49 research outputs found
On the effect of heterovalent substitutions in ruthenocuprates
We discuss the properties of superconducting derivatives of the RuSr2GdCu2O8
(1212-type) ruthenocuprate, for which heterovalent doping has been achieved
through partial substitution of Cu ions into the RuO2 planes
(Ru1-xSr2GdCu2+xO8-d, 0<x<0.75, Tcmax=72 K for x=0.3-0.4) and Ce ions into the
Gd sites (RuSr2Gd1-yCeyCu2O8, 0<y<0.1). The measurements of XANES, thermopower,
and magnetization under external pressure reveal an underdoped character of all
compounds. Muon spin rotation experiments indicate the presence of magnetic
order at low temperatures (Tm=14-2 K for x=0.1-0.4). Properties of these two
series lead us to the qualitative phase diagram for differently doped 1212-type
ruthenocuprates. The difference in temperature of magnetic ordering found for
superconducting and non-superconducting RuSr2GdCu2O8 is discussed in the
context of the properties of substituted compounds. The high pressure oxygen
conditions required for synthesis of Ru1-xSr2RECu2+xO8-d, have been extended to
synthesis of a Ru1-xSr2Eu2-yCeyCu2+xO10-d series. The Cu->Ru doping achieved in
these phases is found to decrease the temperature for magnetic ordering as well
the volume fraction of the magnetic phase.Comment: Proceedings of the 3rd Polish-US Workshop on Magnetism and
Superconductivity of Advanced Materials, July 14-19, 2002, Ladek Zdroj
(Poland) to appear in Physica
Assessment of the relationship between genotypic status of a DT-diaphorase point mutation and enzymatic activity
DT-diaphorase, a cytosolic reductase, has been implicated as an activator of chemotherapeutic prodrugs and a detoxifier of certain potentially carcinogenic xenobiotics. A common C to T nucleotide 609 substitution in DT-diaphorase cDNA has been associated with protein instability and reduced catalytic activity. The degree to which the allelic status of the substitution correlates with enzymatic activity was assessed in 45 normal human skin fibroblast strains using a PCR-RFLP assay. Included in this study was the 3437T strain, which is unique in that it is heterozygous for the polymorphism yet contains undetectable enzymatic activity. An allele-specific RT-PCR-RFLP technique attributed this phenomenon to exclusive DT-diaphorase mRNA expression from the variant allele. Overlap in activities was observed between individual strains homozygous for the wild-type allele and heterozygotes, but the former group displayed enzymatic activity that was on average 2-fold higher. Western blot analysis of the two strains in this panel that are homozygous for the variant allele revealed that they express relatively low amounts of DT-diaphorase protein, consistent with the role of the substitution in protein instability. This work confirms that genotypic status is a reliable initial estimate of DT-diaphorase activity. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
Synthesis effects on the magnetic and superconducting properties of RuSr2GdCu2O8
A systematic study on the synthesis of the Ru-1212 compound by preparing a
series of samples that were annealed at increasing temperatures and then
quenched has been performed. It results that the optimal temperature for the
annealing lies around 1060-1065 C; a further temperature increase worsens the
phase formation. Structural order is very important and the subsequent grinding
and annealing improves it. Even if from the structural point of view the
samples appear substantially similar, the physical characterization highlight
great differences both in the electrical and magnetic properties related to
intrinsic properties of the phase as well as to the connection between the
grains as inferred from the resistive and the Curie Weiss behaviour at high
temperature as well as in the visibility of ZFC anf FC magnetic signals.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures. Proc. Int. Workshop " Ruthenate and
rutheno-cuprate materials: theory and experiments", Vietri, October 2001. To
be published on LNP Series, Springer Verlag, Berlin, C. Noce, A. Vecchione,
M. Cuoco, A. Romano Eds, 200
Infrared optical properties of Pr2CuO4
The ab-plane reflectance of a Pr2CuO4 single crystal has been measured over a
wide frequency range at a variety of temperatures, and the optical properties
determined from a Kramers-Kronig analysis. Above ~ 250 K, the low frequency
conductivity increases quickly with temperature; the resistivity follows the
form e^(E_a/k_BT), where E_a ~ 0.17 eV is much less than the inferred optical
gap of ~ 1.2 eV. Transport measurements show that at low temperature the
resistivity deviates from activated behavior and follows the form
e^[(T_0/T)^1/4], indicating that the dc transport in this material is due to
variable-range hopping between localized states in the gap. The four
infrared-active Eu modes dominate the infrared optical properties. Below ~ 200
K, a striking new feature appears near the low-frequency Eu mode, and there is
additional new fine structure at high frequency. A normal coordinate analysis
has been performed and the detailed nature of the zone-center vibrations
determined. Only the low-frequency Eu mode has a significant Pr-Cu interaction.
Several possible mechanisms related to the antiferromagnetism in this material
are proposed to explain the sudden appearance of this and other new spectral
features at low temperature.Comment: 11 pages, 7 embedded EPS figures, REVTeX
Characteristic crossing point ( K) in specific-heat curves of samples RuSrGdCeCuO taken for different values of magnetic field
Magnetic properties of polycrystalline samples of
RuSr(GdCe)CuO, as-prepared (by
solid-state reaction) and annealed (12 hours at 845C) in pure oxygen
at different pressure (30, 62 and 78 atm) are presented. Specific heat and
magnetization were investigated in the temperature range 1.8--300 K with a
magnetic field up to 8 T. Specific heat, , shows a jump at the
superconducting transition (with onset at K). Below 20 K, a
Schottky-type anomaly becomes apparent in . This low-temperature anomaly
can be attributed to splitting of the ground term of paramagnetic
Gd ions by internal and external magnetic fields. It is found that
curves taken for different values of magnetic field have the same
crossing point (at K) for all samples studied. At the
same time, curves taken for different temperatures have a crossing point
at a characteristic field T. These effects can be
considered as manifestation of the crossing-point phenomenon which is supposed
to be inherent for strongly correlated electron systems.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, submitted to J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Integration of Expressed Sequence Tag Data Flanking Predicted RNA Secondary Structures Facilitates Novel Non-Coding RNA Discovery
Many computational methods have been used to predict novel non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs), but none, to our knowledge, have explicitly investigated the impact of integrating existing cDNA-based Expressed Sequence Tag (EST) data that flank structural RNA predictions. To determine whether flanking EST data can assist in microRNA (miRNA) prediction, we identified genomic sites encoding putative miRNAs by combining functional RNA predictions with flanking ESTs data in a model consistent with miRNAs undergoing cleavage during maturation. In both human and mouse genomes, we observed that the inclusion of flanking ESTs adjacent to and not overlapping predicted miRNAs significantly improved the performance of various methods of miRNA prediction, including direct high-throughput sequencing of small RNA libraries. We analyzed the expression of hundreds of miRNAs predicted to be expressed during myogenic differentiation using a customized microarray and identified several known and predicted myogenic miRNA hairpins. Our results indicate that integrating ESTs flanking structural RNA predictions improves the quality of cleaved miRNA predictions and suggest that this strategy can be used to predict other non-coding RNAs undergoing cleavage during maturation