PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Laser-driving a 2D material

2023-12-22
(Press-News.org) Writing in Nature Communications on November 24, engineers at Columbia and theoretical collaborators at the Max Planck for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter find that pairing laser light to crystal lattice vibrations can enhance the nonlinear optical properties of a layered 2D material.

Cecilia Chen, a Columbia Engineering PhD student and co-author of the recent paper, and her colleagues from Alexander Gaeta’s Quantum and Nonlinear Photonics group used hexagonal boron nitride (hBN). hBN is a 2D material similar to graphene: its atoms are arranged in a honey-combed-shaped repeating pattern and can be peeled into thin layers with unique quantum properties. Chen noted that hBN is stable at room temperature, and its constituent elements—boron and nitrogen—are very light. That means they vibrate very quickly.

Atomic vibrations occur in all materials above absolute zero. That movement can be quantized into quasiparticles called phonons with particular resonances; in hBN's case, the team was interested in the optical phonon mode vibrating at 41 THz, corresponding to a wavelength of 7.3 μm, which is in the mid-infrared regime of the electromagnetic spectrum. While mid-IR wavelengths are considered short, and thus, high energy, in the picture of crystal vibrations, they are considered very long and low energy in most optics research with lasers, where the overwhelming majority of experiments and studies are performed in the visible to near-IR range of approximately 400 nm to 2 um.

When they tuned their laser system to hBN’s frequency corresponding to 7.3 μm, Chen, along with fellow PhD student Jared Ginsberg (now a data scientist at Bank of America) and postdoc Mehdi Jadidi (now a Team Lead at quantum computing company PsiQuantum), were able to coherently and simultaneously drive the phonons and electrons of the hBN crystal to efficiently generate new optical frequencies from the medium—an essential goal of nonlinear optics. Theoretical work led by Professor Angel Rubio’s group at Max Planck helped the experimental team understand their results.

Using commercially available, table-top mid-infrared lasers, they explored the phonon-mediated nonlinear optical process of four-wave mixing to generate light close to even harmonics of an optical signal. They also observed greater than a 30-fold increase in third-harmonic generation over what is achieved without exciting the phonons.

 “We’re excited to show that amplifying the natural phonon motion with laser driving can enhance nonlinear optical effects and generate new frequencies,” said Chen. The team plans to explore how they might be able to modify hBN and materials like it using light in future work.

Read More: Ginsberg, J.S. et al. Phonon-enhanced nonlinearities in hexagonal boron nitride. Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-43501-x

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UTHealth Houston researchers find link between lonely veterans and firearm purchases

UTHealth Houston researchers find link between lonely veterans and firearm purchases
2023-12-22
Low-income U.S. veterans who are experiencing feelings of loneliness are more likely to purchase firearms, according to new research from UTHealth Houston. A study led by principal investigator Alexander Testa, PhD, assistant professor, and co-investigator Jack Tsai, PhD, professor, from the Department of Management, Policy and Community Health with UTHealth Houston School of Public Health, was published recently in Social Science & Medicine.  “Loneliness was significantly associated with a higher likelihood ...

Flavonoid supplement reduces swelling after total knee arthroplasty

2023-12-22
Waltham — December 19, 2023 — For patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty (TKA), treatment with diosmin – a flavonoid supplement derived from citrus fruits –reduced swelling of the knee and leg and some measures of associated pain can be achieved, reports a clinical trial in The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio in partnership with Wolters Kluwer.  "The use of diosmin after TKA reduced lower-extremity swelling and pain during motion and was not associated with an increased incidence of short-term complications involving the outcomes studied," according ...

Two types of CBT are equally effective in the treatment of fibromyalgia

Two types of CBT are equally effective in the treatment of fibromyalgia
2023-12-22
  There does not appear to be any profound differences between so-called exposure-based CBT and traditional CBT in the treatment of fibromyalgia, according to a study led by researchers at Karolinska Institutet. Both forms of treatment produced a significant reduction in symptoms in people affected by the disease. The study is one of the largest to date to compare different treatment options for fibromyalgia and is published in the journal PAIN. About 200,000 people in Sweden currently live with fibromyalgia, a long-term pain syndrome that causes great suffering for patients through widespread pain, fatigue, and stiffness in the body. There is no cure ...

Fewer hospital admissions when people are fitter

Fewer hospital admissions when people are fitter
2023-12-22
People who maintain or increase their aerobic fitness are at less risk of being hospitalized in future, particularly if they were hospitalized previously. These are the findings of a study conducted at the University of Gothenburg. Regular physical activity is linked to a number of health benefits, including a reduced risk of developing and dying from cardiovascular disease. However, there has been little research into the link between development of aerobic fitness and the likelihood of being hospitalized. The study in question, published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, includes ...

