459 research outputs found
Spectroscopy of a fractional Josephson vortex molecule
In long Josephson junctions with multiple discontinuities of the Josephson
phase, fractional vortex molecules are spontaneously formed. At each
discontinuity point a fractional Josephson vortex carrying a magnetic flux
, Wb being the magnetic flux
quantum, is pinned. Each vortex has an oscillatory eigenmode with a frequency
that depends on and lies inside the plasma gap.
We experimentally investigate the dependence of the eigenfrequencies of a
two-vortex molecule on the distance between the vortices, on their topological
charge and on the bias current applied to the
Josephson junction. We find that with decreasing distance between vortices, a
splitting of the eigenfrequencies occurs, that corresponds to the emergence of
collective oscillatory modes of both vortices. We use a resonant microwave
spectroscopy technique and find good agreement between experimental results and
theoretical predictions.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
Ultrafast band-gap renormalization and build-up of optical gain in monolayer MoTe
The dynamics of band-gap renormalization and gain build-up in monolayer
MoTe is investigated by evaluating the non-equilibrium Dirac-Bloch
equations with the incoherent carrier-carrier and carrier-phonon scattering
treated via quantum-Boltzmann type scattering equations. For the case where an
approximately fs-long high intensity optical pulse generates
charge-carrier densities in the gain regime, the strong Coulomb coupling leads
to a relaxation of excited carriers on a few fs time scale. The pump-pulse
generation of excited carriers induces a large band-gap renormalization during
the time scale of the pulse. Efficient phonon coupling leads to a subsequent
carrier thermalization within a few ps, which defines the time scale for the
optical gain build-up energetically close to the low-density exciton resonance.Comment: This is a post-peer-review version of an article published in
Physical Review
Direct current superconducting quantum interferometers with asymmetric shunt resistors
We have investigated asymmetrically shunted Nb/Al-AlO/Nb direct current
(dc) superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs). While keeping the
total resistance identical to a comparable symmetric SQUID with , we shunted only one of the two Josephson junctions with
. Simulations predict that the optimum energy resolution
and thus also the noise performance of such an asymmetric SQUID can
be 3--4 times better than that of its symmetric counterpart. Experiments at a
temperature of 4.2\,K yielded for an asymmetric
SQUID with an inductance of . For a comparable symmetric device
was achieved, confirming our simulation results.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Aluminum Hard Mask Technique for the Fabrication of High-Quality Submicron Nb/Al-AlOx/Nb Josephson Junctions
We have developed a combined photolithography and electron-beam lithography
fabrication process for sub-\mum to \mum-size Nb/Al-AlOx/Nb Josephson
junctions. In order to define the junction size and protect its top electrode
during anodic oxidation, we developed and used the new concept of an aluminum
hard mask. Josephson junctions of sizes down to 0.5 \mum2 have been fabricated
and thoroughly characterized. We found that they have a very high quality,
which is witnessed by the IV curves with quality parameters Vm > 50 mV and Vgap
= 2.8 mV at 4.2 K, as well as IcRN products of 1.75-1.93 mV obtained at lower
temperatures. In order to test the usability of our fabrication process for
superconducting quantum bits, we have also designed, fabricated and
experimentally investigated phase qubits made of these junctions. We found a
relaxation time of T1 = 26 ns and a dephasing time of T2 = 21 ns
Geometry-induced reduction of the critical current in superconducting nanowires
Reduction of the critical current in narrow superconducting NbN lines with
sharp and rounded bends with respect to the critical current in straight lines
was studied at different temperatures. We compare our experimental results with
the reduction expected in the framework of the London model and the
Ginsburg-Landau model. We have experimentally found that the reduction is
significantly less than either model predicts. We also show that in our NbN
lines the bends mostly contribute to the reduction of the critical current at
temperatures well below the superconducting transition temperature
Information theoretical approaches for the identification of potentially cooperating transcription factors
Physical countermeasures to sustain acceptable living and working conditions in radioactively contaminated residential areas
Microscopic theory of the linear and nonlinear optical properties of TMDCs
Since the discovery of graphene, the research interest in two-dimensional materials has drastically increased. Among them, semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenides promise great potential for future applications in optoelectronics and photonics as they combine atomic-scale thickness with pronounced light-matter coupling and sizable band gaps in the visible to near-infrared range. In this context, a quantitative and predictive description of the optical properties is of great importance. For the results summarized in this thesis, a self-consistent scheme was established to provide such a quantitative and predictive description for various semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenide systems in the vicinity of the K/K' points. The theoretical framework combines an anisotropic dielectric model for the Coulomb potential in layered materials with gap equations for the ground-state renormalization, Dirac-Wannier equation to determine the excitonic properties, and Dirac-Bloch equations to access linear and nonlinear optical properties. The latter are formally equivalent to the semiconductor Bloch equations, that have proven to be reliable to compute the optical properties of various semiconductor systems for many years. Detailed differences arise from the
