566 research outputs found
Single-Particle Diffusion-Coefficient on Surfaces with Ehrlich-Schwoebel-Barriers
The diffusion coefficient of single particles in the presence of
Ehrlich-Schwoebel barriers (ESB)is considered. An exact expression is given for
the diffusion coefficient on linear chains with random arrangements of ESB. The
results are extended to surfaces having ESB with uniform extension in one or
both directions. All results are verified by Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX2e, 6 eps-figure
General technique of calculating drift velocity and diffusion coefficient in arbitrary periodic systems
We develop a practical method of computing the stationary drift velocity V
and the diffusion coefficient D of a particle (or a few particles) in a
periodic system with arbitrary transition rates. We solve this problem both in
a physically relevant continuous-time approach as well as for models with
discrete-time kinetics, which are often used in computer simulations. We show
that both approaches yield the same value of the drift, but the difference
between the diffusion coefficients obtained in each of them equals V*V/2.
Generalization to spaces of arbitrary dimension and several applications of the
method are also presented.Comment: 12 pages + 2 figures, RevTeX. Submitted to J. Phys. A: Math. Ge
Absence of self-averaging in the complex admittance for transport through random media
A random walk model in a one dimensional disordered medium with an
oscillatory input current is presented as a generic model of boundary
perturbation methods to investigate properties of a transport process in a
disordered medium. It is rigorously shown that an admittance which is equal to
the Fourier-Laplace transform of the first-passage time distribution is
non-self-averaging when the disorder is strong. The low frequency behavior of
the disorder-averaged admittance, where , does not coincide with the low frequency behavior of the admittance for any
sample, . It implies that the Cole-Cole plot of
appears at a different position from the Cole-Cole plots of of any
sample. These results are confirmed by Monte-Carlo simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, published in Phys. Rev.
Effects of cariprazine on extracellular levels of glutamate, GABA, dopamine, noradrenaline and serotonin in the medial prefrontal cortex in the rat phencyclidine model of schizophrenia studied by microdialysis and simultaneous recordings of locomotor activity
Aberrant glutamatergic, dopaminergic, and GABAergic neurotransmission has been implicated in schizophrenia. Cariprazine reverses the behavioral effects observed in the rat phencyclidine (PCP)-induced model of schizophrenia; however, little is known about its in vivo neurochemistry. The study aims to compare the effects of cariprazine and aripiprazole on PCP-induced changes in the extracellular levels of glutamate, dopamine, serotonin, noradrenaline, and GABA in the rat medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), and on locomotor activation. Microdialysis was performed in awake rats with probes placed into the mPFC. Rats (n = 7/group) received vehicle (saline), cariprazine (0.05, 0.2, or 0.8 mg/kg), or aripiprazole (3 or 20 mg/kg) via gavage. After 60 min, 5 mg/kg PCP was administered intraperitoneally (i.p.). Samples were taken before drug administration, during pretreatment, and after PCP injection. Locomotor activity recording and microdialysis sampling occurred simultaneously. PCP treatment increased extracellular levels of all the neurotransmitters tested except GABA, for which there were no significant changes. Cariprazine and aripiprazole dose-dependently inhibited the PCP-induced increases of tested neurotransmitters. Overall effects were significant for higher cariprazine doses and both aripiprazole doses for glutamate and noradrenaline, for higher cariprazine doses and 20 mg/kg aripiprazole for dopamine, and for 0.8 mg/kg cariprazine and 20 mg/kg aripiprazole for serotonin and locomotor activity. Both cariprazine and aripiprazole dose-dependently attenuated PCP-induced hyperlocomotion and acute increases in glutamate, dopamine, noradrenaline, and serotonin levels in the mPFC; cariprazine was approximately 5-fold more potent than aripiprazole
A Dynamical Mean Field Theory for the Study of Surface Diffusion Constants
We present a combined analytical and numerical approach based on the Mori
projection operator formalism and Monte Carlo simulations to study surface
diffusion within the lattice-gas model. In the present theory, the average jump
rate and the susceptibility factor appearing are evaluated through Monte Carlo
simulations, while the memory functions are approximated by the known results
for a Langmuir gas model. This leads to a dynamical mean field theory (DMF) for
collective diffusion, while approximate correlation effects beyond DMF are
included for tracer diffusion. We apply our formalism to three very different
strongly interacting systems and compare the results of the new approach with
those of usual Monte Carlo simulations. We find that the combined approach
works very well for collective diffusion, whereas for tracer diffusion the
influence of interactions on the memory effects is more prominent.Comment: 13 pages LaTeX and 6 PostScript figures, style files included. To
appear in Surface Science Letter
Alfalfa Insect Management Studies 1971-77
Three tests in southwestern Nebraska during 1971 and 1972 evaluated insecticides against the army cutworm. Adult alfalfa weevils did not damage new second growth alfalfa in a small plot study during a 3-year period (1973-1975) at Gothenburg, NE. However, excellent control of larval alfalfa weevils was obtained. These results indicated a need to establish economic threshold levels for the alfalfa weevil in Nebraska to prevent unnecessary use of insecticides. Four tests to control the alfalfa weevil with registered insecticides verified the efficacy of these materials under Nebraska conditions. A series of tests conducted during 1975 at the Mead Field Laboratory were designed to evaluate plant resistance, cultural practices and insecticides. The use of alfalfa varieties with resistance to various insect pests of alfalfa appeared to be an ideal control method. During 1975-1977, a test was conducted each year at the Mead Field Laboratory to evaluate new experimental insecticides against the alfalfa weevil and other pest insects of alfalfa grown for forage. A number of the new insecticides showed promise against the alfalfa weevil and the pea aphid
Continuum theory of vacancy-mediated diffusion
We present and solve a continuum theory of vacancy-mediated diffusion (as
evidenced, for example, in the vacancy driven motion of tracers in crystals).
Results are obtained for all spatial dimensions, and reveal the strongly
non-gaussian nature of the tracer fluctuations. In integer dimensions, our
results are in complete agreement with those from previous exact lattice
calculations. We also extend our model to describe the vacancy-driven
fluctuations of a slaved flux line.Comment: 25 Latex pages, subm. to Physical Review
Alfalfa Insect Management Studies 1971-77
Three tests in southwestern Nebraska during 1971 and 1972 evaluated insecticides against the army cutworm. Adult alfalfa weevils did not damage new second growth alfalfa in a small plot study during a 3-year period (1973-1975) at Gothenburg, NE. However, excellent control of larval alfalfa weevils was obtained. These results indicated a need to establish economic threshold levels for the alfalfa weevil in Nebraska to prevent unnecessary use of insecticides. Four tests to control the alfalfa weevil with registered insecticides verified the efficacy of these materials under Nebraska conditions. A series of tests conducted during 1975 at the Mead Field Laboratory were designed to evaluate plant resistance, cultural practices and insecticides. The use of alfalfa varieties with resistance to various insect pests of alfalfa appeared to be an ideal control method. During 1975-1977, a test was conducted each year at the Mead Field Laboratory to evaluate new experimental insecticides against the alfalfa weevil and other pest insects of alfalfa grown for forage. A number of the new insecticides showed promise against the alfalfa weevil and the pea aphid
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