968 resultados para Linear optics in Quantum dots
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Nel corso di questa Tesi sono state studiate le reazioni di cluster carbonil anionici di Platino con fosfine. In particolare, sono state investigate nel dettaglio le reazioni dei cluster [Pt3n(CO)6n]2– (n = 3,4) e [Pt19(CO)22]n– (n = 3,4) con PPh3. Sono state poi preliminarmente studiate anche le reazioni di [Pt24(CO)30]2– e [Pt38(CO)44]2– con PPh3. Questo ha portato alla sintesi e alla completa caratterizzazione mediante diffrazione di raggi X su cristallo singolo delle specie [NBu4]2[Pt9(CO)16(PPh3)2] e [NBu4]x[Pt22(CO)22(PPh3)6]2•yCH3CN, contenenti gli anioni [Pt9(CO)16(PPh3)2]2– e [Pt22(CO)22(PPh3)6]2–. È stato inoltre preparato un nuovo composto tentativamente formulato come [Pt19(CO)20(PPh3)2]4–, sulla base dei dati IR, 31P NMR e ESI-MS. Questi rappresentano i primi esempi di cluster carbonilici anionici di Platino contenenti fosfine. Nel caso delle reazioni di [Pt24(CO)30]2– e [Pt38(CO)44]2– con PPh3 i prodotti sono stati caratterizzati al momento solo mediante spettroscopia IR, e quindi è molto difficile ipotizzare una loro struttura. I composti [Pt9(CO)16(PPh3)2]2– e [Pt19(CO)20(PPh3)2]4– sono stati investigati mediante spettroscopia 31P NMR in soluzione a temperatura variabile. Il primo mostra un unico segnale 31P NMR, in accordo con la struttura allo stato solido, mentre [Pt19(CO)20(PPh3)2]4– è risultato essere flussionale. È stato poi studiato nel dettaglio il comportamento fotochimico dei cluster [Pt3n(CO)6n]2– (n = 3-6) in funzione della concentrazione, confermando la loro natura di “Double emitting quantum dots”. Infine è stato preparato e caratterizzato strutturalmente il sale [DAMS]2[Pt9(CO)18]•dmf, contenente il catione [DAMS]+.
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Mit Hilfe der Pfadintegral-Monte Carlo-Methode werdenPhasendiagramme von physisorbierten Molekülschichten aufGraphit untersucht. Die Verwendung von realistischen Potenzialen sowie dieBehandlung aller translatorischen und rotatorischenFreiheitsgrade erlaubt einen quantitativen Vergleich mit denExperimenten.Krypton-Atome bilden in der Monolage ein kommensurablesGitter mit den Atomen über der Mitte jeder drittenGraphitwabe.Die Vorgänge am Schmelzübergang werden von der Desorptioneiniger Atome dominiert. Die Argon-Schicht auf Graphit ist dagegen inkommensurabel.Zweiatomigen Stickstoff-Moleküle bilden eineorientierungsgeordnete Tieftemperaturphase(Fischgrät-Struktur). Quantenfluktuationen führen zu einer Erniedrigung der mitklassischen Methoden berechneten Phasenübergangstemperaturum 12%.Damit wird der experimentelle Wert von 28 K erreicht.Die Anisotropie und das Dipolmoment von Kohlenmonoxid führenzu einer dipolar geordneten Tieftemperaturphase.Die experimentell nicht geklärte Struktur kann in derQuantensimulation als antiferroelektrischeFischgrät-Struktur identifiziert werden.Der Phasenübergang liegt mit 6 K sehr nahe am Experiment(5.2 K).Für die Argon-Stickstoff-Mischsysteme wird dasPhasendiagramm in der Konzentrations(x)-Temperatur(T)-Ebeneerstellt. Die Übergangstemperaturen decken sich mit denen desExperiments.In Konfigurationen mit zufälliger Teilchenbesetzung weisen die linearen Moleküle ab Argon-Konzentrationen von10% ein Orientierungsglas-Verhalten auf.Durch einen zusätzlichen Teilchenaustausch wird in denMischsystemen die Bildung einer Windrad-Phase ermöglicht, inder die Argon-Atome eine Überstruktur annehmen.Diese Phase wird experimentell imArgon-Kohlenmonoxid-Mischsystem vorgefunden, dessenx-T-Phasendiagramm in guter Übereinstimmung mit denSimulationsergebnissen steht.Die explizite Berücksichtigung der Quantenmechanik in denComputersimulationen liefert wesentliche Beiträge zurKlärung des Phasenverhaltens und der Bestimmung vonÜbergangstemperaturen der Tieftemperaturstrukturen.
