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Charge-Transfer Associated Photoluminescence Of Rare-Earths Doped Oxide PhosphorsNag, Abanti 08 1900 (has links)
Luminescent materials can be found in a broad range of everyday applications. While in the seventies and eighties, the field of luminescent materials seemed to be fairly well covered, research in nineties has been revitalized both in industry and academia. Improvements over the last three decades have led to phosphor materials that operate close to their physical limits. It cannot be expected that properties such as quantum yield and spectral energy distribution will be significantly improved or that distinctly better materials will be found in the near future. Recently, there is a considerable research activity in the field of luminescent materials for lighting and displays to improve the chemical stability and to adopt the materials to the production technology. Ongoing miniaturization, lifetime improvement and spectral stability of fluorescent lamps on the one hand and brightness and contrast improvement in imaging systems on the other hand demand luminescent materials with very high stability that is invariable to operating conditions. All of the today's efficient lighting sources are based on either direct or indirect light emission from plasma discharges. During the pioneering stage, fluorescent lamp industries predominantly used mixtures of two photo luminescent materials: (Zn,Be)2SiO4.'Mn2+ having two emission maxima at 520 and 600 nm and MgW04 with 480 nm emission. The emission from these two phosphors covers the major portion of the visible spectrum. However, the compound (Zn,Be)2Si04 is hazardous to health because of its beryllium content. In 1942, Jenkins showed that Ca5(PO4)3(F,Cl):Sb,Mn was a very efficient emitter. The halophosphates emit both in the blue (Sb3+) as well as in the orange (Mn2+) spectral region, thus in addition yield white light. By carefully adjusting the ratio of Sb3+ and Mn2+ ion concentrations, a white light emitting phosphor was obtained with color temperatures ranging between 6500 and 2700K. However, the drawback of the halophosphate lamps is that it is impossible to have simultaneously high brightness and high color rendering; if the brightness is high (efficacy -80 lm W"1), the color rendering index (CRI) is of the order of 60, the CRI value can be improved up to 90, but then brightness decreases (-50 lm W"1). In 1974, another important breakthrough came in the form of compact fluorescent lamp, based on the trichromatic phosphor blend which resulted color rending values of 80-85 (color 80 lamps) at high efficiencies of 100 lm W"1. The fluorescent lamps with very high color rendering and efficiency can be obtained if three narrow band emitters with emission maxima at 450, 540 and 610 nm are employed. A typical trichromatic lamp phosphor blend comprises of (i) Sr5(PO4)3Cl:Eu2\ BaMgAl1()O,7:Eu2' as blue component, (ii) Ce0.67Tbo.33MgAl,,0,9, LaPO4,Le3\Tb3+ as green component and (iii)Y2C>3:Eiru as the red component. The color 80 lamps employ line emitters that generated light in discrete wavelength intervals. Colored objects that absorb outside these spectral regions appear with a slightly different body color when illuminated with these lamps rather than with a black body radiator such as the light bulb. For these purposes, color 90 or Deluxe lamps have been developed. The emission maximum of the blue phosphor can be shifted towards longer Wavelength by substituting BaMgAli0Oi7:Eu2+ with Sr4Ali4025:Eu2+. The red and green line emitters can be substituted by broad band emitters covering the whole spectral range. For this concept, (Ce,Gd,Tb)MgB5Oi0:Mn has been developed as a red emitter in which energy transfer from Ce3+ via Gd3+ to Mn2+ gives rise to an additional broad band at 630 nm. On the other hand, (Ba,Sr,Ca)2Si04:Eu has been developed as an alternative green-band emitter in which depending on the exact composition, the phosphor emits between 550 and 580 nm with a high quantum yield. Unfortunately, the host lattice is not stable in water, which prevents its deposition on the lamp bulb from aqueous suspensions and for environmental reasons more and more lamps producers use water as the suspending solvent in production instead of butyl acetate. Therefore, it is necessary to develop a new full color emitting phosphors, which has both thermal and chemical stability for application in luminescent lighting.
