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Electronic and spintronic transport in germanium nanostructures
textThe digital information processing system has benefited tremendously from the invention and development of complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits. The relentless scaling of the physical dimensions of transistors has been consistently delivering improved overall circuit density and performance every technology generation. However, the continuation of this trend is in question for silicon-based transistors when quantum mechanical tunneling becomes more relevant; further scaling in feature sizes can lead to increased leakage current and power dissipation. Numerous research efforts have been implemented to address these scaling challenges, either by aiming to increase the performance at the transistor level or to introduce new functionalities at the circuit level. In the first approach, novel materials and device structures are explored to improve the performance of CMOS transistors, including the use of high-mobility materials (e.g. III-V compounds and germanium) as the channel, and multi-gate structures. On the other hand, the overall circuit capability could be increased if other state variables are exploited in the electronic devices, such as the electron spin degree of freedom (e.g. spintronics). Here we explore the potential of germanium nanowires in both CMOS and beyond-CMOS applications, studying the electronic and spintronic transport in this material system. Germanium is an attractive replacement to silicon as the channel material in CMOS technology, thanks to its lighter effective electron and hole mass. The nanowire structures, directly synthesized using chemical vapor deposition, provide a natural platform for multi-gate structures in which the electrostatic control of the gate is enhanced. We present the realization and scaling properties of germanium-silicon-germanium core-shell nanowire n-type, [omega]-gate field-effect transistors (FETs). By studying the channel length dependence of NW FET characteristics, we conclude that the intrinsic channel resistance is the main limiting factor of the drive current of Ge NW n-FETs. Utilizing the electron spins in semiconductor devices can in principle enhance overall circuit performance and functionalities. Electrical injection of spin-polarized electrons into a semiconductor, large spin diffusion length, and an integration friendly platform are desirable ingredients for spin based-devices. Here we demonstrate lateral spin injection and detection in Ge NWs, by using ferromagnetic metal contacts and tunnel barriers for contact resistance engineering. We map out the contact resistance window for which spin transport is observed, manifestly showing the conductivity matching required for spin injection.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Effect of Earth's rotation on the trajectories of free-fall bodies in Equivalence Principle Experiment
Owing to Earth's rotation a free-fall body would move in an elliptical orbit
rather than along a straight line forward to the center of the Earth. In this
paper on the basis of the theory for spin-spin coupling between macroscopic
rotating bodies we study violation of the equivalence principle from
long-distance free-fall experiments by means of a rotating ball and a
non-rotating sell. For the free-fall time of 40 seconds, the difference between
the orbits of the two free-fall bodies is of the order of 10^{-9}cm which could
be detected by a SQUID magnetometer owing to such a magnetometer can be used to
measure displacements as small as 10^{-13} centimeters.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Scaling Properties of Ge-SixGe1-x Core-Shell Nanowire Field Effect Transistors
We demonstrate the fabrication of high-performance Ge-SixGe1-x core-shell
nanowire field-effect transistors with highly doped source and drain, and
systematically investigate their scaling properties. Highly doped source and
drain regions are realized by low energy boron implantation, which enables
efficient carrier injection with a contact resistance much lower than the
nanowire resistance. We extract key device parameters, such as intrinsic
channel resistance, carrier mobility, effective channel length, and external
contact resistance, as well as benchmark the device switching speed and ON/OFF
current ratio.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices (in press
Transcription Expression and Clinical Significance of Dishevelled-3 mRNA and δ-Catenin mRNA in Pleural Effusions from Patients with Lung Cancer
Objective. To evaluate diagnostic utility of Dishevelled-3 (DVL-3) mRNA and δ-catenin mRNA expression in pleural effusions of patients with lung cancer. Methods. DVL-3 mRNA and δ-catenin mRNA levels were assessed by performing RT-PCR on pleural effusion specimens from patients with lung cancer (n = 75) and with lung benign disease (n = 51). Results. The expressions of DVL-3 mRNA and δ-catenin mRNA were significantly higher in malignant than in benign lung disease (P < 0.01) and were obviously higher than cytology in adenocarcinoma (P < 0.01). In single use, DVL-3 mRNA had the highest specificity (94.1%) and PPV (95.7%), whereas δ-catenin mRNA had the highest sensitivity (92.0%) and NPV (88.5%). When combinations of markers were evaluated together, DVL-3 mRNA and δ-catenin mRNA gave a high-diagnostic performance: sensitivity of 100.0%, NPV of 100.0%, and accuracy of 96.0%, respectively. Conclusion. As molecular markers of detecting pleural micrometastasis, DVL-3 mRNA and δ-catenin mRNA are helpful to diagnose the cancer cells in pleural effusions of patients with lung cancer
Plasmoid ejection and secondary current sheet generation from magnetic reconnection in laser-plasma interaction
Reconnection of the self-generated magnetic fields in laser-plasma
interaction was first investigated experimentally by Nilson {\it et al.} [Phys.
Rev. Lett. 97, 255001 (2006)] by shining two laser pulses a distance apart on a
solid target layer. An elongated current sheet (CS) was observed in the plasma
between the two laser spots. In order to more closely model magnetotail
reconnection, here two side-by-side thin target layers, instead of a single
one, are used. It is found that at one end of the elongated CS a fan-like
electron outflow region including three well-collimated electron jets appears.
The ( MeV) tail of the jet energy distribution exhibits a power-law
scaling. The enhanced electron acceleration is attributed to the intense
inductive electric field in the narrow electron dominated reconnection region,
as well as additional acceleration as they are trapped inside the rapidly
moving plasmoid formed in and ejected from the CS. The ejection also induces a
secondary CS
Towards the Properties of Long Gamma-Ray Burst Progenitors with Swift Data
We investigate the properties of both the prompt and X-ray afterglows of
gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) in the burst frame with a sample of 33 Swift GRBs.
