953 resultados para Exciton emission
Resumo:
The micrometeorological mass-balance integrated horizontal flux (IHF) technique has been commonly employed for measuring ammonia (NH3) emissions inon-field experiments. However, the inverse-dispersion modeling technique, such as the backward Lagrangian stochastic (bLS) modeling approach, is currently highlighted as offering flexibility in plot design and requiring a minimum number of samplers (Ro et al., 2013). The objective of this study was to make a comparison between the bLS technique with the IHF technique for estimating NH3 emission from flexible bag storage and following landspreading of dairy cattle slurry. Moreover, considering that NH3 emission in storage could have been non uniform, the effect on bLS estimates of a single point and multiple downwind concentration measurements was tested, as proposed by Sanz et al. (2010).
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The achievement of the limit values established in the European legislation pose an important handicap for large urban areas with intense road traffic, such as Madrid (Spain). Despite permanent measures included in air quality plans it is important to assess additional measures that may be temporally applied under unfavourable conditions. This paper reports on the simulation of different traffic restriction strategies in Madrid for high-pollution episodes.
Resumo:
Una amarra electrodinámica (electrodynamic tether) opera sobre principios electromagnéticos intercambiando momento con la magnetosfera planetaria e interactuando con su ionosfera. Es un subsistema pasivo fiable para desorbitar etapas de cohetes agotadas y satélites al final de su misión, mitigando el crecimiento de la basura espacial. Una amarra sin aislamiento captura electrones del plasma ambiente a lo largo de su segmento polarizado positivamente, el cual puede alcanzar varios kilómetros de longitud, mientras que emite electrones de vuelta al plasma mediante un contactor de plasma activo de baja impedancia en su extremo catódico, tal como un cátodo hueco (hollow cathode). En ausencia de un contactor catódico activo, la corriente que circula por una amarra desnuda en órbita es nula en ambos extremos de la amarra y se dice que ésta está flotando eléctricamente. Para emisión termoiónica despreciable y captura de corriente en condiciones limitadas por movimiento orbital (orbital-motion-limited, OML), el cociente entre las longitudes de los segmentos anódico y catódico es muy pequeño debido a la disparidad de masas entre iones y electrones. Tal modo de operación resulta en una corriente media y fuerza de Lorentz bajas en la amarra, la cual es poco eficiente como dispositivo para desorbitar. El electride C12A7 : e−, que podría presentar una función de trabajo (work function) tan baja como W = 0.6 eV y un comportamiento estable a temperaturas relativamente altas, ha sido propuesto como recubrimiento para amarras desnudas. La emisión termoiónica a lo largo de un segmento así recubierto y bajo el calentamiento de la operación espacial, puede ser más eficiente que la captura iónica. En el modo más simple de fuerza de frenado, podría eliminar la necesidad de un contactor catódico activo y su correspondientes requisitos de alimentación de gas y subsistema de potencia, lo que resultaría en un sistema real de amarra “sin combustible”. Con este recubrimiento de bajo W, cada segmento elemental del segmento catódico de una amarra desnuda de kilómetros de longitud emitiría corriente como si fuese parte de una sonda cilíndrica, caliente y uniformemente polarizada al potencial local de la amarra. La operación es similar a la de una sonda de Langmuir 2D tanto en los segmentos catódico como anódico. Sin embargo, en presencia de emisión, los electrones emitidos resultan en carga espacial (space charge) negativa, la cual reduce el campo eléctrico que los acelera hacia fuera, o incluso puede desacelerarlos y hacerlos volver a la sonda. Se forma una doble vainas (double sheath) estable con electrones emitidos desde la sonda e iones provenientes del plasma ambiente. La densidad de corriente termoiónica, variando a lo largo del segmento catódico, podría seguir dos leyes distintas bajo diferentes condiciones: (i) la ley de corriente limitada por la carga espacial (space-charge-limited, SCL) o (ii) la ley de Richardson-Dushman (RDS). Se presenta un estudio preliminar sobre la corriente SCL frente a una sonda emisora usando la teoría de vainas (sheath) formada por la captura iónica en condiciones OML, y la corriente electrónica SCL entre los electrodos cilíndricos según Langmuir. El modelo, que incluye efectos óhmicos y el efecto de transición de emisión SCL a emisión RDS, proporciona los perfiles de corriente y potencial a lo largo de la longitud completa de la amarra. El análisis muestra que en el modo más simple de fuerza de frenado, bajo condiciones orbitales y de amarras típicas, la emisión termoiónica proporciona un contacto catódico eficiente y resulta en una sección catódica pequeña. En el análisis anterior, tanto la transición de emisión SCL a RD como la propia ley de emisión SCL consiste en un modelo muy simplificado. Por ello, a continuación se ha estudiado con detalle la solución de vaina estacionaria de una sonda con emisión termoiónica polarizada negativamente respecto a un plasma isotrópico, no colisional y sin campo magnético. La existencia de posibles partículas atrapadas ha sido ignorada y el estudio incluye tanto un estudio semi-analítico mediante técnica asintóticas como soluciones numéricas completas del problema. Bajo las tres condiciones (i) alto potencial, (ii) R = Rmax para la validez de la captura iónica OML, y (iii) potencial monotónico, se desarrolla un análisis asintótico auto-consistente para la estructura de plasma compleja que contiene las tres especies de cargas (electrones e iones del plasma, electrones emitidos), y cuatro regiones espaciales distintas, utilizando teorías de movimiento orbital y modelos cinéticos de las especies. Aunque los electrones emitidos presentan carga espacial despreciable muy lejos de la sonda, su efecto no se puede despreciar en el análisis global de la estructura de la vaina y