1,141 research outputs found
Conductance of a molecular junction mediated by unconventional metal-induced gap states
The conductance of a molecular junction is commonly determined by either
charge-transfer-doping, where alignment of the Fermi energy to the molecular
levels is achieved, or tunnelling through the tails of molecular resonances
within the highest-occupied and lowest-unoccupied molecular-orbital gap.
Here, we present an alternative mechanism where electron transport is
dominated by electrode surface states. They give rise to metallization of the
molecular bridge and additional, pronounced conductance resonances allowing for
substantial tailoring of its electronic properties via, e.g. a gate voltage.
This is demonstrated in a field-effect geometry of a fullerene-bridge between
two metallic carbon nanotubes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures included; to be published in Europhys. Let
Electrical Conductance of Molecular Wires
Molecular wires (MW) are the fundamental building blocks for molecular
electronic devices. They consist of a molecular unit connected to two continuum
reservoirs of electrons (usually metallic leads). We rely on Landauer theory as
the basis for studying the conductance properties of MW systems. This relates
the lead to lead current to the transmission probability for an electron to
scatter through the molecule. Two different methods have been developed for the
study of this scattering. One is based on a solution of the Lippmann-Schwinger
equation and the other solves for the {\bf t} matrix using Schroedinger's
equation. We use our methodology to study two problems of current interest. The
first MW system consists of 1,4 benzene-dithiolate (BDT) bonded to two gold
nanocontacts. Our calculations show that the conductance is sensitive to the
chemical bonding between the molecule and the leads. The second system we study
highlights the interesting phenomenon of antiresonances in MW. We derive an
analytic formula predicting at what energies antiresonances should occur in the
transmission spectra of MW. A numerical calculation for a MW consisting of
filter molecules attached to an active molecule shows the existence of an
antiresonance at the energy predicted by our formula.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Antiresonances in Molecular Wires
We present analytic and numerical studies based on Landauer theory of
conductance antiresonances of molecular wires. Our analytic treatment is a
solution of the Lippmann-Schwinger equation for the wire that includes the
effects of the non-orthogonality of the atomic orbitals on different atoms
exactly. The problem of non-orthogonality is treated by solving the transport
problem in a new Hilbert space which is spanned by an orthogonal basis. An
expression is derived for the energies at which antiresonances should occur for
a molecular wire connected to a pair of single-channel 1D leads. From this
expression we identify two distinct mechanisms that give rise to antiresonances
under different circumstances. The exact treatment of non-orthogonality in the
theory is found to be necessary to obtain reliable results. Our numerical
simulations extend this work to multichannel leads and to molecular wires
connected to 3D metallic nanocontacts. They demonstrate that our analytic
results also provide a good description of these more complicated systems
provided that certain well-defined conditions are met. These calculations
suggest that antiresonances should be experimentally observable in the
differential conductance of molecular wires of certain types.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
A mesoscopic ring as a XNOR gate: An exact result
We describe XNOR gate response in a mesoscopic ring threaded by a magnetic
flux . The ring is attached symmetrically to two semi-infinite
one-dimensional metallic electrodes and two gate voltages, viz, and
, are applied in one arm of the ring which are treated as the inputs of
the XNOR gate. The calculations are based on the tight-binding model and the
Green's function method, which numerically compute the conductance-energy and
current-voltage characteristics as functions of the ring-to-electrode coupling
strength, magnetic flux and gate voltages. Our theoretical study shows that,
for a particular value of () (, the elementary
flux-quantum), a high output current (1) (in the logical sense) appears if both
the two inputs to the gate are the same, while if one but not both inputs are
high (1), a low output current (0) results. It clearly exhibits the XNOR gate
behavior and this aspect may be utilized in designing an electronic logic gate.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Stacco: Differentially Analyzing Side-Channel Traces for Detecting SSL/TLS Vulnerabilities in Secure Enclaves
Intel Software Guard Extension (SGX) offers software applications enclave to
protect their confidentiality and integrity from malicious operating systems.
The SSL/TLS protocol, which is the de facto standard for protecting
transport-layer network communications, has been broadly deployed for a secure
communication channel. However, in this paper, we show that the marriage
between SGX and SSL may not be smooth sailing.
Particularly, we consider a category of side-channel attacks against SSL/TLS
implementations in secure enclaves, which we call the control-flow inference
attacks. In these attacks, the malicious operating system kernel may perform a
powerful man-in-the-kernel attack to collect execution traces of the enclave
programs at page, cacheline, or branch level, while positioning itself in the
middle of the two communicating parties. At the center of our work is a
differential analysis framework, dubbed Stacco, to dynamically analyze the
SSL/TLS implementations and detect vulnerabilities that can be exploited as
decryption oracles. Surprisingly, we found exploitable vulnerabilities in the
latest versions of all the SSL/TLS libraries we have examined.
