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Dive into the research topics where Rafał Korlacki is active.

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Featured researches published by Rafał Korlacki.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Tuning the Energy Level Offset between Donor and Acceptor with Ferroelectric Dipole Layers for Increased Efficiency in Bilayer Organic Photovoltaic Cells

Bin Yang; Yongbo Yuan; Pankaj Sharma; Shashi Poddar; Rafał Korlacki; Stephen Ducharme; Alexei Gruverman; Ravi F. Saraf; Jinsong Huang

Ultrathin ferroelectric polyvinylidene fluoride (70%)-tetrafluoroethylene (30%) copolymer film is inserted between the poly3(hexylthiophene) (P3HT) donor and [6,6]-phenyl-C61-butyric acid methylester (PCBM) acceptor layers as the dipole layer to tune the relative energy levels, which can potentially maximize the open circuit voltage of bilayer organic solar cells. In this work, the power conversion efficiency of P3HT/PCBM bilayer solar cells is demonstrated to be doubled with the inserted dipoles.


Physical Review B | 2016

Anisotropy, phonon modes, and free charge carrier parameters in monoclinic β -gallium oxide single crystals

M. Schubert; Rafał Korlacki; Sean Knight; Tino Hofmann; S. Schöche; Vanya Darakchieva; Erik Janzén; B. Monemar; Daniela Gogova; Quang Thieu; Rie Togashi; Hisashi Murakami; Yoshinao Kumagai; Ken Goto; Akito Kuramata; Shigenobu Yamakoshi; Masataka Higashiwaki

There is growing interest in low-symmetry metal oxides because of their potential use in high-power electronics capable to sustain very high voltages. Very little is known about their fundamental physical properties, such as transverse and longitudinal optical phonon modes, dielectric constants, and how free charge carriers couple with lattice vibrations. This lack of information is partially due to the complexity by which these properties intertwine due to the low symmetry crystal systems. Here, the authors describe a general pathway to the analysis of long-wavelength experiments for monoclinic and triclinic crystal systems, and they report for the first time a complete set of phonon modes for the monoclinic phase of gallium oxide. These parameters may arrive just in time to support computational optimization of charge and heat transport for device designs. The concept for analysis of long wavelength properties in monoclinic and triclinic crystal systems can help access a widely uncharted field in condensed matter physics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Electrical control of photoluminescence wavelength from semiconductor quantum dots in a ferroelectric polymer matrix

Rafał Korlacki; Ravi F. Saraf; Stephen Ducharme

We report controllable tuning of the room temperature photoluminescence band of CdSe semiconductor quantum dots embedded in thin films of ferroelectric copolymer of vinylidene fluoride and trifluoroethylene made by Langmuir-Blodgett deposition. The high breakdown strength of the polymer permits the application of electric fields of up to 400 MV/m and results in a shift in the photoluminescence peak by up to 9 nm, nearly half the fluorescence band width. Moreover, we found that at these high electric fields, the Stark effect exhibits unusual fourth power dependence.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2013

Infrared dielectric anisotropy and phonon modes of rutile TiO2

S. Schöche; Tino Hofmann; Rafał Korlacki; T. E. Tiwald; M. Schubert

Spectroscopic ellipsometry in the mid-infrared and far-infrared spectral range and generalized ellipsometry in the mid-infrared spectral range are used to investigate the anisotropic dielectric response of rutile TiO2. The ordinary and extraordinary dielectric function tensor components and all infrared active phonon mode parameters of single crystalline rutile TiO2 are determined with high accuracy for wavelengths from 3 μm to 83 μm. The data were acquired from samples of (001), (100), and (111) surfaces cut from bulk single crystals. A factorized model dielectric function is employed in order to determine the frequencies and damping parameters of the transverse and longitudinal phonon modes with A2u and Eu symmetries. The bands of total reflection of s- and p-polarized light in dependence of the angle of incidence for highly symmetric sample cuts and orientations are derived. Excellent agreement with phonon modes reported in literature is obtained. Introduction of two additional modes for ordinary as we...


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Highly efficient, tunable single photon source based on single molecules

Mathias Steiner; Achim Hartschuh; Rafał Korlacki; Alfred J. Meixner

The authors studied spatially isolated terrylene molecules immobilized in a quasiplanar optical λ∕2-microresonator using confocal microscopy and spectroscopy at variable temperatures. At T=1.8K, they observed individual molecules relaxing into microresonator-allowed vibronic levels of their electronic ground state by emission of single fluorescence photons. Coupling the purely electronic transition of embedded molecules to the longitudinal photonic mode of the microresonator resulted in an ultimate spectral narrowing and an increased collection efficiency of the emitted single photon wave trains.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Anisotropy, band-to-band transitions, phonon modes, and oxidation properties of cobalt-oxide core-shell slanted columnar thin films

Alyssa Mock; Rafał Korlacki; Chad Briley; Derek Sekora; Tino Hofmann; Peter M. Wilson; Alexander Sinitskii; Eva Schubert; M. Schubert

