellung von Nanopartikeln und Nanodrähten, sondern gestatten es auch, Domänenwände in diesen Strukturen auszumessen. Die meisten heute verwendeten Theorien und Simulationsmethoden haben ihre Grundlage im mikromagnetischen Kontinuumsmodell, daß schon über Jahrzehnte hinweg erforscht und erprobt ist. Wir stellen uns jedoch die Frage, ob die innere diskrete Struktur der Substrate und die quantenmechanischen Effekte bei der Genauigkeit heutiger Messungen in Betracht gezogen werden müssen. Dazu wählen wir einen anderen Ansatz. Wir werden zunächst den wohlbekannten klassischen Fall erweitern, indem wir die diskrete Struktur der Materie in unseren Berechnungen berücksichtigen. Man findet in diesem Formalismus einen strukturellen Phasenübergang zwischen einer Ising-artigen und einer ausgedehnten Wand. Das führt zu bestimmten Korrekturen im Vergleich zum Kontinuumsfall. Der Hauptteil dieser Arbeit wird sich dann mit dem quantenmechanischen Fall beschäftigen. Wir rotieren das System zunächst mit einer Reihe lokaler Transformationen derart, daß alle Spins in die z-Richtung ausgerichtet sind. Im Rahmen einer 1/S-Entwicklung läßt sich der erhaltene neue Hamilton-Operator diagonalisieren. Setzt man hier die klassische Lösung ein, so erhält man Anregungsmoden in diesem Grenzfall. Unsere Resultate erweitern und bestätigen frühere Berechnungen. Mit Hilfe der Numerik wird schließlich der Erwartungswert der Energie minimiert und somit die Form der Domänenwand im quantenmechanischen Fall berechnet. Hieraus ergeben sich auch bestimmte Korrekturen zum kritischen Verhalten des Systems. Diese Ergebnisse sind vollkommen neu.
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Nach einer kurzen Einführung in die Entwicklung der magnetischen Anwendungen, werden in Kapitel 2 und 3 die physikalischen Grundlagen der Messmethoden, insbesondere die Rastertunnelspektroskopie und Kerr-Magnetometrie, sowie der experimentelle Aufbau erläutert. Kapitel 4 beschäftigt sich mit den magnetischen Eigenschaften von quasi ein-dimensionalen ferromagnetischen Nanostreifen und Monolagen, die durch Selbstorganisation auf einem Wolfram(110)-Einkristall mit vizinaler und glatter Oberfläche präpariert werden. Hierbei wird die Temperaturabhängigkeit der magnetischen Größen, wie Remanenz, Sättigungsmagnetisierung und Suszeptibilität, sowie die Auswirkung einer Abdeckung des Systems auf die Domänenwandenergie und Anisotropie untersucht. Zusätzlich wird die Kopplung von parallelen Nanostreifen in Abhängigkeit des Streifenabstandes betrachtet. In Kapitel 5 werden das Wachstum und die Morphologie von Co-Monolagen auf W(110) untersucht. Der Übergang von pseudomorphem zu dicht gepacktem Wachstum in der Monolage wird mit Hilfe der Rastertunnelspektroskopie sichtbar gemacht, ebenso wie unterschiedliche Stapelfolgen in Tripellagen Co-Systemen. Atomar aufgelöste Rastertunnelmikroskopie erlaubt die genauen Atompositionen der Oberfläche zu bestimmen und mit theoretischen Wachstumsmodellen zu vergleichen. Auf die Untersuchung zwei-dimensionaler binärer Co-Fe und Fe-Mn Legierungen auf W(110) wird in Kapitel 6 eingegangen. Mit einer Präparationstemperatur von T=520 K ist es möglich, atomar geordnete Co-Fe Legierungsmonolagen wachsen zu lassen. Ein direkter Zusammenhang zwischen der Magnetisierung und der lokalen Zustandsdichte in Abhängigkeit der Legierungszusammensetzung wird gezeigt.
