Search results for "confinement."
showing 10 items of 183 documents
Morphology and Band Structure of Orthorhombic PbS Nanoplatelets: An Indirect Band Gap Material
2021
PbS quantum dots and nanoplatelets (NPLs) are of enormous interest in the development of optoelectronic devices. However, some important aspects of their nature remain unclear. Recent studies have revealed that colloidal PbS NPLs may depart from the rock-salt crystal structure of bulk and form an orthorhombic (Pnma) modification instead. To gain insight into the implications of such a change over the optoelectronic properties, we have synthesized orthorhombic PbS NPLs and determined the lattice parameters by means of selected area electron diffraction measurements. We have then calculated the associated band structure using density functional theory with Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof functional fo…
Room-temperature efficient light detection by amorphous Ge quantum wells
2013
In this work, ultrathin amorphous Ge films (2 to 30 nm in thickness) embedded in SiO2 layers were grown by magnetron sputtering and employed as proficient light sensitizer in photodetector devices. A noteworthy modification of the visible photon absorption is evidenced due to quantum confinement effects which cause both a blueshift (from 0.8 to 1.8 eV) in the bandgap and an enhancement (up to three times) in the optical oscillator strength of confined carriers. The reported quantum confinement effects have been exploited to enhance light detection by Ge quantum wells, as demonstrated by photodetectors with an internal quantum efficiency of 70%. © 2013 Cosentino et al.
Imaging the Local Density of States of Optical Corrals
2002
International audience; This paper reports the experimental observation, at optical frequencies, of the electromagnetic local density of states established by nanostructures corresponding to the recently introduced concept of optical corral [G. Colas des Francs et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 4950 (2001)]. The images obtained by a scanning near-field optical microscope under specific operational conditions are found in agreement with the theoretical maps of the optical local density of states. A clear functionality of detection by the scanning near-field optical microscope is thereby identified since the theoretical maps are computed without including any specific tip model.
Low-Temperature Miniemulsion-Based Routes for Synthesis of Metal Oxides.
2020
Abstract The use of miniemulsions containing chemical precursors in the disperse phase is a versatile method to produce nanoparticles and nanostructures of different chemical nature, including not only polymers, but also a variety of inorganic materials. This Minireview focuses on materials in which nanostructures of metal oxides are synthesized in processes that involve the miniemulsion technique in any of the steps. This includes in the first place those approaches in which the spaces provided by nanodroplets are directly used to confine precipitation reactions that lead eventually to oxides. On the other hand, miniemulsions can also be used to form functionalized polymer nanoparticles th…
The power threshold of H-mode access in mixed hydrogen–tritium and pure tritium plasmas at JET with ITER-like wall
2022
The heating power to access the high confinement mode (H-mode), PLH, scales approximately inversely with the isotope mass of the main ion plasma species as found in (protonic) hydrogen, deuterium and tritium plasmas in many fusion facilities over the last decades. In first dedicated L–H transition experiments at the Joint European Torus (JET) tokamak facility with the ITER-like wall (ILW), the power threshold, PLH, was studied systematically in plasmas of pure tritium and hydrogen–tritium mixtures at a magnetic field of 1.8 T and a plasma current of 1.7 MA in order to assess whether this scaling still holds in a metallic wall device. The measured power thresholds, PLH, in Ohmically heated t…
Germanium Doped CHxMicroshells for LMJ Targets
2011
AbstractAt the CEA Laser “Megajoule” facility, amorphous hydrogenated carbon (a-C:H or CHx) is the nominal ablator used to achieve inertial confinement fusion experiments. These targets are filled with a fusible mixture of deuterium-tritium in order to perform ignition.Since the achievement of ignition greatly depends on the physical properties of the shell, there must be precise control of thicknesses, doping concentration, and roughness. Experimental devices associated with suitable characterizations are described in this paper. The tolerances and yields for each specification are also presented. Some specifications are largely reached; high-frequency surface roughness due to isolated sur…
A Model to Characterize the D-T Layer of ICF Targets by Backlit Optical Shadowgraphy
2005
A numerical model is presented in order to modelize the bright ring that appears in backlit optical shadowgraphy on a transparent hollow sphere with a solid deuterium-tritium layer inside. This novel model is based on computational calculations applied to the problem of the targets used in inertial confinement fusion. The model takes into account the influences of the optical imaging system (numerical aperture, source divergence, camera resolution, etc.) and the effect of the capsule itself, diameter, thickness, and refractive index, and allows one to analyze the inner surface of a capsule in terms of thickness and roughness.
Nature of the light scalar mesons
2005
Despite the apparent simplicity of meson spectroscopy, light scalar mesons cannot be accommodated in the usual $q\bar q$ structure. We study the description of the scalar mesons below 2 GeV in terms of the mixing of a chiral nonet of tetraquarks with conventional $q\bar q$ states. A strong diquark-antidiquark component is found for several states. The consideration of a glueball as dictated by quenched lattice QCD drives a coherent picture of the isoscalar mesons.
Glueball enhancement by color deconfinement
2007
5 pages, 4 figures.-- PACS nrs.: 14.80.-j; 24.80.+y; 25.75.Nq.-- ISI Article Identifier: 000245333000063.-- ArXiv pre-print available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0609219
European Hadron Facility
1989
In this contribution we survey the physics potential of a facility such as EHF in somewhat general terms. In other words, we outline some fundamental questions in nuclear physics and low energy particle physics to whose advancement EHF can and will make substantial contributions, without going into specific experiments needed to answer them. It is the role of the case studies, presented in the EHF proposal(1), to illustrate the kind of experimental effort (typical beam requirements, characteristic detectors, size of experiments, etc.) needed at EHF for the physics one wishes to clarify.