966 resultados para PbS quantum dots
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High-resolution X-ray diffractometry is used to probe the nature of a diffraction-peak broadening previously noticed in quantum dots (QDs) systems with freestanding InAs islands on top of GaAs (001) substrates [Freitas et al., Phys. Status Solidi (A) 204, 2548 (2007)]. The procedure is hence extended to further investigate the capping process of InAs/GaAs QDs. A direct correlation is established between QDs growth rates and misorientation of lattice-planes at the samples surfaces. This effect provides an alternative too] for studying average strain fields on QDs systems in standard triple axis diffractometers running on X-ray tube sources, which are much more common than synchrotron facilities. (C) 2009 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
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Multilayers of PbTe quantum dots embedded in SiO2 were fabricated by alternate use of Pulsed Laser Deposition (PLD) and Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) techniques. The morphological properties of the nanostructured material were studied by means of High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy (HRTEM), Grazing-Incidence Small-Angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) and X-ray Reflectometry (XRR) techniques. A preliminary analysis of the GISAXS spectra provided information about the multilayer periodicity and its relationship to the size of the deposited PbTe nanoparticles. Finally multilayers were fabricated inside a Fabry-Perot cavity. The device was characterized by means of Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). Transmittance measurements show the device functionality in the infrared region. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Thioglycolic acid-capped Use quantum dots (QDs) were assembled on glass substrates with two distinct polyelectrolytes, viz poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH) and poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM), generation 4 dendrimer, via the layer-by-layer (LbL) technique. Films containing up to 30 polyelectrolyte/QD bilayers were prepared. The growth of the multilayers was monitored with UV-vis spectroscopy, which showed an almost linear increase in the absorbance of the 2.8 nm QDs at 535 nm with the number of deposited bilayers. AFM measurements estimated a film thickness of 3 nm per bilayer for the PAH/Cdse films. The adsorption process and the optical properties of the PAMAM/CdSe LbL films were further analyzed layer-by-layer using surface plasmon resonance (SPR), from which a thickness of 3.2 nm was found for a PAMAM/CdSe bilayer. Photoluminescence measurements revealed higher photooxidation of the quantum dots in PAH/CdSe than in PAMAM/CdSe films. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Buried two-dimensional arrays of InP dots were used as a template for the lateral ordering of self-assembled quantum dots. The template strain field can laterally organize compressive (InAs) as well as tensile (GaP) self-assembled nanostructures in a highly ordered square lattice. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy measurements show that the InAs dots are vertically correlated to the InP template, while the GaP dots are vertically anti-correlated, nucleating in the position between two buried InP dots. Finite InP dot size effects are observed to originate InAs clustering but do not affect GaP dot nucleation. The possibility of bilayer formation with different vertical correlations suggests a new path for obtaining three-dimensional pseudocrystals.
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We report a numerical renormalization-group study of the thermoelectric effect in the single-electron transistor (SET) and side-coupled geometries. As expected, the computed thermal conductance and thermopower curves show signatures of the Kondo effect and of Fano interference. The thermopower curves are also affected by particle-hole asymmetry. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Metallic nanoparticles (NPs) have been used to improve the sensibility of biosensors and bioassays either by enhancing radiative emission or inducing quenching process on fluorescent probes. The aim of this research was to study the interaction of silver and silver-pectin NPs with water-dispersed carboxyl-coated cadmium telluride (CdTe) quantum dots (QDs). Metallic NPs were observed to change the emission of these fluorophores through local field effects. In a solution-base platform, an increase of 82 % was observed for the CdTe emission due to the interaction of QDs and silver-pectin NPs. QDs interaction with silver NPs without pectin was also investigated and a smaller emission enhancement of 20 % was detected. We observed that the NPs' nature and QDs' surface charge and concentration are important parameters for NPs-QDs interaction. Moreover, the presence of the pectin polymer shows to be a key component to the observed fluorescence enhancement. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media New York.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Pós-graduação em Física - IGCE
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We report on the strong temperature-dependent thermal expansion, alpha(D), in CdS quantum dots (QDs) embedded in a glass template. We have performed a systematic study by using the temperature-dependent first-order Raman spectra, in CdS bulk and in dot samples, in order to assess the size dependence of alpha(D), and where the role of the compressive strain provoked by the glass host matrix on the dot response is discussed. We report the Gruneisen mode parameters and the anharmonic coupling constants for small CdS dots with mean radius R similar to 2.0 nm. We found that gamma parameters change, with respect to the bulk CdS, in a range between 20 and 50%, while the anharmonicity contribution from two-phonon decay channel becomes the most important process to the temperature-shift properties.