Resumo:
In this treatise we consider finite systems of branching particles where the particles move independently of each other according to d-dimensional diffusions. Particles are killed at a position dependent rate, leaving at their death position a random number of descendants according to a position dependent reproduction law. In addition particles immigrate at constant rate (one immigrant per immigration time). A process with above properties is called a branching diffusion withimmigration (BDI). In the first part we present the model in detail and discuss the properties of the BDI under our basic assumptions. In the second part we consider the problem of reconstruction of the trajectory of a BDI from discrete observations. We observe positions of the particles at discrete times; in particular we assume that we have no information about the pedigree of the particles. A natural question arises if we want to apply statistical procedures on the discrete observations: How can we find couples of particle positions which belong to the same particle? We give an easy to implement 'reconstruction scheme' which allows us to redraw or 'reconstruct' parts of the trajectory of the BDI with high accuracy. Moreover asymptotically the whole path can be reconstructed. Further we present simulations which show that our partial reconstruction rule is tractable in practice. In the third part we study how the partial reconstruction rule fits into statistical applications. As an extensive example we present a nonparametric estimator for the diffusion coefficient of a BDI where the particles move according to one-dimensional diffusions. This estimator is based on the Nadaraya-Watson estimator for the diffusion coefficient of one-dimensional diffusions and it uses the partial reconstruction rule developed in the second part above. We are able to prove a rate of convergence of this estimator and finally we present simulations which show that the estimator works well even if we leave our set of assumptions.
Resumo:
This dissertation is devoted to the experimental exploration of the propagation of elastic waves in soft mesoscopic structures with submicrometer dimensions. A strong motivation of this work is the large technological relevance and the fundamental importance of the subject. Elastic waves are accompanied by time-dependent fluctuations of local stress and strain fields in the medium. As such, the propagation phase velocities are intimately related to the elastic moduli. Knowledge of the elastic wave propagation directly provides information about the mechanical properties of the probed mesoscopic structures, which are not readily accessible experimentally. On the other hand, elastic waves, when propagating in an inhomogeneous medium with spatial inhomogeneities comparable to their wavelength, exhibit rather rich behavior, including the appearance of novel physical phenomena, such as phononic bandgap formation. So far, the experimental work has been restricted to macroscopic structures, which limit wave propagation below the KHz range. It was anticipated that an experimental approach capable of probing the interplay of the wave propagation with the controlled mesoscopic structures would contribute to deeper insights into the fundamental problem of elastic wave propagation in inhomogeneous systems. The mesoscopic nature of the structures to be studied precludes the use of traditional methods, such as sound transmission, for the study of elastic wave propagation. In this work, an optical method utilizing the inelastic scattering of photons by GHz frequency thermally excited elastic waves, known as Brillouin light scattering spectroscopy (BLS), was employed. Two important classes of soft structures were investigated: thin films and colloidal crystals. For the former, the main interest was the effect of the one-dimensional (1D) confinement on the wave propagation due to the presence of the free-surface or interface of the layer and the utilization of these waves to extract relevant material parameters. For the second system, the primary interest was the interaction of the elastic wave and the strong scattering medium with local resonance units in a three-dimensional (3D) periodic arrangement.
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In dieser Arbeit werden Quantum-Hydrodynamische (QHD) Modelle betrachtet, die ihren Einsatz besonders in der Modellierung von Halbleiterbauteilen finden. Das QHD Modell besteht aus den Erhaltungsgleichungen für die Teilchendichte, das Momentum und die Energiedichte, inklusive der Quanten-Korrekturen durch das Bohmsche Potential. Zu Beginn wird eine Übersicht über die bekannten Ergebnisse der QHD Modelle unter Vernachlässigung von Kollisionseffekten gegeben, die aus einem Schrödinger-System für den gemischten-Zustand oder aus der Wigner-Gleichung hergeleitet werden können. Nach der Reformulierung der eindimensionalen QHD Gleichungen mit linearem Potential als stationäre Schrödinger-Gleichung werden die semianalytischen Fassungen der QHD Gleichungen für die Gleichspannungs-Kurve betrachtet. Weiterhin werden die viskosen Stabilisierungen des QHD Modells berücksichtigt, sowie die von Gardner vorgeschlagene numerische Viskosität für das {sf upwind} Finite-Differenzen Schema berechnet. Im Weiteren wird das viskose QHD Modell aus der Wigner-Gleichung mit Fokker-Planck Kollisions-Operator hergeleitet. Dieses Modell enthält die physikalische Viskosität, die durch den Kollision-Operator eingeführt wird. Die Existenz der Lösungen (mit strikt positiver Teilchendichte) für das isotherme, stationäre, eindimensionale, viskose Modell für allgemeine Daten und nichthomogene Randbedingungen wird gezeigt. Die dafür notwendigen Abschätzungen hängen von der Viskosität ab und erlauben daher den Grenzübergang zum nicht-viskosen Fall nicht. Numerische Simulationen der Resonanz-Tunneldiode modelliert mit dem nichtisothermen, stationären, eindimensionalen, viskosen QHD Modell zeigen den Einfluss der Viskosität auf die Lösung. Unter Verwendung des von Degond und Ringhofer entwickelten Quanten-Entropie-Minimierungs-Verfahren werden die allgemeinen QHD-Gleichungen aus der Wigner-Boltzmann-Gleichung mit dem BGK-Kollisions-Operator hergeleitet. Die Herleitung basiert auf der vorsichtige Entwicklung des Quanten-Maxwellians in Potenzen der skalierten Plankschen Konstante. Das so erhaltene Modell enthält auch vertex-Terme und dispersive Terme für die Geschwindigkeit. Dadurch bleibt die Gleichspannungs-Kurve für die Resonanz-Tunneldiode unter Verwendung des allgemeinen QHD Modells in einer Dimension numerisch erhalten. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass der dispersive Geschwindigkeits-Term die Lösung des Systems stabilisiert.
