36 research outputs found
Simple Metals at High Pressure
In this lecture we review high-pressure phase transition sequences exhibited
by simple elements, looking at the examples of the main group I, II, IV, V, and
VI elements. General trends are established by analyzing the changes in
coordination number on compression. Experimentally found phase transitions and
crystal structures are discussed with a brief description of the present
theoretical picture.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures, lecture notes for the lecture given at the Erice
course on High-Pressure Crystallography in June 2009, Sicily, Ital
Pressure-induced amorphous-to-amorphous configuration change in Ca-Al metallic glasses
Pressure-induced amorphous-to-amorphous configuration changes in Ca-Al metallic glasses (MGs) were studied by performing in-situ room-temperature high-pressure x-ray diffraction up to about 40 GPa. Changes in compressibility at about 18 GPa, 15.5 GPa and 7.5 GPa during compression are detected in Ca80Al20, Ca72.7Al27.3, and Ca66.4Al33.6 MGs, respectively, whereas no clear change has been detected in the Ca50Al50 MG. The transfer of s electrons into d orbitals under pressure, reported for the pressure-induced phase transformations in pure polycrystalline Ca, is suggested to explain the observation of an amorphous-to-amorphous configuration change in this Ca-Al MG system. Results presented here show that the pressure induced amorphous-to-amorphous configuration is not limited to f electron-containing MGs
Intense paramagnon excitations in a large family of high-temperature superconductors
In the search for the mechanism of high-temperature superconductivity,
intense research has been focused on the evolution of the spin excitation
spectrum upon doping from the antiferromagnetic insulating to the
superconducting states of the cuprates. Because of technical limitations, the
experimental investigation of doped cuprates has been largely focused on
low-energy excitations in a small range of momentum space. Here we use resonant
inelastic x-ray scattering to show that a large family of superconductors,
encompassing underdoped YBaCuO and overdoped YBaCuO,
exhibits damped spin excitations (paramagnons) with dispersions and spectral
weights closely similar to those of magnons in undoped cuprates. %The results
are in excellent agreement with the spin excitations obtained by exact
diagonalization of the Hamiltonian on finite-sized clusters. The
comprehensive experimental description of this surprisingly simple spectrum
permits quantitative tests of magnetic Cooper pairing models. A numerical
solution of the Eliashberg equations for the magnetic spectrum of
YBaCuO reproduces its superconducting transition temperature
within a factor of two, a level of agreement comparable to Eliashberg theories
of conventional superconductors.Comment: Main text (11 pages, 4 figures) + supplementary information (4 pages,
4 figures, 1 table). An updated version will appear in Nature Physic
Hybrid coupling of R-phycoerythrin and the orange carotenoid protein supports the FRET-based mechanism of cyanobacterial photoprotection
To regulate the effectiveness of photosynthesis and photoprotection cyanobacteria utilize a system
consisting of only few components. Photoactivation of the orange carotenoid protein (OCP) enables its
interaction with a specific, yet controversial site in the core of the light-harvesting antenna, the phycobilisome
(PBS). The resulting delivery of a quenching carotenoid molecule to the antenna pigments
leads to thermal dissipation of the excitation energy absorbed by the latter, and, consequently, to
depression of the photosynthetic activity. The nature of the OCP-induced PBS fluorescence quenching
mechanism remains debatable, however, specific protein-protein interactions between PBS and photoactivated
OCP should provide a unique environment for interactions between the excitation energy
donor and acceptor. Here we questioned whether the F€orster theory of resonance energy transfer can
explain PBS quenching by OCP even at their very small spectral overlap and whether in model systems,
the absence of specific protein-protein interactions of OCP with a donor of energy can be compensated by
a better spectral overlap. Hybridization of algal R-phycoerythrin with cyanobacterial OCP by chemical
crosslinking results in a significant decrease of R-phycoerythrin fluorescence lifetime, irrespective of the
OCP photoactivation status. Supported by structural considerations, this indicates that FRET may be the
essence of cyanobacterial photoprotection mechanism.
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