Ongoing brain injury caused by COVID-19 may not always be detected by routine tests

2023-12-22
A new study published today (22 December 2023) in Nature Communications details that markers of brain injury are present in the blood many months after COVID-19 infection, despite inflammation blood tests being normal. The findings represent a major output from the University of Liverpool and King’s College London led COVID-19 Clinical Neuroscience Study (COVID-CNS) and also involves scientists from the ISARIC4C consortium, The Pandemic Institute and the NIHR BioResource. Professor Benedict Michael, Principal Investigator and Director of the University of Liverpool’s Infection Neuroscience Laboratory ...

Texas A&M team develops polymers that can kill bacteria

2023-12-22
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria have become a rapidly growing threat to public health. Each year, they account for more than 2.8 million infections, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Without new antibiotics, even common injuries and infections harbor the potential to become lethal. Scientists are now one step closer to eliminating that threat, thanks to a Texas A&M University-led collaboration that has developed a new family of polymers capable of killing bacteria without inducing antibiotic resistance by disrupting the membrane of these microorganisms. “The new polymers we synthesized could help fight antibiotic ...

How jellyfish regenerate functional tentacles in days

How jellyfish regenerate functional tentacles in days
2023-12-22
At about the size of a pinkie nail, the jellyfish species Cladonema can regenerate an amputated tentacle in two to three days — but how? Regenerating functional tissue across species, including salamanders and insects, relies on the ability to form a blastema, a clump of undifferentiated cells that can repair damage and grow into the missing appendage. Jellyfish, along with other cnidarians such as corals and sea anemones, exhibit high regeneration abilities, but how they form the critical blastema has remained a mystery until now. A research team based in Japan has revealed that stem-like proliferative cells — which are actively growing and dividing but ...

Reindeer sleep while chewing their cud

Reindeer sleep while chewing their cud
2023-12-22
Researchers report December 22 in the journal Current Biology that the more time reindeer spend ruminating, the less time they spend in non-rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep. EEG recordings revealed that reindeer’s brainwaves during rumination resemble the brain waves present during non-REM sleep, and these brainwave patterns suggest that the reindeer are more “rested” after ruminating. The researchers speculate that this multitasking might help reindeer get enough sleep during the summer months, when food is abundant ...

Trends in abdominoplasty: More outpatient surgery and concomitant liposuction

2023-12-22
Waltham — December 22, 2023 —   Abdominoplasty continues to be a safe and effective procedure, with more cases performed on an outpatient basis and increased use of concomitant liposuction, according to a new 16-year analysis in the January issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.   "Taking advantage of quality-improvement data submitted by US Board-certified plastic surgeons, our study provides new insight ...

Like kids in a candy store 

Like kids in a candy store 
2023-12-22
Kyoto, Japan – A non-prescription drug abuse crisis in Japan seems only one overdose away. The demand for a particular anti-cough drug has been rising, along with the social impact of its abuse due to its psychosomatic effects.  The ease of obtaining information online about how to acquire over-the-counter medications or OTCs for achieving overdose, however, does not appear to be the real problem. Now, a study by a team of researchers at Kyoto University suggests that reliable information about OTC abuse needs to be readily available and effectively disseminated.  "We ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Protecting confidentiality in adolescent patient portals

Gatling conducting digitization project

Regenstrief researcher awarded $1.9 million CDC grant

Independent expert report: The Human Brain Project significantly advanced neuroscience

Wu conducting molecular modeling of DR domain of HIV restriction factor PSGL-1

Nguyen working to make complex invariants accessible

Menstrual cycle luteal phase lengths are not 'fixed' at 13-14 days

Should men and women eat different breakfasts to lose weight?

SwRI’s Nathan Andrews named AIAA Associate Fellow

Invasive populations of tiger mosquitoes continuously expand the diversity of hosts in their blood-meal

After injury, these comb jellies can fuse to become one

Whale shark shipping collisions may increase as oceans warm

Despite medical advances, life expectancy gains are slowing

Johns Hopkins Medicine study finds commonly used arm positions can substantially overestimate blood pressure readings

Arm position and blood pressure readings

Longitudinal changes in epigenetic age acceleration across childhood and adolescence

An early blood test can predict survival in patients with metastatic prostate cancer, shows USC study

Scientists discover that special immune cells stop metastatic cancer

Cancer biologists discover a new mechanism for an old drug

Food deserts, limited access to transportation linked to more complications among preschool children with SCD

Space oddity: Most distant rotating disc galaxy found

How a common economic theory could help save endangered frogs

Stopping off-the-wall behavior in fusion reactors

Real-time cancer diagnostics and therapy through theranostics

Researchers confront new US and global challenges in vaccinations of adults

NCSA building stronger connections among observatories, astronomers

Latest advances in brain network models for medical applications: A comprehensive review highlights future potential

Jefferson Lab physicists named APS Fellows

Bias found when drug manufacturers fund clinical trials

The University of Texas at San Antonio is advancing space exploration as the lead of a multimillion-dollar DOE project

[Press-News.org] Laser-driving a 2D material