1,369 research outputs found
Interfacial Phonon Scattering and Transmission Loss in >1 um Thick Silicon-on-insulator Thin Films
Scattering of phonons at boundaries of a crystal (grains, surfaces, or
solid/solid interfaces) is characterized by the phonon wavelength, the angle of
incidence, and the interface roughness, as historically evaluated using a
specularity parameter p formulated by Ziman [J. M. Ziman, Electrons and Phonons
(Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1960)]. This parameter was initially defined to
determine the probability of a phonon specularly reflecting or diffusely
scattering from the rough surface of a material. The validity of Ziman's theory
as extended to solid/solid interfaces has not been previously validated. To
better understand the interfacial scattering of phonons and to test the
validity of Ziman's theory, we precisely measured the in-plane thermal
conductivity of a series of Si films in silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafers by
time-domain thermoreflectance (TDTR) for a Si film thickness range of 1 - 10
{\mu}m and a temperature range of 100 - 300 K. The Si/SiO2 interface roughness
was determined to be 0.11+/-0.04 nm using transmission electron microscopy
(TEM). Furthermore, we compared our in-plane thermal conductivity measurements
to theoretical calculations that combine first-principles phonon transport with
Ziman's theory. Calculations using Ziman's specularity parameter significantly
overestimate values from the TDTR measurements. We attribute this discrepancy
to phonon transmission through the solid/solid interface into the substrate,
which is not accounted for by Ziman's theory for surfaces. We derive a simple
expression for the specularity parameter at solid/amorphous interfaces and
achieve good agreement between calculations and measurement values.Comment: 4 figures, submitted to PR
Physically founded phonon dispersions of few-layer materials, and the case of borophene
An increasing number of theoretical calculations on few-layer materials have
been reporting a non-zero sound velocity for all three acoustic phonon modes.
In contrast with these reports, here we show that the lowest phonon dispersion
branch of atomistically described few-layer materials should be quadratic, and
this can have dramatic consequencies on calculated properties, such as the
thermal conductivity. By reformulating the interatomic force constants (IFC) in
terms of internal coordinates, we find that a delicate balance between the IFCs
is responsible for this quadraticity. This balance is hard to obtain in
ab-initio calculations even if all the symmetries are numerically enforced a
posteriori, but it arises naturally in our approach. We demonstrate the
phenomenon in the case of borophene, where a very subtle correction to the
ab-initio IFCs yields the physically correct quadratic dispersion, while
leaving the rest of the spectrum virtually unmodified. Such quadraticity
nevertheless has a major effect on the computed lattice thermal conductivity,
which in the case of borophene changes by more than a factor 2, and reverses
its anisotropy, when the subtle IFC correction is put in place
At the intersection of primary pulmonary myxoid sarcoma and pulmonary angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma: observations from three new cases
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/107555/1/his12354.pd
A Systematic Review of Mosquito Coils and Passive Emanators: Defining Recommendations for Spatial Repellency Testing Methodologies.
Mosquito coils, vaporizer mats and emanators confer protection against mosquito bites through the spatial action of emanated vapor or airborne pyrethroid particles. These products dominate the pest control market; therefore, it is vital to characterize mosquito responses elicited by the chemical actives and their potential for disease prevention. The aim of this review was to determine effects of mosquito coils and emanators on mosquito responses that reduce human-vector contact and to propose scientific consensus on terminologies and methodologies used for evaluation of product formats that could contain spatial chemical actives, including indoor residual spraying (IRS), long lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) and insecticide treated materials (ITMs). PubMed, (National Centre for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), U.S. National Library of Medicine, NIH), MEDLINE, LILAC, Cochrane library, IBECS and Armed Forces Pest Management Board Literature Retrieval System search engines were used to identify studies of pyrethroid based coils and emanators with key-words "Mosquito coils" "Mosquito emanators" and "Spatial repellents". It was concluded that there is need to improve statistical reporting of studies, and reach consensus in the methodologies and terminologies used through standardized testing guidelines. Despite differing evaluation methodologies, data showed that coils and emanators induce mortality, deterrence, repellency as well as reduce the ability of mosquitoes to feed on humans. Available data on efficacy outdoors, dose-response relationships and effective distance of coils and emanators is inadequate for developing a target product profile (TPP), which will be required for such chemicals before optimized implementation can occur for maximum benefits in disease control
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