Atomic force microscopy with a conductive probe has been used to study both the topography and the electronic properties of 10-nm-scale self-assembled InAs quantum dots (QDs) grown by molecular beam epitaxy on n-type GaAs. The current flowing through the conductive probe normal to the sample surface is measured for imaging local conductance, while the deflection of cantilever is optically detected for disclosing geometrical structure. The conductance on InAs QDs is found to be much larger than that on the wetting layer, allowing imaging of QDs through measurements of local current. We attribute this change in conductance to the local modification of surface band bending associated with surface states on InAs QD surface. Mechanisms of electron transport through QDs are discussed based on current–voltage characteristics measured on QDs of various sizes.
We present a study of cavity enhancement of the magneto-optic Kerr effect using dielectric multilayers in order to facilitate optical studies of individual single-domain nanomagnets. We develop a transfer matrix theory to analyze Kerr rotation from an arbitrary number of possibly lossy dielectric layers. The combination of one lossless and one thin metallic layer is found to be most favorable for studying individual nanomagnets, providing the best tradeoff between signal enhancement and spatial resolution. Accounting for the microscopic surface structure, we find good agreement between theory and experiment. Using this technique, we demonstrate Kerr enhancements by a factor of more than 16.
In this paper, we propose an innovative, simple and inexpensive gas sensor based on the variation in the magnetic properties of nanoparticles due to their interaction with gases. To measure the nanoparticle response a magnetostatic spin wave (MSW) tunable oscillator has been developed using an yttrium iron garnet (YIG) epitaxial thin film as a delay line (DL). The sensor has been prepared by coating a uniform layer of CuFe2O4 nanoparticles on the YIG film. The unperturbed frequency of the oscillator is determined by a bias magnetic field, which is applied parallel to the YIG film and perpendicularly to the wave propagation direction. In this device, the total bias magnetic field is the superposition of the field of a permanent magnet and the field associated with the layer of magnetic nanoparticles. The perturbation produced in the magnetic properties of the nanoparticle layer due to its interaction with gases induces a frequency shift in the oscillator, allowing the detection of low concentrations of gases. In order to demonstrate the ability of the sensor to detect gases, it has been tested with organic volatile compounds (VOCs) which have harmful effects on human health, such as dimethylformamide, isopropanol and ethanol, or the aromatic hydrocarbons like benzene, toluene and xylene more commonly known by its abbreviation (BTX). All of these were detected with high sensitivity, short response time, and good reproducibility.
Particle-particle interactions determine the state of a system. Control over the range of such interactions as well as their magnitude has been an active area of research for decades due to the fundamental challenges it poses in science and technology. Very recently, effective interactions between active particles have gathered much attention as they can lead to out-of-equilibrium cooperative states such as flocking. Inspired by nature, where active living cells coexist with lifeless objects and structures, here we study the effective interactions that appear in systems composed of active and passive mixtures of colloids. Our systems are 2D colloidal monolayers composed primarily of passive (inactive) colloids, and a very small fraction of active (spinning) ferromagnetic colloids. We find an emergent ultra-long-range attractive interaction induced by the activity of the spinning particles and mediated by the elasticity of the passive medium. Interestingly, the appearance of such interaction depends on the spinning protocol and has a minimum actuation timescale below which no attraction is observed. Overall, these results clearly show that, in the presence of elastic components, active particles can interact across very long distances without any chemical modification of the environment. Such a mechanism might potentially be important for some biological systems and can be harnessed for newer developments in synthetic active soft materials.active matter | nonequilibrium | colloids | monolayer | elasticity A ctive-matter systems have received much interest due to their emergent nonequilibrium phase and collective dynamical behavior. This interest is well founded as some of the most ubiquitous and important biological systems or processes can exhibit such emergent nonequilibrium behavior, which is perhaps most recognizable in macroscopic examples ranging from schools of aquatic organisms like rays or fish (1-3), herds of livestock (4), flocks of birds (5-7), and even a mosh pit at a heavy metal concert (8). Active-matter systems are additionally unique in that such phenomena spans multiple length scales from meter to nanometer. At these smaller length scales, it is clear that such dynamical adaptation and phase separation are necessary to perform many vital biological processes. Dense crowds of cells move collectively through tissue during development and in many of the immune response processes, i.e., wound healing (9). Sea urchin sperm cells have been found to phase separate and organize into arrays of vortices when the density of spermatozoa is large enough (10). In fact, a myriad of biological systems, and experimental systems with biological components, have reported swarming (11-13), flocking (6, 14, 15), spiraling (13, 16), and many more nonequilibrium steady states (17,18). It is clear that, in all these systems, a combination of the activity, shape of the active agents, and the environment lead to effective out-ofequilibrium interactions that determine their steady states. These active-matter systems have ...
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