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We present a Green's function based treatment of the effects of electron-phonon coupling on transport through a molecular quantum dot in the quantum limit. Thereby we combine an incomplete variational Lang-Firsov approach with a perturbative calculation of the electron-phonon self energy in the framework of generalised Matsubara Green functions and a Landauer-type transport description. Calculating the ground-state energy, the dot single-particle spectral function and the linear conductance at finite carrier density, we study the low-temperature transport properties of the vibrating quantum dot sandwiched between metallic leads in the whole electron-phonon coupling strength regime. We discuss corrections to the concept of an anti-adiabatic dot polaron and show how a deformable quantum dot can act as a molecular switch.
In classical Drude theory the conductivity is determined by the mass of the propagating particles and the mean free path between two scattering events. For a quantum particle this simple picture of diffusive transport loses relevance if strong correlations dominate the particle motion. We study a situation where the propagation of a fermionic particle is possible only through creation and annihilation of local bosonic excitations. This correlated quantum transport process is outside the Drude picture, since one cannot distinguish between free propagation and intermittent scattering. The characterization of transport is possible using the Drude weight obtained from the f-sum rule, although its interpretation in terms of free mass and mean free path breaks down. For the situation studied we calculate the Green's function and Drude weight using a Green's functions expansion technique, and discuss their physical meaning.
A quantum kinetic approach is presented to investigate the energy relaxation of dense strongly coupled two-temperature plasmas. We derive a balance equation for the mean total energy of a plasma species including a quite general expression for the transfer rate. An approximation scheme is used leading to an expression of the transfer rates for systems with coupled modes relevant for the warm dense matter regime. The theory is then applied to dense beryllium plasmas under conditions such as realized in recent experiments. Special attention is paid to the influence of correlation and quantum effects on the relaxation process.
In order to clarify the physics of the crossover from a spin-density-wave (SDW) Mott insulator to a charge-density-wave (CDW) Peierls insulator in one-dimensional (1D) systems, we investigate the Hubbard-Holstein Hamiltonian at half filling within a density matrix renormalisation group (DMRG) approach. Determining the spin and charge correlation exponents, the momentum distribution function, and various excitation gaps, we confirm that an intervening metallic phase expands the SDW-CDW transition in the weak-coupling regime.
We discuss a numerical method to study electron transport in mesoscopic devices out of equilibrium. The method is based on the solution of operator equations of motion, using efficient Chebyshev time propagation techniques. Its peculiar feature is the propagation of operators backwards in time. In this way the resource consumption scales linearly with the number of states used to represent the system. This allows us to calculate the current for non-interacting electrons in large one-, two- and three-dimensional lead-device configurations with time-dependent voltages or potentials. We discuss the technical aspects of the method and present results for an electron pump device and a disordered system, where we find transient behaviour that exists for a very long time and may be accessible to experiments.
Because of some disadvantages of chemical disinfection in dental practice (especially denture cleaning), we investigated the effects of physical methods on Candida albicans biofilms. For this purpose, the antifungal efficacy of three different low-temperature plasma devices (an atmospheric pressure plasma jet and two different dielectric barrier discharges (DBDs)) on Candida albicans biofilms grown on titanium discs in vitro was investigated. As positive treatment controls, we used 0.1% chlorhexidine digluconate (CHX) and 0.6% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl). The corresponding gas streams without plasma ignition served as negative treatment controls. The efficacy of the plasma treatment was determined evaluating the number of colony-forming units (CFU) recovered from titanium discs. The plasma treatment reduced the CFU significantly compared to chemical disinfectants. While 10 min CHX or NaOCl exposure led to a CFU log10 reduction factor of 1.5, the log10 reduction factor of DBD plasma was up to 5. In conclusion, the use of low-temperature plasma is a promising physical alternative to chemical antiseptics for dental practice.
Behavior of a porous particle in a radiofrequency plasma under pulsed argon ion beam bombardment
(2010)
The behavior of a single porous particle with a diameter of 250 μm levitating in a radiofrequency (RF) plasma under pulsed argon ion beam bombardment was investigated. The motion of the particle under the action of the ion beam was observed to be an oscillatory motion. The Fourier-analyzed motion is dominated by the excitation frequency of the pulsed ion beam and odd higher harmonics, which peak near the resonance frequency. The appearance of even harmonics is explained by a variation of the particles's charge depending on its position in the plasma sheath. The Fourier analysis also allows a discussion of neutral and ion forces. The particle's charge was derived and compared with theoretical estimates based on the orbital motion-limited (OML) model using also a numerical simulation of the RF discharge. The derived particle's charge is about 7–15 times larger than predicted by the theoretical models. This difference is attributed to the porous structure of the particle.
