930 research outputs found
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Ontology mapping for semantically enabled applications
In this review, we provide a summary of recent progress in ontology mapping (OM) at a crucial time when biomedical research is under a deluge of an increasing amount and variety of data. This is particularly important for realising the full potential of semantically enabled or enriched applications and for meaningful insights, such as drug discovery, using machine-learning technologies. We discuss challenges and solutions for better ontology mappings, as well as how to select ontologies before their application. In addition, we describe tools and algorithms for ontology mapping, including evaluation of tool capability and quality of mappings. Finally, we outline the requirements for an ontology mapping service (OMS) and the progress being made towards implementation of such sustainable services
Semiconducting Monolayer Materials as a Tunable Platform for Excitonic Solar Cells
The recent advent of two-dimensional monolayer materials with tunable
optoelectronic properties and high carrier mobility offers renewed
opportunities for efficient, ultra-thin excitonic solar cells alternative to
those based on conjugated polymer and small molecule donors. Using
first-principles density functional theory and many-body calculations, we
demonstrate that monolayers of hexagonal BN and graphene (CBN) combined with
commonly used acceptors such as PCBM fullerene or semiconducting carbon
nanotubes can provide excitonic solar cells with tunable absorber gap,
donor-acceptor interface band alignment, and power conversion efficiency, as
well as novel device architectures. For the case of CBN-PCBM devices, we
predict the limit of power conversion efficiencies to be in the 10 - 20% range
depending on the CBN monolayer structure. Our results demonstrate the
possibility of using monolayer materials in tunable, efficient, polymer-free
thin-film solar cells in which unexplored exciton and carrier transport regimes
are at play.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Optical signature of symmetry variations and spin-valley coupling in atomically thin tungsten dichalcogenides
Motivated by the triumph and limitation of graphene for electronic
applications, atomically thin layers of group VI transition metal
dichalcogenides are attracting extensive interest as a class of graphene-like
semiconductors with a desired band-gap in the visible frequency range. The
monolayers feature a valence band spin splitting with opposite sign in the two
valleys located at corners of 1st Brillouin zone. This spin-valley coupling,
particularly pronounced in tungsten dichalcogenides, can benefit potential
spintronics and valleytronics with the important consequences of spin-valley
interplay and the suppression of spin and valley relaxations. Here we report
the first optical studies of WS2 and WSe2 monolayers and multilayers. The
efficiency of second harmonic generation shows a dramatic even-odd oscillation
with the number of layers, consistent with the presence (absence) of inversion
symmetry in even-layer (odd-layer). Photoluminescence (PL) measurements show
the crossover from an indirect band gap semiconductor at mutilayers to a
direct-gap one at monolayers. The PL spectra and first-principle calculations
consistently reveal a spin-valley coupling of 0.4 eV which suppresses
interlayer hopping and manifests as a thickness independent splitting pattern
at valence band edge near K points. This giant spin-valley coupling, together
with the valley dependent physical properties, may lead to rich possibilities
for manipulating spin and valley degrees of freedom in these atomically thin 2D
materials
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Matching disease and phenotype ontologies in the ontology alignment evaluation initiative
Background: The disease and phenotype track was designed to evaluate the relative performance of ontology matching systems that generate mappings between source ontologies. Disease and phenotype ontologies are important for applications such as data mining, data integration and knowledge management to support translational science in drug discovery and understanding the genetics of disease.
Results: Eleven systems (out of 21 OAEI participating systems) were able to cope with at least one of the tasks in the Disease and Phenotype track. AML, FCA-Map, LogMap(Bio) and PhenoMF systems produced the top results for ontology matching in comparison to consensus alignments. The results against manually curated mappings proved to be more difficult most likely because these mapping sets comprised mostly subsumption relationships rather than equivalence. Manual assessment of unique equivalence mappings showed that AML, LogMap(Bio) and PhenoMF systems have the highest precision results.
Conclusions: Four systems gave the highest performance for matching disease and phenotype ontologies. These systems coped well with the detection of equivalence matches, but struggled to detect semantic similarity. This deserves more attention in the future development of ontology matching systems. The findings of this evaluation show that such systems could help to automate equivalence matching in the workflow of curators, who maintain ontology mapping services in numerous domains such as disease and phenotype
Electrically Tunable Excitonic Light Emitting Diodes based on Monolayer WSe2 p-n Junctions
Light-emitting diodes are of importance for lighting, displays, optical
interconnects, logic and sensors. Hence the development of new systems that
allow improvements in their efficiency, spectral properties, compactness and
integrability could have significant ramifications. Monolayer transition metal
dichalcogenides have recently emerged as interesting candidates for
optoelectronic applications due to their unique optical properties.
