292 research outputs found

    Teaching in groups in grade III.

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University N.B.:Pages 28, 144 and 145 are missing from original thesis

    Physics and chemistry of hydrogen in the vacancies of semiconductors

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    Hydrogen is well known to cause electrical passivation of lattice vacancies in semiconductors. This effect follows from the chemical passivation of the dangling bonds. Recently it was found that H in the carbon vacancy of SiC forms a three-center bond with two silicon neighbors in the vacancy, and gives rise to a new electrically active state. In this paper we examine hydrogen in the anion vacancies of BN, AlN, and GaN. We find that three-center bonding of H is quite common and follows clear trends in terms of the second-neighbor distance in the lattice, the typical (two-center) hydrogen-host-atom bond length, the electronegativity difference between host atoms and hydrogen, as well as the charge state of the vacancy. Three-center bonding limits the number of H atoms a nitrogen vacancy can capture to two, and prevents electric passivation in GaAs as well

    Electric fields and valence band offsets at strained [111] heterojunctions

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    [111] ordered common atom strained layer superlattices (in particular the common anion GaSb/InSb system and the common cation InAs/InSb system) are investigated using the ab initio full potential linearized augmented plane wave (FLAPW) method. We have focused our attention on the potential line-up at the two sides of the homopolar isovalent heterojunctions considered, and in particular on its dependence on the strain conditions and on the strain induced electric fields. We propose a procedure to locate the interface plane where the band alignment could be evaluated; furthermore, we suggest that the polarization charges, due to piezoelectric effects, are approximately confined to a narrow region close to the interface and do not affect the potential discontinuity. We find that the interface contribution to the valence band offset is substantially unaffected by strain conditions, whereas the total band line-up is highly tunable, as a function of the strain conditions. Finally, we compare our results with those obtained for [001] heterojunctions.Comment: 18 pages, Latex-file, to appear in Phys.Rev.

    Inner-shell photodetachment from Niāˆ’ : A giant Feshbach resonance

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    Citation: Dumitriu, I., Bilodeau, R. C., Gorczyca, T. W., Walter, C. W., Gibson, N. D., Rolles, D., ā€¦ Berrah, N. (2017). Inner-shell photodetachment from \mathrm{N}{\mathrm{i}}^{\ensuremath{-}}: A giant Feshbach resonance. Physical Review A, 96(2), 023405. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.96.023405Inner-shell photodetachment from Niāˆ’([Ar]3d94s2) leading to Ni+,Ni2+, and Ni3+ ion production was studied near and above the 3p excitation region, in the 60ā€“90 eV photon energy range, using a merged ion-photon beam technique. The absolute photodetachment cross section of Niāˆ’ leading to Ni+ ion production was measured. The 3pā†’3d photoexcitation in Niāˆ’ gives rise to a giant Feshbach resonance. In the near-threshold region, a Fano profile, modified by a Wigner s-wave (l=0) threshold law, accurately fits the Niāˆ’ single-photodetachment cross section. A lower-order R-matrix calculation shows overall agreement with essential features of the experimental data, confirming the nature of the strong, asymmetric Fano profile of the giant 3pā†’3d photoexcitation-autodetachment resonance in Niāˆ’

    A theoretical model for template-free synthesis of long DNA sequence

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    This theoretical scheme is intended to formulate a potential method for high fidelity synthesis of Nucleic Acid molecules towards a few thousand bases using an enzyme system. Terminal Deoxyribonucleotidyl Transferase, which adds a nucleotide to the 3ā€²OH end of a Nucleic Acid molecule, may be used in combination with a controlled method for nucleotide addition and degradation, to synthesize a predefined Nucleic Acid sequence. A pH control system is suggested to regulate the sequential activity switching of different enzymes in the synthetic scheme. Current practice of synthetic biology is cumbersome, expensive and often error prone owing to the dependence on the ligation of short oligonucleotides to fabricate functional genetic parts. The projected scheme is likely to render synthetic genomics appreciably convenient and economic by providing longer DNA molecules to start with

    Over-expression of Adenine Nucleotide Translocase 1 (ANT1) Induces Apoptosis and Tumor Regression in vivo

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    Background: Adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT) is located in the inner mitochondrial membrane and catalyzes the exchange of mitochondrial ATP for cytosolic ADP. ANT has been known to be a major component of the permeability transition pore complex of mitochondria and contributes to mitochondria-mediated apoptosis. Human ANT has four isoforms (ANT1, ANT2, ANT3, and ANT4), and the expression of the ANT isoforms is variable depending on the tissue and cell type, developmental stage, and proliferation status. Among the isoforms, ANT1 is highly expressed in terminally-differentiated tissues, but expressed in low levels in proliferating cells, such as cancer cells. In particular, over-expression of ANT1 induces apoptosis in cultured tumor cells. Methods: We applied an ANT1 gene transfer approach to induce apoptosis and to evaluate the anti-tumor effect of ANT1 in a nude mouse model. Results: We demonstrated that ANT1 transfection induced apoptosis of MDA-MB-231 cells, inactivated NF-ĪŗB activity, and increased Bax expression. ANT1-inducing apoptosis was accompanied by the disruption of mitochondrial membrane potential, cytochrome c release and the activation of caspases-9 and -3. Moreover, ANT1 transfection significantly suppressed tumor growth in vivo. Conclusion: Our results suggest that ANT1 transfection may be a useful therapeutic modality for the treatment of cancer
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