We have investigated the microscopic dynamics of strawberry and red onion by means of broadband dielectric spectroscopy. In contrast to most of the previous experiments on carbohydrate-rich biological materials, which have mainly considered the more global dynamics of the "biological matrix," we are here focusing on the microscopic dynamics of mainly the associated water. The results for both strawberry and red onion show that the imaginary part of the permittivity contains one conductivity term and a clear dielectric loss peak, which was found to be similar to the strongest relaxation process of water in carbohydrate solutions. The temperature dependence of the relaxation process was analyzed for different water content. The relaxation process slows down, and its temperature dependence becomes more non-Arrhenius, with decreasing water content. The reason for this is most likely that, on average, the water molecules interact more strongly with carbohydrates and other biological materials at low water content, and the dynamical properties of this biological matrix changes substantially with increasing temperature (from an almost rigid matrix where the water is basically unable to perform long-range diffusion due to confinement effects, to a dynamic matrix with no static confinement effects), which also changes (i.e., reduces) the activation energy of the relaxation process with increasing temperature (i.e., causes a non-Arrhenius temperature dependence). This further changes the conductivity from mainly polarization effects at low temperatures, due to hindered ionic motions, to long-range diffusivity at T>250 K . Thus, around this temperature ions in the carbohydrate solution no longer get stuck in confined cavities, since the motion of the biological matrix "opens up" the cavities and the ions are then able to perform long-range migration.
In this article, we report a theoretical analysis of a nanoelectromechanical shuttle based on a multiscale model that combines microscopic electronic structure data with macroscopic dynamics. The microscopic part utilizes a (static) density functional description to obtain the energy levels and orbitals of the shuttling particle together with the forces acting on the particle. The macroscopic part combines stochastic charge dynamics that incorporates the microscopically evaluated tunneling rates with a Newtonian dynamics.We have applied the multiscale model to describe the shuttling of a single copper atom between two gold-like jellium electrodes. We find that energy spectrum and particle surface interaction greatly influence shuttling dynamics; in the specific example that we studied the shuttling is found to involve only charge states Q = 0 and Q = +e. The system is found to exhibit two quasi-stable shuttling modes, a fundamental one and an excited one with a larger amplitude of mechanical motion, with random transitions between them.
We have studied the mechanical properties of suspended graphene membranes using molecular dynamics (MD) and generalized continuum elasticity theory (GE) in order to develop and assess a continuum description for graphene. The MD simulations are based on a valence force field model which is used to determine the deformation and the elastic energy of the membrane (E MD ) as a function of external forces. For the continuum description, we use the expression E cont = E stretching + E bending for the elastic energy functional. The elastic parameters (tensile rigidity and Poisson ratio) entering E cont are determined by requiring that E cont = E MD for a set of deformations.Comparisons with the MD results show excellent agreement. We find that the elastic energy of a supported graphene sheets is typically dominated by the nonlinear stretching terms whereas a linear description is valid only for very small deflections. This implies that in some applications, i.e. NEMS, a linear description is of limited applicability.
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