Electroluminescence has already been observed from monolayer MoS2 devices.
However, the electroluminescence efficiency was low and the linewidth broad due
both to the poor optical quality of MoS2 and to ineffective contacts. Here, we
report electroluminescence from lateral p-n junctions in monolayer WSe2 induced
electrostatically using a thin boron nitride support as a dielectric layer with
multiple metal gates beneath. This structure allows effective injection of
electrons and holes, and combined with the high optical quality of WSe2 it
yields bright electroluminescence with 1000 times smaller injection current and
10 times smaller linewidth than in MoS2. Furthermore, by increasing the
injection bias we can tune the electroluminescence between regimes of
impurity-bound, charged, and neutral excitons. This system has the required
ingredients for new kinds of optoelectronic devices such as spin- and
valley-polarized light-emitting diodes, on-chip lasers, and two-dimensional
electro-optic modulators.Comment: 13 pages main text with 4 figures + 4 pages upplemental material
Silicon Mie Resonators for Highly Directional Light Emission from monolayer MoS2
Controlling light emission from quantum emitters has important applications
ranging from solid-state lighting and displays to nanoscale single-photon
sources. Optical antennas have emerged as promising tools to achieve such
control right at the location of the emitter, without the need for bulky,
external optics. Semiconductor nanoantennas are particularly practical for this
purpose because simple geometries, such as wires and spheres, support multiple,
degenerate optical resonances. Here, we start by modifying Mie scattering
theory developed for plane wave illumination to describe scattering of dipole
emission. We then use this theory and experiments to demonstrate several
pathways to achieve control over the directionality, polarization state, and
spectral emission that rely on a coherent coupling of an emitting dipole to
optical resonances of a Si nanowire. A forward-to-backward ratio of 20 was
demonstrated for the electric dipole emission at 680 nm from a monolayer MoS2
by optically coupling it to a Si nanowire
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
Graphene plasmonics
Two rich and vibrant fields of investigation, graphene physics and
plasmonics, strongly overlap. Not only does graphene possess intrinsic plasmons
that are tunable and adjustable, but a combination of graphene with noble-metal
nanostructures promises a variety of exciting applications for conventional
plasmonics. The versatility of graphene means that graphene-based plasmonics
may enable the manufacture of novel optical devices working in different
frequency ranges, from terahertz to the visible, with extremely high speed, low
driving voltage, low power consumption and compact sizes. Here we review the
field emerging at the intersection of graphene physics and plasmonics.Comment: Review article; 12 pages, 6 figures, 99 references (final version
available only at publisher's web site
Switching Mechanism in Single-Layer Molybdenum Disulfide Transistors: an Insight into Current Flow across Schottky Barriers
In this article, we study the properties of metal contacts to single-layer
molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) crystals, revealing the nature of switching
mechanism in MoS2 transistors. On investigating transistor behavior as contact
length changes, we find that the contact resistivity for metal/MoS2 junctions
is defined by contact area instead of contact width. The minimum gate dependent
transfer length is ~0.63 {\mu}m in the on-state for metal (Ti) contacted
single-layer MoS2. These results reveal that MoS2 transistors are Schottky
barrier transistors, where the on/off states are switched by the tuning the
Schottky barriers at contacts. The effective barrier heights for source and
drain barriers are primarily controlled by gate and drain biases, respectively.
We discuss the drain induced barrier narrowing effect for short channel
devices, which may reduce the influence of large contact resistance for MoS2
Schottky barrier transistors at the channel length scaling limit.Comment: ACS Nano, ASAP (2013
Direct exfoliation and dispersion of two-dimensional materials in pure water via temperature control
The high-volume synthesis of two-dimensional (2D) materials in the form of platelets is desirable for various applications. While water is considered an ideal dispersion medium, due to its abundance and low cost, the hydrophobicity of platelet surfaces has prohibited its widespread use. Here we exfoliate 2D materials directly in pure water without using any chemicals or surfactants. In order to exfoliate and disperse the materials in water, we elevate the temperature of the sonication bath, and introduce energy via the dissipation of sonic waves. Storage stability greater than one month is achieved through the maintenance of high temperatures, and through atomic and molecular level simulations, we further discover that good solubility in water is maintained due to the presence of platelet surface charges as a result of edge functionalization or intrinsic polarity. Finally, we demonstrate inkjet printing on hard and flexible substrates as a potential application of water-dispersed 2D materials.close1
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