de dos capas finas entre la vaina y la región cuasi-neutra. El análisis proporciona las condiciones paramétricas para que la corriente sea SCL. También muestra que la emisión termoiónica aumenta el radio máximo de la sonda para operar dentro del régimen OML y que la emisión de electrones es mucho más eficiente que la captura iónica para el segmento catódico de la amarra. En el código numérico, los movimientos orbitales de las tres especies son modelados para potenciales tanto monotónico como no-monotónico, y sonda de radio R arbitrario (dentro o más allá del régimen de OML para la captura iónica). Aprovechando la existencia de dos invariante, el sistema de ecuaciones Poisson-Vlasov se escribe como una ecuación integro-diferencial, la cual se discretiza mediante un método de diferencias finitas. El sistema de ecuaciones algebraicas no lineal resultante se ha resuelto de con un método Newton-Raphson paralelizado. Los resultados, comparados satisfactoriamente con el análisis analítico, proporcionan la emisión de corriente y la estructura del plasma y del potencial electrostático. ABSTRACT An electrodynamic tether operates on electromagnetic principles and exchanges momentum through the planetary magnetosphere, by continuously interacting with the ionosphere. It is a reliable passive subsystem to deorbit spent rocket stages and satellites at its end of mission, mitigating the growth of orbital debris. A tether left bare of insulation collects electrons by its own uninsulated and positively biased segment with kilometer range, while electrons are emitted by a low-impedance active device at the cathodic end, such as a hollow cathode, to emit the full electron current. In the absence of an active cathodic device, the current flowing along an orbiting bare tether vanishes at both ends and the tether is said to be electrically floating. For negligible thermionic emission and orbital-motion-limited (OML) collection throughout the entire tether (electron/ion collection at anodic/cathodic segment, respectively), the anodic-to-cathodic length ratio is very small due to ions being much heavier, which results in low average current and Lorentz drag. The electride C12A7 : e−, which might present a possible work function as low as W = 0.6 eV and moderately high temperature stability, has been proposed as coating for floating bare tethers. Thermionic emission along a thus coated cathodic segment, under heating in space operation, can be more efficient than ion collection and, in the simplest drag mode, may eliminate the need for an active cathodic device and its corresponding gas-feed requirements and power subsystem, which would result in a truly “propellant-less” tether system. With this low-W coating, each elemental segment on the cathodic segment of a kilometers-long floating bare-tether would emit current as if it were part of a hot cylindrical probe uniformly polarized at the local tether bias, under 2D probe conditions that are also applied to the anodic-segment analysis. In the presence of emission, emitted electrons result in negative space charge, which decreases the electric field that accelerates them outwards, or even reverses it, decelerating electrons near the emitting probe. A double sheath would be established with electrons being emitted from the probe and ions coming from the ambient plasma. The thermionic current density, varying along the cathodic segment, might follow two distinct laws under different con ditions: i) space-charge-limited (SCL) emission or ii) full Richardson-Dushman (RDS) emission. A preliminary study on the SCL current in front of an emissive probe is presented using the orbital-motion-limited (OML) ion-collection sheath and Langmuir’s SCL electron current between cylindrical electrodes. A detailed calculation of current and bias profiles along the entire tether length is carried out with ohmic effects considered and the transition from SCL to full RDS emission is included. Analysis shows that in the simplest drag mode, under typical orbital and tether conditions, thermionic emission provides efficient cathodic contact and leads to a short cathodic section. In the previous analysis, both the transition between SCL and RDS emission and the current law for SCL condition have used a very simple model. To continue, considering an isotropic, unmagnetized, colissionless plasma and a stationary sheath, the probe-plasma contact is studied in detail for a negatively biased probe with thermionic emission. The possible trapped particles are ignored and this study includes both semianalytical solutions using asymptotic analysis and complete numerical solutions. Under conditions of i) high bias, ii) R = Rmax for ion OML collection validity, and iii) monotonic potential, a self-consistent asymptotic analysis is carried out for the complex plasma structure involving all three charge species (plasma electrons and ions, and emitted electrons) and four distinct spatial regions using orbital motion theories and kinetic modeling of the species. Although emitted electrons present negligible space charge far away from the probe, their effect cannot be neglected in the global analysis for the sheath structure and two thin layers in between the sheath and the quasineutral region. The parametric conditions for the current to be space-chargelimited are obtained. It is found that thermionic emission increases the range of probe radius for OML validity and is greatly more effective than ion collection for cathodic contact of tethers. In the numerical code, the orbital motions of all three species are modeled for both monotonic and non-monotonic potential, and for any probe radius R (within or beyond OML regime for ion collection). Taking advantage of two constants of motion (energy and angular momentum), the Poisson-Vlasov equation is described by an integro differential equation, which is discretized using finite difference method. The non-linear algebraic equations are solved using a parallel implementation of the Newton-Raphson method. The results, which show good agreement with the analytical results, provide the results for thermionic current, the sheath structure, and the electrostatic potential.
