58 research outputs found
Designing electronic properties of two-dimensional crystals through optimization of deformations
One of the enticing features common to most of the two-dimensional electronic
systems that are currently at the forefront of materials science research is
the ability to easily introduce a combination of planar deformations and
bending in the system. Since the electronic properties are ultimately
determined by the details of atomic orbital overlap, such mechanical
manipulations translate into modified electronic properties. Here, we present a
general-purpose optimization framework for tailoring physical properties of
two-dimensional electronic systems by manipulating the state of local strain,
allowing a one-step route from their design to experimental implementation. A
definite example, chosen for its relevance in light of current experiments in
graphene nanostructures, is the optimization of the experimental parameters
that generate a prescribed spatial profile of pseudomagnetic fields in
graphene. But the method is general enough to accommodate a multitude of
possible experimental parameters and conditions whereby deformations can be
imparted to the graphene lattice, and complies, by design, with graphene's
elastic equilibrium and elastic compatibility constraints. As a result, it
efficiently answers the inverse problem of determining the optimal values of a
set of external or control parameters that result in a graphene deformation
whose associated pseudomagnetic field profile best matches a prescribed target.
The ability to address this inverse problem in an expedited way is one key step
for practical implementations of the concept of two-dimensional systems with
electronic properties strain-engineered to order. The general-purpose nature of
this calculation strategy means that it can be easily applied to the
optimization of other relevant physical quantities which directly depend on the
local strain field, not just in graphene but in other two-dimensional
electronic membranes.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures. This submission contains low-resolution bitmap
images; high-resolution images can be found in version 1, which is ~13.5 M
Optimal control of plate shape with incompatible strain fields
A flat plate can bend into a curved surface if it experiences an
inhomogeneous growth field. In this article a method is described that
numerically determines the optimal growth field giving rise to an arbitrary
target shape, optimizing for closeness to the target shape and for growth field
smoothness. Numerical solutions are presented, for the full non-symmetric case
as well as for simplified one-dimensional and axisymmetric geometries. This
system can also be solved semi-analytically by positing an ansatz for the
deformation and growth fields in a circular disk with given thickness profile.
Paraboloidal, cylindrical and saddle-shaped target shapes are presented as
examples, of which the last two exemplify a soft mode arising from a
non-axisymmetric deformation of a structure with axisymmetric material
properties.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
Modeling growth in biological materials
The biomechanical modeling of growing tissues has recently become an area of intense interest. In particular, the interplay between growth patterns and mechanical stress is of great importance, with possible applications to arterial mechanics, embryo morphogenesis, tumor development, and bone remodeling. This review aims to give an overview of the theories that have been used to model these phenomena, categorized according to whether the tissue is considered as a continuum object or a collection of cells. Among the continuum models discussed is the deformation gradient decomposition method, which allows a residual stress field to develop from an incompatible growth field. The cell-based models are further subdivided into cellular automata, center-dynamics, and vertex-dynamics models. Of these the second two are considered in more detail, especially with regard to their treatment of cell-cell interactions and cell division. The review concludes by assessing the prospects for reconciliation between these two fundamentally different approaches to tissue growth, and by identifying possible avenues for further research. © 2012 Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
Novel Bacillus sphaericus binary toxin active against bin-resistant culex mosquito larvae
Some Bacillus sphaericus strains (e.g. IAB59, LP1G and 47-6B) can overcome resistance in Culex mosquito larvae, raised against the well characterised binary toxin from this bacterium. A common spore protein (P49), of approximately 49 kDa, produced by these strains has previously been proposed to be responsible for this toxicity. Protein fingerprint analysis of sporulated cultures of these strains identified a number of candidate toxins. Their N-terminal sequences were determined and used to design degenerate oligonucleotide probes. Southern blotting, cloning and colony hybridisation allowed the identification of clones containing genes encoding the putative toxins Cry49Aal (P49) and Cry48Aal (P135) from IAB59. The 1,395 bp cry49Aal gene encodes a protein of 53.3 kDa, showing homology to BinA and BinB from B. sphaericus as well as Cry36Aal and the Cry35 binary toxins from Bacillus thuringiensis. The 3,534 bp cry48Aal gene encodes a 135.6 kDa protein showing homology to the three-domain Cry toxins from B. thuringiensis, including the mosquitocidal Cry4Aa and Cry4Ba from B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis. Individual expression of these proteins in an acrystalliferous B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis strain, followed by bioassays against mosquito larvae revealed no toxicity. However, a Cry48Aal/Cry49Aal combination was toxic to both Bin-susceptible and Bin-resistant Culex quinquefasciatus larvae. Aedes aegypti and Anopheles gambiae mosquito larvae were insensitive to the combination, as were a range of other dipteran, coleopteran and lepidopteran insects. The components of this novel binary toxin from B. sphaericus are highly conserved among strains able to overcome resistance. Differential processing of Cry48Aal by C. quinquefasciatus and A. aegypti larval gut proteinases is not responsible for the non-toxicity towards the latter mosquito. Cry49Aal and Cry48Aal form bipyramidal and amorphous crystals respectively at sporulation and their expression involves RNA polymerase factor cr6 in B. subtilis. Discovery of Cry49Aal and Cry48Aal may prove central in the development of strategies to avoid resistance development against B. sphaericus in Culex populations
Analysing vote choice in a multinational state:National identity and territorial differentiation in the 2016 Brexit vote
Striking territorial variations in the 2016 Brexit referendum are neglected in the explanatory literature, a gap our analysis of British Election Study helps to fill. Rather than modelling Britain as one political system, we present parallel models for England, Scotland and Wales. Typical in other multi-national states, this approach is innovative for ‘British politics’. To analyse complex multi-level national identities, we develop a Relative Territorial Identity (RTI) measure. Substantively, RTI predicts Brexit vote-choice. Since voters who prioritise English identity tended to vote Leave, while the obverse was true in Wales and Scotland, RTI helps to explain territorial differentiation
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