523 research outputs found
Interlayer tunneling in counterflow experiments on the excitonic condensate in quantum Hall bilayers
The effect of tunneling on the transport properties of} quantum Hall double
layers in the regime of the excitonic condensate at total filling factor one is
studied in counterflow experiments. If the tunnel current is smaller than a
critical , tunneling is large and is effectively shorting the two layers.
For tunneling becomes negligible. Surprisingly, the transition
between the two tunneling regimes has only a minor impact on the features of
the filling-factor one state as observed in magneto-transport, but at currents
exceeding the resistance along the layers increases rapidly
Exciton Condensation and Perfect Coulomb Drag
Coulomb drag is a process whereby the repulsive interactions between
electrons in spatially separated conductors enable a current flowing in one of
the conductors to induce a voltage drop in the other. If the second conductor
is part of a closed circuit, a net current will flow in that circuit. The drag
current is typically much smaller than the drive current owing to the heavy
screening of the Coulomb interaction. There are, however, rare situations in
which strong electronic correlations exist between the two conductors. For
example, bilayer two-dimensional electron systems can support an exciton
condensate consisting of electrons in one layer tightly bound to holes in the
other. One thus expects "perfect" drag; a transport current of electrons driven
through one layer is accompanied by an equal one of holes in the other. (The
electrical currents are therefore opposite in sign.) Here we demonstrate just
this effect, taking care to ensure that the electron-hole pairs dominate the
transport and that tunneling of charge between the layers is negligible.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Exciton condensate at a total filling factor of 1 in Corbino 2D electron bilayers
Magneto-transport and drag measurements on a quasi-Corbino 2D electron
bilayer at the systems total filling factor 1 (v_tot=1) reveal a drag voltage
that is equal in magnitude to the drive voltage as soon as the two layers begin
to form the expected v_tot=1 exciton condensate. The identity of both voltages
remains present even at elevated temperatures of 0.25 K. The conductance in the
current carrying layer vanishes only in the limit of strong coupling between
the two layers and at T->0 K which suggests the presence of an excitonic
circular current
Adsorption of Toxic Metal Ions From Solution by Inactivated Cells of Larrea Tridentata Creosote Bush
Larrea tridentata (creosote bush) is a plant that grows abundantly in the desert environment. This desert plant has been found naturally growing in heavy-metal contaminated soils. Previous experiments showed that the inactivated biomass of creosote bush was able to adsorb Cu(II) ions from aqueous solutions. The copper-binding capacity of the bush biomass that grows in heavy-metal uncontaminated soils was higher than the biomass that grows in heavy-metal contaminated soils. Experiments were performed to determine the ability of creosote bush biomass (grown in heavy metal uncontaminated soils) to adsorb Pb(II), Cd(II), Zn(II), Cr(III), Cr(VI), and Ni(II) ions from aqueous solutions. Batch pH profile experiments for these metal ions showed that the metal ion binding was different for every metal tested but increased as the pH was raised from 2.0 to 6.0. The metal ion uptake by the roots, stems, and leaves was quite fast. Binding capacity experiments showed a more significant binding capacity for lead(II) and chromium(III) ions and in general, the leaves bound more metal ions than the stems and roots. A great portion of the metal ions adsorbed by the creosote’s roots, stems, and leaves was desorbed by treatment with 0.1 M HCl (up to 99% in some cases). Biomass of creosote bush may prove to be useful to remove and recover metal ions from contaminated waters
Ability of Immobilized Cyanobacteria to Remove Metal Ions From Solution and Demonstration of the Presence of Metallothionein Genes in Various Strains
Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 has the ability to grow in mass quantity under ideal conditions; such an ability provides usable biomass at a minimal effort. Using lyophilized biomass grown under normal conditions, Synechococcus was tested for its potential to bind metal ions from solution. Batch experiments have determined the optimum binding pH, time dependency, and metal binding capacities for copper(II), lead(II), nickel(II), cadmium(II), chromium(III), and chromium(VI), along with desorption of the metal bound. The biomass studied showed an affinity for five of the metal ions, with an optimum binding at pH 5. Time dependency studies showed that this cyanobacterium had rapid binding, while capacity experiments showed this cyanobacterial strain to bind 11.3 mg of copper(II) per gram of biomass, 30.4mg of lead(II) per gram of biomass, 3.2 mg of nickel(II) per gram of biomass, 7.2 mg of cadmium (II) per gram of biomass, and 5.4 