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Die Isotopenzusammensetzungen des Pitcairn Hotspot (Südpazifik), des Mauna Kea (Hawaii) und der Insel Rurutu (Französisch Polynesien) wurden bestimmt, um Heterogenitäten im Erdmantel zu charakterisieren. Die Bleiisotopenzusammensetzung wurde mit einer Dreiisotopenspiketechnik zur Korrektur der instrumentellen Massenfraktionierung gemessen. An Proben von Pitcairn wurde zusätzlich die Os, Hf, Nd, Sr Isotopenzusammensetzung, sowie die Haupt- und Spurenelementzusammensetzung bestimmt. Die Isotopensignatur des Pitcairn Hotspots kann durch eine Sedimentkomponente in der Magmenquelle erklärt werden. Die Bleiisotopenschwankungen des Mauna Kea in der HSDP-2 Bohrung treten als Oszillationen auf, die sich zu linearen Anordnungen im Bleiisotopenraum zusammensetzen. Das begrenzte zeitliche Auftreten einer linearen Anordnung zeigt, daß die Heterogenitäten mehrere zehner Kilometer Länge im aufsteigenden Mantelmaterial unter dem Vulkan einnehmen. Auch die Bleiisotopenzusammensetzungen der Rurutu-laven zeigen lineare Anordnungen.Diese lineare Anordnungen im Bleiisotopenraum können durch eine vorwiegend binäre Mischung erklärt werden. Ein Bleiisotopenentwicklungsmodell unterstützt, daß die Differenzierung der Ausgangsmaterialien vor weniger als etwa zwei Milliarden Jahren geschah und für Mauna Kea relativ jung sein könnte. Keine der Hotspots weisen identische Mischungsendglieder auf, so daß die Heterogenitäten kleinräumige Merkmale im Erdmantel sind.
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Die Arbeit beginnt mit dem Vergleich spezieller Regularisierungsmethoden in der Quantenfeldtheorie mit dem Verfahren zur störungstheoretischen Konstruktion der S-Matrix nach Epstein und Glaser. Da das Epstein-Glaser-Verfahren selbst als Regularisierungsverfahren verwandt werden kann und darüberhinaus ausschließlich auf physikalisch motivierten Postulaten basiert, liefert dieser Vergleich ein Kriterium für die Zulässigkeit anderer Regularisierungsmethoden. Zusätzlich zur Herausstellung dieser Zulässigkeit resultiert aus dieser Gegenüberstellung als weiteres wesentliches Resultat ein neues, in der Anwendung praktikables sowie konsistentes Regularisierungsverfahren, das modifizierte BPHZ-Verfahren. Dieses wird anhand von Ein-Schleifen-Diagrammen aus der QED (Elektronselbstenergie, Vakuumpolarisation und Vertexkorrektur) demonstriert. Im Gegensatz zur vielverwandten Dimensionalen Regularisierung ist dieses Verfahren uneingeschränkt auch für chirale Theorien anwendbar. Als Beispiel hierfür dient die Berechnung der im Rahmen einer axialen Erweiterung der QED-Lagrangedichte auftretenden U(1)-Anomalie. Auf der Stufe von Mehr-Schleifen-Diagrammen zeigt der Vergleich der Epstein-Glaser-Konstruktion mit dem bekannten BPHZ-Verfahren an mehreren Beispielen aus der Phi^4-Theorie, darunter das sog. Sunrise-Diagramm, daß zu deren Berechnung die nach der Waldformel des BPHZ-Verfahrens zur Regularisierung beitragenden Unterdiagramme auf eine kleinere Klasse eingeschränkt werden können. Dieses Resultat ist gleichfalls für die Praxis der Regularisierung bedeutsam, da es bereits auf der Stufe der zu berücksichtigenden Unterdiagramme zu einer Vereinfachung führt.
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The present thesis is concerned with the study of a quantum physical system composed of a small particle system (such as a spin chain) and several quantized massless boson fields (as photon gasses or phonon fields) at positive temperature. The setup serves as a simplified model for matter in interaction with thermal "radiation" from different sources. Hereby, questions concerning the dynamical and thermodynamic properties of particle-boson configurations far from thermal equilibrium are in the center of interest. We study a specific situation where the particle system is brought in contact with the boson systems (occasionally referred to as heat reservoirs) where the reservoirs are prepared close to thermal equilibrium states, each at a different temperature. We analyze the interacting time evolution of such an initial configuration and we show thermal relaxation of the system into a stationary state, i.e., we prove the existence of a time invariant state which is the unique limit state of the considered initial configurations evolving in time. As long as the reservoirs have been prepared at different temperatures, this stationary state features thermodynamic characteristics as stationary energy fluxes and a positive entropy production rate which distinguishes it from being a thermal equilibrium at any temperature. Therefore, we refer to it as non-equilibrium stationary state or simply NESS. The physical setup is phrased mathematically in the language of C*-algebras. The thesis gives an extended review of the application of operator algebraic theories to quantum statistical mechanics and introduces in detail the mathematical objects to describe matter in interaction with radiation. The C*-theory is adapted to the concrete setup. The algebraic description of the system is lifted into a Hilbert space framework. The appropriate Hilbert space representation is given by a bosonic Fock space over a suitable L2-space. The first part of the present work is concluded by the derivation of a spectral theory which connects the dynamical and thermodynamic features with spectral properties of a suitable generator, say K, of the time evolution in this Hilbert space setting. That way, the question about thermal relaxation becomes a spectral problem. The operator K is of Pauli-Fierz type. The spectral analysis of the generator K follows. This task is the core part of the work and it employs various kinds of functional analytic techniques. The operator K results from a perturbation of an operator L0 which describes the non-interacting particle-boson system. All spectral considerations are done in a perturbative regime, i.e., we assume that the strength of the coupling is sufficiently small. The extraction of dynamical features of the system from properties of K requires, in particular, the knowledge about the spectrum of K in the nearest vicinity of eigenvalues of the unperturbed operator L0. Since convergent Neumann series expansions only qualify to study the perturbed spectrum in the neighborhood of the unperturbed one on a scale of order of the coupling strength we need to apply a more refined tool, the Feshbach map. This technique allows the analysis of the spectrum on a smaller scale by transferring the analysis to a spectral subspace. The need of spectral information on arbitrary scales requires an iteration of the Feshbach map. This procedure leads to an operator-theoretic renormalization group. The reader is introduced to the Feshbach technique and the renormalization procedure based on it is discussed in full detail. Further, it is explained how the spectral information is extracted from the renormalization group flow. The present dissertation is an extension of two kinds of a recent research contribution by Jakšić and Pillet to a similar physical setup. Firstly, we consider the more delicate situation of bosonic heat reservoirs instead of fermionic ones, and secondly, the system can be studied uniformly for small reservoir temperatures. The adaption of the Feshbach map-based renormalization procedure by Bach, Chen, Fröhlich, and Sigal to concrete spectral problems in quantum statistical mechanics is a further novelty of this work.