Resumo:
Integrated master-oscillator power amplifiers driven under steady-state injection conditions are known to show a complex dynamics resulting in a variety of emission regimes. We present experimental results on the emission characteristics of a 1.5 µm distributed feedback tapered master-oscillator power-amplifier in a wide range of steady-state injection conditions, showing different dynamic behaviors. The study combines the optical and radio-frequency spectra recorded under different levels of injected current into the master oscillator and the power amplifier sections. Under low injection current of the master oscillator the correlation between the optical and radio-frequency spectral maps allows to identify operation regimes in which the device emission arises from either the master oscillator mode or from the compound cavity modes allowed by the residual reflectance of the amplifier front facet. The quasi-periodic occurrence of these emission regimes as a function of the amplifier current is interpreted in terms of a thermally tuned competition between the modes of the master oscillator and the compound cavity modes. Under high injection current of the masteroscillator, two different regimes alternate quasi-periodically as a function of the injected current in the power amplifier: a stable regime with a single mode emission at the master oscillator frequency, and an unstable and complex self-pulsating regime showing strong peaks in the radio-frequency spectra as well as multiple frequencies in the optical spectra.
Resumo:
We present and analyze experimental results on the emission characteristics of a 1.5 ?m distributed feedback tapered master-oscillator power-amplifier in a wide range of steady-state injection conditions, showing different emission regimes under cw operation: stable single frequency emission, multi-frequency Fabry-Perot-like emission, and self-pulsation operation.
Resumo:
With a thin coating of low-work-function material, thermionic emission in the cathodic segment of bare tethers might be much greater than orbital-motion-limited (OML) ion collection current. The space charge of the emitted electrons decreases the electric field that accelerates them outwards, and could even reverse it for high enough emission, producing a potential hollow. In this work, at the conditions of high bias and relatively low emission that make the potential monotonic, an asymptotic analysis is carried out, extending the OML ion-collection analysis to investigate the probe response due to electrons emitted by the negatively biased cylindrical probe. At given emission, the space charge effect from emitted electrons increases with decreasing magnitude of negative probe bias. Although emitted electrons present negligible space charge far away from the probe, their effect cannot be neglected in the global analysis for the sheath structure and two thin layers in between sheath and the quasineutral region. The space-charge-limited condition is located. It is found that thermionic emission increases the range of probe radius for OML validity and is greatly more effective than ion collection for cathodic contact of tethers.