Highly ordered and spatially coherent cobalt slanted columnar thin films (SCTFs) were deposited by glancing angle deposition onto silicon substrates, and subsequently oxidized by annealing at 475 °C. Scanning electron microscopy, Raman scattering, generalized ellipsometry, and density functional theory investigations reveal shape-invariant transformation of the slanted nanocolumns from metallic to transparent metal-oxide core-shell structures with properties characteristic of spinel cobalt oxide. We find passivation of Co-SCTFs yielding Co-Al2O3 core-shell structures produced by conformal deposition of a few nanometers of alumina using atomic layer deposition fully prevents cobalt oxidation in ambient and from annealing up to 475 °C.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Investigation of ferroelectric domains in thin films of vinylidene fluoride oligomers

Pankaj Sharma; Shashi Poddar; Rafał Korlacki; Stephen Ducharme; Alexei Gruverman

High-resolution vector piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) has been used to investigate ferroelectric domains in thin vinylidene fluoride oligomer films fabricated by the Langmuir-Blodgett deposition technique. Molecular chains are found to be preferentially oriented normal to the substrate, and PFM imaging shows that the films are in ferroelectric β-phase with a predominantly in-plane polarization, in agreement with infrared spectroscopic ellipsometry and X-ray diffraction measurements. The fractal analysis of domain structure has yielded the Hausdorff dimension (D) in the range of ∼1.3–1.5 indicating a random-bond nature of the disorder potential, with domain size exhibiting Landau-Lifshitz-Kittel scaling.


Physical Review B | 2017

Band-to-band transitions, selection rules, effective mass, and excitonic contributions in monoclinic beta-Ga2O3

Alyssa Mock; Rafał Korlacki; Chad Briley; Vanya Darakchieva; B. Monemar; Yoshinao Kumagai; Ken Goto; Masataka Higashiwaki; M. Schubert

We employ an eigenpolarization model including the description of direction dependent excitonic effects for rendering critical point structures within the dielectric function tensor of monoclinic b ...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Anisotropic contrast optical microscope

Darin Peev; Tino Hofmann; Negin Kananizadeh; Sandya Beeram; Elliott Rodriguez; S. Wimer; Keith B. Rodenhausen; Craig M. Herzinger; T. Kasputis; E. Pfaunmiller; Albert Nguyen; Rafał Korlacki; Angela K. Pannier; Yusong Li; Eva Schubert; David S. Hage; M. Schubert

An optical microscope is described that reveals contrast in the Mueller matrix images of a thin, transparent, or semi-transparent specimen located within an anisotropic object plane (anisotropic filter). The specimen changes the anisotropy of the filter and thereby produces contrast within the Mueller matrix images. Here we use an anisotropic filter composed of a semi-transparent, nanostructured thin film with sub-wavelength thickness placed within the object plane. The sample is illuminated as in common optical microscopy but the light is modulated in its polarization using combinations of linear polarizers and phase plate (compensator) to control and analyze the state of polarization. Direct generalized ellipsometry data analysis approaches permit extraction of fundamental Mueller matrix object plane images dispensing with the need of Fourier expansion methods. Generalized ellipsometry model approaches are used for quantitative image analyses. These images are obtained from sets of multiple images obtained under various polarizer, analyzer, and compensator settings. Up to 16 independent Mueller matrix images can be obtained, while our current setup is limited to 11 images normalized by the unpolarized intensity. We demonstrate the anisotropic contrast optical microscope by measuring lithographically defined micro-patterned anisotropic filters, and we quantify the adsorption of an organic self-assembled monolayer film onto the anisotropic filter. Comparison with an isotropic glass slide demonstrates the image enhancement obtained by our method over microscopy without the use of an anisotropic filter. In our current instrument, we estimate the limit of detection for organic volumetric mass within the object plane of ≈49 fg within ≈7 × 7 μm2 object surface area. Compared to a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation instrumentation, where contemporary limits require a total load of ≈500 pg for detection, the instrumentation demonstrated here improves sensitivity to a total mass required for detection by 4 orders of magnitude. We detail the design and operation principles of the anisotropic contrast optical microscope, and we present further applications to the detection of nanoparticles, to novel approaches for imaging chromatography and to new contrast modalities for observations on living cells.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Oligo(vinylidene fluoride) Langmuir-Blodgett films studied by spectroscopic ellipsometry and the density functional theory

Rafał Korlacki; J. Travis Johnson; Jihee Kim; Stephen Ducharme; Daniel W. Thompson; V. M. Fridkin; Zhongxin Ge; James M. Takacs

Thin films of amphiphilic vinylidene fluoride oligomers prepared by Langmuir-Blodgett deposition on silicone substrates were investigated by comparing experimental and theoretical mid-infrared (IR) spectra. The experimental spectra were obtained using infrared spectroscopic ellipsometry. Theoretical spectra were calculated using density functional theory. Excellent correspondence of major IR bands in both data sets shows that the molecular backbone is oriented with the long axis normal to the substrate plane. This is in contrast to poly(vinylidene fluoride) LB films, in which the polymer chains are parallel to the substrate.

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M. Schubert

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Alyssa Mock

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Stephen Ducharme

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Eva Schubert

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Tino Hofmann

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Alexander Sinitskii

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Sean Knight

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Alexey Lipatov

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Chad Briley

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Derek Sekora

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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