Assuming that the steep decay segment in the canonical X-ray afterglow
lightcurves is due to the curvature effect, we fit the lightcurves with a
broken power-law to derive the zero time of the last emission epoch of the
prompt emission (t1) and the beginning as well as the end time of the shallow
decay segment (t2 and t3).We show that both the isotropic peak gamma-ray
luminosity and gamma-ray energy are correlated with the isotropic X-ray energy
of the shallow decay phase and the isotropic X-ray luminosity at t2. We infer
the properties of the progenitor stars based on a model proposed by Kumar et
al. who suggested that both the prompt gamma-rays and the X-ray afterglows are
due to the accretions of different layers of materials of the GRB progenitor
star by a central black hole (BH). We find that most of the derived masses of
the core layers are 0.1-5 solar mass with a radius of 10^8-10^10 cm. The
rotation parameter is correlated with the burst duration, being consistent with
the expectation of collapsar models. The estimated radii and the masses of the
fall-back materials for the envelope layers are 10^10-10^12 cm and 10^-3~1
solar mass, respectively. The average accretion rates in the shallow decay
phase are correlated with those in the prompt gamma-ray phase, but they are
much lower. The derived radii of the envelope are smaller than the photospheric
radii of Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars. It is interesting that the assembled mass
density profile for the bursts in our sample is also well consistent with the
simulation for a pre-supernova star with 25 solar mass.Comment: 12 pages in MNRAS two-column style, 8 figures, 3 tables, accepted for
publication in MNRA
Engineering 3D bicontinuous hierarchically macro-mesoporous LiFePO<sub>4</sub>/C nanocomposite for lithium storage with high rate capability and long cycle stability
A highly crystalline three dimensional (3D) bicontinuous hierarchically macro-mesoporous LiFePO(4)/C nanocomposite constructed by nanoparticles in the range of 50~100 nm via a rapid microwave assisted solvothermal process followed by carbon coating have been synthesized as cathode material for high performance lithium-ion batteries. The abundant 3D macropores allow better penetration of electrolyte to promote Li(+) diffusion, the mesopores provide more electrochemical reaction sites and the carbon layers outside LiFePO(4) nanoparticles increase the electrical conductivity, thus ultimately facilitating reverse reaction of Fe(3+) to Fe(2+) and alleviating electrode polarization. In addition, the particle size in nanoscale can provide short diffusion lengths for the Li(+) intercalation-deintercalation. As a result, the 3D macro-mesoporous nanosized LiFePO(4)/C electrode exhibits excellent rate capability (129.1 mA h/g at 2 C; 110.9 mA h/g at 10 C) and cycling stability (87.2% capacity retention at 2 C after 1000 cycles, 76.3% at 5 C after 500 cycles and 87.8% at 10 C after 500 cycles, respectively), which are much better than many reported LiFePO(4)/C structures. Our demonstration here offers the opportunity to develop nanoscaled hierarchically porous LiFePO(4)/C structures for high performance lithium-ion batteries through microwave assisted solvothermal method
A Comprehensive Study of Gamma-Ray Burst Optical Emission: I. Flares and Early Shallow Decay Component
Well-sampled optical lightcurves of 146 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are compiled
from the literature. By empirical fitting we identify eight possible emission
components and summarize the results in a "synthetic" lightcurve. Both optical
flare and early shallow-decay components are likely related to long-term
central engine activities. We focus on their statistical properties in this
paper. Twenty-four optical flares are obtained from 19 GRBs. The isotropic
R-band energy is smaller than 1% of . The relation between
isotropic luminosities of the flares and gamma-rays follows . Later flares tend to be
wider and dimmer, i.e., and . The detection
probability of the optical flares is much smaller than that of X-ray flares. An
optical shallow decay segment is observed in 39 GRBs. The relation between the
break time and break luminosity is a power-law, with an index of , similar to that derived from X-ray flares. The X-ray and optical breaks
are usually chromatic, but a tentative correlation is found. We suggest that
similar to the prompt optical emission that tracks -rays, the optical
flares are also related to the erratic behavior of the central engine. The
shallow decay component is likely related to a long-lasting spinning-down
central engine or piling up of flare materials onto the blastwave. Mixing of
different emission components may be the reason of the diverse chromatic
afterglow behaviors.Comment: 43 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
Meta-Analysis Results on the Association Between TP53 Codon 72 Polymorphism With the Susceptibility to Oral Cancer
Objectives: TP53 is an important tumor suppressor gene to maintain genomic integrity, and its mutations increase the susceptibility to oral carcinoma. Previous published studies have reported the relation of TP53 codon 72 polymorphism with the risk of oral carcinoma, but the results remain controversial and inconclusive.Methods: We therefore utilized meta-analysis based on a comprehensive search in PubMed, EMBASE, and Google of Scholar databases up to August 19, 2017.Results: Total 3,525 cases and 3,712 controls from 21 case-control studies were selected. We found no significant association between TP53 codon 72 polymorphism and oral carcinoma susceptibility in all genetic contrast models, including subgroup analysis based on control source and ethnicity. Furthermore, TP53 codon 72 polymorphism was not significant associated with oral carcinoma susceptibility in tobacco or alcohol use, and HPV infection status. Our results were confirmed by sensitivity analysis and no publication bias was found.Conclusions: Taken together, our data indicate that TP53 codon 72 polymorphism is not associated with the susceptibility to oral carcinoma
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