191 research outputs found
Large Scale Integration of Graphene Transistors for Potential Applications in the Back End of the Line
A chip to wafer scale, CMOS compatible method of graphene device fabrication
has been established, which can be integrated into the back end of the line
(BEOL) of conventional semiconductor process flows. In this paper, we present
experimental results of graphene field effect transistors (GFETs) which were
fabricated using this wafer scalable method. The carrier mobilities in these
transistors reach up to several hundred cmVs. Further, these
devices exhibit current saturation regions similar to graphene devices
fabricated using mechanical exfoliation. The overall performance of the GFETs
can not yet compete with record values reported for devices based on
mechanically exfoliated material. Nevertheless, this large scale approach is an
important step towards reliability and variability studies as well as
optimization of device aspects such as electrical contacts and dielectric
interfaces with statistically relevant numbers of devices. It is also an
important milestone towards introducing graphene into wafer scale process
lines
Electromechanical Piezoresistive Sensing in Suspended Graphene Membranes
Monolayer graphene exhibits exceptional electronic and mechanical properties,
making it a very promising material for nanoelectromechanical (NEMS) devices.
Here, we conclusively demonstrate the piezoresistive effect in graphene in a
nano-electromechanical membrane configuration that provides direct electrical
readout of pressure to strain transduction. This makes it highly relevant for
an important class of nano-electromechanical system (NEMS) transducers. This
demonstration is consistent with our simulations and previously reported gauge
factors and simulation values. The membrane in our experiment acts as a strain
gauge independent of crystallographic orientation and allows for aggressive
size scalability. When compared with conventional pressure sensors, the sensors
have orders of magnitude higher sensitivity per unit area.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Interplay of the volume and surface plasmons in the electron energy loss spectra of C
The results of a joint experimental and theoretical investigation of the C60
collective excitations in the process of inelastic scattering of electrons are
presented. The shape of the electron energy loss spectrum is observed to vary
when the scattering angle increases. This variation arising due to the electron
diffraction of the fullerene shell is described by a new theoretical model
which treats the fullerene as a spherical shell of a finite width and accounts
for the two modes of the surface plasmon and for the volume plasmon as well. It
is shown that at small angles, the inelastic scattering cross section is
determined mostly by the symmetric mode of the surface plasmon, while at larger
angles, the contributions of the antisymmetric surface plasmon and the volume
plasmon become prominent.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Vacancy decay in endohedral atoms: the role of non-central position of the atom
We demonstrate that the Auger decay rate in an endohedral atom is very
sensitive to the atom's location in the fullerene cage. Two additional decay
channels appear in an endohedral system: (a) the channel due to the change in
the electric field at the atom caused by dynamic polarization of the fullerene
electron shell by the Coulomb field of the vacancy, (b) the channel within
which the released energy is transferred to the fullerene electron via the
Coulomb interaction. % The relative magnitudes of the correction terms are
dependent not only on the position of the doped atom but also on the transition
energy \om. Additional enhancement of the decay rate appears for transitions
whose energies are in the vicinity of the fullerene surface plasmons energies
of high multipolarity. % It is demonstrated that in many cases the additional
channels can dominate over the direct Auger decay resulting in pronounced
broadening of the atomic emission lines. % The case study, carried out for
Sc@C, shows that narrow autoionizing resonances in an
isolated Sc within the range \om = 30... 45 eV are dramatically
broadened if the ion is located strongly off-the-center. % Using the developed
model we carry out quantitative analysis of the photoionization spectrum for
the endohedral complex ScN@C and demonstrate that the additional
channels are partly responsible for the strong modification of the
photoionization spectrum profile detected experimentally by
M\"{u}ller et al. (J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 88, 012038 (2008)).Comment: 32 pages, 11 figure
FGFR4 phosphorylates MST1 to confer breast cancer cells resistance to MST1/2-dependent apoptosis
Cancer cells balance with the equilibrium of cell death and growth to expand and metastasize. The activity of mammalian sterile20-like kinases (MST1/2) has been linked to apoptosis and tumor suppression via YAP/Hippo pathway-independent and -dependent mechanisms. Using a kinase substrate screen, we identified here MST1 and MST2 among the top substrates for fibroblast growth factor receptor 4 (FGFR4). In COS-1 cells, MST1 was phosphorylated at Y433 residue in an FGFR4 kinase activity-dependent manner, as assessed by mass spectrometry. Blockade of this phosphorylation by Y433F mutation induced MST1 activation, as indicated by increased threonine phosphorylation of MST1/2, and the downstream substrate MOB1, in FGFR4-overexpressing T47D and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. Importantly, the specific knockdown or short-term inhibition of FGFR4 in endogenous models of human HER2(+) breast cancer cells likewise led to increased MST1/2 activation, in conjunction with enhanced MST1 nuclear localization and generation of N-terminal cleaved and autophosphorylated MST1. Unexpectedly, MST2 was also essential for this MST1/N activation and coincident apoptosis induction, although these two kinases, as well as YAP, were differentially regulated in the breast cancer models analyzed. Moreover, pharmacological FGFR4 inhibition specifically sensitized the HER2(+) MDA-MB-453 breast cancer cells, not only to HER2/EGFR and AKT/mTOR inhibitors, but also to clinically relevant apoptosis modulators. In TCGA cohort, FGFR4 overexpression correlated with abysmal HER2(+) breast carcinoma patient outcome. Therefore, our results uncover a clinically relevant, targetable mechanism of FGFR4 oncogenic activity via suppression of the stress-associated MST1/2-induced apoptosis machinery in tumor cells with prominent HER/ERBB and FGFR4 signaling-driven proliferation.Peer reviewe
Formalism of collective electron excitations in fullerenes
We present a detailed formalism for the description of collective electron
excitations in fullerenes in the process of the electron inelastic scattering.
