TY - JOUR A1 - Love, John A. A1 - Chou, Shu-Hua A1 - Huang, Ye A1 - Bazan, Guillermo C. A1 - Thuc-Quyen Nguyen, T1 - Effects of solvent additive on "s-shaped" curves in solution-processed small molecule solar cells JF - Beilstein journal of organic chemistry N2 - A novel molecular chromophore, p-SIDT(FBTThCA8)(2), is introduced as an electron-donor material for bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells with broad absorption and near ideal energy levels for the use in combination with common acceptor materials. It is found that films cast from chlorobenzene yield devices with strongly s-shaped current-voltage curves, drastically limiting performance. We find that addition of the common solvent additive diiodooctane, in addition to facilitating crystallization, leads to improved vertical phase separation. This yields much better performing devices, with improved curve shape, demonstrating the importance of morphology control in BHJ devices and improving the understanding of the role of solvent additives. KW - current voltage analysis KW - morphology KW - organic solar cells Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3762/bjoc.12.249 SN - 1860-5397 VL - 12 SP - 2543 EP - 2555 PB - Beilstein-Institut zur Förderung der Chemischen Wissenschaften CY - Frankfurt, Main ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lechleitner, Franziska A. A1 - Baldini, James U. L. A1 - Breitenbach, Sebastian Franz Martin A1 - Fohlmeister, Jens Bernd A1 - McIntyre, Cameron A1 - Goswami, Bedartha A1 - Jamieson, Robert A. A1 - van der Voort, Tessa S. A1 - Prufer, Keith A1 - Marwan, Norbert A1 - Culleton, Brendan J. A1 - Kennett, Douglas J. A1 - Asmerom, Yemane A1 - Polyak, Victor A1 - Eglinton, Timothy I. T1 - Hydrological and climatological controls on radiocarbon concentrations in a tropical stalagmite JF - Geochimica et cosmochimica acta : journal of the Geochemical Society and the Meteoritical Society N2 - Precisely-dated stalagmites are increasingly important archives for the reconstruction of terrestrial paleoclimate at very high temporal resolution. In-depth understanding of local conditions at the cave site and of the processes driving stalagmite deposition is of paramount importance for interpreting proxy signals incorporated in stalagmite carbonate. Here we present a sub-decadally resolved dead carbon fraction (DCF) record for a stalagmite from Yok Balum Cave (southern Belize). The record is coupled to parallel stable carbon isotope (delta C-13) and U/Ca measurements, as well as radiocarbon (C-14) measurements from soils overlying the cave system. Using a karst carbon cycle model we disentangle the importance of soil and karst processes on stalagmite DCF incorporation, revealing a dominant host rock dissolution control on total DCF. Covariation between DCF, delta C-13, and U/Ca indicates that karst processes are a common driver of all three parameters, suggesting possible use of delta C-13 and trace element ratios to independently quantify DCF variability. A statistically significant multi-decadal lag of variable length exists between DCF and reconstructed solar activity, suggesting that solar activity influenced regional precipitation in Mesoamerica over the past 1500 years, but that the relationship was non-static. Although the precise nature of the observed lag is unclear, solar-induced changes in North Atlantic oceanic and atmospheric dynamics may play a role. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Stalagmite KW - Tropics KW - Radiocarbon KW - Trace elements KW - Hydroclimate Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2016.08.039 SN - 0016-7037 SN - 1872-9533 VL - 194 SP - 233 EP - 252 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Komarov, Maxim A1 - Bazhenov, Maxim T1 - Linking dynamics of the inhibitory network to the input structure JF - Journal of computational neuroscience KW - Inhibitory neurons KW - Information coding KW - Neural network KW - Olfactory system KW - Spike sequences KW - Odor discrimination Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10827-016-0622-8 SN - 0929-5313 SN - 1573-6873 VL - 41 SP - 367 EP - 391 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hamaguchi, K. A1 - Oskinova, Lidia M. A1 - Russell, C. M. P. A1 - Petre, R. A1 - Enoto, T. A1 - Morihana, K. A1 - Ishida, M. T1 - DISCOVERY OF RAPIDLY MOVING PARTIAL X-RAY ABSORBERS WITHIN GAMMA CASSIOPEIAE JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - detected six rapid X-ray spectral hardening events called "softness dips" in a similar to 100 ks observation in 2011. All the softness dip events show symmetric softness-ratio