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The goal of this thesis was the investigation of the structure, conformation, supramolecular order and molecular dynamics of different classes of functional materials (phthalocyanine, perylene and hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene derivatives and mixtures of those), all having planar aromatic cores modified with various types of alkyl chains. The planar aromatic systems are known to stack in the solid and the liquid-crystalline state due to p-p interactions forming columnar superstructures with high one-dimensional charge carrier mobility and potential application in photovoltaic devices. The different functionalities attached to the aromatic cores significantly influence the behavior of these systems allowing the experimentalists to modify the structures to fine-tune the desired thermotropic properties or charge carrier mobility. The aim of the presented studies was to understand the interplay between the driving forces causing self-assembly by relating the structural and dynamic information about the investigated systems. The supramolecular organization is investigated by applying 1H solid state NMR recoupling techniques. The results are related with DSC and X-ray scattering data. Detailed information about the site-specific molecular dynamics is gained by recording spinning sideband patterns using 1H-1H and 13C-1H solid state NMR recoupling techniques. The determined dipole-dipole coupling constants are then related with the coupling constants of the respective rigid pairs, thus providing local dynamic order parameters for the respective moieties. The investigations presented reveal that in the crystalline state the preferred arrangement in the columnar stack of discotic molecules modified with alkyl chains is tilted. This leads to characteristic differences in the 1H chemical shifts of otherwise chemically equivalent protons. Introducing branches and increasing the length of the alkyl chains results in lower mesophase transitions and disordered columnar stacks. In the liquid-crystalline state some of the discs lose the tilted orientation, others do not, but all start a rapid rotation about the columnar axis.
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Computer simulations play an ever growing role for the development of automotive products. Assembly simulation, as well as many other processes, are used systematically even before the first physical prototype of a vehicle is built in order to check whether particular components can be assembled easily or whether another part is in the way. Usually, this kind of simulation is limited to rigid bodies. However, a vehicle contains a multitude of flexible parts of various types: cables, hoses, carpets, seat surfaces, insulations, weatherstrips... Since most of the problems using these simulations concern one-dimensional components and since an intuitive tool for cable routing is still needed, we have chosen to concentrate on this category, which includes cables, hoses and wiring harnesses. In this thesis, we present a system for simulating one dimensional flexible parts such as cables or hoses. The modeling of bending and torsion follows the Cosserat model. For this purpose we use a generalized spring-mass system and describe its configuration by a carefully chosen set of coordinates. Gravity and contact forces as well as the forces responsible for length conservation are expressed in Cartesian coordinates. But bending and torsion effects can be dealt with more effectively by using quaternions to represent the orientation of the segments joining two neighboring mass points. This augmented system allows an easy formulation of all interactions with the best appropriate coordinate type and yields a strongly banded Hessian matrix. An energy minimizing process accounts for a solution exempt from the oscillations that are typical of spring-mass systems. The use of integral forces, similar to an integral controller, allows to enforce exactly the constraints. The whole system is numerically stable and can be solved at interactive frame rates. It is integrated in the DaimlerChrysler in-house Virtual Reality Software veo for use in applications such as cable routing and assembly simulation and has been well received by users. Parts of this work have been published at the ACM Solid and Physical Modeling Conference 2006 and have been selected for the special issue of the Computer-Aided-Design Journal to the conference.
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In this work the numerical coupling of thermal and electric network models with model equations for optoelectronic semiconductor devices is presented. Modified nodal analysis (MNA) is applied to model electric networks. Thermal effects are modeled by an accompanying thermal network. Semiconductor devices are modeled by the energy-transport model, that allows for thermal effects. The energy-transport model is expandend to a model for optoelectronic semiconductor devices. The temperature of the crystal lattice of the semiconductor devices is modeled by the heat flow eqaution. The corresponding heat source term is derived under thermodynamical and phenomenological considerations of energy fluxes. The energy-transport model is coupled directly into the network equations and the heat flow equation for the lattice temperature is coupled directly into the accompanying thermal network. The coupled thermal-electric network-device model results in a system of partial differential-algebraic equations (PDAE). Numerical examples are presented for the coupling of network- and one-dimensional semiconductor equations. Hybridized mixed finite elements are applied for the space discretization of the semiconductor equations. Backward difference formluas are applied for time discretization. Thus, positivity of charge carrier densities and continuity of the current density is guaranteed even for the coupled model.