To validate the detected vulnerabilities, we developed a man-in-the-kernel
adversary to demonstrate Bleichenbacher attacks against the latest OpenSSL
library running in the SGX enclave (with the help of Graphene) and completely
broke the PreMasterSecret encrypted by a 4096-bit RSA public key with only
57286 queries. We also conducted CBC padding oracle attacks against the latest
GnuTLS running in Graphene-SGX and an open-source SGX-implementation of mbedTLS
(i.e., mbedTLS-SGX) that runs directly inside the enclave, and showed that it
only needs 48388 and 25717 queries, respectively, to break one block of AES
ciphertext. Empirical evaluation suggests these man-in-the-kernel attacks can
be completed within 1 or 2 hours.Comment: CCS 17, October 30-November 3, 2017, Dallas, TX, US
Paraoxonase Activity and Expression Is Modulated by Therapeutics in Experimental Rat Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Objective. The objective of the present study is to investigate the effect of rosiglitazone, metformin, ezetimibe, and valsartan (alone or in combinations) on paraoxonase (PON) activity and PON-mRNA expression in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Methods. 54 Male Sprague–Dawley rats were divided to 9 groups: chow diet group (15 weeks); methionine-choline-deficient diet (MCDD) group (15 weeks); MCDD-treated groups for the last 6 weeks with either metformin (M), rosiglitazone (R), metformin plus rosiglitazone (M+R), ezetimibe (E), valsartan (V), or a combination of R+M+V or of R+M+V+E for a total period of 15 weeks. Results. PON activities in serum and liver were decreased in MCDD rats. PON activity in serum increased significantly in all treatment groups. PON activity in liver was also increased significantly, except only in groups R, E, V, R+M+V, and R+M+V+E. Liver PON3 mRNA expression increased significantly in groups R+M, E, V, R+M+V, and R+M+V+E whereas liver PON2 mRNA expression increased significantly in MCDD, R+M, E, V, R+M+V, and R+M+V+E. Conclusions. PON activities in serum and liver were decreased in NAFLD. Treatment with insulin sensitizers, ezetimibe, and valsartan increased PON activity and reduced oxidative stress both in serum and liver
Precursors prior to Type IIn supernova explosions are common: precursor rates, properties, and correlations
There is a growing number of supernovae (SNe), mainly of Type IIn, which
present an outburst prior to their presumably final explosion. These precursors
may affect the SN display, and are likely related to some poorly charted
phenomena in the final stages of stellar evolution. Here we present a sample of
16 SNe IIn for which we have Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) observations
obtained prior to the SN explosion. By coadding these images taken prior to the
explosion in time bins, we search for precursor events. We find five Type IIn
SNe that likely have at least one possible precursor event, three of which are
reported here for the first time. For each SN we calculate the control time.
Based on this analysis we find that precursor events among SNe IIn are common:
at the one-sided 99% confidence level, more than 50% of SNe IIn have at least
one pre-explosion outburst that is brighter than absolute magnitude -14, taking
place up to 1/3 yr prior to the SN explosion. The average rate of such
precursor events during the year prior to the SN explosion is likely larger
than one per year, and fainter precursors are possibly even more common. We
also find possible correlations between the integrated luminosity of the
precursor, and the SN total radiated energy, peak luminosity, and rise time.
These correlations are expected if the precursors are mass-ejection events, and
the early-time light curve of these SNe is powered by interaction of the SN
shock and ejecta with optically thick circumstellar material.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figures, submitted to Ap
Bi-stable tunneling current through a molecular quantum dot
An exact solution is presented for tunneling through a negative-U d-fold
degenerate molecular quantum dot weakly coupled to electrical leads. The tunnel
current exhibits hysteresis if the level degeneracy of the negative-U dot is
larger than two (d>2). Switching occurs in the voltage range V1 < V < V2 as a
result of attractive electron correlations in the molecule, which open up a new
conducting channel when the voltage is above the threshold bias voltage V2.
Once this current has been established, the extra channel remains open as the
voltage is reduced down to the lower threshold voltage V1. Possible
realizations of the bi-stable molecular quantum dots are fullerenes, especially
C60, and mixed-valence compounds.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. (v2) Figure updated to compare the current
hysteresis for degeneracies d=4 and d>>1 of the level in the dot, minor
corrections in the text. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Driving current through single organic molecules
We investigate electronic transport through two types of conjugated
molecules. Mechanically controlled break-junctions are used to couple thiol
endgroups of single molecules to two gold electrodes. Current-voltage
characteristics (IVs) of the metal-molecule-metal system are observed. These
IVs reproduce the spatial symmetry of the molecules with respect to the
direction of current flow. We hereby unambigously detect an intrinsic property
of the molecule, and are able to distinguish the influence of both the molecule
and the contact to the metal electrodes on the transport properties of the
compound system.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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