variations, and some of them have flat bottoms apparently due to saturation. The softness dip spectra are best described by either similar to 40% or similar to 70% partial covering absorption to kT similar to 12 keV plasma emission by matter with a neutral hydrogen column density of similar to(2-8) x 10(21) cm(-2), while the spectrum outside these dips is almost free of absorption. This result suggests the presence of two distinct X-ray-emitting spots in the.. Cas system, perhaps on a white dwarf (WD) companion with dipole mass accretion. The partial covering absorbers may be blobs in the Be stellar wind, the Be disk, or rotating around the WD companion. Weak correlations of the softness ratios to the hard X-ray flux suggest the presence of stable plasmas at kT similar to 0.9 and 5 keV, which may originate from the Be or WD winds. The formation of a Be star and WD binary system requires mass transfer between two stars; gamma Cas may have experienced such activity in the past. KW - blue stragglers KW - stars: emission-line, Be KW - stars: individual (gamma Cassiopeiae) KW - stars: winds, outflows KW - white dwarfs KW - X-rays: stars Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/832/2/140 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 832 SP - 33 EP - 49 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fang, Lijia A1 - Holzmueller, Felix A1 - Matulaitis, Tomas A1 - Baasner, Anne A1 - Hauenstein, Christoph A1 - Benduhn, Johannes A1 - Schwarze, Martin A1 - Petrich, Annett A1 - Piersimoni, Fortunato A1 - Scholz, Reinhard A1 - Zeika, Olaf A1 - Koerner, Christian A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Vandewal, Koen A1 - Leo, Karl T1 - Fluorine-containing low-energy-gap organic dyes with low voltage losses for organic solar cells JF - Synthetic metals : the journal of electronic polymers and electronic molecular materials N2 - Fluorine-containing donor molecules TFTF, CNTF and PRTF are designed and isomer selectively synthesized for application in vacuum-deposited organic solar cells. These molecules comprise a donor acceptor molecular architecture incorporating thiophene and benzothiadiazole derivatives as the electron-donating and electron-withdrawing moieties, respectively. As opposed to previously reported materials from this class, PRTF can be purified by vacuum sublimation at moderate to high yields because of its higher volatility and better stabilization due to a stronger intramolecular hydrogen bond, as compared to TFTF and CNTF. The UV-vis absorption spectra of the three donors show an intense broadband absorption between 500 nm and 800 nm with, similar positions of their frontier energy levels. The photophysical properties of the three donor molecules are thoroughly tested and optimized in bulk heterojunction solar cells with C-60 as acceptor. PRTF shows the best performance, yielding power conversion efficiencies of up to 3.8%. Moreover, the voltage loss for the PRTF device due to the non radiative recombination of free charge carriers is exceptionally low (0.26 V) as compared to typical values for organic solar cells (>0.34V). (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V. KW - (Z)-isomer KW - Donor materials KW - CH center dot center dot center dot F hydrogen bonds KW - Sublimation with good yield KW - Low voltage losses Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.synthmet.2016.10.025 SN - 0379-6779 VL - 222 SP - 232 EP - 239 PB - Elsevier CY - Lausanne ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Nishikawa, Ken-Ichi A1 - Mizuno, Yosuke A1 - Niemiec, Jacek A1 - Kobzar, Oleh A1 - Pohl, Martin A1 - Gomez, Jose L. A1 - Dutan, Ioana A1 - Frederiksen, Jacob Trier A1 - Nordlund, Ake A1 - Meli, Athina A1 - Sol, Helene A1 - Hardee, Philip E. A1 - Hartmann, Dieter H. T1 - Microscopic Processes in Global Relativistic Jets Containing Helical Magnetic Fields JF - Galaxies : open access journal N2 - In the study of relativistic jets one of the key open questions is their interaction with the environment on the microscopic level. Here, we study the initial evolution of both electron-proton (e(-)-p(+)) and electron-positron (e(+/-)) relativistic jets containing helical magnetic fields, focusing on their interaction with an ambient plasma. We have performed simulations of "global" jets containing helical magnetic fields in order to examine how helical magnetic fields affect kinetic instabilities such as the Weibel instability, the kinetic Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (kKHI) and the Mushroom instability (MI). In our initial simulation study these kinetic instabilities are suppressed and new types