Advances in colloidal quantum dots
The confinement found in colloidal semiconductor quantum dots enables the design of materials with tunable properties. García de Arquer
et al
. review the recent ...advances in methods for synthesis and surface functionalization of quantum dots that enable fine tuning of their optical, chemical, and electrical properties. These important developments have driven the commercialization of display and lighting applications and provide promising developments in the related fields of lasing and sensing. —MSL
A review highlights advances in the synthesis of colloidal quantum dots that have enabled numerous applications.
BACKGROUND
Semiconductor materials feature optical and electronic properties that can be engineered through their composition and crystal structure. The use of semiconductors such as silicon gallium arsenide sparked technologies from computers and mobile phones to lasers and satellites. Semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) offer an additional lever: Because their size is reduced to the nanometer scale in all three dimensions, the restricted electron motion leads to a discrete atom-like electronic structure and size-dependent energy levels. This enables the design of nanomaterials with widely tunable light absorption, bright emission of pure colors, control over electronic transport, and a wide tuning of chemical and physical functions because of their large surface-to-volume ratio.
ADVANCES
The bright and narrowband light emission of semiconductor QDs, tunable across the visible and near-infrared spectrum, is attractive to realize more efficient displays with purer colors. QDs are engineered compositionally and structurally to manipulate energy states and charge interactions, leading to optical gain and lasing, relevant to light emission across visible and infrared wavelengths and fiberoptic communication. Their tunable surface chemistry allows application as optical labels in bio-imaging, made possible by tethering QDs with proteins and antibodies. The manipulation of QD surfaces with capping molecules that have different chemical and physical functions can be tailored to program their assembly into semiconducting solids, increasing conductivity and enabling the transduction of photonic and chemical stimuli into electrical signals. Optoelectronic devices such as transistors and photodetectors lead to cameras sensitive to visible and infrared light. Highly crystalline QDs can be grown epitaxially on judiciously chosen substrates by using high-temperature and vacuum conditions, and their use has led to commercially viable high-performance lasers. The advent of colloidal QDs, which can be fabricated and processed in solution at mild conditions, enabled large-area manufacturing and widened the scope of QD application to markets such as consumer electronics and photovoltaics.
OUTLOOK
From a chemistry perspective, further advances in QD fabrication are needed to sustain and improve desired chemical and optoelectronic properties and to do so with high reproducibility. This entails the use of inexpensive synthesis methods and precursors that are able to retain laboratory-scale QD properties to market-relevant volumes. A better understanding of the yet-incomplete picture of QD surfaces, atomic arrangement, and metastable character is needed to drive further progress. From a regulatory perspective, added attention is needed to achieve high-quality materials that do not rely on heavy metals such as Cd, Pb, and Hg. The role of nanostructuring in toxicity and life cycle analysis for each application is increasingly important. From a materials and photophysics perspective, exciting opportunities remain in the understanding and harnessing of electrons in highly confined materials, bridging the gap between mature epitaxial QDs and still-up-and-coming colloidal QDs. The yet-imperfect quality of the latter—a price paid today in exchange for their ease of manufacture—remains a central challenge and must be addressed to achieve further-increased performance in devices. From a device perspective, colloidal QD manufacturing must advance to translate from laboratory-scale to large-area applications such as roll-to-roll and inkjet printing. Photocatalysis, in which light is used to drive chemical transformations, is an emerging field in which QDs are of interest. Quantum information technologies, which rely on the transduction of coherent light and electrons, bring new challenges and opportunities to exploit quantum confinement effects. Moving forward, opportunities remain in the design of QD-enabled new device architectures.
Semiconductor quantum dot technologies.
Quantum dots feature widely tunable and distinctive optical, electrical, chemical, and physical properties. They span energy harvesting, illumination, displays, cameras, sensors, communication and information technology, biology, and medicine, among others. These have been exploited to realize efficient lasers, displays, biotags, and solar harvesting devices available in the market and are emerging in photovoltaics, sensing, and quantum information.
In quantum-confined semiconductor nanostructures, electrons exhibit distinctive behavior compared with that in bulk solids. This enables the design of materials with tunable chemical, physical, electrical, and optical properties. Zero-dimensional semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) offer strong light absorption and bright narrowband emission across the visible and infrared wavelengths and have been engineered to exhibit optical gain and lasing. These properties are of interest for imaging, solar energy harvesting, displays, and communications. Here, we offer an overview of advances in the synthesis and understanding of QD nanomaterials, with a focus on colloidal QDs, and discuss their prospects in technologies such as displays and lighting, lasers, sensing, electronics, solar energy conversion, photocatalysis, and quantum information.