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Spin coherence generation in an ensemble of negatively charged (In,Ga)As/GaAs quantum dots was investigated by picosecond time-resolved pump-probe spectroscopy measuring ellipticity. Robust coherence of the ground-state electron spins is generated by pumping excited charged exciton (trion) states. The phase of the coherent state, as evidenced by the spin ensemble precession about an external magnetic field, varies relative to spin coherence generation resonant with the ground state. The phase variation depends on the pump photon energy. It is determined by (a) pumping dominantly either singlet or triplet excited states, leading to a phase inversion, and (b) the subsequent carrier relaxation into the ground states. From the dependence of the precession phase and the measured g factors, information about the quantum dot shell splitting and the exchange energy splitting between triplet and singlet states can be extracted in the ensemble.
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In this paper, we present a method to order low temperature (LT) self-assembled ferromagnetic In1-xMnxAs quantum dots (QDs) grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). The ordered In1-xMnxAs QDs were grown on top of a non-magnetic In0.4Ga0.6As/GaAs(100) QDs multi-layered structure. The modulation of the chemical potential, due to the stacking, provides a nucleation center for the LT In1-xMnxAs QDs. For particular conditions, such as surface morphology and growth conditions, the In1-xMnxAs QDs align along lines like chains. This work also reports the characterization of QDs grown on plain GaAs(100) substrates, as well as of the ordered structures, as function of Mn content and growth temperature. The substitutional Mn incorporation in the InAs lattice and the conditions for obtaining coherent and incoherent structures are discussed from comparison between Raman spectroscopy and x-ray analysis. Ferromagnetic behavior was observed for all structures at 2K. We found that the magnetic moment axis changes from [110] in In1-xMnxAs over GaAs to [1-10] for the ordered In1-xMnxAs grown over GaAs template. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4745904]
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We study a strongly interacting "quantum dot 1" and a weakly interacting "dot 2" connected in parallel to metallic leads. Gate voltages can drive the system between Kondo-quenched and non-Kondo free-moment phases separated by Kosterlitz-Thouless quantum phase transitions. Away from the immediate vicinity of the quantum phase transitions, the physical properties retain signatures of first-order transitions found previously to arise when dot 2 is strictly noninteracting. As interactions in dot 2 become stronger relative to the dot-lead coupling, the free moment in the non-Kondo phase evolves smoothly from an isolated spin-one-half in dot 1 to a many-body doublet arising from the incomplete Kondo compensation by the leads of a combined dot spin-one. These limits, which feature very different spin correlations between dot and lead electrons, can be distinguished by weak-bias conductance measurements performed at finite temperatures.
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We present effective-mass calculations of the bound-state energy levels of electrons confined inside lens-shaped InxGa1-xAs quantum dots (QDs) embedded in a GaAs matrix, taking into account the strain as well as the In gradient inside the QDs due to the strong In segregation and In-Ga intermixing present in the InxGa1-xAs/GaAs system. In order to perform the calculations, we used a continuum model for the strain, and the QDs and wetting layer were divided into their constituting monolayers, each one with a different In concentration, to be able to produce a specific composition profile. Our results clearly show that the introduction of such effects is very important if one desires to correctly reproduce or predict the optoelectronic properties of these nanostructures.