of instabilities can grow. In the e(-)-p(+) jet simulation a recollimation-like instability occurs and jet electrons are strongly perturbed. In the e(+/-) jet simulation a recollimation-like instability occurs at early times followed by a kinetic instability and the general structure is similar to a simulation without helical magnetic field. Simulations using much larger systems are required in order to thoroughly follow the evolution of global jets containing helical magnetic fields. KW - relativistic jets KW - particle-in-cell simulations KW - global jets KW - helical magnetic fields KW - kinetic instabilities KW - kink instability Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies4040038 SN - 2075-4434 VL - 4 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - González Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Gonzalez, N. Bello A1 - Hoch, S. A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Kummerow, Philipp A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Kneer, F. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Löhner-Böttcher, J. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Pastor Yabar, A. A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Schubert, M. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Volkmer, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Waldmann, T. T1 - Horizontal flow fields in and around a small active region The transition period between flux emergence and decay JF - Polymers N2 - Context. The solar magnetic field is responsible for all aspects of solar activity. Thus, emergence of magnetic flux at the surface is the first manifestation of the ensuing solar activity. Aims. Combining high-resolution and synoptic observations aims to provide a comprehensive description of flux emergence at photospheric level and of the growth process that eventually leads to a mature active region. Methods. The small active region NOAA 12118 emerged on 2014 July 17 and was observed one day later with the 1.5-m GREGOR solar telescope on 2014 July 18. High-resolution time-series of blue continuum and G-band images acquired in the blue imaging channel (BIC) of the GREGOR Fabry-Perot Interferometer (GFPI) were complemented by synoptic line-of-sight magnetograms and continuum images obtained with the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI) onboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). Horizontal proper motions and horizontal plasma velocities were computed with local correlation tracking (LCT) and the differential affine velocity estimator (DAVE), respectively. Morphological image processing was employed to measure the photometric and magnetic area, magnetic flux, and the separation profile of the emerging flux region during its evolution. Results. The computed growth rates for photometric area, magnetic area, and magnetic flux are about twice as high as the respective decay rates. The space-time diagram using HMI magnetograms of five days provides a comprehensive view of growth and decay. It traces a leaf-like structure, which is determined by the initial separation of the two polarities, a rapid expansion phase, a time when the spread stalls, and a period when the region slowly shrinks again. The separation rate of 0.26 km s(-1) is highest in the initial stage, and it decreases when the separation comes to a halt. Horizontal plasma velocities computed at four evolutionary stages indicate a changing pattern of inflows. In LCT maps we find persistent flow patterns such as outward motions in the outer part of the two major pores, a diverging feature near the trailing pore marking the site of upwelling plasma and flux emergence, and low velocities in the interior of dark pores. We detected many elongated rapidly expanding granules between the two major polarities, with dimensions twice as large as the normal granules. KW - Sun: photosphere KW - Sun: magnetic fields KW - techniques: image processing KW - methods: data analysis Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201628380 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 596 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Martinez Gonzalez, M. J. A1 - Pastor Yabar, A. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Asensio Ramos, A. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Doerr, H. P. A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Franz, M. A1 - González Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Kneer, F. A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Louis, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Orozco, D. A1 - Rezaei, R. A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Waldman, T. A1 - Volkmer, R. T1 - Inference of magnetic fields in the very quiet Sun JF - Journal of geophysical research : Earth surface N2 - Context. Over the past 20 yr, the quietest areas of the solar surface have revealed a weak but extremely dynamic magnetism occurring at small scales (<500 km), which may provide an important contribution to the dynamics and energetics of the outer layers of the atmosphere. Understanding this magnetism requires the inference of physical quantities from high-sensitivity spectro-polarimetric data with high spatio-temporal resolution. Aims. We present high-precision spectro-polarimetric data with high spatial resolution (0.4") of the very quiet Sun at 1.56 mu m obtained with the GREGOR telescope to shed some light on this complex magnetism. Methods. We used inversion techniques in two main approaches. First, we assumed that the observed profiles can be reproduced with a constant magnetic field atmosphere embedded in a field-free medium. Second, we assumed that the resolution element has a substructure with either two constant magnetic atmospheres or a single magnetic atmosphere with gradients of the physical quantities along the optical depth, both coexisting with a global stray-light component. Results. Half of our observed quiet-Sun region is better explained by magnetic substructure within the resolution element. However, we cannot distinguish whether this substructure comes from gradients of the physical parameters along the line of sight or from horizontal gradients (across the surface). In these pixels, a model with two magnetic components is preferred, and we find two distinct magnetic field populations. The population with the larger filling factor has very weak (similar to 150 G) horizontal fields similar to those obtained in previous works. We demonstrate that the field vector of this population is not constrained by the observations, given the spatial resolution and polarimetric accuracy of our data. The topology of the other component with the smaller filling factor is constrained by the observations for field strengths above 250 G: we infer hG fields with inclinations and azimuth values compatible with an isotropic distribution. The filling factors are typically below 30%. We also find that the flux of the two polarities is not balanced. From the other half of the observed quiet-Sun area similar to 50% are two-lobed Stokes V profiles, meaning that 23% of the field of view can be adequately explained with a single constant magnetic field embedded in a non-magnetic atmosphere. The magnetic field vector and filling factor are reliable inferred in only 50% based on the regular profiles. Therefore, 12% of the field of view harbour hG fields with filling factors typically below 30%. At our present spatial resolution, 70% of the pixels apparently are non-magnetised. KW - Sun: atmosphere KW - Sun: magnetic fields KW - techniques: polarimetric KW - methods: observational Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201628449 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 596 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bozzo, Enrico A1 - Bhalerao, V. A1 - Pradhan, Prajal A1 - Tomsick, J. A1 - Romano, Patrizia A1 - Ferrigno, Carlo A1 - Chaty, S. A1 - Oskinova, Lidia M. A1 - Manousakis, A. A1 - Walter, R. A1 - Falanga, M. A1 - Campana, S. A1 - Stella, L. A1 - Ramolla, M. A1 - Chini, R. T1 - Multi-wavelength observations of IGR J17544-2619 from quiescence to outburst JF - Journal of geophysical research : Earth surface N2 - In this paper we report on a long multi-wavelength observational campaign of the supergiant fast X-ray transient prototype IGR J17544-2619. A 150 ks-long observation was carried out simultaneously with XMM-Newton and NuSTAR, catching the source in an initial faint X-ray state and then undergoing a bright X-ray outburst lasting approximately 7 ks. We studied the spectral variability during outburst and quiescence by using a thermal and bulk Comptonization model that is typically adopted to describe the X-ray spectral energy distribution of young pulsars in high mass X-ray binaries. Although the statistics of the collected X-ray data were relatively high, we could neither confirm the presence of a cyclotron line in the broad-band spectrum of the source (0.5-40 keV), nor detect any of the previously reported tentative detections of the source spin period. The monitoring carried out with Swift/XRT during the same orbit of the system observed by XMM-Newton and NuSTAR revealed that the source remained in a low emission state for most of the time, in agreement with the known