Resumo:
En la presente tesis doctoral se ha realizado un estudio utilizando diferentes técnicas de crecimiento (RPE-MOCVD y spray pyrolysis) y estructuras (nanohilos, pozos y puntos cuánticos y capas) con el objetivo de desarrollar dispositivos que cubran desde el rango visible hasta el ultravioleta. Es por esta razón por la que se han elegido materiales basados en ZnO, debido a la posibilidades que estos ofrecen para variar su bandgap en un amplio rango de energías. Prueba de ello es que en este estudio se ha conseguido cubrir un rango espectral desde 1.86 hasta 4.11 eV, estudiandose además fenómenos físicos como son la difusión e incorporaci ón de la aleación o la adsorción de gases en la super_cie, lo que ha permitido la fabricación de diferentes fotodetectores de gran sensibilidad. Por todo ello, los resultados obtenidos en esta tesis suponen una gran contribución al conocimiento de las propiedades físicas de las aleaciones de Zn(Cd)O y Zn(Mg)O para potenciales aplicaciónes en dispositivos que operen en el rango visible y ultravioleta del espectro, respectivamente. En esta memoria se da en primer lugar una visión de las propiedades de materiales basados en ZnO, entrando en detalle en una de las ventajas que este presenta, la facilidad que tiene este material para formar nanoestructuras. En el capítulo 3 se dan los conceptos teóricos necesarios para comprender las propiedades ópticas de este tipo de materiales, mostrando también los resultados más reseñables obtenidos en ZnO. En los capítulos referentes a los resultados se pueden diferenciar dos grandes bloques. En el primer bloque de resultados se han analizado nanohilos y pozos cuánticos de Zn(Cd)O crecidos por la técnica de RPE-MOCVD (Capítulos 4 y 5). En el segundo se expondrá el estudio realizado sobre capas y puntos cuánticos de Zn(Mg)O crecidos por la técnica spray pyrolysis como se describe en mayor detalle a continuación. Nanohilos y pozos cuánticos de Zn(Cd)O crecidos por RPE-MOCVD Teóricamente aleando el ZnO con CdO es posible disminuir el valor del band- gap desde 3.37 eV hasta 0.95 eV, cubriendo por completo el espectro visible. El desarrollo del ternario Zn(Cd)O permitiría la fabricación de heteroestructuras y pozos cuánticos, muy importantes en el desarrollo de dispositivos optoelectrónicos que cubran la parte visible del espectro. Sin embargo, la diferencia de estructura cristalina entre estos dos materiales junto a la baja solubilidad del Cd y su alta presión de vapor, di_culta la obtención de material de alta calidad cristalina con alto contenido en Cd. En esta tesis doctoral se ha realizado una completa caracterización óptica y estructural de nanohilos de Zn(Cd)O credidos por la técnica de RPE-MOCVD. Estos nanohilos tinene unas longitudes comprendidas entre 1 y 3 _m y diámetros entre 100 y 200 nm. La concentración máxima introducida de Cd en estas estructuras ha sido de hasta un 54% manteniendo la estructura wurtzita del ZnO, siendo este el mayor contenido de Cd introducido hasta la fecha en nanostructuras basada en ZnO. Este hecho se traduce en una variación de la energía de emisión entre 3.31 y 1.86 eV con el aumento en Cd. El uso de diferentes técnicas de alta resoluci ón de caracterización estructural ha permitido demostrar la presencia de una sola fase estructural wurtzita sin observarse ningún indicio de separación de fases ni acumulación de Cd a lo largo del nanohilo para todos los contenidos de Cd. Con el propósito de fabricar dispositivos en nanohilos individuales, parte de esta tesis doctoral ha estado dedicada a estudiar el impacto que el recocido térmico tiene en las propiedades ópticas y eléctricas de nanohilos de Zn(Cd)O. El recocido térmico es un proceso clave en la optimización de dispositivos, ya sea para la obtenci ón de contactos óhmicos, reducción de defectos o difusión de dopantes por ejemplo. En este estudio se ha observado una mejora muy signi_cativa de las propiedades de emisión de los nanohilos cuando estos eran recocidos a temperaturas mayores que la de crecimiento (300 oC). En las muestras con Cd se ha observado además que el recocido también produce un desplazamiento de la emisión hacia mayores energías debido a una reducción homogénea del contenido de Cd. Medidas de fotoluminiscencia con resolución temporal muestran el impacto que tiene la localización del excitón en las _uctuaciones de potencial, debidas a una distribución estadística del Cd, en la dinámica de los portadores. Comparando el tiempo de vida de los portadores entre los nanohilos recocidos y sin recocer se ha observado un aumento de este parámetro en las estructuras recocidas. Este aumento es fundamentalmente debido a una reducción de centros de recombinación no radiativa asociados a defectos presentes a lo largo del nanohilo. Además, se ha estudiado la evolución de los tiempos de vida de los portadores en función de la temperatura, registrándose una menor estabilidad con la temperatura de los tiempos de vida en las muestras recocidas. Este resultado sugiere que el recocido térmico consigue reducir parte del desorden de la aleación en la estructura. Tras haber caracterizados los nanohilos se desarrollaron una serie de procesa dos para la fabricación de dispositivos basados en nanohilos individuales. Se fabricaron en concreto fotodetectores sensibles al UV, en los que se observó también la alta sensibilidad que muestran a la adsorción de gases en la super_cie, incrementada por la gran relación super_cie/volúmen característica de las nanoestructuras. Estos procesos de adsorción observados tienen un impacto directo sobre las propiedades ópticas y electricas de los dispositivos como se ha demostrado. Por ello que en esta tesis se hayan estudiado en detalle este tipo de procesos, ideando maneras para tener