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Metallische Objekte in der Größenordnung der optischen Wellenlänge zeigen Resonanzen im optischen Spektralbereich. Mit einer Kombination aus Kolloidlithographie, Metallfilmbedampfung und reaktivem Ionenstrahl¨atzen wurden Nanosicheln aus Gold bzw. Silber mit identischer Form und Orientierung in Sichelform mit einer Größe von 60nm bis 400nm hergestellt. Der Öffnungswinkel der Nanosicheln lässt sich kontinuierlich einstellen. Durch die einheitliche Orientierung lassen sich Messungen am Ensemble direkt auf das Verhalten des Einzelobjektes übertragen, wie ein Vergleich der Extinktionsspektren einer Ensemblemessung am UV/Vis/NIR-Spektrometer mit einer Einzelpartikelmessung in einem konfokalen Mikroskop zeigt. Die optische Antwort der Nanosicheln wurde als zwei-dimensionales Modell mit einer Finite Elemente Methode berechnet. Das Ergebnis sind mehrere polarisationsabhängige Resonanzen im optischen Spektrum. Diese lassen sich durch Variation des Öffnungswinkels und der Gr¨oße der Nanosichel verschieben. Durch Beleuchten lassen sich plasmonische Schwingungen anregen, die ein stark lokalisiertes Nahfeld an den Spitzen und in der Öffnung der Nanosicheln erzeugen. Das Nahfeld der Partikelresonanz wurde mit einer Fotolackmethode nachgewiesen. Die Untersuchungen am UV/Vis/NIR-Spektrometer zeigen mehrere polarisationsabhängige Resonanzen im Spektralbereich von 300 nm bis 3200 nm. Die Resonanzen der Nanosicheln lassen sich durch den Öffnungswinkel und den Durchmesser in der Größenordnung der Halbwertbreite im optischen Spektrum verschieben. In der Anwendung als Chemo- bzw. Biosensor zeigen Gold-Nanosicheln eine ähnliche Empfindlichkeit wie vergleichbare Sensoren auf der Basis von dünnen Metallstrukturen. Das Nahfeld zeichnet sich durch eine starke Lokalisierung aus und dringt, je nach Multipolordnung, zwischen 14 nm und 70 nm in die Umgebung ein. Quantenpunkte wurden an das Nahfeld der Nanosicheln gekoppelt. Die Emission der Quantenpunkte bei einer Wellenlänge von 860nm wird durch die Resonanz der Nanosicheln verstärkt. Die Nanosicheln wurden als optische Pinzette eingesetzt. Bei einer Anregung mit einem Laser bei einer Wellenlänge von 1064 nm wurden Polystyrolkolloide mit einem Durchmesser von 40 nm von den resonanten Nanosicheln eingefangen. Die Nanosicheln zeigen außergewöhnliche optische Eigenschaften, die mithilfe der Geometrieparameter über einen großen Bereich verändert werden können. Die ersten Anwendungen haben Anknüpfungspunkte zur Verwendung in der Sensorik, Fluoreszenzspektroskopie und als optische Pinzette aufgezeigt.