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Der Lichtsammelkomplex II (LHCII) höherer Pflanzen ist eines der häufigsten Membranproteine der Welt. Er bindet 14 Chlorophylle und 4 Carotinoide nicht kovalent und fungiert in vivo als Lichtantenne des Photosystems II. Eine optimale Absorption von Licht ist auch bei Solarzellen entscheidend und es liegt nahe hier dasselbe Prinzip zu verwenden. Dafür bietet sich der Einsatz biologischer Komponenten wie des LHCII an. Dieser wurde evolutionär für eine effektive Absorption und Weiterleitung von Sonnenenergie optimiert. Zusätzlich lässt er sich in vitro in rekombinanter Form rekonstituieren. Für eine eventuelle Nutzung des LHCII in technologischen Anwendungen bedarf es der Interaktion mit anderen, vorzugsweise synthetischen Komponenten. Daher wurde die Bindung und der Energietransfer zwischen dem LHCII und organischen Fluoreszenzfarbstoffen sowie anorganischen „Quantum dots“ (QDs) untersucht. rnMit Donorfarbstoffen wurde die Grünlücke des LHCII funktionell geschlossen. Dafür wurden bis zu vier Fluoreszenzfarbstoffe kovalent an den LHCII gebunden. Diese Interaktion erfolgte sowohl mit Maleimiden an Cysteinen als auch mit N-Hydroxysuccinimidylestern an Lysinen. Die Assemblierung, Struktur und Funktion des Pigment-Protein-Komplexes wurde durch die Fluoreszenzfarbstoffe nicht gestört.rnAuf der Suche nach einem Farbstoff, der als Akzeptor die vom LHCII aufgenommene Energie übernimmt und durch Elektronenabgabe in elektrische Energie umwandelt, wurden drei Rylenfarbstoffe, ein Quaterrylen und zwei Terrylene, untersucht. Der LHCII konnte mit allen Farbstoffen erfolgreich markiert werden. Für die Nutzung der Hybridkomplexe ergaben sich allerdings Probleme. Das Quaterrylen beeinträchtigte aufgrund seiner Hydrophobizität die Rekonstitution des Proteins, während bei beiden Terrylenen der Energietransfer ineffizient war.rn Zusätzlich zu den Standard-Verknüpfungen zwischen Farbstoffen und Proteinen wurde in dieser Arbeit die „native chemische Ligation“ etabliert. Hierfür wurde eine LHCII-Mutante mit N-terminalem Cystein hergestellt, markiert und rekonstituiert. Messdaten an diesem Hybridkomplex ließen auf einen Energietransfer zwischen Farbstoff und Protein schließen. rnIn Hybridkomplexen sollen langfristig zur Ladungstrennung fähige Typ II-QDs Anwendung finden, wobei der LHCII als Lichtantenne dienen soll. Bis diese QDs verwendet werden können, wurden grundlegende Fragen der Interaktion beider Materialen an Typ I-QDs mit Energietransfer zum LHCII untersucht. Dabei zeigte sich, dass QDs in wässriger Lösung schnell aggregieren und entsprechende Kontrollen wichtig sind. Weiterführend konnte anhand der Trennung von ungebundenem und QD-gebundenem LHCII die Bindung von LHCII an QDs bestätigt werden. Dabei wurden Unterschiede in der Bindungseffizienz in Abhängigkeit der verwendeten LHCII und QDs festgestellt. Durch Herstellung von Fusionsproteinen aus LHCII und Affinitätspeptiden konnte die Bindung optimiert werden. Ein Energietransfer von QDs zu LHCII war nicht sicher nachzuweisen, da in den Hybridkomplexen zwar die QD- (Donor-) Fluoreszenz gelöscht, aber die LHCII- (Akzeptor-) Fluoreszenz nicht entsprechend stimuliert wurde.rnZusammenfassend wurden in dieser Arbeit einige Hybridkomplexe hergestellt, die in weiterführenden Ansätzen Verwendung finden können. Auf die hier gewonnenen Erkenntnisse über Interaktionen zwischen LHCII und synthetischen Materialien kann jetzt weiter aufgebaut werden.