411 research outputs found
Phonon dispersion and electron-phonon interaction in peanut-shaped fullerene polymers
We reveal that the periodic radius modulation peculiar to one-dimensional
(1D) peanut-shaped fullerene (C) polymers exerts a strong influence on
their low-frequency phonon states and their interactions with mobile electrons.
The continuum approximation is employed to show the zone-folding of phonon
dispersion curves, which leads to fast relaxation of a radial breathing mode in
the 1D C polymers. We also formulate the electron-phonon interaction
along the deformation potential theory, demonstrating that only a few set of
electron and phonon modes yields a significant magnitude of the interaction
relevant to the low-temperature physics of the system. The latter finding gives
an important implication for the possible Peierls instability of the C
polymers suggested in the earlier experiment.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Plate Wave Propagation in Transversely Isotropic Materials
In this work, the modes of plate wave propagation in a fiber reinforced com posite (assumed to be transversely isotropic) were investigated. The waves were modeled as harmonic plane waves propagating in the plane of an infinite plate whose bounding sur faces were assumed to be stress free. A numerical analysis procedure was developed to calculate the dispersion relationships for plate waves propagating in arbitrary directions in the plate. Particle displacements and stress distributions were calculated for several im portant propagation modes. Possible applications to nondestructive testing of composites are discussed.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline
Vibrational spectra of C60C8H8 and C70C8H8 in the rotor-stator and polymer phases
C60-C8H8 and C70-C8H8 are prototypes of rotor-stator cocrystals. We present
infrared and Raman spectra of these materials and show how the rotor-stator
nature is reflected in their vibrational properties. We measured the
vibrational spectra of the polymer phases poly(C60C8H8) and poly(C70C8H8)
resulting from a solid state reaction occurring on heating. Based on the
spectra we propose a connection pattern for the fullerene in poly(C60C8H8),
where the symmetry of the C60 is D2h. On illuminating the C60-C8H8 cocrystal
with green or blue light a photochemical reaction was observed leading to a
similar product to that of the thermal polymerization.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2nd
version: minor changes in wording, accepted version by journa
Dialkyldithiophosphate Acids (HDDPs) as Effective Lubricants of Sol–Gel Titania Coatings in Technical Dry Friction Conditions
The goal of this study was the investigation of
the effectiveness of dialkyldithiophosphate acids (HDDPs)
films in improving the tribological properties of thin, sol–
gel derived titania coatings. Amorphous, anatase, and rutile
titania coatings were obtained using sol–gel dip–coating
deposition after treatment at 100, 500, and 1,000 C,
respectively. Titania coatings were then modified from the
liquid phase by HDDPs acids having dodecyl-(C12), tetradecyl-(C14),
and hexadecyl-(C16) alkyl chains deposited by
dip–coating (DC) and Langmuir–Blodgett (LB) methods.
The influence of the deposition procedure, the length of the
HDDPs alkyl chain and the type of titania substrate on the
surface morphology and tribological properties were studied.
It was found, using wetting contact angle measurements,
that these modifications of titania coatings decrease
the surface free energy and increase its hydrophobicity.