un mayor control sobre ellos. Finalmente se crecieron estructuras de pozos cuántico de ZnCdO/ZnO en nanohilos con contenidos de Cd nominales de 54 %. Las medidas ópticas realizadas mostraron como al aumentar la anchura del pozo de 0.7 a 10 nm, la emisión relacionada con el pozo se desplazaba entre 3.30 y 1.97 eV. Este gran desplazamiento representa el mayor obtenido hasta la fecha en pozos cuánticos de ZnCdO/ZnO. Sin embargo, al caracterizar estructuralmente estas muestras se observó la presencia de procesos de difusión de Cd entre el pozo y la barrera. Como se ha podido medir, este tipo de procesos reducen sustancialmente la concentración de Cd en el pozo al difundirse parte a la barrera. cambiando completamente la estructura de bandas nominal de estas estructuras. Este estudio demuestra la importancia del impacto de los procesos de difusión en la interpretación de los efectos de con_namiento cuántico para este tipo de estructuras. Capas y puntos cuánticos de Zn(Mg)O crecidos por spray pyrolysis La técnica de spray pyrolysis, debido a su simplicidad, bajo coste y capacidad de crecer sobre grandes áreas conservando una alta calidad cristalina presenta un gran interés en la comunidad cientí_ca para el potencial desarrollo de dispositivos comerciales. En esta tesis se ha estudiado las propiedades ópticas y eléctricas de capas y puntos cuánticos de Zn(Mg)O crecidos por esta técnica. Al contrario que pasa con el Cd, al introducir Mg en la estructura wurtzita de ZnO se consigue aumentar el bandgap del semiconductor. Sin embargo, al igual que pasa con el CdO, la diferencia de estructura cristalina entre el ZnO y el MgO limita la cantidad de Mg que se puede incorporar, haciendo que para una cierta concentración de Mg aparezcan el fenómeno de separación de fases. En esta tesis se ha conseguido incorporar hasta un contenido de Mg del 35% en la estructura wurtzita del ZnO utilizando la técnica de spray pyrolysis, resultado que representa la mayor concentración de Mg publicada hasta la fecha. Este hecho ha posibilitado variar la energía del borde de absorción desde 3.30 a 4.11 eV. En estas capas se ha realizado una completa caracterización óptica observándose una diferencia entre las energías del borde de absorción y del máximo de emisión creciente con el contenido en Mg. Esta diferencia, conocida como desplazamiento de Stokes, es debida en parte a la presencia de _uctuaciones de potencial producidas por un desorden estadístico de la aleación. Se han fabricado fotodetectores MSM de alta calidad utilizando las capas de Zn(Mg)O previamente caracterizadas, observándose un desplazamiento del borde de absorción con el aumento en Mg desde 3.32 a 4.02 eV. Estos dispositivos muestran altos valores de responsividad (10-103 A/W) y altos contrastes entre la responsividad bajo iluminación y oscuridad (10-107). Estos resultados son en parte debidos a la presencia de mecanismos de ganancia y una reducción de la corriente de oscuridad en las muestras con alto contenido de Mg. Utilizando esta misma técnica de crecimiento se han crecido puntos de Zn(Mg)O con concentraciones nominales de Mg entre 0 y 100 %, con dimensiones medias entre 4 y 6 nm. Las medidas estructurales realizadas muestran que hasta un valor de Mg de 45 %, los puntos están compuestos por una única fase estructural, wurtzita. A partir de esa concentración de Mg aparece una fase cúbica en los puntos, coexistiendo con la fase hexagonal hasta una concentración nominales del 85 %. Para concentraciones mayores de Mg, los puntos muestran una única fase estructural cúbica. Medidas de absorción realizadas en estos puntos de Zn(Mg)O muestran un desplazamiento del borde de absorción entre 3.33 y 3.55 eV cuando la concentraci ón de Mg en los puntos aumenta hasta el 40 %. Este desplazamiento observado es debido solamente a la fase wurtzita del Zn(Mg)O donde se incorpora el Mg. ABSTRACT This PhD theis presents a study using di_erent growth techniques (RPEMOCVD and spray pyrolysis) and structures (nanowires, quantum dots and wells and layers) in order to develop devices that extend from the visible to the ultraviolet range. For this reason ZnO based materials have been choosen, because they o_er the possibility to tunne the bandgap in this energy range. Proof of this is that this study has managed to cover a spectral range from 1.86 to 4.11 eV, also being studied physical phenomena such as di_usion and incorporation of alloy or adsorption of gases on the surface, allowing the develop di_erent highly sensitive photodetectors. Therefore, the results obtained in this thesis are a great contribution two large blockso the knowledge of the physical properties of alloys Zn(Cd)O and Zn(Mg)O for potential applications in devices that operate in the visible and ultraviolet range, respectively. In the _rst chapter, the general properties of ZnO-based materials are presented, showing the facilities that these kind of materials o_er to obtain di_erent nanoestructures. In Chapter 3, optical theoretical concepts are given to understand the optical properties of these materials, also showing the most signi_cant results of ZnO. In the chapters related with the results, two blocks could be distinguish. In the _rst one, Zn(Cd)O nanowires and quantum wells grown by RPE-MOCVD have been analyzed (Chapters 4 and 5). The second block of results shows the study performed in Zn(Mg)O _lms and quantum dots grown by spray pyrolysis. Zn(Cd)O nanowires and quantum wells grown by RPE-MOCVD In summary, the results of the PhD thesis are a great contribution to the knowledge of the physical properties of Zn(Cd)O and Zn(Mg)O alloys and their application for high performance devices operating in the visible and UV ranges, respectively. The performance of the device is still