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The last decade has witnessed an exponential growth of activities in the field of nanoscience and nanotechnology worldwide, driven both by the excitement of understanding new science and by the potential hope for applications and economic impacts. The largest activity in this field up to date has been in the synthesis and characterization of new materials consisting of particles with dimensions in the order of a few nanometers, so-called nanocrystalline materials. [1-8] Semiconductor nanomaterials such as III/V or II/VI compound semiconductors exhibit strong quantum confinement behavior in the size range from 1 to 10 nm. Therefore, preparation of high quality semiconductor nanocrystals has been a challenge for synthetic chemists, leading to the recent rapid progress in delivering a wide variety of semiconducting nanomaterials. Semiconductor nanocrystals, also called quantum dots, possess physical properties distinctly different from those of the bulk material. Typically, in the size range from 1 to 10 nm, when the particle size is changed, the band gap between the valence and the conduction band will change, too. In a simple approximation a particle in a box model has been used to describe the phenomenon[9]: at nanoscale dimensions the degenerate energy states of a semiconductor separate into discrete states and the system behaves like one big molecule. The size-dependent transformation of the energy levels of the particles is called “quantum size-effect”. Quantum confinement of both the electron and hole in all three dimensions leads to an increase in the effective bandgap of the material with decreasing crystallite size. Consequently, both the optical absorption and emission of semiconductor nanaocrystals shift to the blue (higher energies) as the size of the particles gets smaller. This color tuning is well documented for CdSe nanocrystals whose absorption and emission covers almost the whole visible spectral range. As particle sizes become smaller the ratio of surface atoms to those in the interior increases, which has a strong impact on particle properties, too. Prominent examples are the low melting point [8] and size/shape dependent pressure resistance [10] of semiconductor nanocrystals. Given the size dependence of particle properties, chemists and material scientists now have the unique opportunity to change the electronic and chemical properties of a material by simply controlling the particle size. In particular, CdSe nanocrystals have been widely investigated. Mainly due to their size-dependent optoelectronic properties [11, 12] and flexible chemical processibility [13], they have played a distinguished role for a number of seminal studies [11, 12, 14, 15]. Potential technical applications have been discussed, too. [8, 16-27] Improvement of the optoelectronic properties of semiconductor nanocrystals is still a prominent research topic. One of the most important approaches is fabricating composite type-I core-shell structures which exhibit improved properties, making them attractive from both a fundamental and a practical point of view. Overcoating of nanocrystallites with higher band gap inorganic materials has been shown to increase the photoluminescence quantum yields by eliminating surface nonradiative recombination sites. [28] Particles passivated with inorganic shells are more robust than nanocrystals covered by organic ligands only and have greater tolerance to processing conditions necessary for incorporation into solid state structures or for other applications. Some examples of core-shell nanocrystals reported earlier include CdS on CdSe [29], CdSe on CdS, [30], ZnS on CdS, [31] ZnS on CdSe[28, 32], ZnSe on CdSe [33] and CdS/HgS/CdS [34]. The characterization and preparation of a new core-shell structure, CdSe nanocrystals overcoated by different shells (CdS, ZnS), is presented in chapter 4. Type-I core-shell structures as mentioned above greatly improve the photoluminescence quantum yield and chemical and photochemical stability of nanocrystals. The emission wavelengths of type-I core/shell nanocrystals typically only shows a small red-shift when compared to the plain core nanocrystals. [30, 31, 35] In contrast to type-I core-shell nanocrystals, only few studies have been conducted on colloidal type-II core/shell structures [36-38] which are characterized by a staggered alignment of conduction and valence bands giving rise to a broad tunability of absorption and emission wavelengths, as was shown for CdTe/CdSe core-shell nanocrystals. [36] The emission of type-II core/shell nanocrystals mainly originates from the radiative recombination of electron-hole pairs across the core-shell interface leading to a long photoluminescence lifetime. Type-II core/shell nanocrystals are promising with respect to photoconduction or photovoltaic applications as has been discussed in the literature.[39] Novel type-II core-shell structures with ZnTe cores are reported in chapter 5. The recent progress in the shape control of semiconductor nanocrystals opens new fields of applications. For instance, rod shaped CdSe nanocrystals can enhance the photo-electro conversion efficiency of photovoltaic cells, [40, 41] and also allow for polarized emission in light emitting diodes. [42, 43] Shape control of anisotropic nanocrystals can be achieved by the use of surfactants, [44, 45] regular or inverse micelles as regulating agents, [46, 47] electrochemical processes, [48] template-assisted [49, 50] and solution-liquid-solution (SLS) growth mechnism. [51-53] Recently, formation of various CdSe nanocrystal shapes has been reported by the groups of Alivisatos [54] and Peng, [55] respectively. Furthermore, it has been reported by the group of Prasad [56] that noble metal nanoparticles can induce anisotropic growth of CdSe nanocrystals at lower temperatures than typically used in other methods for preparing anisotropic CdSe structures. Although several approaches for anisotropic crystal growth have been reported by now, developing new synthetic methods for the shape control of colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals remains an important goal. Accordingly, we have attempted to utilize a crystal phase control approach for the controllable synthesis of colloidal ZnE/CdSe (E = S, Se, Te) heterostructures in a variety of morphologies. The complex heterostructures obtained are presented in chapter 6. The unique optical properties of nanocrystals make them appealing as in vivo and in vitro fluorophores in a variety of biological and chemical investigations, in which traditional fluorescence labels based on organic molecules fall short of providing long-term stability and simultaneous detection of multiple emission colours [References]. The ability to prepare water soluble nanocrystals with high stability and quantum yield has led to promising applications in cellular labeling, [57, 58] deep-tissue imaging, [59, 60] and assay labeling [61, 62]. Furthermore, appropriately solubilized nanocrystals have been used as donors in fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) couples. [63-65] Despite recent progress, much work still needs to be done to achieve reproducible and robust surface functionalization and develop flexible (bio-) conjugation techniques. Based on multi-shell CdSe nanocrystals, several new solubilization and ligand exchange protocols have been developed which are presented in chapter 7. The organization of this thesis is as follows: A short overview describing synthesis and properties of CdSe nanocrystals is given in chapter 2. Chapter 3 is the experimental part providing some background information about the optical and analytical methods used in this thesis. The following chapters report the results of this work: synthesis and characterization of type-I multi-shell and type-II core/shell nanocrystals are described in chapter 4 and chapter 5, respectively. In chapter 6, a high–yield synthesis of various CdSe architectures by crystal phase control is reported. Experiments about surface modification of nanocrystals are described in chapter 7. At last, a short summary of the results is given in chapter 8.
