38,815 research outputs found
Wide-band current preamplifier for conductance measurements with large input capacitance
A wide-band current preamplifier based on a composite operational amplifier
is proposed. It has been shown that the bandwidth of the preamplifier can be
significantly increased by enhancing the effective open-loop gain of the
composite preamplifier. The described preamplifier with current gain 10 V/A
showed the bandwidth of about 100 kHz with 1 nF input shunt capacitance. The
current noise of the amplifier was measured to be about 46 fA/
at 1 kHz, close to the design noise minimum. The voltage noise was found to be
about 2.9 nV/ at 1 kHz, which is in a good agreement with the
value expected for the operational amplifier used in the input stage. By
analysing the total noise produced by the preamplifier we found the optimal
frequency range suitable for the fast lock-in measurements to be from 1 kHz to
2 kHz. To get the same signal-to-noise ratio, the reported preamplifier
requires roughly 10% of the integration time used in measurements made with a
conventional preamplifier.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Effects of a Novel Dental Gel on Plaque and Gingivitis: A Comparative Study.
ObjectivesThe goal of this prospective, randomized, controlled, double-blinded study was to evaluate the effects of a novel dental gel on plaque and gingival health. The dental gel was designed to (1) break up and prevent re-accumulation of microbial biofilm, and (2) inhibit metal mediated inflammation.Materials and methodsTwenty-five subjects with moderate gingival inflammation (Löe and Silness Gingival Index ≥2) and pocket depths <4 were randomly assigned to brush twice daily for 21 days with the test or the control dental gel. On Days 0, 7, 14 and 21, plaque levels (Quigley-Hein, Turesky Modification Plaque Index), gingival inflammation (Löe and Silness Gingival Index) and gingival bleeding (modified Sulcus Bleeding Index) were determined by one blinded, investigator using a pressure sensitive probe.ResultsAfter 3 weeks, all 3 clinical indices were significantly improved in both groups (P<0.05) and significantly lower in the test group (P<0.05).ConclusionThe novel dental gel formulation was provided effective plaque control and reduced gingival inflammation.Clinical relevanceA novel dentifrice formulation may be an effective tool for plaque removal and maintaining gingival health
Competing topological and Kondo insulator phases on a honeycomb lattice
We investigate the competition between the spin-orbit interaction of
itinerant electrons and their Kondo coupling with local moments densely
distributed on the honeycomb lattice. We find that the model at half-filling
displays a quantum phase transition between topological and Kondo insulators at
a nonzero Kondo coupling. In the Kondo-screened case, tuning the electron
concentration can lead to a new topological insulator phase. The results
suggest that the heavy-fermion phase diagram contains a new regime with a
competition among topological, Kondo-coherent and magnetic states, and that the
regime may be especially relevant to Kondo lattice systems with -conduction
electrons. Finally, we discuss the implications of our results in the context
of the recent experiments on SmB implicating the surface states of a
topological insulator, as well as the existing experiments on the phase
transitions in SmB under pressure and in CeNiSn under chemical pressure.Comment: (v3) Published version including the main text (5 pages + 4 figures)
and a supplementary material discussing the effects of quantum fluctuations
of the slave bosons and antiferromagnetic ordering of the local moments on
the transitions among the Kondo, magnetic and topological state
On the chain length dependence of local correlations in polymer melts and a perturbation theory of symmetric polymer blends
The self-consistent field (SCF) theory of dense polymer liquids assumes that
short-range correlations are almost independent of how monomers are connected
into polymers. Some limits of this idea are explored in the context of a
perturbation theory for mixtures of structurally identical polymer species, A
and B, in which the AB pair interaction differs slightly from the AA and BB
interaction, and the difference is controlled by a parameter alpha Expanding
the free energy to O(\alpha) yields an excess free energy of the form alpha
, in both lattice and continuum models, where z(N) is a
measure of the number of inter-molecular near neighbors of each monomer in a
one-component liquid. This quantity decreases slightly with increasing N
because the self-concentration of monomers from the same chain is slightly
higher for longer chains, creating a deeper correlation hole for longer chains.
We analyze the resulting -dependence, and predict that , where is an invariant degree of
polymerization, and . This and other predictions are
confirmed by comparison to simulations. We also propose a way to estimate the
effective interaction parameter appropriate for comparisons of simulation data
to SCF theory and to coarse-grained theories of corrections to SCF theory,
which is based on an extrapolation of coefficients in this perturbation theory
to the limit . We show that a renormalized one-loop theory
contains a quantitatively correct description of the -dependence of local
structure studied here.Comment: submitted to J. Chem. Phy
Kondo effect in coupled quantum dots with RKKY interaction: Finite temperature and magnetic field effects
We study transport through two quantum dots coupled by an RKKY interaction as
a function of temperature and magnetic field. By applying the Numerical
Renormalization Group (NRG) method we obtain the transmission and the linear
conductance. At zero temperature and magnetic field, we observe a quantum phase
transition between the Kondo screened state and a local spin singlet as the
RKKY interaction is tuned. Above the critical RKKY coupling the Kondo peak is
split. However, we find that both finite temperature and magnetic field restore
the Kondo resonance. Our results agree well with recent transport experiments
on gold grain quantum dots in the presence of magnetic impurities.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Acoustically evoked potentials in two cephalopods inferred using the auditory brainstem response (ABR) approach
It is still a matter of debate whether cephalopods can detect sound frequencies above 400 Hz. So far there is no proof for the detection of underwater sound above 400 Hz via a physiological approach. The controversy of whether cephalopods have a sound detection ability above 400 Hz was tested using the auditory brainstem response (ABR) approach, which has been successfully applied in fish, crustaceans, amphibians, reptiles and birds. Using ABR we found that auditory evoked potentials can be obtained in the frequency range 400 to 1500 Hz (Sepiotheutis lessoniana) and 400 to 1000 Hz (Octopus vulgaris), respectively. The thresholds of S. lessoniana were generally lower than those of O. vulgaris
Two-stage Kondo effect in side-coupled quantum dots: Renormalized perturbative scaling theory and Numerical Renormalization Group analysis
We study numerically and analytically the dynamical (AC) conductance through
a two-dot system, where only one of the dots is coupled to the leads but it is
also side-coupled to the other dot through an antiferromagnetic exchange (RKKY)
interaction. In this case the RKKY interaction gives rise to a ``two-stage
Kondo effect'' where the two spins are screened by two consecutive Kondo
effects. We formulate a renormalized scaling theory that captures remarkably
well the cross-over from the strongly conductive correlated regime to the low
temperature low conductance state. Our analytical formulas agree well with our
numerical renormalization group results. The frequency dependent current noise
spectrum is also discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
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