The classical cathode ray tube (CRT) invented as the brown tube more than 100 years ago has developed into a remarkably mature product considering the complexity of its manufacturing process. Cathode rays are a beam of fast electrons, the accelerating voltage in a television picture tube is high (>10 kV). Basic requirements of display phosphors are stability (2000 hr operation) and emission color purity according to the standards set by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). The blue and green phosphors are still the very cheep ZnS based materials, essentially the same ever since color-TV was introduced in fifties. On the other hand, (Zn,Cd)S, Ag+,C1" was originally used as the red phosphor however, the broad emission centered at 650 nm due to intrinsic donor-acceptor transition leads to rather low lumen equivalent as large fraction of the emission integral lies outside the eye sensitivity curve. For this and the environmental reasons, it has been replaced by the much more expensive Y2O2S:Eu with main emission lines at 612 and 628 nm. Recently, the big electronic companies are trying to enforce flat panel displays e.g. PDPs (plasma display panels) and FEDs (field emission displays). This is because of the fact that when compared to the CRT screen pigments, FED phosphors are required to operate at lower voltages and higher current densities. Although the voltages used in FEDs are only 0.1 to < 2 kV, the high-energy surface excitation on the phosphor particles causes degradation of sulfides, leaving the oxide hosts as the only favorable choice. The phosphor blends used are mixtures of SrTiO3:Pr3+ (red), Y2Si05:Tb (green) and Y2Si05:Ce (blue). However, the white light generation efficiency is very low (-5 lm W"1) and required improvement of phosphor efficacy because of its distinct advantages such as a very wide range of operational temperatures, stability under rugged conditions and wide viewing angle of emission. Similarly, in PDPs blue emitting BaMgAlioOniEu, green emitting Z^SiO^Mn and red emitting (Y,Gd)BO3:Eu are mostly used which shows a screen efficiency of about 1.5 lm W"1, just only half that of a CRT used in today's TV sets. However, the advantages of PDPs over CRTs are that it is not sensitive towards the display manufacturing process, which includes high temperature annealing up to about 600°C and it is stable under the harsh conditions of a Ne/Xe plasma used in PDPs (ion bombardment, VUV radiation). This puts pressure on the development of phosphor for maximum brightness and high stability to replace completely the classical CRTs.
On the other hand, the invention of the blue-light emitting diode (LED) based on GaN can be regarded as a triumph of materials chemistry. In principle, it is possible to vary the emission wavelength of blue GaN-based LEDs between 370 nm (band-gap of pure GaN) and 470 nm by increasing the indium (In) content in InGaN devices. Assuming a conversion from the incident light by a phosphor material emitting at 555 nm, InGaN is coated with (Yi.xGdx)3(Ali-yGay)5Oi2:Ce (YAG:Ce) which has broad yellow band varying between 510 and 580 nm. This allows the adjustment of white color temperature from 8000 down to 3000 K. Recently, S^SiCU and S^SiOs have attracted current interest due to their potential applications in developing white light-emitting-diodes (LEDs) because GaN (400 nm chip)-coated with Sr2Si04:Eu2+ or Sr3SiC>5;Eu2+ exhibits better luminous efficiency than that of the industrially available product such as InGaN (460 nm chip)-coated with YAG:Ce. However, the major drawback of this combination is the strongly decreasing overall efficiency upon lowering the color temperature. This can be solved by using a phosphor material that has sufficient absorption at the emission wavelength of the blue diode, the quantum yield should be high under UV/Vis excitation and the FWHM of the emission band should be as small as possible in order to achieve high luminous output. The search for stable inorganic rare-earths phosphors with high absoiption in the near UV/blue spectral region is therefore an attractive research work.
Since luminescence materials are a key component for lighting and display concept, research in the field of rare-earths doped oxide phosphors is carried out. Although state-of-the-art materials fulfill most requirements, improvements are still necessary to further boost the efficiency of the phosphor materials. Since it is not expected that materials will be found that perform better than the already established phosphor, the present work concentrates on the improvements of the phosphor by modifying the chemical and niicrostructurai features as well as the crystal structure.
