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LOW-DIMENSIONAL SILICON AS A PHOTONIC MATERIAL

2008
In this chapter the state-of-the-art on the development of low dimensional silicon for application in photonics is presented with the aim to settle the status and try to weight out the perspectives. The necessity for Si-based photonics is introduced, and special emphasis is dedicated to the subject which is at the forefront of the today discus-sion ...
Daldosso, Nicola, Pavesi, Lorenzo
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Low-dimensional material based wearable sensors

Nanotechnology, 2021
Abstract Wearable sensors are believed to be the most important part of the Internet of Things. In order to meet the application requirements, low-dimensional materials such as graphene and carbon nanotubes have been attempted to constitute wearable sensors with high performance.
Chenggen Wu   +7 more
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Low Dimensional Materials

1990
Any review of the EPR spectra of linear chain compounds must necessarily start from [(CH3)4N]MnCl3 or, in a form more familiar in the physical literature, TMMC. Indeed, this is the first compound on which the one-dimensional properties were studied [10.1] and even after about 20 Years it is still an excellent testing ground for all the refinements that
Alessandro Bencini, Dante Gatteschi
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Low-dimensional thermoelectric materials

Physics of the Solid State, 1999
The promise of low dimensional thermoelectric materials for enhanced performance is reviewed, with particular attention given to quantum wells and quantum wires. The high potential of bismuth as a low-dimensional thermoelectric material is discussed.
M. S. Dresselhaus   +5 more
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Hybridization of Biomolecular Crystals and Low-Dimensional Materials

ACS Nano, 2021
In cellular environments, metabolites, peptides, proteins, and other biomolecules can self-assemble into planar and fibrilar molecular crystals. We use atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to show that such biomolecular crystals coupled with low-dimensional materials can form stable hybrid superstructures. We discuss enantiopure and racemic TRP and
Pavel Rehak, Petr Král
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Nonlinear Optics with Low-dimensional Materials

Latin America Optics and Photonics Conference, 2018
I will discuss our recent results on nonlinear optics with one-dimensional and two-dimensional materials. These results show advantages of utilizing low-dimensional nanomaterials for photonic and optoelectronic applications, e.g., quantum emitters, wavelength converters, and ultrafast lasers.
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Low-Dimensional Thermoelectric Materials

2001
In Chap. 2, the thermoelectric transport coefficients (Seebeck, α, resistivity, ρ, and thermal conductivity, λ) were defined and analyzed as if they were strictly bulk quantities. This assumption is not valid if boundaries significantly affect the transport of electric current or heat, which can result from overall sample dimensions or structural ...
George S. Nolas   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Low-Dimensional organic conductors as thermoelectric materials

Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry, 2008
We have developed a system to measure electrical resistivity, thermopower and thermal conductivity of tiny fragile organic conductors simultaneously. Figure of merit Z has been successfully determined from these transport coefficients for a two-dimensional organic conductor τ-(EDO-S,S-DMEDT-TTF)2(AuBr2)1+y, (y≤0.875), where EDO-S,S-DMEDT-TTF is ...
Yoshino, H.   +2 more
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Tuning dimensionality in low-dimensional electronic materials

Chemical Physics Letters, 1998
We demonstrate how dimensionality can be tuned in complex low-dimensional electronic materials via small perturbations in competing molecular forces. The delicate balance between molecular level forces on observed dimensionality in materials is illustrated by the 1-d to 3-d structural reorganization following deuteration of the ancillary ligands in the
Strouse, G.F.   +6 more
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Low-dimensional magnetic materials

Current Opinion in Solid State and Materials Science, 1997
Abstract One-dimensional (1d) magnets show novel phenomena that originate from quantum effects. In some of the 1D antiferromagnet the ground state is a singlet and there is an energy gap to the excited state. These include an antiferromagnet with a spontaneously dimerized state originating from a competing interaction, and spin-Peierls materials ...
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