The surface topography imaged by Atomic force microscopy
(AFM), exhibit island-like or agglomerate features for
the DC deposition method, while smooth topographies
were observed for LB depositions. Tribological tests were
conducted by means of a microtribometer operating in the
normal load range 30–100 mN. An enhancement of tribological
properties was observed upon modification, as
compared to unmodified titania
Rough Surface Effect on Meissner Diamagnetism in Normal-layer of N-S Proximity-Contact System
Rough surface effect on the Meissner diamagnetic current in the normal layer
of proximity contact N-S bi-layer is investigated in the clean limit. The
diamagnetic current and the screening length are calculated by use of
quasi-classical Green's function. We show that the surface roughness has a
sizable effect, even when a normal layer width is large compared with the
coherence length . The effect is as large as that
of the impurity scattering and also as that of the finite reflection at the N-S
interface.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. To be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. Vol.71-
Far-infrared study of the Jahn-Teller distorted C60 monoanion in C60 tetraphenylphosphoniumiodide
We report high-resolution far-infrared transmission measurements on C(60)-tetraphenylphosphoniumiodide as a function of temperature. In the spectral region investigated (20-650 cm(-1)), we assign intramolecular modes of the C(60) monoanion and identify low-frequency combination modes. The well-known F(1u)(1) and F(1u)(2) modes are split into doublers at room temperature, indicating a D(5d) or D(3d) distorted ball. This result is consistent with a dynamic Jahn-Teller effect in the strong-coupling limit or with a static distortion stabilized by low-symmetry perturbations. The appearance of silent odd modes is in keeping with symmetry reduction of the hall, while activation of even modes is attributed to interband electron-phonon coupling and orientational disorder in the fulleride salt. Temperature dependences reveal a weak transition in the region 125-150 K in both C(60)(-) and counterion modes, indicating a bulk, rather than solely molecular, effect. Anomalous softening (with decreasing temperature) in several modes may correlate with the radial character of those vibrations. [S0163-1829(98)03245-7]
Overscreening Diamagnetism in Cylindrical Superconductor-Normal Metal-Heterostructures
We study the linear diamagnetic response of a superconducting cylinder coated
by a normal-metal layer due to the proximity effect using the clean limit
quasiclassical Eilenberger equations. We compare the results for the
susceptibility with those for a planar geometry. Interestingly, for
the cylinder exhibits a stronger overscreening of the magnetic field, i.e., at
the interface to the superconductor it can be less than (-1/2) of the applied
field. Even for , the diamagnetism can be increased as compared to the
planar case, viz. the magnetic susceptibility becomes smaller than
-3/4. This behaviour can be explained by an intriguing spatial oscillation of
the magnetic field in the normal layer
Far-infrared vibrational properties of high-pressure-high-temperature C60 polymers and the C60 dimer
We report high-resolution far-infrared transmission measurements of the 2 + 2 cycloaddition C-60 dimer and two-dimensional rhombohedral and one-dimensional orthorhombic high-pressure high-temperature C60 polymers. In the spectral region investigated(20-650 cm(-1)), we see no low-energy interball modes, but symmetry breaking of the linked C-60 balls is evident in the complex spectrum of intramolecular modes. Experimental features suggest large splittings or frequency shifts of some IhC60-derived modes that are activated by symmetry reduction, implying that the balls are strongly distorted in these structures. We have calculated the vibrations of all three systems by first-principles quantum molecular dynamics and use them to assign the predominant IhC60 symmetries of observed modes. Pur calculations show unprecedentedly large downshifts of T-1u(2)-derived modes and extremely large splittings of other modes, both of which are consistent with the experimental spectra. For the rhombohedral and orthorhombic polymers, the T-1u(2)-derived mode that is polarized along the bonding direction is calculated to downshift below any T-1u(1)-derived modes. We also identify a previously unassigned feature near 610 cm(-1) in all three systems as a widely split or shifted mode derived from various silent IhC60 vibrations, confirming a strong perturbation model for these linked fullerene structures
Pfmrk, a MO15-related protein kinase from Plasmodium falciparum. Gene cloning, sequence, stage-specific expression and chromosome localization.
Cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) play a central role in the regulation of the eukaryotic cell cycle. A novel gene encoding a Cdk-like protein, Pfmrk, has been isolated from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The gene has no introns and comprises an open reading frame encoding a protein of 324 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 38 kDa. Database searches revealed a striking similarity to the Cdk subfamily with the highest similarity to human MO15 (Cdk7). The overall sequence of Pfmrk shares 62% similarity and 46% identity with human MO15, in comparison to the 49-58% similarity and 34-43% identity with other human Cdks. Pfmrk contains two unique inserts: one consisting of 5 amino acids just before the cyclin-binding motif and the other composed of 13 amino acids within the T-loop equivalent region. Southern blots of genomic DNA digests and chromosomal separations showed that Pfmrk is a single-copy gene conserved between several parasite strains and is located on chromosome 10. A 2500-nucleotide transcript of this gene is expressed predominantly in the sexual blood stages (gametocytes), suggesting that Pfmrk may be involved in sexual stage development
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