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The development and characterization of biomolecule sensor formats based on the optical technique Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) Spectroscopy and electrochemical methods were investigated. The study can be divided into two parts of different scope. In the first part new novel detection schemes for labeled targets were developed on the basis of the investigations in Surface-plamon Field Enhanced Spectroscopy (SPFS). The first one is SPR fluorescence imaging formats, Surface-plamon Field Enhanced Fluorescence Microscopy (SPFM). Patterned self assembled monolayers (SAMs) were prepared and used to direct the spatial distribution of biomolecules immobilized on surfaces. Here the patterned monolayers would serve as molecular templates to secure different biomolecules to known locations on a surface. The binding processed of labeled target biomolecules from solution to sensor surface were visually and kinetically recorded by the fluorescence microscope, in which fluorescence was excited by the evanescent field of propagating plasmon surface polaritons. The second format which also originates from SPFS technique, Surface-plamon Field Enhanced Fluorescence Spectrometry (SPFSm), concerns the coupling of a fluorometry to normal SPR setup. A spectrograph mounted in place of photomultiplier or microscope can provide the information of fluorescence spectrum as well as fluorescence intensity. This study also firstly demonstrated the analytical combination of surface plasmon enhanced fluorescence detection with analyte tagged by semiconducting nano- crystals (QDs). Electrochemically addressable fabrication of DNA biosensor arrays in aqueous environment was also developed. An electrochemical method was introduced for the directed in-situ assembly of various specific oligonucleotide catcher probes onto different sensing elements of a multi-electrode array in the aqueous environment of a flow cell. Surface plasmon microscopy (SPM) is utilized for the on-line recording of the various functionalization steps. Hybridization reactions between targets from solution to the different surface-bound complementary probes are monitored by surface-plasmon field-enhanced fluorescence microscopy (SPFM) using targets that are either labeled with organic dyes or with semiconducting quantum dots for color-multiplexing. This study provides a new approach for the fabrication of (small) DNA arrays and the recording and quantitative evaluation of parallel hybridization reactions. In the second part of this work, the ideas of combining the SP optical and electrochemical characterization were extended to tethered bilayer lipid membrane (tBLM) format. Tethered bilayer lipid membranes provide a versatile model platform for the study of many membrane related processes. The thiolipids were firstly self-assembled on ultraflat gold substrates. Fusion of the monolayers with small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) formed the distal layer and the membranes thus obtained have the sealing properties comparable to those of natural membranes. The fusion could be monitored optically by SPR as an increase in reflectivity (thickness) upon formation of the outer leaflet of the bilayer. With EIS, a drop in capacitance and a steady increase in resistance could be observed leading to a tightly sealing membrane with low leakage currents. The assembly of tBLMs and the subsequent incorporation of membrane proteins were investigated with respect to their potential use as a biosensing system. In the case of valinomycin the potassium transport mediated by the ion carrier could be shown by a decrease in resistance upon increasing potassium concentration. Potential mediation of membrane pores could be shown for the ion channel forming peptide alamethicin (Alm). It was shown that at high positive dc bias (cis negative) Alm channels stay at relatively low conductance levels and show higher permeability to potassium than to tetramethylammonium. The addition of inhibitor amiloride can partially block the Alm channels and results in increase of membrane resistance. tBLMs are robust and versatile model membrane architectures that can mimic certain properties of biological membranes. tBLMs with incorporated lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and lipid A mimicking bacteria membranes were used to probe the interactions of antibodies against LPS and to investigate the binding and incorporation of the small antimicrobial peptide V4. The influence of membrane composition and charge on the behavior of V4 was also probed. This study displays the possibility of using tBLM platform to record and valuate the efficiency or potency of numerous synthesized antimicrobial peptides as potential drug candidates.
