100 research outputs found
Microdistribution of oxygen in silicon and its effects on electronic properties
The effects of interstitial oxygen on the electrical characteristics of Czochralski-grown silicon crystals were investigated for the first time on a microscale. It was found that the generation of thermal donors is not a direct function of the oxygen concentration. It was further found that the minority carrier life-time decreases with increasing oxygen concentration, on a microscale in as-grown crystals. It was thus shown, again for the first time, that oxygen in as grown crystals is not electronically inert as generally believed. Preannealing at 1200 C commonly employed in device fabrication, was found to suppress the donor generation at 450 C and to decrease the deep level concentrations
Statistical mechanics of double-stranded semi-flexible polymers
We study the statistical mechanics of double-stranded semi-flexible polymers
using both analytical techniques and simulation. We find a transition at some
finite temperature, from a type of short range order to a fundamentally
different sort of short range order. In the high temperature regime, the
2-point correlation functions of the object are identical to worm-like chains,
while in the low temperature regime they are different due to a twist
structure. In the low temperature phase, the polymers develop a kink-rod
structure which could clarify some recent puzzling experiments on actin.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; final version for publication - slight
modifications to text and figure
Optical absorption in boron clusters B and B : A first principles configuration interaction approach
The linear optical absorption spectra in neutral boron cluster B and
cationic B are calculated using a first principles correlated
electron approach. The geometries of several low-lying isomers of these
clusters were optimized at the coupled-cluster singles doubles (CCSD) level of
theory. With these optimized ground-state geometries, excited states of
different isomers were computed using the singles configuration-interaction
(SCI) approach. The many body wavefunctions of various excited states have been
analysed and the nature of optical excitation involved are found to be of
collective, plasmonic type.Comment: 22 pages, 38 figures. An invited article submitted to European
Physical Journal D. This work was presented in the International Symposium on
Small Particles and Inorganic Clusters - XVI, held in Leuven, Belgiu
Binding of molecules to DNA and other semiflexible polymers
A theory is presented for the binding of small molecules such as surfactants
to semiflexible polymers. The persistence length is assumed to be large
compared to the monomer size but much smaller than the total chain length. Such
polymers (e.g. DNA) represent an intermediate case between flexible polymers
and stiff, rod-like ones, whose association with small molecules was previously
studied. The chains are not flexible enough to actively participate in the
self-assembly, yet their fluctuations induce long-range attractive interactions
between bound molecules. In cases where the binding significantly affects the
local chain stiffness, those interactions lead to a very sharp, cooperative
association. This scenario is of relevance to the association of DNA with
surfactants and compact proteins such as RecA. External tension exerted on the
chain is found to significantly modify the binding by suppressing the
fluctuation-induced interaction.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, RevTex, the published versio
Statistical mechanics of semiflexible ribbon polymers
The statistical mechanics of a ribbon polymer made up of two semiflexible
chains is studied using both analytical techniques and simulation. The system
is found to have a crossover transition at some finite temperature, from a type
of short range order to a fundamentally different sort of short range order. In
the high temperature regime, the 2-point correlation functions of the object
are identical to worm-like chains, while in the low temperature regime they are
different due to a twist structure. The crossover happens when the persistence
length of individual strands becomes comparable to the thickness of the ribbon.
In the low temperature regime, the ribbon is observed to have a novel
``kink-rod'' structure with a mutual exclusion of twist and bend in contrast to
smooth worm-like chain behaviour. This is due to its anisotropic rigidity and
corresponds to an {\it infinitely} strong twist-bend coupling. The
double-stranded polymer is also studied in a confined geometry. It is shown
that when the polymer is restricted in a particular direction to a size less
than the bare persistence length of the individual strands, it develops zigzag
conformations which are indicated by an oscillatory tangent-tangent correlation
function in the direction of confinement. Increasing the separation of the
confining plates leads to a crossover to the free behaviour, which takes place
at separations close to the bare persistence length. These results are expected
to be relevant for experiments which involve complexation of two or more stiff
or semiflexible polymers.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures. PRE (in press
Union Eagle: then and now
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