Electric and Magnetic Field Effect Studies on the Hologram Recording in Azobenzene Molecular Films

2019 ◽  
Vol 800 ◽  
pp. 269-274
Author(s):  
Andris Ozols ◽  
Peteris Augustovs ◽  
Elmars Zarins ◽  
Valdis Kokars

Various electrooptic and magnetooptic effects enable the electric and magnetic field control of the holographic information recording. They can become significant if the frequency of light irradiation is close enough to the absorption line of a material. In this paper, these effects are theoretically considered, and the influence of applied external electric (up to 17 kV/cm) as well as magnetic field (0.15T) is experimentally studied on the transmission holographic grating recording in azobenzene-based molecular films at 632.8 and 532 nm. Recording beam polarizations were s-s, p-p, L-L and L-R . Self-diffraction efficiency (SDE) exposure time dependences were measured with and without the applied fields, and maximum SDE values as well as recording energies corresponding to 0.017% SDE were determined. No effect of electric field was found within the measurement accuracy (1-5%). Some trend to recording efficiency increase by magnetic field was observed. This result is in the agreement with the theoretical analysis. Unfortunately, these results are within experimental errors (usually 15-24%).

Author(s):  
Denise Widdowson ◽  
Paris von Lockette ◽  
Anil Erol ◽  
Manuel A. Rodriguez

Abstract Composites can be tailored to specific applications by adjusting process variables. These variables include those related to composition, such as volume fraction of the constituents and those associated with processing methods, methods that can affect composite topology. In the case of particle matrix composites, orientation of the inclusions affects the resulting composite properties, particularly so in instances where the particles can be oriented and arranged into structures. In this work, we study the effects of coupled electric and magnetic field processing with externally applied fields on those structures, and consequently on the resulting material properties that arise. The ability to vary these processing conditions with the goal of generating microstructures that yield target material properties adds an additional level of control to the design of composite material properties. Moreover, while analytical models allow for the prediction of resulting composite properties from constituents and composite topology, these models do not build upward from process variables to make these predictions. This work couples simulation of the formation of microscale architectures, which result from coupled electric and magnetic field processing of particulate filled polymer matrix composites, with finite element analysis of those structures to provide a direct and explicit linkages between process, structure, and properties. This work demonstrates the utility of these method as a tool for determining composite properties from constituent and processing parameters. Initial particle dynamics simulation incorporating electromagnetic responses between particles and between the particles and the applied fields, including dielectrophoresis, are used to stochastically generate representative volume elements for a given set of process variables. Next, these RVEs are analyzed as periodic structures using FEA yielding bulk material properties. The results are shown to converge for simulation size and discretization, validating the RVE as an appropriate representation of the composite volume. Calculated material properties are compared to traditional effective medium theory models. Simulations allow for mapping of composite properties with respect to not only composition, but also fundamentally from processing simulations that yield varying particle configurations, a step not present in traditional or more modern effective medium theories such as the Halpin Tsai or double-inclusion theories.


1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (18) ◽  
pp. 2033-2038 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Iaci ◽  
M. Lo Savio ◽  
E. Turrisi

In order to investigate the behavior of positronium in water, magnetic quenching measurements have been performed at various temperatures from 0 to 45 °C and with applied fields up to 12.5 kG. From these measurements it has been possible to evaluate the effect of the water. In fact, while for the positronium-free atom in the ground state the hyperfine structure energy splitting is ΔW0 = 8.34 × 10−4 eV, for positronium in water we find two consistent values, ΔW = (6.32 ± 0.20) × 10−4 eV and ΔW = (7.30 ± 0.80) × 10−4 eV, obtained by considering the magnetic-field effect on the positronium component which decays by pickoff and on its decay rate.


2004 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-138
Author(s):  
J. Kleiza ◽  
V. Kleiza

A method for calculating the values of specific resistivity ρ as well as the product µHB of the Hall mobility and magnetic induction on a conductive sample of an arbitrary geometric configuration with two arbitrary fitted current electrodes of nonzero length and has been proposed an grounded. During the experiment, under the constant value U of voltage and in the absence of the magnetic field effect (B = 0) on the sample, the current intensities I(0), IE(0) are measured as well as the mentioned parameters under the effect of magnetic fields B1, B2 (B1 ≠ B2), i.e.: IE(β(i)), I(β(i)), i = 1, 2. It has been proved that under the constant difference of potentials U and sample thickness d, the parameters I(0), IE(0) and IE(β(i)), I(β(i)), i = 1, 2 uniquely determines the values of the product µHB and specific resistivity ρ of the sample. Basing on the conformal mapping method and Hall’s tensor properties, a relation (a system of nonlinear equations) between the above mentioned quantities has been found.


2015 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 345-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Kowalik ◽  
K. Mech ◽  
D. Kutyla ◽  
T. Tokarski ◽  
P. Zabinski

2013 ◽  
Vol 49 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 237-248
Author(s):  
A. V. Beznosov ◽  
O. O. Novozhilova ◽  
S. Yu. Savinov ◽  
M. V. Yarmonov ◽  
R. E. Alekseev

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