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Polymere Vesikel, gebildet durch Selbstorganisation des amphiphilen Blockcopolymers Polybutadien-b-Polyethylenoxid in Wasser, wurden in der vorliegenden Arbeit erfolgreich mit hydrophoben und hydrophilen Substraten beladen und detailliert charakterisiert. Über verschiedene Präparationsmethoden sind unilamellare PB130-PEO66-Vesikel unterschiedlicher Größen und Verteilungsbreiten zugänglich, die aber alle eine konstante hydrophobe Schalendicke von etwa 15nm aufweisen, wie aus TEM-Messungen hervorgeht. Die hydrophoben Farbstoffe Oil Red EGN, Oil Blue N, Nilrot sowie ein Perylen-Derivat wurden in diese hydrophobe Schale eingelagert. Durch Absorptions-, Emissions-, (cryo)TEM- und Fluoreszenzmikroskopie-Messungen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die selbstorganisierte Struktur durch die Einlagerung der hydrophoben Farbstoffe in die Schale nicht beeinflusst wird. Als zusätzliche hydrophobe Modell-Substrate wurden Halbleiter-Nanokristalle, sogenannte Quantum Dots (QDs, d=5.7nm), erfolgreich in die polymere Vesikelschale eingelagert und durch Fluoreszenz-Korrelations-Spektroskopie (FCS) in Kombination mit dynamischer Lichtstreuung (DLS) nachgewiesen. Die Position der QDs in der Mitte der polymeren Doppelmembran konnte durch cryogene TEM-Abbildungen aufgezeigt werden. Darüber hinaus wurde die hydrophile Beladung des Vesikelkerns mit dem wasserlöslichen Farbstoff Phloxin B erfolgreich realisiert.
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Coupled-cluster theory in its single-reference formulation represents one of the most successful approaches in quantum chemistry for the description of atoms and molecules. To extend the applicability of single-reference coupled-cluster theory to systems with degenerate or near-degenerate electronic configurations, multireference coupled-cluster methods have been suggested. One of the most promising formulations of multireference coupled cluster theory is the state-specific variant suggested by Mukherjee and co-workers (Mk-MRCC). Unlike other multireference coupled-cluster approaches, Mk-MRCC is a size-extensive theory and results obtained so far indicate that it has the potential to develop to a standard tool for high-accuracy quantum-chemical treatments. This work deals with developments to overcome the limitations in the applicability of the Mk-MRCC method. Therefore, an efficient Mk-MRCC algorithm has been implemented in the CFOUR program package to perform energy calculations within the singles and doubles (Mk-MRCCSD) and singles, doubles, and triples (Mk-MRCCSDT) approximations. This implementation exploits the special structure of the Mk-MRCC working equations that allows to adapt existing efficient single-reference coupled-cluster codes. The algorithm has the correct computational scaling of d*N^6 for Mk-MRCCSD and d*N^8 for Mk-MRCCSDT, where N denotes the system size and d the number of reference determinants. For the determination of molecular properties as the equilibrium geometry, the theory of analytic first derivatives of the energy for the Mk-MRCC method has been developed using a Lagrange formalism. The Mk-MRCC gradients within the CCSD and CCSDT approximation have been implemented and their applicability has been demonstrated for various compounds such as 2,6-pyridyne, the 2,6-pyridyne cation, m-benzyne, ozone and cyclobutadiene. The development of analytic gradients for Mk-MRCC offers the possibility of routinely locating minima and transition states on the potential energy surface. It can be considered as a key step towards routine investigation of multireference systems and calculation of their properties. As the full inclusion of triple excitations in Mk-MRCC energy calculations is computational demanding, a parallel implementation is presented in order to circumvent limitations due to the required execution time. The proposed scheme is based on the adaption of a highly efficient serial Mk-MRCCSDT code by parallelizing the time-determining steps. A first application to 2,6-pyridyne is presented to demonstrate the efficiency of the current implementation.
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In this thesis we develop further the functional renormalization group (RG) approach to quantum field theory (QFT) based on the effective average action (EAA) and on the exact flow equation that it satisfies. The EAA is a generalization of the standard effective action that interpolates smoothly between the bare action for krightarrowinfty and the standard effective action rnfor krightarrow0. In this way, the problem of performing the functional integral is converted into the problem of integrating the exact flow of the EAA from the UV to the IR. The EAA formalism deals naturally with several different aspects of a QFT. One aspect is related to the discovery of non-Gaussian fixed points of the RG flow that can be used to construct continuum limits. In particular, the EAA framework is a useful setting to search for Asymptotically Safe theories, i.e. theories valid up to arbitrarily high energies. A second aspect in which the EAA reveals its usefulness are non-perturbative calculations. In fact, the exact flow that it satisfies is a valuable starting point for devising new approximation schemes. In the first part of this thesis we review and extend the formalism, in particular we derive the exact RG flow equation for the EAA and the related hierarchy of coupled flow equations for the proper-vertices. We show how standard perturbation theory emerges as a particular way to iteratively solve the flow equation, if the starting point is the bare action. Next, we explore both technical and conceptual issues by means of three different applications of the formalism, to QED, to general non-linear sigma models (NLsigmaM) and to matter fields on curved spacetimes. In the main part of this thesis we construct the EAA for non-abelian gauge theories and for quantum Einstein gravity (QEG), using the background field method to implement the coarse-graining procedure in a gauge invariant way. We propose a new truncation scheme where the EAA is expanded in powers of the curvature or field strength. Crucial to the practical use of this expansion is the development of new techniques to manage functional traces such as the algorithm proposed in this thesis. This allows to project the flow of all terms in the EAA which are analytic in the fields. As an application we show how the low energy effective action for quantum gravity emerges as the result of integrating the RG flow. In any treatment of theories with local symmetries that introduces a reference scale, the question of preserving gauge invariance along the flow emerges as predominant. In the EAA framework this problem is dealt with the use of the background field formalism. This comes at the cost of enlarging the theory space where the EAA lives to the space of functionals of both fluctuation and background fields. In this thesis, we study how the identities dictated by the symmetries are modified by the introduction of the cutoff and we study so called bimetric truncations of the EAA that contain both fluctuation and background couplings. In particular, we confirm the existence of a non-Gaussian fixed point for QEG, that is at the heart of the Asymptotic Safety scenario in quantum gravity; in the enlarged bimetric theory space where the running of the cosmological constant and of Newton's constant is influenced by fluctuation couplings.
