170 research outputs found
Revealing the role of molecular rigidity on the fragility evolution of glass-forming liquids
If quenched fast enough, a liquid is able to avoid crystallization and will
remain in a metastable supercooled state down to the glass transition, with an
important increase in viscosity upon further cooling. There are important
differences in the way liquids relax as they approach the glass transition,
rapid or slow variation in dynamic quantities under moderate temperature
changes, and a simple means to quantify such variations is provided by the
concept of "fragility". Here, we report molecular dynamics simulations of a
typical network-forming glass, Ge-Se, and find that the relaxation behaviour of
the supercooled liquid is strongly correlated to the variation of rigidity with
temperature and the spatial distribution of the corresponding topological
constraints which, ultimately connect to fragility minima. This permits
extending the fragility concept to aspects of topology/rigidity, and to the
degree of homogeneity of the atomic-sale interactions for a variety of
structural glasses.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
Understanding amorphous phase-change materials from the viewpoint of Maxwell rigidity
Phase-change materials (PCMs) are the subject of considerable interest
because they have been recognized as potential active layers for
next-generation non-volatile memory devices, known as Phase Change Random
Access Memories (PRAMs). By analyzing First Principles Molecular Dynamics
simulations we develop a new method for the enumeration of mechanical
constraints in the amorphous phase and show that the phase diagram of the most
popular system (Ge-Sb-Te) can be split into two compositional regions having a
well-defined mechanical character: a Tellurium rich flexible phase, and a
stressed rigid phase that encompasses the known PCMs. This sound atomic scale
insight should open new avenues for the understanding of PCMs and other complex
amorphous materials from the viewpoint of rigidity.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures in EP
Structural changes during the switching transition of chalcogenide selector devices
Ovonic threshold switches are a favored choice for chalcogenide-based amorphous (a-) GeSex selector devices used in cross-point arrays of nonvolatile memories. Previous models of their nonlinear high-field conduction proposed a largely electronic-only switching mechanism, within a fixed density of electronic states. Here, we use a density functional molecular-dynamics supercell calculation to show that the high-current excited state configuration of a-GeSex has structural changes such as additional Ge-Ge bonds and overcoordinated Ge sites, giving lower effective mass, more delocalized conduction states, and a lower ON resistance.We acknowledge the funding from the EC H2020 project Phase change switch
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Electronic and Sturctural Transitions in Dense Liquid Sodium
At ambient conditions, the light alkali metals are free-electron like crystals with a highly symmetric structure. However, they were shown recently to exhibit unexpected complexity under pressure. It was predicted from theory and later confirmed by experiment that Li and Na undergo a sequence of symmetry breaking transitions driven by a Peierls mechanism. Most recently, measurements of the Na melting curve revealed an unprecedented and still unexplained drop in the melting temperature from 1000 K at 30 GPa to room temperature at 120 GPa. Here we report results from ab initio calculations that explain the unusual melting behavior in dense Na. We show that molten Na undergoes a series of pressure-induced structural and electronic transitions analogous to that observed in solid Na, but commencing at much lower pressure in the presence of disorder. With increasing pressure, liquid Na initially evolves by assuming a more compact local structure. However, a transition to a lower coordinated liquid takes place at a pressure around 65 GPa, accompanied by a threefold drop in electrical conductivity. A pseudogap opening at the Fermi level, an effect previously not observed in a liquid metal, drives this transition. Remarkably, the lower coordinated liquid emerges at rather elevated temperatures and above the stability region of a closed packed free electron-like metal. We predict that similar exotic behavior is possible in other materials as well
Discovering electron transfer driven changes in chemical bonding in lead chalcogenides (PbX, where X = Te, Se, S, O)
Understanding the nature of chemical bonding in solids is crucial to
comprehend the physical and chemical properties of a given compound. To explore
changes in chemical bonding in lead chalcogenides (PbX, where X = Te, Se, S,
O), a combination of property-, bond breaking- and quantum-mechanical bonding
descriptors have been applied. The outcome of our explorations reveals an
electron transfer driven transition from metavalent bonding in PbX (X = Te, Se,
S) to iono-covalent bonding in beta-PbO. Metavalent bonding is characterized by
adjacent atoms being held together by sharing about a single electron and small
electron transfer (ET). The transition from metavalent to iono-covalent bonding
manifests itself in clear changes in these quantum-mechanical descriptors (ES
and ET), as well as in property-based descriptors (i.e. Born effective charge,
dielectric function, effective coordination number (ECON) and mode-specific
Grueneisen parameter, and in bond breaking descriptors (PME). Metavalent
bonding collapses, if significant charge localization occurs at the ion cores
(ET) and/or in the interatomic region (ES). Predominantly changing the degree
of electron transfer opens possibilities to tailor materials properties such as
the chemical bond and electronic polarizability, optical band gap and optical
interband transitions characterized by the imaginary part of the dielectric
function. Hence, the insights gained from this study highlight the
technological relevance of the concept of metavalent bonding and its potential
for materials design
First-principles study of the effect of charge on the stability of a diamond nanocluster surface