limited due to alloy solubility and p-doping stability, which opens a door for future research in this _eld. Theoretically, annealing ZnO with CdO allows to reduce the bandgap from 3.37 to 0.95 eV, covering the whole visible spectrum. The development of ZnCdO alloys allows the fabrication of heterostructures and quantum wells, necessary for the development of high performance optoelectronic devices. However, the di_erent crystal structures between CdO and ZnO and the low solubility of Cd and its high vapor pressure, hinders the growth of ZnCdO alloys with high Cd contents. In this PhD thesis Zn(Cd)O nanowires have been optically and structurally characterized, obtaining a maximum Cd content of 54% while maintaining their wurtzite structure. This Cd content, which allows lowering the bandgap down to 1.86 eV, is the highest concentration ever reported in nanostructures based on ZnO. The combination of optical and structural characterization techniques used during this thesis has allowed the demonstration of the presence of a single wurtzite structure, without observing any indication of phase separation or Cd accumulation along the nanowire. Annealing processes are essential in the fabrication of optoelectronic devices. For this reason, a complete study of the annealing e_ects in the optical and electrical properties of Zn(Cd)O nanowires has been performed. In the _rst place, annealing nanowires at higher temperatures than their growth temperature (300 oC) allows a signi_cant improvement of their emission properties. However, in the samples that contain Cd a shift in the emission towards higher energies has been observed due to a homogeneous reduction of the Cd content in the nanowires. Time resolved photoluminescence measurements show the impact of the exciton localization in the potential _uctuations due to a statistical alloy disorder. An increase in the carrier lifetime has been obtained for the annealed nanowires. This increase is mainly due to the reduction of non-radiative recombination centers associated with the defects present in the material. Furthermore, temperature dependent time resolved photoluminescence measurements suggest a reduction of the alloy disorder in the annealed samples. In this thesis, single nanowire photodetectors with a high responsivity in the UV range have been demonstrated. Due to the high surface/volume ratio, these structures are very sensitive to gas adsorption at the surface, which largely de_nes the optical and electrical properties of the material and, therefore, of the device. With the aim of obtaining time stable devices, the dynamic adsorption-desorption processes have been studied, developing di_erent approaches that allow a higher control over them. Finally, ZnCdO/ZnO quantum wells have been grown with a nominal Cd concentration of 54% inside the well. The performed optical measurements show that increasing the well width from 0.7 to 10 nm, shifts the emission related with the well from 3.30 to 1.97 eV. This result represents the highest shift reported in the literature. However, a detailed structural characterization shows the presence of di_usion phenomena which substantially reduce the concentration of Cd in the well, while increasing it in the barrier. This type of phenomena should be considered when ac curately interpretating the quantum con_nement e_ects in Zn(Cd)O/ZnO quantum wells. Theoretically, annealing ZnO with CdO allows to decrease the bandgap from 3.37 to 0.95 eV, covering the whole visible spectrum. Zn(Mg)O _lms and quantum dots grown by spray pyrolysis Due to its simplicity, low-cost and capacity to grow over large areas conserving a high crystal quality, spray pyrolysis technique presents a great interest in the scienti_c community for developing comercial devices. In this thesis, a complete study of the optical and structural properties of Zn(Mg)O _lms and quantum dots grown by spray pyrolysis has been performed. Contrary to Zn(Cd)O alloys, when introducing Mg in the ZnO wurtzite structure an increase in the bandgap in obtained. Once again, the di_erence in the crystal structure of ZnO and MgO limits the amount of Mg that can be introduced before phase separation appears. In this PhD thesis, a maximum Mg content of 35% has been incorporated in the wurtzite structure using spray pyrolysis. This variation in the Mg content translates into an increase of the absorption edge from 3.30 to 4.11 eV. Up to this date, this result represents the highest Mg content introduced by spray pyrolysis in a ZnO wurzite structure reported in the literature. The comparison of the emission and absorption spectra shows the presence of an increasing Stokes shift with Mg content. This phenomenon is partialy related with the presence of potential _uctuations due to an statistic alloy disorder. MSM photodetectors have been processed on previously characterized Zn(Mg)O _lms. These devices have shown a shift in the absorption edge from 3.32 to 4.02 eV with the increase in Mg content, high responsivity values (10-103 A/W) and high contrast ratios between illuminated and dark responsivities (10-107). These values are explained by the presence of a gain mechanism and a reduction of dark current in the ZnMgO samples. Zn(Mg)O quantum dots have also been grown using spray pyrolysis with Mg concentrations between 0 and 100% and with average widths ranging 4 to 6 nm. Structural measurements show that at a Mg concentration of 45% the cubic phase appears, coexisting with the hexagonal phase up to an 85% concentration of Mg content. From 85% onwards the quantum dots show only the cubic phase. Absorption measurements performed in these structures reveal a shift in the absorption edge from 3.33 to 3.55 eV when the Mg content increases up to 40 %.