The origin and nature of extreme energy cosmic rays (EECRs), which have energies above the
5
⋅
10
19
eV
—the Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin (GZK) energy limit, is one of the most interesting and complicated ...problems in modern cosmic-ray physics. Existing ground-based detectors have helped to obtain remarkable results in studying cosmic rays before and after the GZK limit, but have also produced some contradictions in our understanding of cosmic ray mass composition. Moreover, each of these detectors covers only a part of the celestial sphere, which poses problems for studying the arrival directions of EECRs and identifying their sources. As a new generation of EECR space detectors, TUS (Tracking Ultraviolet Set-up), KLYPVE and JEM-EUSO, are intended to study the most energetic cosmic-ray particles, providing larger, uniform exposures of the entire celestial sphere. The TUS detector, launched on board the Lomonosov satellite on April 28, 2016 from Vostochny Cosmodrome in Russia, is the first of these. It employs a single-mirror optical system and a photomultiplier tube matrix as a photo-detector and will test the fluorescent method of measuring EECRs from space. Utilizing the Earth’s atmosphere as a huge calorimeter, it is expected to detect EECRs with energies above
10
20
eV
.
It will also be able to register slower atmospheric transient events: atmospheric fluorescence in electrical discharges of various types including precipitating electrons escaping the magnetosphere and from the radiation of meteors passing through the atmosphere. We describe the design of the TUS detector and present results of different ground-based tests and simulations.
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DOBA, EMUNI, FIS, FZAB, GEOZS, GIS, IJS, IMTLJ, IZUM, KILJ, KISLJ, MFDPS, NLZOH, NUK, OBVAL, OILJ, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, SBMB, SBNM, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VKSCE, ZAGLJ
Superconducting qubits are an attractive platform for quantum computing since they have demonstrated high-fidelity quantum gates and extensibility to modest system sizes. Nonetheless, an outstanding ...challenge is stabilizing their energy-relaxation times, which can fluctuate unpredictably in frequency and time. Here, we use qubits as spectral and temporal probes of individual two-level-system defects to provide direct evidence that they are responsible for the largest fluctuations. This research lays the foundation for stabilizing qubit performance through calibration, design, and fabrication.
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The development of nanocrystal quantum dots (NQDs) with suppressed nonradiative Auger recombination has been an important goal in colloidal nanostructure research motivated by the needs of ...prospective applications in lasing devices, light-emitting diodes, and photovoltaic cells. Here, we conduct single-nanocrystal spectroscopic studies of recently developed core−shell NQDs (so-called “giant” NQDs) that comprise a small CdSe core surrounded by a 16-monolayer-thick CdS shell. Using both continuous-wave and pulsed excitation, we observe strong emission features due both to neutral and charged biexcitons, as well as multiexcitons of higher order. The development of pronounced multiexcitonic peaks in steady-state photoluminescence of individual nanocrystals, as well as continuous growth of the emission intensity in the range of high pump levels, point toward a significant suppression of nonradiative Auger decay that normally renders multiexcitons nonemissive. The unusually high multiexciton emission efficiencies in these systems open interesting opportunities for studies of multiexciton phenomena using well-established methods of single-dot spectroscopy, as well as new exciting prospects for applications, that have previously been hampered by nonradiative Auger decay.
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IJS, KILJ, NUK, PNG, UL, UM
The review focuses on allergen-specific immunotherapy (AIT), a treatment method for atopic diseases, including allergic rhinitis. The theoretical and practical basics, development prospects, ...indications and contraindications to AIT, peculiarities of AIT execution in allergic rhinitis, and tolerogenic effects of immunotherapy are considered. Advantages and disadvantages of each of the two preferable routes of allergen administration in AIT, subcutaneous and sublingual, are described. The main goals of further AIT advancement include shortening of treatment protocols with no significant loss of efficacy, creation of a safer adverse effect profile, and distribution of AIT in developing countries.