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Polymer-nanoparticle hybrids show synergistic effects, demonstrating both, the unique properties of nanosized structures and the good processability and functionalities of polymeric materials. This work shows the synthesis and application of block copolymers containing a soluble, functional block and a short anchor block, which efficiently binds to the surface of nanocrystals. We functionalized anisotropic, semiconducting nanoparticles, which can be dissolved in organic and polymeric matrices upon modification. The modified nanorods have the ability to form liquid crystalline phases, which behave similar to low molecular liquid crystals with a reversible clearing behaviour. These liquid crystalline phases could also be obtained in hole conducting matrices. For a macroscopic orientation of the nanorods, electric fields were applied and a switching (in analogy to known liquid crystals) to a homeotropic orientation was observed.rnBy introduction of dye molecules in the anchor block of a hole conducting block copolymer, all essential components of a solar cell can be combined in a single particle. Light absorption of the dye induces the injection of electrons into the particles, followed by a charging, that was monitored by a special AFM technique.rnLight emitting nanocrystals were functionalized analogously with a hole transporting polymer. The stability of the particles could be enhanced by the sterically stabilizing polymer corona and the particles showed improved properties in terms of processing. We applied these hybrid materials in light emitting devices, which showed better characteristics due to an improved hole injection and well dispersed emitting particles in the active device layer.rnThe work shows the broad spectrum of properties and applications based on the synergistic effects in hybrid and composite materials.
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This thesis reports on the realization, characterization and analysis of ultracold bosonic and fermionic atoms in three-dimensional optical lattice potentials. Ultracold quantum gases in optical lattices can be regarded as ideal model systems to investigate quantum many-body physics. In this work interacting ensembles of bosonic 87Rb and fermionic 40K atoms are employed to study equilibrium phases and nonequilibrium dynamics. The investigations are enabled by a versatile experimental setup, whose core feature is a blue-detuned optical lattice that is combined with Feshbach resonances and a red-detuned dipole trap to allow for independent control of tunneling, interactions and external confinement. The Fermi-Hubbard model, which plays a central role in the theoretical description of strongly correlated electrons, is experimentally realized by loading interacting fermionic spin mixtures into the optical lattice. Using phase-contrast imaging the in-situ size of the atomic density distribution is measured, which allows to extract the global compressibility of the many-body state as a function of interaction and external confinement. Thereby, metallic and insulating phases are clearly identified. At strongly repulsive interaction, a vanishing compressibility and suppression of doubly occupied lattice sites signal the emergence of a fermionic Mott insulator. In a second series of experiments interaction effects in bosonic lattice quantum gases are analyzed. Typically, interactions between microscopic particles are described as two-body interactions. As such they are also contained in the single-band Bose-Hubbard model. However, our measurements demonstrate the presence of multi-body interactions that effectively emerge via virtual transitions of atoms to higher lattice bands. These findings are enabled by the development of a novel atom optical measurement technique: In quantum phase revival spectroscopy periodic collapse and revival dynamics of the bosonic matter wave field are induced. The frequencies of the dynamics are directly related to the on-site interaction energies of atomic Fock states and can be read out with high precision. The third part of this work deals with mixtures of bosons and fermions in optical lattices, in which the interspecies interactions are accurately controlled by means of a Feshbach resonance. Studies of the equilibrium phases show that the bosonic superfluid to Mott insulator transition is shifted towards lower lattice depths when bosons and fermions interact attractively. This observation is further analyzed by applying quantum phase revival spectroscopy to few-body systems consisting of a single fermion and a coherent bosonic field on individual lattice sites. In addition to the direct measurement of Bose-Fermi interaction energies, Bose-Bose interactions are proven to be modified by the presence of a fermion. This renormalization of bosonic interaction energies can explain the shift of the Mott insulator transition. The experiments of this thesis lay important foundations for future studies of quantum magnetism with fermionic spin mixtures as well as for the realization of complex quantum phases with Bose-Fermi mixtures. They furthermore point towards physics that reaches beyond the single-band Hubbard model.
