121 research outputs found
Magnetic Field Induced Instabilities in Localised Two-Dimensional Electron Systems
We report density dependent instabilities in the localised regime of
mesoscopic two-dimensional electron systems (2DES) with intermediate strength
of background disorder. They are manifested by strong resistance oscillations
induced by high perpendicular magnetic fields B_{\perp}. While the amplitude of
the oscillations is strongly enhanced with increasing B_{\perp}, their position
in density remains unaffected. The observation is accompanied by an unusual
behaviour of the temperature dependence of resistance and activation energies.
We suggest the interplay between a strongly interacting electron phase and the
background disorder as a possible explanation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Low-temperature collapse of electron localization in two dimensions
We report direct experimental evidence that the insulating phase of a disordered, yet strongly interacting two-dimensional electron system becomes unstable at low temperatures. As the temperature decreases, a transition from insulating to metal-like transport behavior is observed, which persists even when the resistivity of the system greatly exceeds the quantum of resistivity h/e(2). The results have been achieved by measuring transport on a mesoscopic length scale while systematically varying the strength of disorder
Local transport in a disorder-stabilized correlated insulating phase
We report the experimental realization of a correlated insulating phase in 2D
GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures at low electron densities in a limited window of
background disorder. This has been achieved at mesoscopic length scales, where
the insulating phase is characterized by a universal hopping transport
mechanism. Transport in this regime is determined only by the average electron
separation, independent of the topology of background disorder. We have
discussed this observation in terms of a pinned electron solid ground state,
stabilized by mutual interplay of disorder and Coulomb interaction.Comment: 4+delta pages, 4 figures, To appear in the Physical Review B (Rapid
Comm
Distribution of preoperative angle alpha and angle kappa values in patients undergoing multifocal refractive lens surgery based on a positive contact lens test
Purpose: To assess the preoperative objective angle alpha and angle kappa measurements of patients deciding to undergo multifocal refractive lens surgery based on a subjective positive multifocal contact lens test (MCLT).
Methods: Retrospective, consecutive case series. Alpha and kappa angles were measured using the iTrace aberrometer. All patients also performed a 1-week MCLT. Only patients with a positive MCLT underwent surgery. Visual outcome (UCVA) was obtained in the 1-year follow-up. We assessed the preoperative distribution of angle values within MCLT positive and negative patient groups.
Results: Two hundred seventeen eyes (111 patients) were included. Mean age was 56.4 years (SD 5.6) and 46.9% were female. In 71 eyes (38 patients), MCLT was positive. Of them, 12 eyes (17%) had an angle alpha and angle kappa ≥ 0.5mm. Of 146 eyes (73 patients) who refrained from surgery due to a negative MCLT, 71 eyes (48.6%) had both angles small (<0.5mm). In the 1-year follow-up, UCVA improved by 0.68 logMAR (SD 0.51; p<0.001) from baseline. Eyes with both small angle alpha and kappa sizes improved by 0.78 logMAR (SD 0.56), as did eyes with high (≥0.5mm) angle sizes (0.82 logMAR (SD 0.53). UCVA of eyes (n=24) with high alpha but low kappa sizes improved less (-0.31 logMAR (SD 0.13; p=0.019)).
Conclusion: Four out of five patients with a positive MCLT also had correspondingly small angle values. One-half of patients with low preoperative angle values refrained from surgery due to a negative MCLT result. One-year visual acuity improvement was substantial and independent from angle sizes.
Keywords: Angle alpha; Angle kappa; Decision-making; Multifocal intraocular lens; Refractive lens surgery
Colossal non-saturating linear magnetoresistance in two-dimensional electron systems at a GaAs/AlGaAs heterointerface
Engineering devices with a large electrical response to magnetic field is of
fundamental importance for a range of applications such as magnetic field
sensing and magnetic read-heads. We show that a colossal non-saturating linear
magnetoresistance (NLMR) arises in two-dimensional electron systems hosted in a
GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure in the strongly insulating regime. When operated at
high source-drain bias, the magnetoresistance of our devices increases almost
linearly with magnetic field reaching nearly 10,000% at 8 Tesla, thus
surpassing many known non-magnetic materials that exhibit giant NLMR. The
temperature dependence and mobility analysis indicate that the NLMR has a
purely classical origin, driven by nanoscale inhomogeneities. A large NLMR
combined with small device dimensions makes these systems a new and attractive
candidate for on-chip magnetic field sensing.Comment: Main text contains 5 pages, 4 figures; supplementary information is
include
Evidence of Novel Quasiparticles in a Strongly Interacting Two-Dimensional Electron System: Giant Thermopower and Metallic Behaviour
We report thermopower () and electrical resistivity ()
measurements in low-density (10 m), mesoscopic two-dimensional
electron systems (2DESs) in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures at sub-Kelvin
temperatures. We observe at temperatures 0.7 K a linearly growing
as a function of temperature indicating metal-like behaviour. Interestingly
this metallicity is not Drude-like, showing several unusual characteristics: i)
the magnitude of exceeds the Mott prediction valid for non-interacting
metallic 2DESs at similar carrier densities by over two orders of magnitude;
and ii) in this regime is two orders of magnitude greater than
the quantum of resistance and shows very little temperature-dependence.
