494 research outputs found
Assessment of pulmonary edema: principles and practice
Pulmonary edema increasingly is recognized as a perioperative complication affecting outcome. Several risk factors have been identified, including those of cardiogenic origin, such as heart failure or excessive fluid administration, and those related to increased pulmonary capillary permeability secondary to inflammatory mediators.
Effective treatment requires prompt diagnosis and early intervention. Consequently, over the past 2 centuries a concentrated effort to develop clinical tools to rapidly diagnose pulmonary edema and track response to treatment has occurred. The ideal properties of such a tool would include high sensitivity and specificity, easy availability, and the ability to diagnose early accumulation of lung water before the development of the full clinical presentation. In addition, clinicians highly value the ability to precisely quantify extravascular lung water accumulation and differentiate hydrostatic from high permeability etiologies of pulmonary edema.
In this review, advances in understanding the physiology of extravascular lung water accumulation in health and in disease and the various mechanisms that protect against the development of pulmonary edema under physiologic conditions are discussed. In addition, the various bedside modalities available to diagnose early accumulation of extravascular lung water and pulmonary edema, including chest auscultation, chest roentgenography, lung ultrasonography, and transpulmonary thermodilution, are examined. Furthermore, advantages and limitations of these methods for the operating room and intensive care unit that are critical for proper modality selection in each individual case are explored
Dynamic Exponent of t-J and t-J-W Model
Drude weight of optical conductivity is calculated at zero temperature by
exact diagonalization for the two-dimensional t-J model with the two-particle
term, . For the ordinary t-J model with =0, the scaling of the Drude
weight for small doping concentration is
obtained, which indicates anomalous dynamic exponent =4 of the Mott
transition. When is switched on, the dynamic exponent recovers its
conventional value =2. This corresponds to an incoherent-to-coherent
transition associated with the switching of the two-particle transfer.Comment: LaTeX, JPSJ-style, 4 pages, 5 eps files, to appear in J. Phys. Soc.
Jpn. vol.67, No.6 (1998
Interaction driven metal-insulator transition in strained graphene
The question of whether electron-electron interactions can drive a metal to
insulator transition in graphene under realistic experimental conditions is
addressed. Using three representative methods to calculate the effective
long-range Coulomb interaction between -electrons in graphene and solving
for the ground state using quantum Monte Carlo methods, we argue that without
strain, graphene remains metallic and changing the substrate from SiO to
suspended samples hardly makes any difference. In contrast, applying a rather
large -- but experimentally realistic -- uniform and isotropic strain of about
seems to be a promising route to making graphene an antiferromagnetic
Mott insulator.Comment: Updated version: 6 pages, 3 figure
Insulator-Metal Transition in the One and Two-Dimensional Hubbard Models
We use Quantum Monte Carlo methods to determine Green functions,
, on lattices up to for the 2D Hubbard model
at . For chemical potentials, , within the Hubbard gap, , and at {\it long} distances, , with critical behavior: , . This result stands in agreement with the
assumption of hyperscaling with correlation exponent and dynamical
exponent . In contrast, the generic band insulator as well as the
metal-insulator transition in the 1D Hubbard model are characterized by and .Comment: 9 pages (latex) and 5 postscript figures. Submitted for publication
in Phys. Rev. Let
Enhancement of Pairing Correlation and Spin Gap through Suppression of Single-Particle Dispersion in One-Dimensional Models
We investigate the effects of suppression of single-particle dispersion near
the Fermi level on the spin gap and the singlet-pairing correlation by using
the exact diagonalization method for finite-size systems. We consider strongly
correlated one-dimensional models, which have flat band dispersions near wave
number k=\pi/2, if the interactions are switched off. Our results for strongly
correlated models show that the spin gap region expands as the single-particle
dispersion becomes flatter. The region where the singlet-pairing correlation is
the most dominant also expands in models with flatter band dispersions. Based
on our numerical results, we propose a pairing mechanism induced by the
flat-band dispersion.Comment: 5 pages, including 5 eps figures, to appear in J.Phys.Soc.Jpn Vol.69
No.
