169 research outputs found
Growth and characterization of heteroepitaxial La-substituted BaSnO films on SrTiO (001) and SmScO (110) substrates
Heteroepitaxial growth of BaSnO (BSO) and BaLaSnO (x = 7
%) (LBSO) thin films on different perovskite single crystal (SrTiO (001)
and SmScO (110)) substrates has been achieved by Pulsed Laser Deposition
(PLD) under optimized deposition conditions. X-ray diffraction measurements
indicate that the films on either of these substrates are relaxed due to the
large mismatch and present a high degree of crystallinity with narrow rocking
curves and smooth surface morphology while analytical quantification by proton
induced x-ray emission (PIXE) confirms the stoichiometric La transfer from a
polyphasic target, producing films with La contents above the bulk solubility
limit. The films show degenerate semiconducting behavior on both substrates,
with the observed room temperature resistivities, Hall mobilities and carrier
concentrations of 4.4 , 10.11 , and 1.38
on SmScO and 7.8 , 5.8 , and 1.36 on SrTiO ruling out any extrinsic
contribution from the substrate. The superior electrical properties observed on
the SmScO3 substrate are attributed to reduction in dislocation density from
the lower lattice mismatch.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, supplementary informations 2 figure
Luminescence of Cu2ZnSnS4 polycrystals described by the fluctuating potential model
The growth of Cu 2ZnSnS4 (CZTS) polycrystals from solid state reaction over a range of compositions, including the regions which produce the highest efficiency photovoltaic devices, is reported. X-ray measurements confirm the growth of crystalline CZTS. Temperature and intensity dependent photoluminescence (PL) measurements show an increase in the energy of the main CZTS luminescence peak with both increasing laser power and increasing temperature. Analysis of the PL peak positions and intensity behavior demonstrates that the results are consistent with the model of fluctuating potentials. This confirms that the polycrystals are heavily doped with the presence of a large concentration of intrinsic defects. The behavior of the main luminescence feature is shown to be qualitatively similar over a broad range of compositions although the nature and amount of secondary phases vary significantly. The implications for thin-film photovoltaic devices are discussed
The Big Society and the Conjunction of Crises: Justifying Welfare Reform and Undermining Social Housing
The idea of the “Big Society” can be seen as culmination of a long-standing debate about the regulation of welfare. Situating the concept within governance theory, the article considers how the UK coalition government has justified a radical restructuring of welfare provision, and considers its implications for housing provision. Although drawing on earlier modernization processes, the article contends that the genesis for welfare reform was based on an analysis that the government was forced to respond to a unique conjunction of crises: in morality, the state, ideology and economics. The government has therefore embarked upon a programme, which has served to undermine the legitimacy of the social housing sector (most notably in England), with detrimental consequences for residents and raising significant dilemmas for those working in the housing sector
Beyond critique: the value of co-production in realising just cities?
This paper contributes to the burgeoning literature on the role of academic–practice relationships in contributing to sustainable urban development. We argue that co-production offers a potential pathway for academics to work with policy-makers in moving towards the realisation of more just cities. The paper starts from the position that there is an essential need for, but limit to, critique alone in contributing to the possibility of urban change. Moving towards a shared critique as a basis for future action is an important precondition for realising more just cities, adding weight to the voices arguing for alternative urban visions. These arguments are advanced through a study conducted by academic researchers and policy-makers in the Greater Manchester Low Carbon Hub. The paper outlines a process for working with existing urban institutions within institutional constraints to develop affirmative actions with the aim of longer term transformations. A key contribution is then the identification of eight markers for assessing progress towards the realisation of more just cities
Co-production: towards a utopian approach
This article outlines how co-production might be understood as a utopian method, which both attends to and works against dominant inequalities. It suggests that it might be positioned ‘within, against, and beyond’ current configurations of power in academia and society more broadly. It develops this argument by drawing on recent research funded through the UK’s Connected Communities programme, led by the Arts and Humanities Research Council; and by attending to arguments from the field of Utopian Studies. It explores particular issues of power and control within the field of co-production, acknowledging that neoliberalism both constrains and co-opts such practice; and explores methodological and infrastructural issues such that its utopian potential might be realised
Enhanced optoelectronic quality of perovskite thin films with hypophosphorous acid for planar heterojunction solar cells
Solution-processed metal halide perovskite semiconductors, such as CH3NH3PbI3, have
exhibited remarkable performance in solar cells, despite having non-negligible density of
defect states. A likely candidate is halide vacancies within the perovskite crystals, or the
presence of metallic lead, both generated due to the imbalanced I/Pb stoichiometry which
could evolve during crystallization. Herein, we show that the addition of hypophosphorous
acid (HPA) in the precursor solution can significantly improve the film quality, both
electronically and topologically, and enhance the photoluminescence intensity, which leads to
more efficient and reproducible photovoltaic devices. We demonstrate that the HPA can
reduce the oxidized I2 back into I�, and our results indicate that this facilitates an improved
stoichiometry in the perovskite crystal and a reduced density of metallic lead
ERK1/2 signalling protects against apoptosis following endoplasmic reticulum stress but cannot provide long-term protection against BAX/BAK-independent cell death
Disruption of protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) causes ER stress. Activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR) acts to restore protein homeostasis or, if ER stress is severe or persistent, drive apoptosis, which is thought to proceed through the cell intrinsic, mitochondrial pathway. Indeed, cells that lack the key executioner proteins BAX and BAK are protected from ER stress-induced apoptosis. Here we show that chronic ER stress causes the progressive inhibition of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK1/2) signalling pathway. This is causally related to ER stress since reactivation of ERK1/2 can protect cells from ER stress-induced apoptosis whilst ERK1/2 pathway inhibition sensitises cells to ER stress. Furthermore, cancer cell lines harbouring constitutively active BRAFV600E are addicted to ERK1/2 signalling for protection against ER stress-induced cell death. ERK1/2 signalling normally represses the pro-death proteins BIM, BMF and PUMA and it has been proposed that ER stress induces BIM-dependent cell death. We found no evidence that ER stress increased the expression of these proteins; furthermore, BIM was not required for ER stress-induced death. Rather, ER stress caused the PERK-dependent inhibition of cap-dependent mRNA translation and the progressive loss of pro-survival proteins including BCL2, BCLXL and MCL1. Despite these observations, neither ERK1/2 activation nor loss of BAX/BAK could confer long-term clonogenic survival to cells exposed to ER stress. Thus, ER stress induces cell death by at least two biochemically and genetically distinct pathways: a classical BAX/BAK-dependent apoptotic response that can be inhibited by ERK1/2 signalling and an alternative ERK1/2- and BAX/BAK-independent cell death pathway
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