Chapter I gives a brief introduction to luminescence in solids, physical aspects and
applications. Chapter II describes the synthesis and various experimental techniques employed in the investigation. Chapter III deals with photoluminescence and energy transfer involving charge transfer states in Sr2-xLnxCe04+x/2 (Ln = Eu and Sm) leading to an efficient full color emitting phosphor for luminescent lighting. Chapter IV and V describe charge transfer transition involving interface states associated with transitional nanophaseprecipitates leading to photoluminescence enhancement of SrTiO3:Pr3+,Al3+ and SrAli2Oi9:Pr3+,Ti4\ The light induced charge transfer leading to changing oxidation state of Eu in Sr2Si04 involving transient crystal structure results an efficient material for optical storage is presented in Chapter VI.Photoluminescence due to efficient energy transfer from Ce3+ to Tb3+ and Mn2t in SnAlioSi02o leading to an efficient phosphor for FEDs is presented in Chapter VII. Chapter VIII describes charge transfer transition involving trap states leading to long phosphorescence in SrAl2-xBxO4 (0<x<0.2) and Sr4Al14.xBxO25 (0.1<x<0.4) co-doped with Eu2+ and Dy3+. Chapter IX presents the role of particle size on the charge transfer associated luminescence of GdVO4:Ln3+ (Ln = Eu
and Sm). A summary of the important findings and the conclusions arrived on the basis of
results from these investigations are presented at the end of the thesis.
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The Mechanism and Regulation of Chromatin Remodeling by ISWI Family EnzymesHwang, William Liang January 2013 (has links)
Eukaryotic genomes are packaged as chromatin, which restricts access to the DNA by critical processes such as DNA replication, repair, and transcription. As a result, eukaryotic cells rely on ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling enzymes (remodelers) to alter the position, structure, and composition of nucleosomes. Understanding the mechanism and regulation of remodeling requires detailed information about transient intermediates of the remodeling process--a challenge ideally suited for single-molecule approaches. In particular, we use single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) to measure nanometer-scale distance changes between strategically placed donor and acceptor dyes to monitor nucleosome translocation in real-time. The mechanism(s) by which remodelers use the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to disrupt histone-DNA contacts and reposition nucleosomes are not well understood. Using smFRET, we show that remodeling by ISWI enzymes begins with a 7 base-pair (bp) step followed by subsequent 3 bp steps toward the exit-side of the nucleosome. These multi-bp steps are actually compound steps composed of 1 bp elementary steps. We discover that DNA movement on the entry side lags behind exit side translocation, which is contrary to previously proposed models. Based on our results, we propose a new integrated mechanism for nucleosome translocation by ISWI enzymes. In the physiological context, remodelers are highly regulated. We study the regulation of human ACF, a prototypical ISWI complex, by critical features of the nucleosomal substrate. First, we dissect how the nucleosome translocation cycle is affected by the linker DNA length and histone H4 tail. Next, we introduce mutations/deletions into conserved enzyme domains to determine the mechanism by which linker length information sensed by the Acfl accessory subunit is allosterically transmitted to the Snf2h catalytic subunit. Interestingly, we find that Acfl modulates the activity of Snf2h indirectly by interacting with the H4 tail in a linker-length dependent fashion. While the majority of our experiments focus on observing changes in nucleosome position, we also develop strategies for site-specific labeling of ISWI enzymes and demonstrate their use in the study of dynamic enzyme-substrate interactions and enzyme conformational changes.
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Molecular Beam Studies of Energy Transfer in Molecule Surface Interactions / Untersuchung des Energietransfers in Molekuel Oberflaechen Wechselwirkungen mit Hilfe von MolekularstrahlexperimentenRussell, James Cooper 29 November 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Primary Effects of X-ray and Photo-Absorption Induced Excitations in BiomoleculesBurmeister, Carl Friedrich 11 April 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Structural vibration damping with synchronized energy transfer between piezoelectric patchesLi, Kaixiang 22 September 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Advanced materials such as carbon fiber, composite materials et al. are more and more used in modern industry. They make the structures lighter and stiffer. However, they bring vibration problems. Researchers studied numerous methods to eliminate the undesirable vibrations. These treatments are expected to be a compact, light, intellectual and modular system. Recently, a nonlinear technique which is known as Synchronized Switch Damping (SSD) technique was proposed. These techniques synchronously switched when structure got to its displacement extremes that leading to a nonlinear voltage on the piezoelectric elements. This resulting voltage showed a time lag with the piezoelectric strain thus causing energy dissipation. Based on the developed SSD techniques, a new synchronized switch damping e.g. Synchronized Switch Damping with Energy Transfer (SSDET) was proposed in this document. This method damped the vibration by using the energy from other vibrating form. The objectives of the work reported in this document were threefold. The first one consisted of introduction of SSDET principle and developing its control law. This part aimed at establishing the mathematical model and verifying the proposed method by mathematical tools. Then, the experimental validations were carried out. Three experiments with different configurations demonstrated that SSDET can be implemented not only between structures but also vibrating modes in one structure. A SSDET scheme with multi-patches was also investigated for improving the damping. Finally, a bidirectional SSDET concept was introduced based on the original SSDET technique. This technique be regarded as a multimode control SSDET. Since it privileged the target vibration while keeps a decent control effect on the source vibration.