We provide evidence suggesting that these observations arise due to the
formation of novel quasiparticles in the 2DES that are not electron-like.
Finally, and show an intriguing decoupling in their
density-dependence, the latter showing striking oscillations and even sign
changes that are completely absent in the resistivity.Comment: QFS2012 Conference proceedings, Journal of Low Temperature Physics,
accepted (figure and discussion added upon referee suggestions
The Nature of Electronic States in Atomically Thin MoS2 Field-Effect Transistors
We present low temperature electrical transport experiments in five field
effect transistor devices consisting of monolayer, bilayer and trilayer MoS2
films, mechanically exfoliated onto Si/SiO2 substrate. Our experiments reveal
that the electronic states in all films are localized well up to the room
temperature over the experimentally accessible range of gate voltage. This
manifests in two dimensional (2D) variable range hopping (VRH) at high
temperatures, while below \sim 30 K the conductivity displays oscillatory
structures in gate voltage arising from resonant tunneling at the localized
sites. From the correlation energy (T0) of VRH and gate voltage dependence of
conductivity, we suggest that Coulomb potential from trapped charges in the
substrate are the dominant source of disorder in MoS2 field effect devices,
which leads to carrier localization as well.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; ACS Nano (2011
Multiple use of preservative-free single dose unit dexamethasone 0.1% eye drops is safe within 24 hours
Background
Unpreserved single-dose unit (SDU) eye drops are commonly used to avoid benzalkonium chloride-related toxicity. Although intended for single use, many patients report off-label repeated use of SDUs over a prolonged period. We investigated whether repeated use of dexamethasone 0.1% SDUs in the same patient increases the bacterial contamination rate.
Methods
We prospectively enrolled patients scheduled for inpatient corneal and glaucoma surgery receiving dexamethasone 0.1% SDU four times per day from the same vial. To assess contamination rates, one drop from the vial was cultured immediately after opening the SDU (t0), 10 hours later after four drop applications (t10) and 24 hours after opening without further drop applications (t24). Conjunctival swabs were taken before and after drop application. Contamination rate was assessed with a standard clinical culturing protocol without introducing a positive control.
Results
110 eyes of 109 patients were evaluated. Drops collected immediately after opening the SDU (t0) were contaminated in 9/110 cultures (8.1%). At t10, 13/110 cultures were contaminated (11.8%; p=0.267) and 11/110 at t24 (10.0%; t24 vs t0; p=1.00). In 5 of 21 cases of contaminated drops at t10 and/or t24, the same isolates were cultured from the initial conjunctival swab and the SDU. In three cases, the same bacterial species was found in consecutive samples.
Conclusion
The contamination rate of the SDU did not increase after multiple use within 24 hours. Contamination from fingertip flora was more likely than from ocular surface flora. Reuse of dexamethasone 0.1% SDU in the same patient within 24 hours appears to be safe
Investigating determinants of yawning in the domestic (Equus caballus) and Przewalski (Equus ferus przewalskii) horses
International audienceYawning is rare in herbivores which therefore may be an interesting group to disentangle the potential function(s) of yawning behaviour. Horses provide the opportunity to compare not only animals living in different conditions but also wild versus domestic species. Here, we tested three hypotheses by observing both domestic and Przewalski horses living in semi-natural conditions: (i) that domestic horses may show an elevated rate of yawning as a result of the domestication process (or as a result of life conditions), (ii) that individuals experiencing a higher level of social stress would yawn more than individuals with lower social stress and (iii) that males would yawn more often than females. The study involved 19 Przewalski horses (PHs) and 16 domestic horses (DHs) of different breeds living in large outdoor enclosures. The results showed that there was no difference between the PH and DH in yawning frequency (YF). PHs exhibited much higher levels of social interactions than DHs. There was a positive correlation between yawning frequency and aggressive behaviours in PHs, especially males, supporting the idea that yawning may be associated with more excitatory/stressful social situations. A correlation was found between yawning frequency and affiliative behaviours in DHs, which supports the potential relationship between yawning and social context. Finally, the entire males, but not castrated males, showed much higher levels of yawning than females in both species. The intensity (rather than the valence) of the interaction may be important in triggering yawning, which could therefore be a displacement activity that helps reduce tension
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