494 research outputs found
An investigation of annealing methods for benzodithiophene terthiophene rhodanine based all small molecule organic solar cells
Mainstream organic solar cells (OSCs) suffer a great variation of photovoltaic performance among different batches of polymers, which brings an opportunity for all-small-molecule OSCs to take leading position of industrialization. In recent years, benzodithiophene terthiophene rhodamine (BTR), as small molecule donor, has played an important role in this field. Here we investigated two typical BTR based all-small-molecule OSCs processed with different annealing methods, to explore the morphology optimization brought by them. As a result, BTR:PC71BM system was optimized by solvent vapor annealing (SVA) reaching an excellent fill factor (FF) of 79.1% via tuning molecular packing intensity, while BTR:Y6 with temperature annealing (TA) yielded a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 12.125% whose molecular packing orientation had been changed. Additionally, by crossing using SVA and TA methods, we found that these two method can't be utilized together to further improve the PCE for either system. Therefore, our work offers better PCEs for these two reported combinations and further studies the compatibility between specific BTR based active layers and designated annealing methods, providing deeper understanding of device engineering on all-small-molecule OSCs.publishe
The Size-Mass Relation of Post-Starburst Galaxies in the Local Universe
We present a study of the size--mass relation for local post-starburst (PSB)
galaxies at selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data
Release 8. We find that PSB galaxies with stellar mass () at
have their galaxy size smaller than or
comparable with those of quiescent galaxies (QGs). After controlling redshift
and stellar mass, the sizes of PSBs are smaller on average than
those of QGs, such differences become larger and significant towards the
low- end, especially at where PSBs can be on average smaller than QGs.
In comparison with predictions of possible PSB evolutionary pathways from
cosmological simulations, we suggest that a fast quenching of star formation
following a short-lived starburst event (might be induced by major merger)
should be the dominated pathway of our PSB sample. Furthermore, by
cross-matching with group catalogs, we confirm that local PSBs at
are more clustered than more massive ones. PSBs
resided in groups are found to be slightly larger in galaxy size and more
disk-like compared to field PSBs, which is qualitatively consistent with and
thus hints the environment-driven fast quenching pathway for group PSBs. Taken
together, our results support multiple evolutionary pathways for local PSB
galaxies: while massive PSBs are thought of as products of fast quenching
following a major merger-induced starburst, environment-induced fast quenching
should play a role in the evolution of less massive PSBs, especially at
.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in Ap
Concomitant pulmonary and thyroid tumors identified by FDG PET/CT and immunohistochemical techniques
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The exact diagnosis of double primary papillary adenocarcinoma of thyroid and lung is even rarer, to our knowledge no report in the literature by [<sup>18</sup>F]-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose-positron emission tomography/X-ray CT(FDG PET/CT) with surgical specimens immunohistochemistry(IHC). We report a patient with abnormal FDG PET/CT in thyroid and lung, this unusual presentation may lead to misdiagnosis without surgical specimens IHC.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A 56-year-old man with coughing three months. FDG PET/CT was performed, and resection specimens of lung and thyroid were detected by hematoxylin eosin staining (HE) and IHC. PET/CT: lung tumor SUVmax: 3.69, delay: 5.17; and thyroid tumor SUVmax 19.97. HE reveal papillary adenocarcinoma, but histological differentiation of primary pulmonary adenocarcinoma from metastatic adenocarcinoma is sometimes difficult because of their phenotypic similarities. So IHC was performed, the IHC of lung tumor: cytokeratin 20 (CK20)(-), thyroglobulin(Tg)(-), cytokeratin7(CK7)(+), thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1)(+); thyroid tumor: CK7(+), TTF-1(+), thyroglobulin (+), CK20(-). Therefore, the final diagnosis was double primary adenocarcinomas of thyroid and lung.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>FDG PET/CT has preliminary diagnostic capacity of multiple primary tumors; the final diagnosis should be adopted for specimens after tumor-specific markers IHC to obtain. Consequently, effective therapeutic approaches can be designed and conducted.</p
Phase-locking matter-wave interferometer of vortex states
Matter-wave interferometer of ultracold atoms with different linear momenta
has been extensively studied in theory and experiment. The vortex matter-wave
interferometer with different angular momenta is applicable as a quantum sensor
for measuring the rotation, interatomic interaction, geometric phase, etc. Here
we report the first experimental realization of a vortex matter-wave
interferometer by coherently transferring the optical angular momentum to an
ultracold Bose condensate. After producing a lossless interferometer with atoms
only populating the two spin states, we demonstrate that the phase difference
between the interferences in the two spin states is locked on . We also
demonstrate the robustness of this out-of-phase relation, which is independent
of the angular-momentum difference between the two interfering vortex states,
constituent of Raman optical fields and expansion of the condensate. The
experimental results agree well with the calculation from the unitary evolution
of wave packet in quantum mechanics. This work opens a new way to build a
quantum sensor and measure the atomic correlation in quantum gases.Comment: 5 figure
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