5,370 research outputs found

    Enzyme activities and glyphosate biodegradation in a riparian soil affected by simulated saltwater incursion

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    Soil salinization due to saltwater incursion, is a major threat to biochemical activities and thus strongly alters biogeochemical processes in a freshwater riparian of coastal estuary region. A pot incubation experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of simulated saltwater incursion on some key enzymatic activities and biodegradation dynamics of herbicide glyphosate in a riparian soil in Chongming Island located in the Yangtze River estuary, China. The results showed that saltwater addition with 10% artificial seawater significantly increased the biodegradation efficiency of glyphosate with the lowest residual concentration among all the treatments. However, glyphosate degradation was markedly decreased in the riparian soil with high levels of saltwater treatment. As compared with no saltwater treatment, the half-lives for 20% and 50% seawater treatments were prolonged by 4.9% and 21.1%, respectively. Throughout the incubation period, saltwater addition with 10% seawater stimulated the enzymatic activities in the glyphosate-spiked riparian soil, as compared to the treatment with 0% seawater. Flourescein diacetate (FDA) hydrolysis rate, dehydrogenase activity (DHA), catalase activity, and alkaline phosphatase activity in the glyphosate-spiked riparian soil treated with 10% seawater were 68.5%, 49.2%, 38.7%, and 28.6% higher than those for no saltwater treatment, respectively. The effect of 20% seawater treatment on the glyphosate-spiked riparian soil enzymatic activities fluctuated between promotion and inhibition depending on the type of enzymes. Soil enzymatic activities were severely depressed by increasing salinity level with 50% seawater treatment significantly inhibited, relative to no saltwater treatment. Especially, FDA hydrolysis rate and DHA were decreased by 73.8% and 64.8%, respectively, as compared to no saltwater treatment. Glyphosate degradation percentages were strongly positively correlated to the FDA hydrolysis rate and DHA, indicating that as compared to the other enzymes, the two enzymes contributed more to the herbicide biodegradation in the salt-affected riparian soil

    Giant spin-orbit splitting of point defect states in monolayer WS2_2

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    The spin-orbit coupling (SOC) effect has been known to be profound in monolayer pristine transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). Here we show that point defects, which are omnipresent in the TMD membranes, exhibit even stronger SOC effects and change the physics of the host materials drastically. In this Article we chose the representative monolayer WS\sub{2} slabs from the TMD family together with seven typical types of point defects including monovacancies, interstitials, and antisites. We calculated the formation energies of these defects, and studied the effect of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on the corresponding defect states. We found that the S monovacancy (V\sub{S} ) and S interstitial (adatom) have the lowest formation energies. In the case of V\sub{S} and both of the W\sub{S and W\sub{S2} antisites, the defect states exhibit giant splitting up to 296 meV when SOC is considered. Depending on the relative position of the defect state with respect to the conduction band minimum (CBM), the hybrid functional HSE will either increase the splitting by up to 60 meV (far from CBM), or decrease the splitting by up to 57 meV (close to CBM). Furthermore, we found that both the W\sub{S} and W\sub{S2} antisites possess a magnetic moment of 2 μB\mu_{B} localized at the antisite W atom and the neighboring W atoms. All these findings provide new insights in the defect behavior under SOC point to new possibilities for spintronics applications for TMDs.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    PT-symmetry in optics beyond the paraxial approximation

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    The concept of the PT-symmetry, originating from the quantum field theory, has been intensively investigated in optics, stimulated by the similarity between the Schr\"odinger equation and the paraxial wave equation that governs the propagation of light in a guiding structure. We go beyond the bounds of the paraxial approximation and demonstrate, using the solution of the Maxwell's equations for light beams propagating in deeply subwavelength waveguides and periodic lattices with "balanced" gain and loss, that the PT symmetry may stay unbroken in this setting. Moreover, the PT-symmetry in subwavelength optical structures may be restored after being initially broken upon the increase of gain and loss. Critical gain/loss levels, at which the breakup and subsequent restoration of the PT symmetry occur, strongly depend on the scale of the structure.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Optics Letter

    Skyline

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    A poem

    Localization-delocalization wavepacket transition in Pythagorean aperiodic potentials

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    We introduce a composite optical lattice created by two mutually rotated square patterns and allowing observation of continuous transformation between incommensurate and completely periodic structures upon variation of the rotation angle θ. Such lattices acquire periodicity only for rotation angles cosθ=a/c, sinθ=b/c, set by Pythagorean triples of natural numbers (a, b, c). While linear eigenmodes supported by lattices associated with Pythagorean triples are always extended, composite patterns generated for intermediate rotation angles allow observation of the localizationdelocalization transition of eigenmodes upon modification of the relative strength of two sublattices forming the composite pattern. Sharp delocalization of supported modes for certain θ values can be used for visualization of Pythagorean triples. The effects predicted here are general and also take place in composite structures generated by two rotated hexagonal latticesPeer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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