3,223 research outputs found
Charge order textures induced by non-linear lattice coupling in a half-doped manganite
The self-organization of strongly interacting electrons into superlattice
structures underlies the properties of many quantum materials. How these
electrons arrange within the superlattice dictates what symmetries are broken
and what ground states are stabilized. Here we show that cryogenic scanning
transmission electron microscopy enables direct mapping of local symmetries and
order at the intra-unit-cell level in the model charge-ordered system
NdSrMnO. In addition to imaging the prototypical
site-centered charge order, we discover the nanoscale coexistence of an exotic
intermediate state which mixes site and bond order and breaks inversion
symmetry. We further show that nonlinear coupling of distinct lattice modes
controls the selection between competing ground states. The results demonstrate
the importance of lattice coupling for understanding and manipulating the
character of electronic self-organization and highlight a novel method for
probing local order in a broad range of strongly correlated systems
Hamiltonian 2-forms in Kahler geometry, III Extremal metrics and stability
This paper concerns the explicit construction of extremal Kaehler metrics on
total spaces of projective bundles, which have been studied in many places. We
present a unified approach, motivated by the theory of hamiltonian 2-forms (as
introduced and studied in previous papers in the series) but this paper is
largely independent of that theory.
We obtain a characterization, on a large family of projective bundles, of
those `admissible' Kaehler classes (i.e., the ones compatible with the bundle
structure in a way we make precise) which contain an extremal Kaehler metric.
In many cases, such as on geometrically ruled surfaces, every Kaehler class is
admissible. In particular, our results complete the classification of extremal
Kaehler metrics on geometrically ruled surfaces, answering several
long-standing questions.
We also find that our characterization agrees with a notion of K-stability
for admissible Kaehler classes. Our examples and nonexistence results therefore
provide a fertile testing ground for the rapidly developing theory of stability
for projective varieties, and we discuss some of the ramifications. In
particular we obtain examples of projective varieties which are destabilized by
a non-algebraic degeneration.Comment: 40 pages, sequel to math.DG/0401320 and math.DG/0202280, but largely
self-contained; partially replaces and extends math.DG/050151
Vortex Pinning and the Non-Hermitian Mott Transition
The boson Hubbard model has been extensively studied as a model of the zero
temperature superfluid/insulator transition in Helium-4 on periodic substrates.
It can also serve as a model for vortex lines in superconductors with a
magnetic field parallel to a periodic array of columnar pins, due to a formal
analogy between the vortex lines and the statistical mechanics of quantum
bosons. When the magnetic field has a component perpendicular to the pins, this
analogy yields a non-Hermitian boson Hubbard model. At integer filling, we find
that for small transverse fields, the insulating phase is preserved, and the
transverse field is exponentially screened away from the boundaries of the
superconductor. At larger transverse fields, a ``superfluid'' phase of tilted,
entangled vortices appears. The universality class of the transition is found
to be that of vortex lines entering the Meissner phase at H_{c1}, with the
additional feature that the direction of the tilted vortices at the transition
bears a non-trivial relationship to the direction of the applied magnetic
field. The properties of the Mott Insulator and flux liquid phases with tilt
are also discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures included in text; to appear in Physical Review
Why Some Interfaces Cannot be Sharp
A central goal of modern materials physics and nanoscience is control of
materials and their interfaces to atomic dimensions. For interfaces between
polar and non-polar layers, this goal is thwarted by a polar catastrophe that
forces an interfacial reconstruction. In traditional semiconductors this
reconstruction is achieved by an atomic disordering and stoichiometry change at
the interface, but in multivalent oxides a new option is available: if the
electrons can move, the atoms don`t have to. Using atomic-scale electron energy
loss spectroscopy we find that there is a fundamental asymmetry between
ionically and electronically compensated interfaces, both in interfacial
sharpness and carrier density. This suggests a general strategy to design sharp
interfaces, remove interfacial screening charges, control the band offset, and
hence dramatically improving the performance of oxide devices.Comment: 12 pages of text, 6 figure
Beyond substrates : strain engineering of ferroelectric membranes
Strain engineering in perovskite oxides provides for dramatic control over material structure, phase, and properties, but is restricted by the discrete strain states produced by available high-quality substrates. Here, using the ferroelectric BaTiO, production of precisely strain-engineered, substrate-released nanoscale membranes is demonstrated via an epitaxial lift-off process that allows the high crystalline quality of films grown on substrates to be replicated. In turn, fine structural tuning is achieved using interlayer stress in symmetric trilayer oxide-metal/ferroelectric/oxide-metal structures fabricated from the released membranes. In devices integrated on silicon, the interlayer stress provides deterministic control of ordering temperature (from 75 to 425 °C) and releasing the substrate clamping is shown to dramatically impact ferroelectric switching and domain dynamics (including reducing coercive fields to <10 kV cm and improving switching times to <5 ns for a 20 µm diameter capacitor in a 100-nm-thick film). In devices integrated on flexible polymers, enhanced room-temperature dielectric permittivity with large mechanical tunability (a 90% change upon ±0.1% strain application) is demonstrated. This approach paves the way toward the fabrication of ultrafast CMOS-compatible ferroelectric memories and ultrasensitive flexible nanosensor devices, and it may also be leveraged for the stabilization of novel phases and functionalities not achievable via direct epitaxial growth
Adapting a Traumatic Brain Injury Goals-of-Care Decision Aid for Critically Ill Patients to Intracerebral Hemorrhage and Hemispheric Acute Ischemic Stroke
Objectives: Families in the neurologic ICU urgently request goals-of-care decision support and shared decision-making tools. We recently developed a goals-of-care decision aid for surrogates of critically ill traumatic brain injury patients using a systematic development process adherent to the International Patient Decision Aid Standards. To widen its applicability, we adapted this decision aid to critically ill patients with intracerebral hemorrhage and large hemispheric acute ischemic stroke.
