443 research outputs found
Buckling-driven delamination of carbon nanotube forests
We report buckling-driven delamination of carbon nanotube (CNT) forests from their growth substrates when subjected to compression. Macroscale compression experiments reveal local delamination at the CNT forest-substrate interface. Results of microscale flat punch indentations indicate that enhanced CNT interlocking at the top surface of the forest accomplished by application of a metal coating causes delamination of the forest from the growth substrate, a phenomenon not observed in indentation of as-grown CNT forests. We postulate that the post-buckling tensile stresses that develop at the base of the CNT forests serve as the driving force for delamination
The EL2 trap in highly doped GaAs:Te
We have investigated highly doped GaAs:Te at different doping concentrations (>10(17) cm(-3)) to assess the presence of the EL2 trap. We have utilized both capacitance and current transient spectroscopy techniques. The crucial parameter for the detection of EL2 is the relative position of the electron quasi-Fermi level in the depletion region. The observed shift of the EL2 apparent activation energy with increasing doping concentration is also discussed
Effects of morphology on the micro-compression response of carbon nanotube forests
This study reports the mechanical response of distinct carbon nanotube (CNT) morphologies as
revealed by flat punch in situ nanoindentation in a scanning electron microscope. We find that the
location of incipient deformation varies significantly by changing the CNT growth parameters. The
initial buckles formed close to the growth substrate in 70 and 190 ”m tall CNT forests grown with low
pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) and moved to ~100 ”m above the growth substrate when
the height increased to 280 ”m. Change of the recipe from LPCVD to CVD at pressures near
atmospheric changed the location of the initial buckling event from the bottom half to the top half of
the CNT forest. Plasma pretreatment of the catalyst also resulted in a unique CNT forest morphology
in which deformation started by bending and buckling of the CNT tips. We find that the vertical
gradients in CNT morphology dictate the location of incipient buckling. These new insights are critical
in the design of CNT forests for a variety of applications where mechanical contact is important
Controlled generation of momentum states in a high-finesse ring cavity
A Bose-Einstein condensate in a high-finesse ring cavity scatters the photons
of a pump beam into counterpropagating cavity modes, populating a
bi-dimensional momentum lattice. A high-finesse ring cavity with a sub-recoil
linewidth allows to control the quantized atomic motion, selecting particular
discrete momentum states and generating atom-photon entanglement. The
semiclassical and quantum model for the 2D collective atomic recoil lasing
(CARL) are derived and the superradiant and good-cavity regimes discussed. For
pump incidence perpendicular to the cavity axis, the momentum lattice is
symmetrically populated. Conversely, for oblique pump incidence the motion
along the two recoil directions is unbalanced and different momentum states can
be populated on demand by tuning the pump frequency.Comment: Submitted to EPJ-ST Special Issue. 10 pages and 3 figure
The PLASMONX Project for advanced beam physics experiments
The Project PLASMONX is well progressing into its
design phase and has entered as well its second phase of
procurements for main components. The project foresees
the installation at LNF of a Ti:Sa laser system (peak
power > 170 TW), synchronized to the high brightness
electron beam produced by the SPARC photo-injector.
The advancement of the procurement of such a laser
system is reported, as well as the construction plans of a
new building at LNF to host a dedicated laboratory for
high intensity photon beam experiments (High Intensity
Laser Laboratory). Several experiments are foreseen
using this complex facility, mainly in the high gradient
plasma acceleration field and in the field of mono-
chromatic ultra-fast X-ray pulse generation via Thomson
back-scattering. Detailed numerical simulations have
been carried out to study the generation of tightly focused
electron bunches to collide with laser pulses in the
Thomson source: results on the emitted spectra of X-rays
are presented
Quantum state engineering assisted by entanglement
We suggest a general scheme for quantum state engineering based on
conditional measurements carried out on entangled twin-beam of radiation.
Realistic detection schemes such as {\sc on/off} photodetection, homodyne
detection and joint measurement of two-mode quadratures are analyzed in
details. Imperfections of the apparatuses, such as nonunit quantum efficiency
and finite resolution, are taken into account. We show that conditional {\sc
on/off} photodetection provides a reliable scheme to verify nonclassicality,
whereas conditional homodyning represents a tunable and robust source of
squeezed light. We also describe optical teleportation as a conditional
measurement, and evaluate the degrading effects of finite amount of
entanglement, decoherence due to losses, and nonunit quantum efficiency.Comment: Some pics with low resolution. Originals at http://www.qubit.i
N6L pseudopeptide interferes with nucleophosmin protein-protein interactions and sensitizes leukemic cells to chemotherapy.
Abstract NPM1 is a multifunctional nucleolar protein implicated in several processes such as ribosome maturation and export, DNA damage response and apoptotic response to stress stimuli. The NPM1 gene is involved in human tumorigenesis and is found mutated in one third of acute myeloid leukemia patients, leading to the aberrant cytoplasmic localization of NPM1. Recent studies indicated that the N6L multivalent pseudopeptide, a synthetic ligand of cellâsurface nucleolin, is also able to bind NPM1 with high affinity. N6L inhibits cell growth with different mechanisms and represents a good candidate as a novel anticancer drug for a number of malignancies of different histological origin. In this study we investigated whether N6L treatment could drive antitumor effect in acute myeloid leukemia cell lines. We found that N6L binds NPM1 at the N-terminal domain, co-localizes with cytoplasmic, mutated NPM1, and interferes with its protein-protein associations. N6L toxicity appears to be p53 dependent but interestingly, the leukemic cell line harbouring the mutated form of NPM1 is more resistant to treatment, suggesting that NPM1 cytoplasmic delocalization confers protection from p53 activation. Moreover, we show that N6L sensitizes AML cells to doxorubicin and cytarabine treatment. These studies suggest that N6L may be a promising option in combination therapies for acute myeloid leukemia treatment
Folding-competent and folding-defective forms of Ricin A chain have different fates following retrotranslocation from the endoplasmic reticulum
We report that a toxic polypeptide retaining the potential to refold upon dislocation from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
to the cytosol (ricin A chain; RTA) and a misfolded version that cannot (termed RTAÎ), follow ER-associated degradation
(ERAD) pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that substantially diverge in the cytosol. Both polypeptides are dislocated
in a step mediated by the transmembrane Hrd1p ubiquitin ligase complex and subsequently degraded. Canonical
polyubiquitylation is not a prerequisite for this interaction because a catalytically inactive Hrd1p E3 ubiquitin ligase
retains the ability to retrotranslocate RTA, and variants lacking one or both endogenous lysyl residues also require the
Hrd1p complex. In the case of native RTA, we established that dislocation also depends on other components of the
classical ERAD-L pathway as well as an ongoing ERâGolgi transport. However, the dislocation pathways deviate
strikingly upon entry into the cytosol. Here, the CDC48 complex is required only for RTAÎ, although the involvement of
individual ATPases (Rpt proteins) in the 19S regulatory particle (RP) of the proteasome, and the 20S catalytic chamber
itself, is very different for the two RTA variants. We conclude that cytosolic ERAD components, particularly the
proteasome RP, can discriminate between structural features of the same substrate
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