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1.
Nano Lett ; 23(15): 7206-7212, 2023 Aug 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37490518

RESUMO

Are surface nanobubbles transient or thermodynamically stable structures? This question remained controversial until recently, when the stability of gas nanobubbles at solid-liquid interfaces was demonstrated from thermodynamic arguments in closed systems, establishing that bubbles with radii of hundreds of nanometers can be stable at modest supersaturations if the gas amount is finite. Here we develop a grand-canonical description of bubble formation that predicts that nanobubbles can nucleate and remain thermodynamically stable in open boundaries at high supersaturations when pinned to hydrophobic supports as small as a few nanometers. While larger bubbles can also be stable at lower supersaturations, the corresponding barriers are orders of magnitude above kT, meaning that their formation cannot proceed via heterogeneous nucleation on a uniform solid interface but must follow some alternative path. Moreover, we conclude that a source of growth-limiting mechanism, such as pinning or gas availability, is necessary for the thermodynamic stabilization of surface bubbles.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 158(14): 144104, 2023 Apr 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37061497

RESUMO

Real time modeling of fluorescence with vibronic resolution entails the representation of the light-matter interaction coupled to a quantum-mechanical description of the phonons and is therefore a challenging problem. In this work, taking advantage of the difference in timescales characterizing internal conversion and radiative relaxation-which allows us to decouple these two phenomena by sequentially modeling one after the other-we simulate the electron dynamics of fluorescence through a master equation derived from the Redfield formalism. Moreover, we explore the use of a recent semiclassical dissipative equation of motion [C. M. Bustamante et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 126, 087401 (2021)], termed coherent electron electric-field dynamics (CEED), to describe the radiative stage. By comparing the results with those from the full quantum-electrodynamics treatment, we find that the semiclassical model does not reproduce the right amplitudes in the emission spectra when the radiative process involves the de-excitation to a manifold of closely lying states. We argue that this flaw is inherent to any mean-field approach and is the case with CEED. This effect is critical for the study of light-matter interaction, and this work is, to our knowledge, the first one to report this problem. We note that CEED reproduces the correct frequencies in agreement with quantum electrodynamics. This is a major asset of the semiclassical model, since the emission peak positions will be predicted correctly without any prior assumption about the nature of the molecular Hamiltonian. This is not so for the quantum electrodynamics approach, where access to the spectral information relies on knowledge of the Hamiltonian eigenvalues.

3.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 13(50): 11601-11609, 2022 Dec 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36480910

RESUMO

Cooperative optical effects provide a pathway to both the amplification (superradiance) and the suppression (subradiance) of photon emission from electronically excited states. These captivating phenomena offer a rich variety of possibilities for photonic technologies aimed at electromagnetic energy manipulation, including lasers and high-speed emitting devices in the case of superradiance or optical energy storage in that of subradiance. The employment of molecules as the building pieces in these developments requires a precise understanding of the roles of separation, orientation, spatial distribution, and applied fields, which remains challenging for theory and experiments. These questions are addressed here through ab initio quantum dynamics simulations of collective emission on the basis of a novel semiclassical formalism and time-dependent density functional theory. By establishing the configurations leading to decoherence and how the fine-tuning of a pulse can accumulate or release optical energy in H2 arrays, this report provides fundamental insight toward the design of real superradiant and subradiant devices.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 126(8): 087401, 2021 Feb 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33709735

RESUMO

The dynamical description of the radiative decay of an electronically excited state in realistic many-particle systems is an unresolved challenge. In the present investigation electromagnetic radiation of the charge density is approximated as the power dissipated by a classical dipole, to cast the emission in closed form as a unitary single-electron theory. This results in a formalism of unprecedented efficiency, critical for ab initio modeling, which exhibits at the same time remarkable properties: it quantitatively predicts decay rates, natural broadening, and absorption intensities. Exquisitely accurate excitation lifetimes are obtained from time-dependent DFT simulations for C^{2+}, B^{+}, and Be, of 0.565, 0.831, and 1.97 ns, respectively, in accord with experimental values of 0.57±0.02, 0.86±0.07, and 1.77-2.5 ns. Hence, the present development expands the frontiers of quantum dynamics, bringing within reach first-principles simulations of a wealth of photophysical phenomena, from fluorescence to time-resolved spectroscopies.

5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(16): 6573-6579, 2020 Aug 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32692923

RESUMO

Gas-producing electrochemical reactions are key to energy conversion and generation technologies. Bubble formation dramatically decreases gas-production rates on nanoelectrodes, by confining the reaction to the electrode boundary. This results in the collapse of the current to a stationary value independent of the potential. Startlingly, these residual currents also appear to be insensitive to the nanoelectrode diameter in the 5 to 500 nm range. These results are counterintuitive, as it may be expected that the current be proportional to the circumference of the electrode, i.e., the length of the three-phase line where the reaction occurs. Here, we use molecular simulations and a kinetic model to elucidate the origin of current insensitivity with respect to the potential and establish its relationship to the size of nanoelectrodes. We provide critical insights for the design and operation of nanoscale electrochemical devices and demonstrate that nanoelectrode arrays maximize conversion rates compared to macroscopic electrodes with same total area.

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