property of all supergiant fast X-ray transients being significantly sub-luminous compared to other supergiant X-ray binaries. Optical and infrared observations were carried out for a total of a few thousand seconds during the quiescence state of the source detected by XMM-Newton and NuSTAR. The measured optical and infrared magnitudes were slightly lower than previous values reported in the literature, but compatible with the known micro-variability of supergiant stars. UV observations obtained with the UVOT telescope on-board Swift did not reveal significant changes in the magnitude of the source in this energy domain compared to previously reported values. KW - X-rays: binaries Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201629311 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 596 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kuik, Friderike A1 - Lauer, Axel A1 - Churkina, Galina A1 - Van der Gon, Hugo A. C. Denier A1 - Fenner, Daniel A1 - Mar, Kathleen A. A1 - Butler, Tim M. T1 - Air quality modelling in the Berlin-Brandenburg region using WRF-Chem v3.7.1: sensitivity to resolution of model grid and input data JF - Geoscientific model development : an interactive open access journal of the European Geosciences Union N2 - Air pollution is the number one environmental cause of premature deaths in Europe. Despite extensive regulations, air pollution remains a challenge, especially in urban areas. For studying summertime air quality in the Berlin–Brandenburg region of Germany, the Weather Research and Forecasting Model with Chemistry (WRF-Chem) is set up and evaluated against meteorological and air quality observations from monitoring stations as well as from a field campaign conducted in 2014. The objective is to assess which resolution and level of detail in the input data is needed for simulating urban background air pollutant concentrations and their spatial distribution in the Berlin–Brandenburg area. The model setup includes three nested domains with horizontal resolutions of 15, 3 and 1 km and anthropogenic emissions from the TNO-MACC III inventory. We use RADM2 chemistry and the MADE/SORGAM aerosol scheme. Three sensitivity simulations are conducted updating input parameters to the single-layer urban canopy model based on structural data for Berlin, specifying land use classes on a sub-grid scale (mosaic option) and downscaling the original emissions to a resolution of ca. 1 km × 1 km for Berlin based on proxy data including traffic density and population density. The results show that the model simulates meteorology well, though urban 2 m temperature and urban wind speeds are biased high and nighttime mixing layer height is biased low in the base run with the settings described above. We show that the simulation of urban meteorology can be improved when specifying the input parameters to the urban model, and to a lesser extent when using the mosaic option. On average, ozone is simulated reasonably well, but maximum daily 8 h mean concentrations are underestimated, which is consistent with the results from previous modelling studies using the RADM2 chemical mechanism. Particulate matter is underestimated, which is partly due to an underestimation of secondary organic aerosols. NOx (NO + NO2) concentrations are simulated reasonably well on average, but nighttime concentrations are overestimated due to the model's underestimation of the mixing layer height, and urban daytime concentrations are underestimated. The daytime underestimation is improved when using downscaled, and thus locally higher emissions, suggesting that part of this bias is due to deficiencies in the emission input data and their resolution. The results further demonstrate that a horizontal resolution of 3 km improves the results and spatial representativeness of the model compared to a horizontal resolution of 15 km. With the input data (land use classes, emissions) at the level of detail of the base run of this study, we find that a horizontal resolution of 1 km does not improve the results compared to a resolution of 3 km. However, our results suggest that a 1 km horizontal model resolution could enable a detailed simulation of local pollution patterns in the Berlin–Brandenburg region if the urban land use classes, together with the respective input parameters to the urban canopy model, are specified with a higher level of detail and if urban emissions of higher spatial resolution are used. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-9-4339-2016 SN - 1991-959X SN - 1991-9603 VL - 9 SP - 4339 EP - 4363 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER -