29 research outputs found

    Coarse-grained model for spring friction study of micron-scale iron by smoothed particle hydrodynamics

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    The paper constructs a coarse-grained model to investigate dry sliding friction of the body-centered-cubic Fe micron-scale system by smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations and examines influences of the spring force on the characters of friction. The N_atom = 864 \times 10^12 atoms Fe system is coarse-grained into the two different simple-cubic particle systems, one of 432000 and the other of 16000 particles. From the detection of stick-slip motion, friction coefficient, dependence of friction coefficient on isotropy or anisotropy of the spring force and externally applied normal load, we find that the coarse-grained model is a reasonable modeling process for study of friction of the Fe system and the anisotropic behavior presents better friction of the system than the isotropic one

    Biocompatible fluorescent silicon nanocrystals for single-molecule tracking and fluorescence imaging.

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    Fluorescence microscopy is used extensively in cell-biological and biomedical research, but it is often plagued by three major problems with the presently available fluorescent probes: photobleaching, blinking, and large size. We have addressed these problems, with special attention to single-molecule imaging, by developing biocompatible, red-emitting silicon nanocrystals (SiNCs) with a 4.1-nm hydrodynamic diameter. Methods for producing SiNCs by simple chemical etching, for hydrophilically coating them, and for conjugating them to biomolecules precisely at a 1:1 ratio have been developed. Single SiNCs neither blinked nor photobleached during a 300-min overall period observed at video rate. Single receptor molecules in the plasma membrane of living cells (using transferrin receptor) were imaged for ≥10 times longer than with other probes, making it possible for the first time to observe the internalization process of receptor molecules at the single-molecule level. Spatial variations of molecular diffusivity in the scale of 1-2 µm, i.e., a higher level of domain mosaicism in the plasma membrane, were revealed

    Avalanche charge generation in anhydrous glucosides excited by an external electric field

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    Glycolipids are components of cellular membranes comprising a hydrophobic lipid tail and one or more hydrophilic sugar heads, and are widely associated with the fields of life science and biochemistry. Due to the hygroscopic nature of sugar, the dry thermotropic phases of glycolipids have fewer studies. We report on the electric charge generation in anhydrous glucosides excited by the external high electric field (∼2 MV/m). This causes a large current in the smectic A phase, but not in the isotropic phase. Its intensity is about 100 times larger than the steady state current. The generation of the current was found to be irreversible by the repetition of the field application. The large electric carrier generation is originated in the smectic A phase, possibly due to an electron avalanche breakdown mechanism caused by the collisions of electrons through the impact ionization. © 2019 Author(s)

    Deuterium NMR investigation of field-induced director dynamics: the role of backflow

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    Deuterium NMR spectroscopy has been used to investigate the director dynamics in the nematic liquid crystal, 4-pentyl-4 ' -cyanobiphenyl, confined between two glass plates and subject to orthogonal magnetic and pulsed electric fields. When the pulsed electric field, whose intensity is strong enough to make the director align normal to the magnetic field, is applied to the nematic film, the director moves from being parallel to the magnetic field to being parallel to the electric field. After the pulsed electric field is switched off, the director relaxes back to being parallel to the magnetic field. Deuterium NMR spectra were recorded during the turn-off realignment process as a function of time. With this experimental geometry the director alignment is not unique as it can rotate equally probably clockwise or counterclockwise in this realignment process. That is, the realignment pathway for the director is degenerate, which establishes a director flow pattern. We have studied the time dependence of the director orientation and distribution for the turn-off process. The deuterium NMR spectra corresponding to the director dynamics in the realignment pathways were predicted by a continuum theory analysis including a time dependent viscous torque with an effective rotational viscosity

    Deuterium NMR spectroscopy and field-induced director dynamics in liquid crystals

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    Deuterium NMR spectroscopy together with spectral simulations have been used to investigate the field-induced director dynamics in a nematic liquid crystal, 4-pentyl-4'-cyanobiphenyl (5CB), confined in a slab between two electrodes. The NMR spectra have been measured when turning the electric field on and turning it off. Measurements were also made at different temperatures to explore how the temperature effects the director relaxation. At higher temperatures, some complications arise as peculiar oscillations are observed in the spectra. With spectral simulation this phenomena is shown to result from the relaxation of the director on a timescale comparable to that of the experiment which is the effective spin-spin relaxation time. The simulated spectra are compared with the experimental spectra for the specifically deuteriated 5CB-d(2)
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