Updated: January 27, 2003
Vibrations of free and embedded anisotropic elastic spheres:
Application to low-frequency Raman scattering of silicon nanoparticles in silica


Vibrational mode frequencies and damping are calculated for an elastic sphere embedded in an infinite, homogeneous, isotropic elastic medium. Anisotropic elasticity of the sphere significantly shifts the frequencies in comparison to simplified calculations that assume isotropy. New low frequency Raman light scattering data are presented for silicon spheres grown in a SiO2 glass matrix. Principal features of the Raman spectrum are not correctly described by a simple model of the nanoparticle as a free, isotropic sphere, but require both matrix effects and the anisotropy of the silicon to be taken into account. Libration, not vibration, is the dominant mechanism.

Lucien Saviot
Laboratoire de Réactivité des Solides, UMR 5613 CNRS - Université de Bourgogne 9 avenue A. Savary, BP 47870 - 21078 Dijon - France
[email protected]
Daniel B. Murray
Department of Physics, Okanagan University College, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada V1V 1V7
[email protected]
Maria del Carmen Marco de Lucas
Laboratoire de Réactivité des Solides, UMR 5613 CNRS - Université de Bourgogne 9 avenue A. Savary, BP 47870 - 21078 Dijon - France

Pdf file: (preprint version) cal38.pdf
Pdf file: (two column version) cal37b.pdf
Final TEX file: (preprint version) cal38.tex
TEX file: (two column version) cal37b.tex
TEX Bibliography file: calcul.bib
figure image file: PaperRaman.pdf

Properties of Silicon used for calculations in this paper:
density 2.329 g/cc
Elastic constants at room temperature and pressure are
C11 = 165.64 GPa
C12 = 63.94 GPa
C44 = 79.51 GPa
[virginiasemi.com] [ioffe.rssi.ru]
Original paper reporting elastic constants of silicon:
J. J. Hall, Phys. Rev. volume 161 (1967) page 756

speeds of sound (to be updated...)

computer programs used (to be updated...)

TEX compilation procedure: (to create pdf file)
(starting with TEX file cal37b.tex, calcul.bib and PaperRaman.pdf)
pdflatex cal37b
bibtex cal37b
pdflatex cal37b
pdflatex cal37b
pdflatex cal37b

I used the MiKTEX software available at www.miktex.org

To submit articles to Physical Review journals you also need these files in the same directory with the .tex file:
revtex4.cls (154k)
revsymb.sty (5k)
natbib.sty (34k)
aps.rtx (14k)
10pt.rtx (4k)




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