Molecules have extremely small absorption cross sections in the terahertz range even under resonant conditions, which severely limit their detectability, often requiring tens of milligrams. We demonstrate that nanoantennas tailored for the terahertz range resolves the small molecular cross section problem. The extremely asymmetric electromagnetic environment inside the slot antenna, which finds the electric field being enhanced by thousand times with the magnetic field changed little, forces the molecular cross section to be enhanced by >10(3) accompanied by a colossal absorption coefficient of ~170,000 cm(-1). Tens of nanograms of small molecules such as 1,3,5-trinitroperhydro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) and lactose drop-cast over an area of 10 mm(2), with only tens of femtograms of molecules inside the single nanoslot, can readily be detected. Our work enables terahertz sensing of chemical and biological molecules in ultrasmall quantities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl400374z | DOI Listing |
Science
January 2025
Institute for Frontier Materials, Deakin University, Burwood, VIC, Australia.
Barocaloric (BC) materials offer the potential for highly energy-efficient refrigeration by generating heat absorption through the effect of pressure on a solid-solid phase transition. However, very few of the known materials have the required phase transition in the temperature regions necessary for domestic refrigeration or air conditioning. We introduce organic ionic plastic crystals (OIPCs) as a new family of BC materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
May 2024
Institute for Advanced Materials Technology, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China.
Double perovskite films have been extensively studied for ferroelectric order, ferromagnetic order, and photovoltaic effects. The customized ion combinations and ordered ionic arrangements provide unique opportunities for bandgap engineering. Here, a synergistic strategy to induce chemical strain and charge compensation through inequivalent element substitution is proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
May 2024
Department of physics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA.
The chiral induced spin selectivity (CISS) effect, in which the structural chirality of a material determines the preference for the transmission of electrons with one spin orientation over that of the other, is emerging as a design principle for creating next-generation spintronic devices. CISS implies that the spin preference of chiral structures persists upon injection of pure spin currents and can act as a spin analyzer without the need for a ferromagnet. Here, we report an anomalous spin current absorption in chiral metal oxides that manifests a colossal anisotropic nonlocal Gilbert damping with a maximum-to-minimum ratio of up to 1000%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2024
Vinh University, 182 Le Duan Street, Vinh City, Vietnam.
In this work, we present an analytical method to achieve giant Kerr nonlinearity without absorption in a five-level atomic medium. By using iterative perturbation technique on density matrix equations, we have derived the analytical expressions of nonlinear susceptibility and Kerr nonlinear coefficient in the presence of spontaneously generated coherence (SGC) and relative phase between applied laser fields. It shows that, this five-level atomic medium exhibits multiple electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) at three different frequencies, at the same time, the Kerr nonlinear coefficient is enhanced around three transparent spectral regions; in each such EIT region appears a pair of positive-negative peaks of Kerr nonlinear coefficient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
July 2023
Shenyang National Laboratory for Materials Science, Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IMR, CAS), Shenyang, 110016, China.
Controlling the domain evolution is critical both for optimizing ferroelectric properties and for designing functional electronic devices. Here we report an approach of using the Schottky barrier formed at the metal/ferroelectric interface to tailor the self-polarization states of a model ferroelectric thin film heterostructure system SrRuO/(Bi,Sm)FeO. Upon complementary investigations of the piezoresponse force microscopy, electric transport measurements, X-ray photoelectron/absorption spectra, and theoretical studies, we demonstrate that Sm doping changes the concentration and spatial distribution of oxygen vacancies with the tunable host Fermi level which modulates the SrRuO/(Bi,Sm)FeO Schottky barrier and the depolarization field, leading to the evolution of the system from a single domain of downward polarization to polydomain states.
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