1. "Sole or Whole" – Quilting the Racialized Subject Calgary feminist and scholar Aruna Srivastava tackles the complex question of what it means to be "mixed-race/mixedblood/halfbreed/mestizo/hybrid/hyphenated?" in her editorial to Hyphe Nation (1996). In response to her question, this study of contemporary African-Canadian literature suggests that mixed-race Canadians are often constructed as the Other in Canadian society. In consequence, constructions of "racial hybridity" in African-Canadian literature usually aim at carving out a space that doesnt marginalize "racial" mixing but eviscerates restrictive Manichean constructions of identity in order to promulgate concepts of wholeness and self-definition. In consequence, African-Canadian mixed-race writers create hybrid identities that are infinite, multilayered, fragmented and yet whole. They reflect the processes of shifting, overlapping and re-creation in the process of creating identity and can hence be read as representations of complex, de-central, non-hierarchical identities. They are quilting multidimensional racialized subjects. 2. Signifying the In-Between: "Race", "Racial Hybridity" and Questions of Belonging "Race" is not a biological category. Rather it represents a social construction predicated upon the interpretation of difference. It was designed to establish, justify or perpetuate hegemonic social structures and is adherent to the principle of white supremacy. Contemporary "race" theory often neglects the experiences of racially mixed individuals because it fails to offer flexible models of identity in which bi- and multiracial people find themselves represented. This thesis argues in favor of a poetics of difference that accepts and recognizes the heterogeneity of subjectivities while taking into consideration the various dimensions of class, gender, sexuality and ethnicity. Accordingly, constructions of racial hybridity in contemporary African-Canadian literature demonstrate that racism must be acknowledged as an ideology in which people believe and upon which people act. Thus identities often bear the stamp of various histories of resistance and domination, while tackling the question of belonging and re-defining Canadianness. 3. African-Canadian Borderlands References to interracial contacts and the existence of bi- and multiracial people have been omitted from the official founding narratives of the Canadian nation. African-Canadian writers have therefore been successful chroniclers of the past and filled blanks in Canadian historiography in order to shed light on hitherto repressed or erased knowledge. Part of this process is also the inscription of the mixed-race experience into Canadas past. Along this line, bi- and multiracial Canadians often criticize that the state-proclaimed policy of multiculturalism fails to take their manifold racial and ethnic subjectivities into account. 4. "From Sole to Whole" – African-Canadian Mixed-Race Poetics Mixed-race characters in US-American literature often appear in the literary motif of the "tragic mulatto" and it is often implicitly suggested that the bi- or multiracial protagonist is categorized as black. In contrast, African-Canadian constructions of racial hybridity less frequently adhere to the stereotype of the "tragic mulatto" and leave more space for employing alternative modes of racial and ethnic identification. Canadian writers of mixed descent have created a mixed-race poetics that calls attention to contexts, relationships, intersections and wholes. They encourage sites of inclusiveness, incessant shifting and discontinuity in the process of constructing identities. Nevertheless, modes of identification among racially hybrid writers in Canada vary, ranging from detesting whiteness to claiming a Black Nationalist stance. In general, however, they support the idea of fluid and flexible identities. The answer to the initial question of Srivastava is hence given by a vast variety of African-Canadian subject positions. An essentially "black" or "racially mixed" Canadian subject does not exist. Instead, constructions of racial hybridity in African-Canadian literature offer a holistic view of identity and aim at re-conceptualizing the various senses of self and community in Canada. This strategy provides a significant means of self-empowerment and self-reclamation – making racially mixed African-Canadians "whole" instead of "sole".
“Za Hranetsiu” – “Beyond the Border”: Constructions of Identities in Ukrainian-Canadian Literature
(2010)
Grounded in the literary and cultural studies, the dissertation “Za Hranetsiu” – “Beyond the Border”: Constructions of Identities in Ukrainian-Canadian Literature answers the question how identities of different Ukrainian immigrants and their offspring have been constructed, continuously developed and transformed in contemporary Canadian literature. The study simultaneously presents a discussion of postmodern identities, a concise historical survey of Ukrainian immigration to Canada in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and an overall picture of the exceptionally substantial body of Ukrainian-Canadian literature. Detailed literary analyses focus on seven Ukrainian-Canadian works: Sons of the Soil (1939-45/1959) by Illia Kiriak, Yellow Boots (1954) by Vera Lysenko, A Letter to My Son (1981) by George Ryga, The Green Library (1996) by Janice Kulyk Keefer, The Doomed Bridegroom: A Memoir (1998) by Myrna Kostash, Kalyna’s Song (2003) by Lisa Grekul, and The Ladies’ Lending Library (2007) by Janice Kulyk Keefer.