Considering the system as a spherical shell of a finite width, we show that the
differential cross section is defined by three plasmon excitations, namely two
coupled modes of the surface plasmon and the volume plasmon. The interplay of
the three plasmons appears due to the electron diffraction of the fullerene
shell. Plasmon modes of different angular momenta provide dominating
contributions to the differential cross section depending on the transferred
momentum.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures; submitted to the special issue "Atomic Cluster
Collisions: Structure and Dynamics from the Nuclear to the Biological Scale"
of Eur. Phys. J.
Angular Dependences of Third Harmonic Generation from Microdroplets
We present experimental and theoretical results for the angular dependence of
third harmonic generation (THG) of water droplets in the micrometer range (size
parameter ). The THG signal in - and -polarization obtained
with ultrashort laser pulses is compared with a recently developed nonlinear
extension of classical Mie theory including multipoles of order .
Both theory and experiment yield over a wide range of size parameters
remarkably stable intensity maxima close to the forward and backward direction
at ``magic angles''. In contrast to linear Mie scattering, both are of
comparable intensity.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 3 figures available on request from
[email protected], submitted to PR
Nucleation of a sodium droplet on C60
We investigate theoretically the progressive coating of C60 by several sodium
atoms. Density functional calculations using a nonlocal functional are
performed for NaC60 and Na2C60 in various configurations. These data are used
to construct an empirical atomistic model in order to treat larger sizes in a
statistical and dynamical context. Fluctuating charges are incorporated to
account for charge transfer between sodium and carbon atoms. By performing
systematic global optimization in the size range 1<=n<=30, we find that Na_nC60
is homogeneously coated at small sizes, and that a growing droplet is formed
above n=>8. The separate effects of single ionization and thermalization are
also considered, as well as the changes due to a strong external electric
field. The present results are discussed in the light of various experimental
data.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure
Surface plasmons in metallic structures
Since the concept of a surface collective excitation was first introduced by
Ritchie, surface plasmons have played a significant role in a variety of areas
of fundamental and applied research, from surface dynamics to surface-plasmon
microscopy, surface-plasmon resonance technology, and a wide range of photonic
applications. Here we review the basic concepts underlying the existence of
surface plasmons in metallic structures, and introduce a new low-energy surface
collective excitation that has been recently predicted to exist.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, to appear in J. Opt. A: Pure Appl. Op
Nonlinear Magneto-Optics of Fe Monolayers from first principles: Structural dependence and spin-orbit coupling strength
We calculate the nonlinear magneto-optical response of free-standing fcc
(001), (110) and (111) oriented Fe monolayers. The bandstructures are
determined from first principles using a full-potential LAPW method with the
additional implementation of spin-orbit coupling. The variation of the
spin-orbit coupling strength and the nonlinear magneto-optical spectra upon
layer orientation are investigated. We find characteristic differences which
indicate an enhanced sensitivity of nonlinear magneto-optics to surface
orientation and variation of the in-plane lattice constants. In particular the
crossover from onedimensional stripe structures to twodimensional films of
(111) layers exhibits a clean signature in the nonlinear Kerr-spectra and
demonstrates the versatility of nonlinear magneto-optics as a tool for in situ
thin-film analysis.Comment: 28 pages, RevTeX, psfig, submitted to PR
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