mg of chromium (III) per gram of biomass. More than 98% of copper(II), lead(II), and nickel(II) metal ions were recovered, while over 50 % of cadmium(II) and chromium(III) were recovered when treated with 0.1M HCl. The biomass was immobilized in a silica polymer and tested for its binding ability under flow conditions. Using 0.1mM concentrations of the previously indicated metals, individual experimental results showed an average of 143 mg/L copper(II), 1456 mg/L lead(II), 142 mg/L nickel(II), and 529 mg/L cadmium(II) bound by the immobilized biomass. Treatment with 0.2M HCl resulted in nearly 100% recovery for both copper(II) and lead(II) from the column, 79% recovery of cadmium(II), while recovery for nickel(II) was 42%. Experiments were conducted to determine if many cycles of metal binding- stripping by the immobilized biomass were possible. Further, attempts were made to demonstrate the presence of metallothioneins in various strains of cyanobacteria which may serve as defense mechanisms against metal ion toxicity. Such proteins may be used to develop engineered strains of cyanobacteria with increased metal ion binding ability. Synechococcus can eventually be used as a source for a novel approach in using biosystems to remediate contaminants from solution and making those contaminants available to industry through an environmentally friendly biofiltration system
Binding of Silver(I) Ions by Alfalfa Biomass (Medicago Sativa): Batch PH, Time, Temperature, and Ionic Strength Studies
In this study, the use of alfalfa biomass as a cost-effective and environmentally safe technique to recover Ag(I) ions from aqueous solutions is reported. This investigation consisted of batch pH profile, time, temperature, and ionic strength dependence studies. Results showed that alfalfa biomass presented the highest adsorption of Ag(I) ions in the pH range of 7 to 9 with a maximum adsorption capacity of 27.37 mg Ag•g-1 of dry biomass, evaluated with a solution of 32.4 ppm of Ag(I). Time and temperature studies demonstrated a stable adsorption of Ag(I) ions by the biomass during the first hour of exposure, with a small decrease in adsorption after this period. Temperature experiments showed that Ag(I) adsorption decreases significantly at 50 ºC as compared to 4ºC and 24 ºC. However, the differences between 4ºC and 24ºC are small. Ionic strength experiments showed that interfering ions (Na and Ca) reduce the adsorption capacity of the biomass. Results of this investigation showed that alfalfa biomass can be effectively used in the recovery process of silver ions from aqueous solutions
GPCR-SSFE 2.0—a fragment-based molecular modeling web tool for Class A G-protein coupled receptors
G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are key players in signal transduction and
therefore a large proportion of pharmaceutical drugs target these receptors.
Structural data of GPCRs are sparse yet important for elucidating the
molecular basis of GPCR-related diseases and for performing structure-based
drug design. To ameliorate this problem, GPCR-SSFE 2.0 (http://www.ssfa-
7tmr.de/ssfe2/), an intuitive web server dedicated to providing three-
dimensional Class A GPCR homology models has been developed. The updated web
server includes 27 inactive template structures and incorporates various new
functionalities. Uniquely, it uses a fingerprint correlation scoring strategy
for identifying the optimal templates, which we demonstrate captures
structural features that sequence similarity alone is unable to do. Template
selection is carried out separately for each helix, allowing both single-
template models and fragment-based models to be built. Additionally, GPCR-SSFE
2.0 stores a comprehensive set of pre-calculated and downloadable homology
models and also incorporates interactive loop modeling using the tool SL2,
allowing knowledge-based input by the user to guide the selection process. For
visual analysis, the NGL viewer is embedded into the result pages. Finally,
blind-testing using two recently published structures shows that GPCR-SSFE 2.0
performs comparably or better than other state-of-the art GPCR modeling web
servers
Theoretical study of the absorption spectra of the sodium dimer
Absorption of radiation from the sodium dimer molecular states correlating to
Na(3s)-Na(3s) is investigated theoretically. Vibrational bound and continuum
transitions from the singlet X Sigma-g+ state to the first excited singlet A
Sigma-u+ and singlet B Pi-u states and from the triplet a Sigma-u+ state to the
first excited triplet b Sigma-g+ and triplet c Pi-g states are studied
quantum-mechanically. Theoretical and experimental data are used to
characterize the molecular properties taking advantage of knowledge recently
obtained from ab initio calculations, spectroscopy, and ultra-cold atom
collision studies. The quantum-mechanical calculations are carried out for
temperatures in the range from 500 to 3000 K and are compared with previous
calculations and measurements where available.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, revtex, eps
- …