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Dive into the research topics where Volodymyr Turkowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Volodymyr Turkowski.


Nano Letters | 2012

The Quantum Magnetism of Individual Manganese-12-Acetate Molecular Magnets Anchored at Surfaces

Steffen Kahle; Zhitao Deng; N. Malinowski; Charlène Tonnoir; Alicia Forment-Aliaga; Nicha Thontasen; Gordon Rinke; Duy Le; Volodymyr Turkowski; Talat S. Rahman; Stephan Rauschenbach; Markus Ternes; Klaus Kern

The high intrinsic spin and long spin relaxation time of manganese-12-acetate (Mn(12)) makes it an archetypical single molecular magnet. While these characteristics have been measured on bulk samples, questions remain whether the magnetic properties replicate themselves in surface supported isolated molecules, a prerequisite for any application. Here we demonstrate that electrospray ion beam deposition facilitates grafting of intact Mn(12) molecules on metal as well as ultrathin insulating surfaces enabling submolecular resolution imaging by scanning tunneling microscopy. Using scanning tunneling spectroscopy we detect spin excitations from the magnetic ground state of the molecule at an ultrathin boron nitride decoupling layer. Our results are supported by density functional theory based calculations and establish that individual Mn(12) molecules retain their intrinsic spin on a well chosen solid support.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Nonequilibrium dynamical mean-field theory.

J. K. Freericks; Volodymyr Turkowski; V. Zlatic

The many-body formalism for dynamical mean-field theory is extended to treat nonequilibrium problems. We illustrate how the formalism works by examining the transient decay of the oscillating current that is driven by a large electric field turned on at time t=0. We show how the Bloch oscillations are quenched by the electron-electron interactions, and how their character changes dramatically for a Mott insulator.


Physical Review B | 2009

Time-dependent density-functional approach for exciton binding energies

Volodymyr Turkowski; Aritz L. Leonardo; Carsten A. Ullrich

Optical processes in insulators and semiconductors, including excitonic effects, can be described in principle exactly using time-dependent density-functional theory (TDDFT). Starting from a linearization of the TDDFT semiconductor Bloch equations in a two-band model, we derive a simple formalism for calculating excitonic binding energies. This formalism leads to a generalization of the standard Wannier equation for excitons, featuring a nonlocal effective electron-hole interaction determined by long-range and dynamical exchange-correlation (XC) effects. We calculate excitonic binding energies in several direct-gap semiconductors, using exchange-only and model XC kernels.


Physical Review B | 2003

Bosonic sector of the two-dimensional Hubbard model studied within a two-pole approximation

Adolfo Avella; Ferdinando Mancini; Volodymyr Turkowski

The charge and spin dynamics of the two-dimensional Hubbard model in the paramagnetic phase is first studied by means of the two-pole approximation within the framework of the composite operator method. The fully self-consistent scheme requires: no decoupling, the fulfillment of both Pauli principle and hydrodynamic constraints, the simultaneous solution of fermionic and bosonic sectors, and a very rich momentum dependence of the response functions. The temperature and momentum dependencies, as well as the dependency on the Coulomb repulsion strength and the filling, of the calculated charge and spin susceptibilities and correlation functions are in very good agreement with the numerical calculations present in the literature.


Physical Review B | 2005

Nonlinear response of Bloch electrons in infinite dimensions

Volodymyr Turkowski; J. K. Freericks

The exact nonlinear response of noninteracting (Bloch) electrons is examined within a nonequilibrium formalism on the infinite-dimensional hypercubic lattice. We examine the effects of a spatially uniform, but time-varying electric field (ignoring magnetic-field effects). The electronic Greens functions, Wigner density of states, and time-varying current are all determined and analyzed. We study both constant and pulsed electric fields, focusing on the transient response region. These noninteracting Greens functions are an important input into nonequilibrium dynamical mean field theory for the nonlinear response of strongly correlated electrons.


Low Temperature Physics | 2004

Doping-dependent superconducting properties of two-dimensional metals with different types of interparticle coupling (Review)

V. M. Loktev; Volodymyr Turkowski

The superconducting properties of a two-dimensional metallic system with arbitrary carrier density and both local and various types of attractive indirect boson-exchange interaction in the cases of s- and d-wave pairing are analyzed and reviewed at T=0. In particular, the possibility of a crossover from the Bose–Einstein condensation regime to Bardeen–Cooper–Schrieffer-like superconductivity with growing carrier density and changing coupling in the case of different pairing channels is discussed. Gaussian fluctuations of the order parameter are taken into account, and the carrier density dependence of the gap magnitude is studied. The role of the form of the interparticle attractive interaction in the physical behavior of the system is also considered.