Effects of net charge on the stability of the diamond nanocluster are investigated using the first-principles pseudopotential method with the local density approximation. We find that the charged nanocluster favors the diamond phase over the reconstruction into a fullerene-like structure. Occupying the dangling bond orbitals in the outermost surface, the excess charge can stabilize the bare diamond surface and destabilize the C-H bond on the hydrogenated surface. In combination with recent experimental results, our calculations suggest that negative charging could promote the nucleation and further growth of low-pressure diamond.open8
Explorative data analysis of MCL reveals gene expression networks implicated in survival and prognosis supported by explorative CGH analysis
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is an incurable B cell lymphoma and accounts for 6% of all non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. On the genetic level, MCL is characterized by the hallmark translocation t(11;14) that is present in most cases with few exceptions. Both gene expression and comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) data vary considerably between patients with implications for their prognosis.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We compare patients over and below the median of survival. Exploratory principal component analysis of gene expression data showed that the second principal component correlates well with patient survival. Explorative analysis of CGH data shows the same correlation.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>On chromosome 7 and 9 specific genes and bands are delineated which improve prognosis prediction independent of the previously described proliferation signature. We identify a compact survival predictor of seven genes for MCL patients. After extensive re-annotation using GEPAT, we established protein networks correlating with prognosis. Well known genes (CDC2, CCND1) and further proliferation markers (WEE1, CDC25, aurora kinases, BUB1, PCNA, E2F1) form a tight interaction network, but also non-proliferative genes (SOCS1, TUBA1B CEBPB) are shown to be associated with prognosis. Furthermore we show that aggressive MCL implicates a gene network shift to higher expressed genes in late cell cycle states and refine the set of non-proliferative genes implicated with bad prognosis in MCL.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The results from explorative data analysis of gene expression and CGH data are complementary to each other. Including further tests such as Wilcoxon rank test we point both to proliferative and non-proliferative gene networks implicated in inferior prognosis of MCL and identify suitable markers both in gene expression and CGH data.</p
Minichromosome maintenance protein 6, a proliferation marker superior to Ki-67 and independent predictor of survival in patients with mantle cell lymphoma
Minichromosome maintenance protein 6 (MCM6) is one of six proteins of the MCM family which are involved in the initiation of DNA replication and thus represent a marker of proliferating cells. Since the level of cell proliferation is the most valuable predictor of survival in mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), we investigated lymph node biopsy specimens from 70 patients immunohistochemically with a monoclonal antibody against MCM6. The percentage of MCM6 expressing lymphoma cells ranged from 12.0 to 95.6%, with a mean of 61.0%, and was significantly higher than the percentage of Ki-67-positive cells (P<0.0001). Surprisingly, the ratio of MCM6-positive cells to Ki-67-positive cells was higher than in normal stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells, indicating a cell early G1-phase arrest in MCL. A high MCM6 expression level of more than 75% positive cells was associated with a significantly shorter overall survival time (16 months) compared to MCL with a low MCM6 expression level of less than 25% (no median reached, P<0.0001). Multivariate analysis revealed MCM6 to be an independent predictor of survival that is superior to the international prognostic factor and the Ki-67 index. Therefore, aside from gene expression profiling, immunohistochemical detection of MCM6 seems to be the most promising marker for predicting the outcome in MCL
Serum screening with Down's syndrome markers to predict pre-eclampsia and small for gestational age: Systematic review and meta-analysis
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Reliable antenatal identification of pre-eclampsia and small for gestational age is crucial to judicious allocation of monitoring resources and use of preventative treatment with the prospect of improving maternal/perinatal outcome. The purpose of this systematic review was to determine the accuracy of five serum analytes used in Down's serum screening for prediction of pre-eclampsia and/or small for gestational age.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The data sources included Medline, Embase, Cochrane library, Medion (inception to February 2007), hand searching of relevant journals, reference list checking of included articles, contact with experts. Two reviewers independently selected the articles in which the accuracy of an analyte used in Downs's serum screening before the 25<sup>th </sup>gestational week was associated with the occurrence of pre-eclampsia and/or small for gestational age without language restrictions. Two authors independently extracted data on study characteristics, quality and results.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Five serum screening markers were evaluated. 44 studies, testing 169,637 pregnant women (4376 pre-eclampsia cases) and 86 studies, testing 382,005 women (20,339 fetal growth restriction cases) met the selection criteria. The results showed low predictive accuracy overall. For pre-eclampsia the best predictor was inhibin A>2.79MoM positive likelihood ratio 19.52 (8.33,45.79) and negative likelihood ratio 0.30 (0.13,0.68) (single study). For small for gestational age it was AFP>2.0MoM to predict birth weight < 10<sup>th </sup>centile with birth < 37 weeks positive likelihood ratio 27.96 (8.02,97.48) and negative likelihood ratio 0.78 (0.55,1.11) (single study). A potential clinical application using aspirin as a treatment is given as an example.</p> <p>There were methodological and reporting limitations in the included studies thus studies were heterogeneous giving pooled results with wide confidence intervals.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Down's serum screening analytes have low predictive accuracy for pre-eclampsia and small for gestational age. They may be a useful means of risk assessment or of use in prediction when combined with other tests.</p
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