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Nuclear medicine imaging techniques such as PET are of increasing relevance in pharmaceutical research being valuable (pre)clinical tools to non-invasively assess drug performance in vivo. Therapeutic drugs, e.g. chemotherapeutics, often suffer from a poor balance between their efficacy and toxicity. Here, polymer based drug delivery systems can modulate the pharmacokinetics of low Mw therapeutics (prolonging blood circulation time, reducing toxic side effects, increasing target site accumulation) and therefore leading to a more efficient therapy. In this regard, poly-N-(2-hydroxypropyl)-methacrylamide (HPMA) constitutes a promising biocompatible polymer. Towards the further development of these structures, non-invasive PET imaging allows insight into structure-property relationships in vivo. This performant tool can guide design optimization towards more effective drug delivery. Hence, versatile radiolabeling strategies need to be developed and establishing 18F- as well as 131I-labeling of diverse HPMA architectures forms the basis for short- as well as long-term in vivo evaluations. By means of the prosthetic group [18F]FETos, 18F-labeling of distinct HPMA polymer architectures (homopolymers, amphiphilic copolymers as well as block copolymers) was successfully accomplished enabling their systematic evaluation in tumor bearing rats. These investigations revealed pronounced differences depending on individual polymer characteristics (molecular weight, amphiphilicity due to incorporated hydrophobic laurylmethacrylate (LMA) segments, architecture) as well as on the studied tumor model. Polymers showed higher uptake for up to 4 h p.i. into Walker 256 tumors vs. AT1 tumors (correlating to a higher cellular uptake in vitro). Highest tumor concentrations were found for amphiphilic HPMA-ran-LMA copolymers in comparison to homopolymers and block copolymers. Notably, the random LMA copolymer P4* (Mw=55 kDa, 25% LMA) exhibited most promising in vivo behavior such as highest blood retention as well as tumor uptake. Further studies concentrated on the influence of PEGylation (‘stealth effect’) in terms of improving drug delivery properties of defined polymeric micelles. Here, [18F]fluoroethylation of distinct PEGylated block copolymers (0%, 1%, 5%, 7%, 11% of incorporated PEG2kDa) enabled to systematically study the impact of PEG incorporation ratio and respective architecture on the in vivo performance. Most strikingly, higher PEG content caused prolonged blood circulation as well as a linear increase in tumor uptake (Walker 256 carcinoma). Due to the structural diversity of potential polymeric carrier systems, further versatile 18F-labeling strategies are needed. Therefore, a prosthetic 18F-labeling approach based on the Cu(I)-catalyzed click reaction was established for HPMA-based polymers, providing incorporation of fluorine-18 under mild conditions and in high yields. On this basis, a preliminary µPET study of a HPMA-based polymer – radiolabeled via the prosthetic group [18F]F-PEG3-N3 – was successfully accomplished. By revealing early pharmacokinetics, 18F-labeling enables to time-efficiently assess the potential of HPMA polymers for efficient drug delivery. Yet, investigating the long-term fate is essential, especially regarding prolonged circulation properties and passive tumor accumulation (EPR effect). Therefore, radiolabeling of diverse HPMA copolymers with the longer-lived isotope iodine-131 was accomplished enabling in vivo evaluation of copolymer P4* over several days. In this study, tumor retention of 131I-P4* could be demonstrated at least over 48h with concurrent blood clearance thereby confirming promising tumor targeting properties of amphiphilic HPMA copolymer systems based on the EPR effect.
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The use of linear programming in various areas has increased with the significant improvement of specialized solvers. Linear programs are used as such to model practical problems, or as subroutines in algorithms such as formal proofs or branch-and-cut frameworks. In many situations a certified answer is needed, for example the guarantee that the linear program is feasible or infeasible, or a provably safe bound on its objective value. Most of the available solvers work with floating-point arithmetic and are thus subject to its shortcomings such as rounding errors or underflow, therefore they can deliver incorrect answers. While adequate for some applications, this is unacceptable for critical applications like flight controlling or nuclear plant management due to the potential catastrophic consequences. We propose a method that gives a certified answer whether a linear program is feasible or infeasible, or returns unknown'. The advantage of our method is that it is reasonably fast and rarely answers unknown'. It works by computing a safe solution that is in some way the best possible in the relative interior of the feasible set. To certify the relative interior, we employ exact arithmetic, whose use is nevertheless limited in general to critical places, allowing us to rnremain computationally efficient. Moreover, when certain conditions are fulfilled, our method is able to deliver a provable bound on the objective value of the linear program. We test our algorithm on typical benchmark sets and obtain higher rates of success compared to previous approaches for this problem, while keeping the running times acceptably small. The computed objective value bounds are in most of the cases very close to the known exact objective values. We prove the usability of the method we developed by additionally employing a variant of it in a different scenario, namely to improve the results of a Satisfiability Modulo Theories solver. Our method is used as a black box in the nodes of a branch-and-bound tree to implement conflict learning based on the certificate of infeasibility for linear programs consisting of subsets of linear constraints. The generated conflict clauses are in general small and give good rnprospects for reducing the search space. Compared to other methods we obtain significant improvements in the running time, especially on the large instances.