The role of electron-electron interactions in two-dimensional Dirac fermions
The role of electron-electron interactions on two-dimensional Dirac fermions
remains enigmatic. Using a combination of nonperturbative numerical and
analytical techniques that incorporate both the contact and long-range parts of
the Coulomb interaction, we identify the two previously discussed regimes: a
Gross-Neveu transition to a strongly correlated Mott insulator, and a
semi-metallic state with a logarithmically diverging Fermi velocity accurately
described by the random phase approximation. Most interestingly, experimental
realizations of Dirac fermions span the crossover between these two regimes
providing the physical mechanism that masks this velocity divergence. We
explain several long-standing mysteries including why the observed Fermi
velocity in graphene is consistently about 20 percent larger than the best
values calculated using ab initio and why graphene on different substrates show
different behavior.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Suppressed Coherence due to Orbital Correlations in the Ferromagnetically Ordered Metallic Phase of Mn Compounds
Small Drude weight together with small specific heat coefficient
observed in the ferromagnetic phase of RAMnO (R=La, Pr, Nd, Sm;
A=Ca, Sr, Ba) are analyzed in terms of a proximity effect of the Mott
insulator. The scaling theory for the metal-insulator transition with the
critical enhancement of orbital correlations toward the staggered ordering of
two orbitals such as and symmetries may lead to the
critical exponents of and with
and . The result agrees with the experimental indications.Comment: 4 pages LaTeX using jpsj.sty. To appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
67(1998)No.
Theory for Gossamer and Resonating Valence Bond Superconductivity
We use an effective Hamiltonian for two-dimensional Hubbard model including
an antiferromagnetic spin-spin coupling term to study recently proposed
gossamer superconductivity. We formulate a renormalized mean field theory to
approximately take into account the strong correlation effect in the partially
projected Gutzwiller wavefucntions. At the half filled, there is a first order
phase transition to separate a Mott insulator at large Coulomb repulsion U from
a gossamer superconductor at small U. Away from the half filled,the Mott
insulator is evolved into an resonating valence bond state, which is
adiabatically connected to the gossamer superconductor.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
Spin and charge dynamics of the ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic two-dimensional half-filled Kondo lattice model
We present a detailed numerical study of spin and charge dynamics of the
two-dimensional Kondo lattice model with hopping t and exchange J. At T=0 and J
> 0, the competition between the RKKY interaction and Kondo effect triggers a
quantum phase transition between magnetically ordered and disordered
insulators: J_c/t = 1.45(5). The quasiparticle gap scales as |J|. S(q,\omega),
evolves smoothly from its strong coupling form with spin gap at q = (\pi,\pi)
to a spin wave form. At J>0, A(\vec{k},\omega) shows a dispersion relation
following that of hybridized bands. For J < J_c this feature is supplemented by
shadows thus pointing to a coexistence of Kondo screening and magnetism. For J
< 0 A(\vec{k},\omega) is similar to that of non-interacting electrons in a
staggered magnetic field. Spin, T_S, and charge, T_C, scales are defined. For
weak to intermediate couplings, T_S marks the onset of antiferromagnetic
fluctuations and follows a J^2 law. At strong couplings T_S scales as J. T_C
scales as J both at weak and strong couplings. At and slightly below T_C we
observe i) a rise in the resistivity as a function of decreasing temperature,
ii) a dip in the integrated density of states at the Fermi energy and iii) the
occurrence of hybridized bands in A(k,\omega). It is shown that in the weak
coupling limit, the charge gap of order J is of magnetic origin. The specific
heat shows a two peak structure, the low temperature peak being of magnetic
origin. Our results are compared to various mean-field theories.Comment: 30 pages, 24 figure
- …