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Bevielio energijos perdavimo tyrimas / Investigation of the wireless energy transferErmanas, Žilvinas 18 June 2013 (has links)
Šiandien neįsivaizduojame savo gyvenimo be daugybės elektrą naudojančių prietaisų, kurie su elektros šaltiniu sujungti elektros laidais. Daugybė besipainiojančių laidų tikrai nepadaro mūsų gyvenimo lengvesnio ir patogesnio. Dar labiau komplikuoja situacijas, kai neįmanoma panaudoti laidų ir prisijungti prie energijos šaltinio. Visi šie nepatogumai skatina ieškoti išeities, kuri galėtų būti energijos perdavimas be laidų. Bevielės elektros idėja buvo iškelta jau prieš daugiau kaip šimtą metų, tai buvo išradėjo Nikola Tesla mintis. Darbui nagrinėti pagamintas bevielės energijos perdavimo demonstracinis modelis. Modelyje nagrinėjama bevielės energijos perdavimo sistema, veikimo principas, siunčiamos energijos nuotolis, perduodamos energijos efektyvumas bei gaunami nuostoliai. / Today can not imagine our life without many electricity using devices are connected to a source of electrical power lines. Numerous trailing wires really does not make our lives easier and more comfortable. Even more complicated situations when there are no opportunities to use wire and to connect to a power source. All these inconveniences are promoting to search the solution wich could be the transfer of energy without wires. Wireless energy idea has been raised for more than a hundred years ago. The thought was inventor inventored by Nikola Tesla. Analyzing this work there was made a demonstration model of wireless power transmission. In this model there is analyzing such things as wireless transmission system, working principal, transmitted energy distance and obtained losses.
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Self-Assembled Resonance Energy Transfer DevicesThusu, Viresh January 2013 (has links)
<p>This dissertation hypothesizes,</p><p><italic>"It is possible to design a self-assembled, nanoscale, high-speed, resonance energy transfer device exhibiting non-linear gain with a few molecules."</italic></p><p>The report recognizes DNA self-assembly, a relatively inexpensive and a massively parallel fabrication process, as a strong candidate for self-assembled RET systems. It successfully investigates into the design and simulations of a novel sequential self-assembly process employed to realize the goal of creating large, scalable, fully-addressable DNA nanostructure-substrate for future molecular circuitry. </p><p>As a pre-cursor to the final device modeling various RET wire designs for interconnecting nanocircuits are presented and their modeling and simulation results are discussed. A chromophore RET system using a biomolecular sensor as a proof-of-concept argument that shows it is possible to model and characterize chromophore systems as a first step towards device modeling is also discussed. </p><p>Finally, the thesis report describes in detail the design, modeling, characterization, and fabrication of the Closed-Diffusive Exciton Valve: a self-assembled, nanoscale (area of 17.34 nm<super>2</super>), high-speed (3.5 ps to 6 ps) resonance energy transfer device exhibiting non-linear gain using only 10 molecules, thus confirming the hypothesis. It also recognized improvements that can be made in the future to facilitate better device operation and suggested various applications.</p> / Dissertation
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EVALUATING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF PEAK POWER TRACKING TECHNOLOGIES FOR SOLAR ARRAYS ON SMALL SPACECRAFTErb, Daniel Martin 01 January 2011 (has links)
The unique environment of CubeSat and small satellite missions allows certain accepted paradigms of the larger satellite world to be investigated in order to trade performance for simplicity, mass, and volume. Peak Power Tracking technologies for solar arrays are generally implemented in order to meet the End-of-Life power requirements for satellite missions given radiation degradation over time. The short lifetime of the generic satellite mission removes the need to compensate for this degradation. While Peak Power Tracking implementations can give increased power by taking advantage and compensating for the temperature cycles that solar cells experience, this comes at the expense of system complexity and, given smart system design, this increased performance is negligible and possibly detrimental. This thesis investigates different Peak Power Tracking implementations and compares them to two Fixed Point implementations as well as a Direct Energy Transfer system in terms of performance and system complexity using computer simulation. This work demonstrates that, though Peak Power Tracking systems work as designed, under most circumstances Direct Energy Transfer systems should be used in small satellite applications as it gives the same or better performance with less complexity.
