531 research outputs found
Highly sensitive and high throughput magnetic resonance thermometry using superparamagnetic nanoparticles
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) enables non-invasive 3D thermometry during
thermal ablation of cancerous tumors. While T1 or T2 contrast MRI are
relatively insensitive to temperature, techniques with greater temperature
sensitivity such as chemical shift or diffusion imaging suffer from motional
artifacts and long scan times. We describe an approach for highly sensitive and
high throughput MR thermometry that is not susceptible to motional artifacts.
We use superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) to spoil T2 of water
protons. Motional narrowing results in proportionality between T2 and the
diffusion constant, dependent only on the temperature in a specific
environment. Our results show, for pure water, the nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR) linewidth and T2 follow the same temperature dependence as the
self-diffusion constant of water. Thus, T2 mapping is a diffusion mapping in
the presence of SPIONs, and T2 is a thermometer. For pure water, a T2 mapping
of a 64 x 64 image (voxel size = 0.5 mm x 0.5 mm x 3 mm) in a 9.4 T MRI scanner
resulted in a temperature resolution of 0.5 K for a scan time of 2 minutes.
This indicates a highly sensitive and high throughput MR thermometry technique
potentially useful for monitoring of biological tissues during thermal
therapies or for diagnosis
Charge Dynamics at the Silicon(001) Surface Studied by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Surface Photovoltage
Scanning tunneling microscopy measurements of local surface photovoltage of the Si(001) surface reveal the existence of local charging produced by the tunneling current. Since the tunneling current is confined to a region of near atomic dimensions, charge transport between surface and bulk electronic states is probed with high spatial resolution. The surface charge is enhanced while tunneling at the bonded, type-B atomic step and at specific point defects demonstrating atomic-scale variations in the charge dynamics
Curvature Induced Phase Stability of an Intensely Heated Liquid
We Use Non-Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics Simulations to Study the Heat Transfer Around Intensely Heated Solid Nanoparticles Immersed in a Model Lennard-Jones Fluid. We Focus Our Studies on the Role of the Nanoparticle Curvature on the Liquid Phase Stability under Steady-State Heating. for Small Nanoparticles We Observe a Stable Liquid Phase Near the Nanoparticle Surface, Which Can Be at a Temperature Well above the Boiling Point. Furthermore, for Particles with Radius Smaller Than a Critical Radius of 2 Nm We Do Not Observe Formation of Vapor Even above the Critical Temperature. Instead, We Report the Existence of a Stable Fluid Region with a Density Much Larger Than that of the Vapor Phase. We Explain the Stability in Terms of the Laplace Pressure Associated with the Formation of a Vapor Nanocavity and the Associated Effect on the Gibbs Free Energy. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC
Temperature mapping of stacked silicon dies from x-ray diffraction intensities
Increasing power densities in integrated circuits has led to an increased
prevalence of thermal hotspots in integrated circuits. Tracking these thermal
hotspots is imperative to prevent circuit failures. In 3D integrated circuits,
conventional surface techniques like infrared thermometry are unable to measure
3D temperature distribution and optical and magnetic resonance techniques are
difficult to apply due to the presence of metals and large current densities.
X-rays offer high penetration depth and can be used to probe 3D structures. We
report a method utilizing the temperature dependence of x-rays diffraction
intensity via the Debye-Waller factor to simultaneously map the temperature of
an individual silicon die that is a part of a stack of dies. Utilizing beamline
1-ID-E at the Advanced Photon Source (Argonne), we demonstrate for each
individual silicon die, a temperature resolution of 3 K, a spatial resolution
of 100 um x 400 um and a temporal resolution of 20 s. Utilizing a sufficiently
high intensity laboratory source, e.g., from a liquid anode source, this method
can be scaled down to laboratories for non-invasive temperature mapping of 3D
integrated circuits
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