392 research outputs found
Low temperature fullerene encapsulation in single wall carbon nanotubes: synthesis of N@C@SWCNT
High filling of single wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) with C and
C fullerenes in solvent is reported at temperatures as low as 69
C. A 2 hour long refluxing in n-hexane of the mixture of the fullerene
and SWCNT results in a high yield of C,C@SWCNT, fullerene peapod,
material. The peapod filling is characterized by TEM, Raman and electron energy
loss spectroscopy and X-ray scattering. We applied the method to synthesize the
temperature sensitive (N@C:C)@SWCNT as proved by electron spin
resonance spectroscopy. The solvent prepared peapod samples can be transformed
to double walled nanotubes enabling a high yield and industrially scalable
production of DWCNT
Low energy high angular resolution neutral atom detection by means of micro-shuttering techniques: the BepiColombo SERENA/ELENA sensor
The neutral sensor ELENA (Emitted Low-Energy Neutral Atoms) for the ESA
cornerstone BepiColombo mission to Mercury (in the SERENA instrument package)
is a new kind of low energetic neutral atoms instrument, mostly devoted to
sputtering emission from planetary surfaces, from E ~20 eV up to E~5 keV,
within 1-D (2x76 deg). ELENA is a Time-of-Flight (TOF) system, based on
oscillating shutter (operated at frequencies up to a 100 kHz) and mechanical
gratings: the incoming neutral particles directly impinge upon the entrance
with a definite timing (START) and arrive to a STOP detector after a flight
path. After a brief dissertation on the achievable scientific objectives, this
paper describes the instrument, with the new design techniques approached for
the neutral particles identification and the nano-techniques used for designing
and manufacturing the nano-structure shuttering core of the ELENA sensor. The
expected count-rates, based on the Hermean environment features, are shortly
presented and discussed. Such design technologies could be fruitfully exported
to different applications for planetary exploration.Comment: 11 page
Molecular Inventories and Chemical Evolution of Low-mass Protostellar Envelopes
This paper presents the first substantial study of the chemistry of the
envelopes around a sample of 18 low-mass pre- and protostellar objects for
which physical properties have previously been derived from radiative transfer
modeling of their dust continuum emission. Single-dish line observations of 24
transitions of 9 molecular species (not counting isotopes) including HCO+,
N2H+, CS, SO, SO2, HCN, HNC, HC3N and CN are reported. The line intensities are
used to constrain the molecular abundances by comparison to Monte Carlo
radiative transfer modeling of the line strengths. An empirical chemical
network is constructed on the basis of correlations between the abundances of
various species. For example, it is seen that the HCO+ and CO abundances are
linearly correlated, both increasing with decreasing envelope mass. Species
such as CS, SO and HCN show no trend with envelope mass. In particular no trend
is seen between ``evolutionary stage'' of the objects and the abundances of the
main sulfur- or nitrogen-containing species. Among the nitrogen-bearing species
abundances of CN, HNC and HC3N are found to be closely correlated, which can be
understood from considerations of the chemical network. The CS/SO abundance
ratio is found to correlate with the abundances of CN and HC3N, which may
reflect a dependence on the atomic carbon abundance. An anti-correlation is
found between the deuteration of HCO+ and HCN, reflecting different temperature
dependences for gas-phase deuteration mechanisms. The abundances are compared
to other protostellar environments. In particular it is found that the
abundances in the cold outer envelope of the previously studied class 0
protostar IRAS16293-2422 are in good agreement with the average abundances for
the presented sample of class 0 objects.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 29 pages, 23 figures. Abstract
abridge
Electronic transport, structure, and energetics of endohedral Gd@C82 metallofullerenes
Electronic structure and transport properties of the fullerene C and
the metallofullerene Gd@C are investigated with density functional
theory and the Landauer-Buttiker formalism. The ground state structure of
Gd@C is found to have the Gd atom below the C-C bond on the C
molecular axis of C. Insertion of Gd into C deforms the carbon
chain in the vicinity of the Gd atoms. Significant overlap of the electron
distribution is found between Gd and the C cage, with the transferred Gd
electron density localized mainly on the nearest carbon atoms. This charge
localization reduces some of the conducting channels for the transport, causing
a reduction in the conductivity of the Gd@C species relative to the
empty C molecule. The electron transport across the metallofullerene is
found to be insensitive to the spin state of the Gd atom.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, submitted Nano Let
Prediction of Anisotropic Single-Dirac-Cones in BiSb Thin Films
The electronic band structures of BiSb thin films can be
varied as a function of temperature, pressure, stoichiometry, film thickness
and growth orientation. We here show how different anisotropic
single-Dirac-cones can be constructed in a BiSb thin film for
different applications or research purposes. For predicting anisotropic
single-Dirac-cones, we have developed an iterative-two-dimensional-two-band
model to get a consistent inverse-effective-mass-tensor and band-gap, which can
be used in a general two-dimensional system that has a non-parabolic dispersion
relation as in a BiSb thin film system
Rapid enhancer remodeling and transcription factor repurposing enable high magnitude gene induction upon acute activation of NK cells
During development, innate lymphocytes acquire defined sets of primed enhancers facilitating the rapid immune response. In this issue of Immunity, Sciumè et al. delineate the epigenetic changes occurring during acute NK cell activation, revealing the formation of de novo enhancers and repurposing of both lineage-determining and signal-regulated transcription factors
Electro-Fluidic Shuttle Memory Device: Classical Molecular Dynamics Study
We investigated the internal dynamics of several electro-fluid shuttle memory
elements, consisting of several media encapsulated in C640 nanocapsule. The
systems proposed were (i) bucky shuttle memory devices (C36+ @C420 and C60+
@C420), (ii) encapsulated-ions shuttle memory devices ((13+)@C420, (3+ -C60-2+
)@C640 and (5+ -C60)@C640) and (iii) endo-fullerenes shuttle memory devices
((K+ @C60- F-@C60)@C640). Energetics and operating responses of several
electro-fluidic shuttle memory devices, such as transitions between the two
states of the C640 capsule, were examined by classical molecular dynamics
simulations of the shuttle media in the C640 capsule under the external force
fields. The operating force fields for the stable operations of the shuttle
memory device were investigated
- …