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Air pollution abatement policies must be based on quantitative information on current and future emissions of pollutants. As emission projections uncertainties are inevitable and traditional statistical treatments of uncertainty are highly time/resources consuming, a simplified methodology for nonstatistical uncertainty estimation based on sensitivity analysis is presented in this work. The methodology was applied to the “with measures” scenario for Spain, concretely over the 12 highest emitting sectors regarding greenhouse gas and air pollutants emissions. Examples of methodology application for two important sectors (power plants, and agriculture and livestock) are shown and explained in depth. Uncertainty bands were obtained up to 2020 by modifying the driving factors of the 12 selected sectors and the methodology was tested against a recomputed emission trend in a low economic-growth perspective and official figures for 2010, showing a very good performance. Implications: A solid understanding and quantification of uncertainties related to atmospheric emission inventories and projections provide useful information for policy negotiations. However, as many of those uncertainties are irreducible, there is an interest on how they could be managed in order to derive robust policy conclusions. Taking this into account, a method developed to use sensitivity analysis as a source of information to derive nonstatistical uncertainty bands for emission projections is presented and applied to Spain. This method simplifies uncertainty assessment and allows other countries to take advantage of their sensitivity analyses.
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The excitons in the orthorhombic phase of the perovskite CH3NH3PbI3 are studied using the effective mass approximation. The electron–hole interaction is screened by a distance-dependent dielectric function, as described by the Haken potential or the Pollmann–Büttner potential. The energy spectrum and the eigenfunctions are calculated for both cases. The results show that the Pollmann–Büttner model, using the corresponding parameters obtained from ab initio calculations, provides better agreement with the experimental results.
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There is considerable evidence from animal studies that gonadal steroid hormones modulate neuronal activity and affect behavior. To study this in humans directly, we used H215O positron-emission tomography to measure regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in young women during three pharmacologically controlled hormonal conditions spanning 4–5 months: ovarian suppression induced by the gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist leuprolide acetate (Lupron), Lupron plus estradiol replacement, and Lupron plus progesterone replacement. Estradiol and progesterone were administered in a double-blind cross-over design. On each occasion positron-emission tomography scans were performed during (i) the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, a neuropsychological test that physiologically activates prefrontal cortex (PFC) and an associated cortical network including inferior parietal lobule and posterior inferolateral temporal gyrus, and (ii) a no-delay matching-to-sample sensorimotor control task. During treatment with Lupron alone (i.e., with virtual absence of gonadal steroid hormones), there was marked attenuation of the typical Wisconsin Card Sorting Test activation pattern even though task performance did not change. Most strikingly, there was no rCBF increase in PFC. When either progesterone or estrogen was added to the Lupron regimen, there was normalization of the rCBF activation pattern with augmentation of the parietal and temporal foci and return of the dorsolateral PFC activation. These data directly demonstrate that the hormonal milieu modulates cognition-related neural activity in humans.
