Institution
Vienna University of Technology
Education•Vienna, Austria•
About: Vienna University of Technology is a education organization based out in Vienna, Austria. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Laser & Context (language use). The organization has 16723 authors who have published 49341 publications receiving 1302168 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The investigation of the fringes makes possible interferometry on the attosecond time scale and produces a situation in which one and the same electron encounters a single and a double slit at the same time.
Abstract: A new scheme for a double-slit experiment in the time domain is presented. Phase-stabilized few-cycle laser pulses open one to two windows (slits) of attosecond duration for photoionization. Fringes in the angle-resolved energy spectrum of varying visibility depending on the degree of which-way information are measured. A situation in which one and the same electron encounters a single and a double slit at the same time is observed. The investigation of the fringes makes possible interferometry on the attosecond time scale. From the number of visible fringes, for example, one derives that the slits are extended over about 500 as.
354 citations
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TL;DR: The present study conclusively explains the differences between the two polymorphs and indicates that even small structural variations in the crystal lattice can lead to a very different behavior.
Abstract: A combination of scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy and density functional theory is used to characterize excess electrons in TiO2 rutile and anatase, two prototypical materials with identical chemical composition but different crystal lattices. In rutile, excess electrons can localize at any lattice Ti atom, forming a small polaron, which can easily hop to neighboring sites. In contrast, electrons in anatase prefer a free-carrier state, and can only be trapped near oxygen vacancies or form shallow donor states bound to Nb dopants. The present study conclusively explains the differences between the two polymorphs and indicates that even small structural variations in the crystal lattice can lead to a very different behavior.
354 citations
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02 Apr 2007TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the volume of the cooling system and of the main passive components for the basic forms of power electronics energy conversion in dependency of the switching frequency and determined switching frequencies minimizing the total volume.
Abstract: Power density of power electronic converters in different applications has roughly doubled every 10 years since 1970. Behind this trajectory was the continuous advancement of power semiconductor device technology allowing an increase of converter switching frequencies by a factor of 10 every decade. However, today's cooling concepts, and passive components and wire bond interconnection technologies could be major barriers for a continuation of this trend. For identifying and quantifying such technological barriers this paper investigates the volume of the cooling system and of the main passive components for the basic forms of power electronics energy conversion in dependency of the switching frequency and determines switching frequencies minimizing the total volume. The analysis is for 5 kW rated output power, high performance air cooling, advanced power semiconductors, and single systems in all cases. A power density limit of 28 kW/dm3@300 kHz is calculated for an isolated DC-DC converter considering only transformer, output inductor and heat sink volume. For single-phase AC-DC conversion a general limit of 35 kW/dm3 results from the DC link capacitor required for buffering the power fluctuating with twice the mains frequency. For a three-phase unity power factor PWM rectifier the limit is 45 kW/dm3@810 kHz just taking into account EMI filter and cooling system. For the sparse matrix converter the limiting components are the input EMI filter and the common mode output inductor; the power density limit is 71 kW/dm3@50 kHz when not considering the cooling system. The calculated power density limits highlight the major importance of broadening the scope of research in power electronics from traditional areas like converter topologies, and modulation and control concepts to cooling systems, high frequency electromagnetics, interconnection technology, multi-functional integration, packaging and multi-domain modeling and simulation to ensure further advancement of the field along the power density trajectory.
353 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a vibronic exciton model is applied to explain the long-lived oscillatory features in the two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectra of the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) complex.
Abstract: A vibronic exciton model is applied to explain the long-lived oscillatory features in the two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectra of the Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) complex. Using experimentally determined parameters and uncorrelated site energy fluctuations, the model predicts oscillations with dephasing times of 1.3 ps at 77 K, which is in a good agreement with the experimental results. These long-lived oscillations originate from the coherent superposition of vibronic exciton states with dominant contributions from vibrational excitations on the same pigment. The oscillations obtain a large amplitude due to excitonic intensity borrowing, which gives transitions with strong vibronic character a significant intensity despite the small Huang–Rhys factor. Purely electronic coherences are found to decay on a 200 fs time scale.
353 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a dynamic micromagnetic code based on the Gilbert equation of motion to study the time evolution of the magnetization has been developed, and three different regimes have been identified.
Abstract: The increasing information density in magnetic recording, the miniaturization in magnetic sensor technology, the trend towards nanocrystalline magnetic materials and the improved availability of large-scale computer power are the main reasons why micromagnetic modelling has been developing extremely rapidly. Computational micromagnetism leads to a deeper understanding of hysteresis effects by visualization of the magnetization reversal process. Recent advances in numerical simulation techniques are reviewed. Higher order finite elements and adaptive meshing have been introduced, in order to reduce the discretization error. The use of a hybrid boundary/finite element method enables accurate stray field computation for arbitrary shaped particles and takes into account the granular microstructure of the material. A dynamic micromagnetic code based on the Gilbert equation of motion to study the time evolution of the magnetization has been developed. Finite element models for different materials and magnet shapes are obtained from a Voronoi construction and subsequent meshing of the polyhedral regions. Adaptive refinement and coarsening of the finite element mesh guarantees accurate solutions near magnetic inhomogeneities or domain walls, while keeping the number of elements small. The polycrystalline microstructure and assumed random magnetocrystalline anisotropy of elongated Co elements decreases the coercive field and the switching time compared to zero anisotropy elements, in which vortices form and move only after a certain waiting time after the application of a reversed field close to the coercive field. NiFe elements with flat, rounded and slanted ends show different hysteresis properties and switching dynamics. Micromagnetic simulations show that the magnetic properties of intergranular regions in nucleation-controlled Nd-Fe-B hard magnetic materials control the coercive field. Exchange interactions between neighbouring soft and hard grains lead to remanence enhancement of isotropically oriented grains in nanocrystalline composite magnets. Upper limits of the coercive field of pinning-controlled Sm-Co magnets for high-temperature applications are predicted from the micromagnetic calculations. Incorporating thermally activated magnetization reversal and micromagnetics we found complex magnetization reversal mechanisms for small spherical magnetic particles. The magnetocrystalline anisotropy and the external field strength determine the switching mechanism. Three different regimes have been identified. For fields, which are smaller than the anisotropy field, magnetization by coherent switching has been observed. Single droplet nucleation occurs, if the external field is comparable to the anisotropy field, and multi-droplet nucleation is the driving reversal process for higher fields.
352 citations
Authors
Showing all 16934 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski | 169 | 1431 | 128585 |
Wolfgang Wagner | 156 | 2342 | 123391 |
Marco Zanetti | 145 | 1439 | 104610 |
Sridhara Dasu | 140 | 1675 | 103185 |
Duncan Carlsmith | 138 | 1660 | 103642 |
Ulrich Heintz | 136 | 1688 | 99829 |
Matthew Herndon | 133 | 1732 | 97466 |
Frank Würthwein | 133 | 1584 | 94613 |
Alain Hervé | 132 | 1279 | 87763 |
Manfred Jeitler | 132 | 1278 | 89645 |
David Taylor | 131 | 2469 | 93220 |
Roberto Covarelli | 131 | 1516 | 89981 |
Patricia McBride | 129 | 1230 | 81787 |
David Smith | 129 | 2184 | 100917 |
Lindsey Gray | 129 | 1170 | 81317 |