The program of physical studies on the
Vernov
satellite launched on July 8, 2014 into a polar (640 × 830 km) solar-synchronous orbit with an inclination of 98.4° is presented. We described the ...complex of scientific equipment on this satellite in detail, including multidirectional gamma-ray detectors, electron spectrometers, red and ultra-violet detectors, and wave probes. The experiment on the
Vernov
satellite is mainly aimed at a comprehensive study of the processes of generation of transient phenomena in the optical and gamma-ray ranges in the Earth’s atmosphere (such as high-altitude breakdown on runaway relativistic electrons), the study of the action on the atmosphere of electrons precipitated from the radiation belts, and low- and high-frequency electromagnetic waves of both space and atmospheric origin.
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DOBA, EMUNI, FIS, FZAB, GEOZS, GIS, IJS, IMTLJ, IZUM, KILJ, KISLJ, MFDPS, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, SBMB, SBNM, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VKSCE, ZAGLJ
We demonstrate diabatic two-qubit gates with Pauli error rates down to 4.3(2)×10^{-3} in as fast as 18 ns using frequency-tunable superconducting qubits. This is achieved by synchronizing the ...entangling parameters with minima in the leakage channel. The synchronization shows a landscape in gate parameter space that agrees with model predictions and facilitates robust tune-up. We test both iswap-like and cphase gates with cross-entropy benchmarking. The presented approach can be extended to multibody operations as well.
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This paper presents an investigation into structure and magnetic properties of Fe–50%Ni permalloy bulk samples manufactured from the powder of the same chemical composition by selective laser melting ...(SLM). The relations of microstructure, heat treatment parameters, maximum relative permeability (μmax) and coercivity (Hc) were established. Fine fcc crystallographic structure with elongated grains in building direction was observed. In as-built state the mode angle of misorientation which characterizes the degree of internal stresses was close to 0.5° that was near the lowest reliably determined misorientation. After heat treatment it was shifted to the bigger angles at the region of 1°, meanwhile the microhardness lowered from 275 HV down to 190 HV after annealing and it was still rather high for this type of alloys. The coercivity decreased after the annealing in comparison with as-built state from 200 to 100 A/m that is rather high for soft magnetic alloys however it is lower than that one of magnetic alloys produced by additive manufacturing methods and published elsewhere. The relative maximum permeability in this case rised from 1000 to 5000. The obtained results for μmax and Hc were discussed in terms of microstructure features which might be some kind of restriction for SLM technology of soft magnetic alloys manufacture.
•The SLM process of Fe–50%Ni soft magnetic alloy powder was successfully applied.•Magnetic properties evolution in dependence on temperature and holding time of heat treatment were investigated.•The obtained results on magnetic properties were discussed in terms of microstructure features and internal stresses.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UILJ, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK, ZAGLJ, ZRSKP
The problem of identification of two sources of binary signals against the background of transforming and erasing types of noise under counteraction conditions is considered. The situation is ...described by an antagonistic game, the analytical solution of which gives the optimal strategies of the players and the price of the game as a function of the a priori probability of the appearance of one of the sources. Particular cases are considered.
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EMUNI, FIS, FZAB, GEOZS, GIS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, MFDPS, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, SBMB, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK, VKSCE, ZAGLJ
Our previous reports demonstrated an alarming in crease in resistance to adamantanes among influenza A(H3N2) viruses isolated in 2001–2005. To continue monitoring drug resistance, we conducted a ...comprehensive analysis of influenza A(H3N2) and A(H1N1) viruses isolated globally in 2005–2006. The results obtained by pyrosequencing indicate that 96.4% (n=761) of A(H3N2) viruses circulating in the United States were adamantane resistant. Drug resistance has reached 100% among isolates from some Asian countries. Analysis of correlation between the appearance of drug resistance and the evolutionary pathway of the hemagglutinin (HA) gene suggests at least 2 separate introductions of resistance into circulating populations that gave rise to identifiable subclades. It also indicates that resistant A(H3N2) viruses may have emerged in Asia in late 2001. Among A(H1N1) viruses isolated worldwide, resistance reached 15.5% in 2005–2006; in the United States alone, it was 4.0%. Phylogenetic analysis of the HA and M genes indicates that the acquisition of resistance in A(H1N1) viruses can be linked to a specific genetic group and was not a result of reassortment between A(H3N2) and A(H1N1) viruses. The results of the study highlight the necessity of close monitoring of resistance to existing antivirals as wells as the need for new therapeutics.
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BFBNIB, NMLJ, NUK, PNG, SAZU, UL, UM, UPUK