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Covalent grafting mesogenic groups to the coordination cores of the parent mononuclear low-spin and spin-crossover compounds afforded metallomesogenic complexes of iron(II). In comparison with the parent complexes the spin-crossover properties of the alkylated derivatives are substantially modified. The type of the modification was found to be dependent on the properties of the parent system and the nature of the used anion, however, the general tendency is the destabilization of the low-spin state at the favor of spin-crossover or high-spin behavior below 400 K. The structural insight revealed the micro-segregated layered organization. The effect of the alkylation of the parent compounds consists first of all in the change of the lattice to a two-dimensional lamellar one retaining significant intermolecular contacts only within the ionic bilayers. The comprehensive analysis of the structural and thermodynamic data in the homologous series pointed at the mechanism of the interplay between the structural modification on melting and the induced anomalous change of the magnetic properties. A family of one-dimensional spin-crossover polymers was synthesized and characterized using a series of spectroscopic methods, X-ray powder diffraction, magnetic susceptibility measurements and differential scanning calorimetry. The copper analogue of was also synthesized and its crystal structure solved. In comparison with the mononuclear systems, the polymeric mesogens of iron(II) are less sensitive to the glass transition, which was attributed to the moderate concomitant variation of the structure. Nevertheless, the observed increase of the magnetic hysteresis with lengthening of the alkyl substituents was ascribed to the interplay of the structural reorganization of the coordination core due to spin-crossover with the structural delay in the spatial reorganization of the mesogenic substituents. The classification of mononuclear and polymeric metallomesogens according to the interactions between the structural- and the spin-transition and analysis of the data on the reported spin-crossover metallomesogens led to the separation of three types, namely: Type i: systems with coupling between the electronic structure of the iron(II) ions and the mesomorphic behavior of the substance; Type ii: systems where both transitions coexist in the same temperature region but are not coupled due to competition with the dehydration or due to negligible structural transformation; Type iii: systems where both transitions occur in different temperature regions and therefore are uncoupled. Fine-tuning, in particular regarding the temperature at which the spin-transition occurs with hysteresis properties responsible for the memory effect, are still a major challenge towards practical implementation of spin-crossover materials. A possible answer to the problem could be materials in which the spin-crossover transition is coupled with another transition easily controllable by external stimuli. In the present thesis we have shown the viability of the approach realized in the mesogenic systems with coupled phase- and spin-transitions.
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Significant interest in nanotechnology, is stimulated by the fact that materials exhibit qualitative changes of properties when their dimensions approach ”finite-sizes”. Quantization of electronic, optical and acoustic energies at the nanoscale provides novel functions, with interests spanning from electronics and photonics to biology. The present dissertation involves the application of Brillouin light scattering (BLS) to quantify and utilize material displacementsrnfor probing phononics and elastic properties of structured systems with dimensions comparable to the wavelength of visible light. The interplay of wave propagation with materials exhibiting spatial inhomogeneities at sub-micron length scales provides information not only about elastic properties but also about structural organization at those length scales. In addition the vector nature of q allows, for addressing the directional dependence of thermomechanical properties. To meet this goal, one-dimensional confined nanostructures and a biological system possessing high hierarchical organization were investigated. These applications extend the capabilities of BLS from a characterization tool for thin films to a method for unravelingrnintriguing phononic properties in more complex systems.
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This thesis presents a new imaging technique for ultracold quantum gases. Since the first observation of Bose-Einstein condensation, ultracold atoms have proven to be an interesting system to study fundamental quantum effects in many-body systems. Most of the experiments use optical imaging rnmethods to extract the information from the system and are therefore restricted to the fundamental limitation of this technique: the best achievable spatial resolution that can be achieved is comparable to the wavelength of the employed light field. Since the average atomic distance and the length scale of characteristic spatial structures in Bose-Einstein condensates such as vortices and solitons is between 100 nm and 500 nm, an imaging technique with an adequate spatial resolution is needed. This is achieved in this work by extending the method of scanning electron microscopy to ultracold quantum gases. A focused electron beam is scanned over the atom cloud and locally produces ions which are subsequently detected. The new imaging technique allows for the precise measurement of the density distribution of a trapped Bose-Einstein condensate. Furthermore, the spatial resolution is determined by imaging the atomic distribution in one-dimensional and two-dimensional optical lattices. Finally, the variety of the imaging method is demonstrated by the selective removal of single lattice site. rn