6 research outputs found
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Novel phase diagram behavior and materials design in heterostructural semiconductor alloys
Structure and composition control the behavior of materials. Isostructural alloying is historically an extremely successful approach for tuning materials properties, but it is often limited by binodal and spinodal decomposition, which correspond to the thermodynamic solubility limit and the stability against composition fluctuations, respectively. We show that heterostructural alloys can exhibit a markedly increased range of metastable alloy compositions between the binodal and spinodal lines, thereby opening up a vast phase space for novel homogeneous single-phase alloys. We distinguish two types of heterostructural alloys, that is, those between commensurate and incommensurate phases. Because of the structural transition around the critical composition, the properties change in a highly nonlinear or even discontinuous fashion, providing a mechanism for materials design that does not exist in conventional isostructural alloys. The novel phase diagram behavior follows from standard alloy models using mixing enthalpies from first-principles calculations. Thin-film deposition demonstrates the viability of the synthesis of these metastable single-phase domains and validates the computationally predicted phase separation mechanism above the upper temperature bound of the nonequilibrium single-phase region
Intrinsic Material Properties Dictating Oxygen Vacancy Formation Energetics in Metal Oxides
Oxygen
vacancies (<i>V</i><sub>O</sub>) in oxides are
extensively used to manipulate vital material properties. Although
methods to predict defect formation energies have advanced significantly,
an understanding of the intrinsic material properties that govern
defect energetics lags. We use first-principles calculations to study
the connection between intrinsic (bulk) material properties and the
energy to form a single, charge neutral oxygen vacancy (<i>E</i><sub>V</sub>). We investigate 45 binary and ternary oxides and find
that a simple model which combines (i) the oxide enthalpy of formation
(Δ<i>H</i><sub>f</sub>), (ii) the midgap energy relative
to the O 2p band center (<i>E</i><sub>O 2p</sub> +
(1/2)<i>E</i><sub>g</sub>), and (iii) atomic electronegativities
reproduces calculated <i>E</i><sub>V</sub> within ∼0.2
eV. This result provides both valuable insights into the key properties
influencing <i>E</i><sub>V</sub> and a direct method to
predict <i>E</i><sub>V</sub>. We then predict the <i>E</i><sub>V</sub> of ∼1800 oxides and validate the predictive
nature of our approach against direct defect calculations for a subset
of 18 randomly selected materials
HIV-1 subtype C Pr55gag virus-like particle vaccine efficiently boosts baboons primed with a matched DNA vaccine
A DNA vaccine expressing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) southern African subtype C Gag (pTHGag) and a recombinant baculovirus Pr55gag virus-like particle prepared using a subtype C Pr55gag protein (Gag VLP) was tested in a prime-boost inoculation regimen in Chacma baboons. The response of five baboons to Gag peptides in a gamma interferon (IFN-γ) enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay after three pTHGag immunizations ranged from 100 to 515 spot-forming units (s.f.u.) per 106 peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), whilst the response of two baboons to the Gag VLP vaccine ranged from 415 to 465 s.f.u. per 106 PBMCs. An increase in the Gag-specific response to a range of 775-3583 s.f.u. per 106 PBMCs was achieved by boosting with Gag VLPs the five baboons that were primed with pTHGag. No improvement in Gag responses was achieved in this prime-boost inoculation regimen by increasing the number of pTHGag inoculations to six. IFN-γ responses were mapped to several peptides, some of which have been reported to be targeted by PBMCs from HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals. Gag VLPs, given as a single-modality regimen, induced a predominantly CD8+ T-cell IFN-γ response and interleukin-2 was a major cytokine within a mix of predominantly Th1 cytokines produced by a DNA-VLP prime-boost modality. The prime-boost inoculation regimen induced high serum p24 antibody titres in all baboons, which were several fold above that induced by the individual vaccines. Overall, this study demonstrated that these DNA prime/VLP boost vaccine regimens are highly immunogenic in baboons, inducing high-magnitude and broad multifunctional responses, providing support for the development of these products for clinical trials. © 2008 SGM