Phonons and their interactions with other phonons, electrons or photons drive energy gain, loss and transport in materials. Although the phonon density of states has been measured and calculated in bulk crystalline semiconductors, phonons remain poorly understood in nanomaterials, despite the increasing prevalence of bottom-up fabrication of semiconductors from nanomaterials and the integration of nanometre-sized components into devices. Here we quantify the phononic properties of bottom-up fabricated semiconductors as a function of crystallite size using inelastic neutron scattering measurements and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. We show that, unlike in microcrystalline semiconductors, the phonon modes of semiconductors with nanocrystalline domains exhibit both reduced symmetry and low energy owing to mechanical softness at the surface of those domains. These properties become important when phonons couple to electrons in semiconductor devices. Although it was initially believed that the coupling between electrons and phonons is suppressed in nanocrystalline materials owing to the scarcity of electronic states and their large energy separation, it has since been shown that the electron-phonon coupling is large and allows high energy-dissipation rates exceeding one electronvolt per picosecond (refs 10-13). Despite detailed investigations into the role of phonons in exciton dynamics, leading to a variety of suggestions as to the origins of these fast transition rates and including attempts to numerically calculate them, fundamental questions surrounding electron-phonon interactions in nanomaterials remain unresolved. By combining the microscopic and thermodynamic theories of phonons and our findings on the phononic properties of nanomaterials, we are able to explain and then experimentally confirm the strong electron-phonon coupling and fast multi-phonon transition rates of charge carriers to trap states. This improved understanding of phonon processes permits the rational selection of nanomaterials, their surface treatments, and the design of devices incorporating them.
We performed quasielastic neutron scattering experiments and atomistic molecular dynamics simulations on a poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) homopolymer system above the melting point. The excellent agreement found between both sets of data, together with a successful comparison with literature diffraction results, validates the condensed-phase optimized molecular potentials for atomistic simulation studies (COMPASS) force field used to produce our dynamic runs and gives support to their further analysis. This provided direct information on magnitudes which are not accessible from experiments such as the radial probability distribution functions of specific atoms at different times and their moments. The results of our simulations on the H-motions and different experiments indicate that in the high-temperature range investigated the dynamics is Rouse-like for Q-values below approximately 0.6 A(-1). We then addressed the single chain dynamic structure factor with the simulations. A mode analysis, not possible directly experimentally, reveals the limits of applicability of the Rouse model to PEO. We discuss the possible origins for the observed deviations.
The first example of QENS data from a room temperature ionic liquid, 1-n-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate, over the temperature rnage 250 to 320 K was reported using a medium resolution spectrometer. These data were used to derive the intermediate incoherent dynamic structure factor. The data indicate that the existence of two different relaxation processes occurring in the sample over the probed time/temperature ranges
Inelastic neutron scattering and high-field electron paramagnetic resonance data are presented for [Mn(bpia)(OAc)(OCH(3))](PF(6)), where bpia is bis(picolyl)(N-methylimidazole-2-yl)amine. Modeling of the data to the conventional fourth-order spin-Hamiltonian yielded the following parameters: D = 3.526(3) cm(-1), E = 0.588(6) cm(-1), B(0)(4) = -0.00084(7) cm(-1), B(2)( 4)= -0.002(2) cm(-1), (4)(4) = -0.0082(5) cm(-1), g(x) = 1.98(1), g(y) = 1.952(6), and g(z) = 1.978(5). The complex is of particular interest given the biochemical activity and the unusual stereochemistry distinguished by a rare example of a tetragonally compressed octahedron and a pronounced angular distortion imposed by the tetradentate tripodal bpia ligand. Ligand field, density functional theory, and complete active space self-consistent field ab initio calculations are presented that aim to relate the spectroscopic data to the molecular geometry.
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