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DNA Hybridization on Walls of Electrokinetically Controlled Microfluidic ChannelsChen, Lu 16 March 2011 (has links)
The use of microfluidic tools to develop two novel approaches to surface-based oligonucleotide hybridization assays has been explored. In one of these approaches,
immobilized oligonucleotide probes on a glass surface of a microfluidic channel were able to quantitatively hybridize with oligonucleotide targets that were electrokinetically injected into the channel. Quantitative oligonucleotide analysis was achieved in seconds, with nM detection limits and a dynamic range of 3 orders of magnitude. Hybridization was detected by the use of fluorescently labeled target. The fluorescence intensity profile evolved as a gradient that could be related to concentration, and was a function of many factors including hybridization reaction rate, convective delivery speed, target concentration and target diffusion coefficient. It was possible to acquire kinetic information from the static fluorescence intensity profile to distinguish target concentration, and the length and base-pair mismatches of target sequences. Numerical simulations were conducted for the system, and fit well with the experimental data.
In a second approach, a solid-phase nucleic acid assay was developed using immobilized Quantum Dot (QD) bioprobes. Hybridization was used to immobilize QDs that had been coated with oligonucleotides having two different sequences. The hybridization of one oligonucleotide sequence conjugated to a QD (a linker sequence) with a complementary sequence that was covalently attached to a glass substrate of a microfluidic channel was shown to be an immobilization strategy that offered flexibility in assay design, with intrinsic potential for quantitative replacement of the sensing chemistry by control of stringency. A second oligonucleotide sequence conjugated to the immobilized QDs provided for the selective detection of target nucleic acids. The microfluidic environment offered the ability to manipulate flow conditions for control of stringency and increasing the speed of analytical signal by introduction of convective delivery of target sequences to the immobilized QDs. This work introduces a stable and adaptable immobilization strategy that facilitates solid-phase QD-bioprobe assays in microfluidic platforms.
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A new approach to the analyses of fluorescence depolarisation experiments in the presence of electronic energy transportOpanasyuk, Oleg January 2011 (has links)
A new and general procedure is described for a detailed analysis of time-resolved fluorescence depolarisation data in the presence of electronic energy migration. An isotropic ensemble of bifluorophoric molecules (D1-R-D2) has been studied to demonstrate its utility. Intramolecular donor-donor energy migration occurs between the two donor groups (D), which are covalently connected to a rigid linker group (R). These groups undergo restricted reorientational motions with respect to the R group. The analysis of depolarisation data basically involves the search for best-fit parameters which describe the local reorienting motions, the interfluorophore D1-D2 distance, as well as the mutual orientations of the donors. For this, the analysis is partly performed in the Fourier domain and the best-fit parameters are determined by using an approach based on a Genetic Algorithm. The energy migration process has been described by using Monte Carlo simulations and an extended Förster theory. It is found that this theory provides the least time-consuming computational method. Since one-photon and two-photon excited fluorescence experiments can be applied for energy migration studies, a general and unified theoretical formulation is given. To exemplify the developed quantitative approach the depolarisation of the fluorescence in the presence of electronic energy migration within a bis-(9-anthrylmethylphosphonate) bisteroid molecule has been studied by time-resolved two-photon excited fluorescence depolarisation experiments. To solely obtain information about local reorientations of the 9-anthrylmethyl group, also the mono-(9-anthrylmethylphosphonate) bisteroid was studied, which enabled modelling of the ordering potential of the donor. Values of the two-photon absorption tensor components were obtained. To describe the discrepancy between the measured values of the initial anisotropy and fundamental anisotropy predicted by theory the distribution of absorption tensor caused by fast processes have been introduced. An angular parameter of absorption tensor was determined. Reasonable values of the distance between the 9-anthrylmethyl groups, as well as for their mutual orientation were obtained.
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