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Existing methods for assessing protein synthetic rates (PSRs) in human skeletal muscle are invasive and do not readily provide information about individual muscle groups. Recent studies in canine skeletal muscle yielded PSRs similar to results of simultaneous stable isotope measurements using l-[1-13C, methyl-2H3]methionine, suggesting that positron-emission tomography (PET) with l-[methyl-11C]methionine could be used along with blood sampling and a kinetic model to provide a less invasive, regional assessment of PSR. We have extended and refined this method in an investigation with healthy volunteers studied in the postabsorptive state. They received ≈25 mCi of l-[methyl-11C]methionine with serial PET imaging of the thighs and arterial blood sampling for a period of 90 min. Tissue and metabolite-corrected arterial blood time activity curves were fitted to a three-compartment model. PSR (nmol methionine⋅min−1⋅g muscle tissue−1) was calculated from the fitted parameter values and the plasma methionine concentrations, assuming equal rates of protein synthesis and degradation. Pooled mean PSR for the anterior and posterior sites was 0.50 ± 0.040. When converted to a fractional synthesis rate for mixed proteins in muscle, assuming a protein-bound methionine content of muscle tissue, the value of 0.125 ± 0.01%⋅h−1 compares well with estimates from direct tracer incorporation studies, which generally range from ≈0.05 to 0.09%⋅h−1. We conclude that PET can be used to estimate skeletal muscle PSR in healthy human subjects and that it holds promise for future in vivo, noninvasive studies of the influences of physiological factors, pharmacological manipulations, and disease states on this important component of muscle protein turnover and balance.
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Long-term visual memory performance was impaired by two types of challenges: a diazepam challenge on acquisition and a sensory challenge on recognition. Using positron-emission tomography regional cerebral blood flow imaging, we studied the effect of these challenges on regional brain activation during the delayed recognition of abstract visual shapes as compared with a baseline fixation task. Both challenges induced a significant decrease in differential activation in the left fusiform gyrus, suggesting that this region is involved in the automatic or volitional comparison of incoming and stored stimuli. In contrast, thalamic differential activation increased in response to memory challenges. This increase might reflect enhanced retrieval attempts as a compensatory mechanism for restoring recognition performance.
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The effect of atmospheric aerosols and regional haze from air pollution on the yields of rice and winter wheat grown in China is assessed. The assessment is based on estimates of aerosol optical depths over China, the effect of these optical depths on the solar irradiance reaching the earth’s surface, and the response of rice and winter wheat grown in Nanjing to the change in solar irradiance. Two sets of aerosol optical depths are presented: one based on a coupled, regional climate/air quality model simulation and the other inferred from solar radiation measurements made over a 12-year period at meteorological stations in China. The model-estimated optical depths are significantly smaller than those derived from observations, perhaps because of errors in one or both sets of optical depths or because the data from the meteorological stations has been affected by local pollution. Radiative transfer calculations using the smaller, model-estimated aerosol optical depths indicate that the so-called “direct effect” of regional haze results in an ≈5–30% reduction in the solar irradiance reaching some of China’s most productive agricultural regions. Crop-response model simulations suggest an ≈1:1 relationship between a percentage increase (decrease) in total surface solar irradiance and a percentage increase (decrease) in the yields of rice and wheat. Collectively, these calculations suggest that regional haze in China is currently depressing optimal yields of ≈70% of the crops grown in China by at least 5–30%. Reducing the severity of regional haze in China through air pollution control could potentially result in a significant increase in crop yields and help the nation meet its growing food demands in the coming decades.
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We are developing quantitative assays to repeatedly and noninvasively image expression of reporter genes in living animals, using positron emission tomography (PET). We synthesized positron-emitting 8-[18F]fluoroganciclovir (FGCV) and demonstrated that this compound is a substrate for the herpes simplex virus 1 thymidine kinase enzyme (HSV1-TK). Using positron-emitting FGCV as a PET reporter probe, we imaged adenovirus-directed hepatic expression of the HSV1-tk reporter gene in living mice. There is a significant positive correlation between the percent injected dose of FGCV retained per gram of liver and the levels of hepatic HSV1-tk reporter gene expression (r2 > 0.80). Over a similar range of HSV1-tk expression in vivo, the percent injected dose retained per gram of liver was 0–23% for ganciclovir and 0–3% for FGCV. Repeated, noninvasive, and quantitative imaging of PET reporter gene expression should be a valuable tool for studies of human gene therapy, of organ/cell transplantation, and of both environmental and behavioral modulation of gene expression in transgenic mice.
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The diffraction barrier responsible for a finite focal spot size and limited resolution in far-field fluorescence microscopy has been fundamentally broken. This is accomplished by quenching excited organic molecules at the rim of the focal spot through stimulated emission. Along the optic axis, the spot size was reduced by up to 6 times beyond the diffraction barrier. The simultaneous 2-fold improvement in the radial direction rendered a nearly spherical fluorescence spot with a diameter of 90–110 nm. The spot volume of down to 0.67 attoliters is 18 times smaller than that of confocal microscopy, thus making our results also relevant to three-dimensional photochemistry and single molecule spectroscopy. Images of live cells reveal greater details.