relativistic framework, the massive Dirac Fermion model, that applies to transition-metal dichalcogenides. To account for the finite out-of-plane extension of the individual layers, a form factor was introduced in the Coulomb potential. The theoretical framework described above was applied in investigations on the ground-state and excitonic properties of monolayer and homogeneous-multilayer structures. For the case of an unspecified monolayer, the dielectric tuning of the renormalized bands and excitonic resonances was simulated by variation of the Coulomb coupling showing characteristics that are observed in experiments on real monolayer systems. Encouraged by the initial results, realistic monolayers were considered, i.e. MoS2, MoSe2, WS2, WSe2, whose material parameters were taken from external density-functional-theory calculations. The procedure to determine the effective-thickness parameter, entering the form factor to account for finite-thickness effects, was illustrated for a SiO2-supported MoS2 monolayer. Once this parameter was fixed for a given material, the advantage of this approach was demonstrated for MoS2, again, by predicting the K/K'-point interband transition energies and excitonic resonances for various dielectric environments and layer numbers, including the bulk limit. Comparisons to experimental findings and similar theoretical approaches were drawn for all of the stated material systems yielding almost excellent overall agreement. In particular, the results suggest a reinterpretation of the bulk exciton series of MoS 2 as a combined two-dimensional intra- and interlayer exciton series. The results strongly indicate that the applied approach captures the essential physics around the K/K' points. Stacking two materials with different band gaps adds a new element to the band-gap engineering of transition-metal dichalcogenides. Heterostructures such as bilayers WSe2/MoS2 and WSe2 /MoSe2 display type-II band alignment enabling highly efficient charge transfer which is promising for applications in photovoltaics. In a theoretical study on the stated bilayer systems, it was demonstrated that the established theoretical framework could also be applied to investigate intra- and interlayer excitons in transition-metal dichalcogenide heterostructures. For this purpose the anisotropic dielectric model for the Coulomb potential was adjusted to the hetero-bilayer environment. Based on the material parameters provided by internal density-functional-theory calculations, linear optical absorption spectra were computed revealing tightly bound interlayer excitons with binding energies comparable to those of the intralayer excitons. Computing the oscillator strength of the respective resonances yielded relatively long ratiative lifetimes for the interlayer excitons, two orders of magnitude larger than that of the intralayer excitons. The artificial strain in WSe2/MoS2 bilayer resulted in heavily misaligned spectra which is why theory-experiment comparisons were avoided for this system. For the rather unstrained WSe2/MoSe2 bilayer, intra- and interlayer excitonic resonances as well as the ratio of the intra- and interlayer exciton lifetimes compared reasonably well to experimental and theoretical findings. Among the semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenides, monolayer MoS2 has drawn the most attention from researchers, not least because it was the first representative that displayed experimental evidence of a direct band gap. Combining the direct band gap with pronounced light-matter coupling, monolayer systems hold promise for laser applications on the atomic scale. In this context, the optical properties of suspended and SiO2-supported MoS2 monolayers were investigated in the nonlinear excitation regime for the case of initial thermal charge carriers located in the K/K' valleys. In particular, it was demonstrated that excited carriers lead to an enormous reduction of the band gap. In the range of comparable carrier densities, the computed optical spectra, excitation-induced band-gap renormalization and exciton binding energies were found to be in good agreement with earlier theoretical investigations on MoS2 , as was the predicted Mott-density. For densities beyond the Mott-transition, broadband plasma-induced optical gain energetically below the exciton resonance was observed, which has yet to be realized in experimental setups. Besides the canonical representatives discussed so far, the optical properties of a SiO2-supported MoTe2 monolayer were studied. This material system became of particular interest since room- temperature lasing had already been observed. A numerical experiment in the nonlinear excitation regime was performed. In particular, excitation conditions for achieving plasma gain in MoTe2 monolayers were identified. Within the scope of this investigation, the theoretical framework was extended beyond the quasiequilibrium regime by including Boltzmann-like carrier- and phonon-scattering rates. Whereas a Markovian treatment was sufficient within the simulation of the K/K'-point carrier-relaxation dynamics, the excitation-induced dephasing of the microscopic polarizations was treated dynamically in order to avoid unphysical behavior within the optical spectra. It was demonstrated that pump-injected charge carriers induce a huge reduction of the band gap on the timescale of the optical pulse. This observation including the magnitude of the band-gap renormalization compared well with experimental findings on monolayer MoS2 . Probing the strongly excited system at distinct time delays yielded ultrafast gain build-up on a few-picosecond timescale as a result of efficient carrier thermalization. Allowing the carriers to equilibriate within the entire Billouin zone, even larger output was predicted. This numerical experiment represents the first study proposing monolayer MoTe2 as a promising candidate to achieve plasma-induced optical gain
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