Design: Prospective observational study.
Setting: Two academic neurologic ICUs.
Subjects: Twenty family members of patients in the neurologic ICU were recruited from July 2018 to October 2018.
Interventions: None.
Measurements and Main Results: We reviewed the existing critically ill traumatic brain injury patients decision aid for content and changed: 1) the essential background information, 2) disease-specific terminology to hemorrhagic stroke and ischemic stroke , and 3) disease-specific prognosis tailored to individual patients. We conducted acceptability and usability testing using validated scales. All three decision aids contain information from validated, disease-specific outcome prediction models, as recommended by international decision aid standards, including careful emphasis on their uncertainty. We replaced the individualizable icon arrays graphically depicting probabilities of a traumatic brain injury patient\u27s prognosis with icon arrays visualizing intracerebral hemorrhage and hemispheric acute ischemic stroke prognostic probabilities using high-quality disease-specific data. We selected the Intracerebral Hemorrhage Score with validated 12-month outcomes, and for hemispheric acute ischemic stroke, the 12-month outcomes from landmark hemicraniectomy trials. Twenty family members participated in acceptability and usability testing (n = 11 for the intracerebral hemorrhage decision aid; n = 9 for the acute ischemic stroke decision aid). Median usage time was 22 minutes (interquartile range, 16-26 min). Usability was excellent (median System Usability Scale = 84/100 [interquartile range, 61-93; with \u3e 68 indicating good usability]); 89% of participants graded the decision aid content as good or excellent, and greater than or equal to 90% rated it favorably for information amount, balance, and comprehensibility.
Conclusions: We successfully adapted goals-of-care decision aids for use in surrogates of critically ill patients with intracerebral hemorrhage and hemispheric acute ischemic stroke and found excellent usability and acceptability. A feasibility trial using these decision aids is currently ongoing to further validate their acceptability and test their feasibility for use in busy neurologic ICUs
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Safety and efficacy of endoscopic submucosal dissection for rectal neoplasia: a multicenter North American experience.
Background and aims  Rectal lesions traditionally represent the first lesions approached during endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) training in the West. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of rectal ESD in North America. Methods  This is a multicenter retrospective analysis of rectal ESD between January 2010 and September 2018 in 15 centers. End points included: rates of en bloc resection, R0 resection, adverse events, comparison of pre- and post-ESD histology, and factors associated with failed resection. Results  In total, 171 patients (median age 63 years; 56 % men) underwent rectal ESD (median size 43 mm). En bloc resection was achieved in 141 cases (82.5 %; 95 %CI 76.8-88.2), including 24 of 27 (88.9 %) with prior failed endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR). R0 resection rate was 74.9 % (95 %CI 68.4-81.4). Post-ESD bleeding and perforation occurred in 4 (2.3 %) and 7 (4.1 %), respectively. Covert submucosal invasive cancer (SMIC) was identified in 8.6 % of post-ESD specimens. There was one case (1/120; 0.8 %) of recurrence at a median follow-up of 31 weeks; IQR: 19-76 weeks). Older age and higher body mass index (BMI) were predictors of failed R0 resection, whereas submucosal fibrosis was associated with a higher likelihood of both failed en bloc and R0 resection. Conclusion  Rectal ESD in North America is safe and is associated with high en bloc and R0 resection rates. The presence of submucosal fibrosis was the main predictor of failed en bloc and R0 resection. ESD can be considered for select rectal lesions, and serves not only to establish a definitive tissue diagnosis but also to provide curative resection for lesions with covert advanced disease
Millimeter-scale freestanding superconducting infinite-layer nickelate membranes
Progress in the study of infinite-layer nickelates has always been highly
linked to materials advances. In particular, the recent development of
superconductivity via hole-doping was predicated on the controlled synthesis of
Ni in a very high oxidation state, and subsequent topotactic reduction to a
very low oxidation state, currently limited to epitaxial thin films. Here we
demonstrate a process to combine these steps with a heterostructure which
includes an epitaxial soluble buffer layer, enabling the release of
freestanding membranes of (Nd,Sr)NiO2 encapsulated in SrTiO3, which serves as a
protective layer. The membranes have comparable structural and electronic
properties to that of optimized thin films, and range in lateral dimensions
from millimeters to ~100 micron fragments, depending on the degree of strain
released with respect to the initial substrate. The changes in the
superconducting transition temperature associated with membrane release are
quite similar to those reported for substrate and pressure variations,
suggestive of a common underlying mechanism. These membranes structures should
provide a versatile platform for a range of experimental studies and devices
free from substrate constraints
Gauge Equivalence in Two--Dimensional Gravity
Two-dimensional quantum gravity is identified as a second-class system which
we convert into a first-class system via the Batalin-Fradkin (BF) procedure.
Using the extended phase space method, we then formulate the theory in most
general class of gauges. The conformal gauge action suggested by David, Distler
and Kawai is derived from a first principle. We find a local, light-cone gauge
action whose Becchi-Rouet-Stora-Tyutin invariance implies Polyakov's curvature
equation , revealing the origin of the
Kac-Moody symmetry. The BF degree of freedom turns out be dynamically
active as the Liouville mode in the conformal gauge, while in the light-cone
gauge the conformal degree of freedom plays that r{\^o}le. The inclusion of the
cosmological constant term in both gauges and the harmonic gauge-fixing are
also considered.Comment: 30 pages, KANAZAWA 93-
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