Optics Express | 2016

Nanoscale plasmonic phenomena in CVD-grown MoS 2 monolayer revealed by ultra-broadband synchrotron radiation based nano-FTIR spectroscopy and near-field microscopy

Piotr Patoka; Georg Ulrich; Ariana E. Nguyen; Ludwig Bartels; Peter A. Dowben; Volodymyr Turkowski; Talat S. Rahman; Peter Hermann; Bernd Kästner; Arne Hoehl; Gerhard Ulm; E. Rühl

Nanoscale plasmonic phenomena observed in single and bi-layers of molybdenum disulfide (MoS(2)) on silicon dioxide (SiO(2)) are reported. A scattering type scanning near-field optical microscope (s-SNOM) with a broadband synchrotron radiation (SR) infrared source was used. We also present complementary optical mapping using tunable CO(2)-laser radiation. Specifically, there is a correlation of the topography of well-defined MoS(2) islands grown by chemical vapor deposition, as determined by atomic force microscopy, with the infrared (IR) signature of MoS(2). The influence of MoS(2) islands on the SiO(2) phonon resonance is discussed. The results reveal the plasmonic character of the MoS(2) structures and their interaction with the SiO(2) phonons leading to an enhancement of the hybridized surface plasmon-phonon mode. A theoretical analysis shows that, in the case of monolayer islands, the coupling of the MoS(2) optical plasmon mode to the SiO(2) surface phonons does not affect the infrared spectrum significantly. For two-layer MoS(2), the coupling of the extra inter-plane acoustic plasmon mode with the SiO(2) surface transverse phonon leads to a remarkable increase of the surface phonon peak at 794 cm(-1). This is in agreement with the experimental data. These results show the capability of the s-SNOM technique to study local multiple excitations in complex non-homogeneous structures.


Physics Letters B | 1996

Dimensional reduction in Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model in external chromomagnetic field

I. A. Shovkovy; Volodymyr Turkowski

Abstract The effective dimensional reduction of fermion-antifermion pairing dynamics in the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model in an external chromomagnetic field is considered. It is shown that such a field causes the reduction of the space dimension by one unit in contrast to an ordinary magnetic field which reduces it by two units. The enhancement of the dynamical chiral symmetry breaking due to the reduction is discussed.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Dynamical mean-field theory for molecules and nanostructures

Volodymyr Turkowski; Alamgir Kabir; Neha Nayyar; Talat S. Rahman

Dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) has established itself as a reliable and well-controlled approximation to study correlation effects in bulk solids and also two-dimensional systems. In combination with standard density-functional theory (DFT), it has been successfully applied to study materials in which localized electronic states play an important role. It was recently shown that this approach can also be successfully applied to study correlation effects in nanostructures. Here, we provide some details on our recently proposed DFT+DMFT approach to study the magnetic properties of nanosystems [V. Turkowski, A. Kabir, N. Nayyar, and T. S. Rahman, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 22, 462202 (2010)] and apply it to examine the magnetic properties of small FePt clusters. We demonstrate that DMFT produces meaningful results even for such small systems. For benchmarking and better comparison with results obtained using DFT+U, we also include the case of small Fe clusters. As in the case of bulk systems, the latter approach tends to overestimate correlation effects in nanostructures. Finally, we discuss possible ways to further improve the nano-DFT+DMFT approximation and to extend its application to molecules and nanoparticles on substrates and to nonequilibrium phenomena.


ACS Nano | 2012

Linker-Induced Anomalous Emission of Organic-Molecule Conjugated Metal-Oxide Nanoparticles

Volodymyr Turkowski; Suresh Babu; Duy Le; Amit Kumar; Manas K. Haldar; Anil Wagh; Zhongjian Hu; Ajay S. Karakoti; Andre J. Gesquiere; Benedict Law; Sanku Mallik; Talat S. Rahman; Michael N. Leuenberger; Sudipta Seal

Semiconductor nanoparticles conjugated with organic- and dye-molecules to yield high efficiency visible photoluminescence (PL) hold great potential for many future technological applications. We show that folic acid (FA)-conjugated to nanosize TiO(2) and CeO(2) particles demonstrates a dramatic increase of photoemission intensity at wavelengths between 500 and 700 nm when derivatized using aminopropyl trimethoxysilane (APTMS) as spacer-linker molecules between the metal oxide and FA. Using density-functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT calculations we demonstrate that the strong increase of the PL can be explained by electronic transitions between the titania surface oxygen vacancy (OV) states and the low-energy excited states of the FA/APTMS molecule anchored onto the surface oxygen bridge sites in close proximity to the OVs. We suggest this scenario to be a universal feature for a wide class of metal oxide nanoparticles, including nanoceria, possessing a similar band gap (∼3 eV) and with a large surface-vacancy-related density of electronic states. We demonstrate that the molecule-nanoparticle linker can play a crucial role in tuning the electronic and optical properties of nanosystems by bringing optically active parts of the molecule and of the surface close to each other.

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Talat S. Rahman

University of Central Florida

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Alamgir Kabir

University of Central Florida

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Neha Nayyar

University of Central Florida

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V. M. Loktev

National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

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Duy Le

University of Central Florida

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Shree Ram Acharya

University of Central Florida

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