Prof. Antonio G. Souza Filho - Research

 

News

Links:

- Physics Department at UFC
- Brazilian physical society
- CNPq
- CAPES

Some words about the Raman effect!

Briefly, the Raman scattering technique is based on the inelastic scattering of light (Raman effect) when the electromagnetic radiation interacts with the matter. Due to this interaction some photons come out from the sample with higher or lower energy than that of the in coming photons. The gain or lose in the photon energy is due to the atomic vibrations of the material that in turn depends on its symmetry properties and Raman spectrum carries out information about the material structure. When the radiation gains energy (the energy contained in vibrations are transferred to the photons) we have a process called anti-Stokes. The Stokes process is said when energy is transferred from the radiation to the vibrations. Below we describe our research lines using Raman spectroscopy as the main technique

Research topics

Resonant Raman Spectroscopy in carbon nanotubes

Raman spectroscopy is nowadays well established as a powerful
technique to characterize a variety of carbon materials including their most famous nanostructured forms, namely fullerenes and carbon nanotubes.
   Read More ...  |

Temperature- and pressure-induced phase transitions studied by Raman spectroscopy

Raman scattering technique is a powerful tool for studying phase transitions (crystal-crystal, crystal-amorphous). We have been studied pressure- and temperature induced structural transformations in ferroelectric and ferroelastics materials. Read More ...  |


Characterization of nanostructured materials (nanocrystals and thin films)
 

Luminescence of rare-earth ions in glassy host
 

Resonant Raman Spectroscopy in carbon nanotubes

The Raman spectra for carbon nanotubes are unique, distinctive and significantly different from those of other forms of carbons due to the reduced dimensionality of carbon nanotubes. The Raman technique has been of particular importance because it allows one to get a rich, detailed characterization (structural, vibrational and electronic) of carbon nanotubes, perhaps more than with any other available characterization technique.

The nanotube electronic structure is peculiar due to its low dimensionality and exhibits molecular-like levels where the density of electronic states is very high at certain energies called van Hove singularities. A very strong optical absorption takes place when the radiation energy matches the transition between valence and conduction bands. What is fundamental and unique is that each nanotube or alternatively each (n,m) pair has a different set of transition values Eii. This feature labels each nanotube with a finger print and if one is able to probe someway the Eii values is possible to identify the (n,m) structure.

By using Raman spectroscopy techniques our main results are:

Resonant Raman Spectroscopy in carbon nanotubes

The Raman spectra for carbon nanotubes are unique, distinctive and significantly different from those of other forms of carbons due to the reduced dimensionality of carbon nanotubes. The Raman technique has been of particular importance because it allows one to get a rich, detailed characterization (structural, vibrational and electronic) of carbon nanotubes, perhaps more than with any other available characterization technique.

The nanotube electronic structure is peculiar due to its low dimensionality and exhibits molecular-like levels where the density of electronic states is very high at certain energies called van Hove singularities. A very strong optical absorption takes place when the radiation energy matches the transition between valence and conduction bands. What is fundamental and unique is that each nanotube or alternatively each (n,m) pair has a different set of transition values Eii. This feature labels each nanotube with a finger print and if one is able to probe someway the Eii values is possible to identify the (n,m) structure.

By using Raman spectroscopy techniques our main results are: