852 research outputs found

    Catalytic hydrogenation of α,β-unsaturated carboxylic acid derivatives using copper(i)/N-heterocyclic carbene complexes

    Get PDF
    A simple and air-stable copper(I)/N-heterocyclic carbene complex enables the catalytic hydrogenation of enoates and enamides, hitherto unreactive substrates employing homogeneous copper catalysis and H2 as a terminal reducing agent. This atom economic transformation replaces commonly employed hydrosilanes and can also be carried out in an asymmetric fashion.TU Berlin, Open-Access-Mittel - 201

    Nanoscale electrical characterization of arrowhead defects in GalnP thin films grown on Ge

    Full text link
    In this work the authors present an electrical characterization of the so called arrowhead defects (ADs) in GaInP thin films grown on Ge(100) substrates misoriented by 6° toward (111). The samples have been evaluated by means of conductive atomic force microscopy (C-AFM) and Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM). It is shown that the ADs have terminating planes which are composed from two alternating subplanes inclined 12° (close to {105} plane) and 6° (close to {109}) with respect to the (100) plane. The terminating planes of the arrowhead defects possess higher conductivity compared to their surrounding. The terminating planes differ also in their electrical behavior from each other, demonstrating different values of conductivity (C-AFM) and bucking voltages (KPFM). The difference in current densities between two terminating planes was found to be ∼ 170±35 μA/m2 at −3 V, and the difference in the bucking voltages was ∼ 70 mV at 5 V of the electrical excitation signal in the lift mode. It is suggested that the distinctive electrical behavior of the ADs is caused by an ordering effect which leads in this case to the degraded electrical properties of the ADs

    Effects of polymethylmethacrylate-transfer residues on the growth of organic semiconductor molecules on chemical vapor deposited graphene

    Get PDF
    Scalably grown and transferred graphene is a highly promising material for organic electronic applications, but controlled interfacing of graphene thereby remains a key challenge. Here, we study the growth characteristics of the important organic semiconductor molecule para-hexaphenyl (6P) on chemical vapor deposited graphene that has been transferred with polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) onto oxidized Si wafer supports. A particular focus is on the influence of PMMA residual contamination, which we systematically reduce by H2 annealing prior to 6P deposition. We find that 6P grows in a flat-lying needle-type morphology, surprisingly independent of the level of PMMA residue and of graphene defects. Wrinkles in the graphene typically act as preferential nucleation centers. Residual PMMA does however limit the length of the resulting 6P needles by restricting molecular diffusion/attachment. We discuss the implications for organic device fabrication, with particular regard to contamination and defect tolerance.B.C.B acknowledges a College Research Fellowship from Hughes Hall, Cambridge. P.R.K. acknowledges the Lindemann Trust Fellowship. A.M. and G.R. acknowledge support by the Serbian MPNTR through Projects OI 171005 and III 45018. R.S.W. acknowledges a research fellowship from St. John’s College, Cambridge. S.H. acknowledges funding from EPSRC (GRAPHTED, Grant No. EP/K016636/1). We want to thank Dr. Sarah M. Skoff (Vienna University of Technology, Austria) for fruitful discussions.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final published version is available via AIP at http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/106/10/10.1063/1.4913948

    Self-assembly of quantum dots: effect of neighbor islands on the wetting in coherent Stranski-Krastanov growth

    Full text link
    The wetting of the homogeneously strained wetting layer by dislocation-free three-dimensional islands belonging to an array has been studied. The array has been simulated as a chain of islands in 1+1 dimensions. It is found that the wetting depends on the density of the array, the size distribution and the shape of the neighbor islands. Implications for the self-assembly of quantum dots grown in the coherent Stranski-Krastanov mode are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, accepted version, minor change

    Trajectories of long-term exposure to anticholinergic and sedative drugs: A latent class growth analysis

    Get PDF
    Introduction: A variety of drugs, which are frequently prescribed to older people, have anticholinergic and sedative effects whereby they may impair cognitive and physical function. Although substantial inter-individual variation in anticholinergic and sedative exposure has been documented, little is known about subpopulations with distinct trajectories of exposure. Methods: Data from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA), an ongoing Dutch population-based cohort study, collected over 20 years (1992-2012) at seven occasions, were analyzed. On each occasion, cumulative anticholinergic and sedative exposure was quantified with the Drug Burden Index, a linear additive pharmacological dose-response model. The most likely number of trajectories were empirically derived with Latent Class Growth Analysis using "Goodness of fit" statistics. Trajectories were then compared on physical and cognitive function. Results: A total of 763 participants completed all follow-ups (61% women; mean age 83, ±6). "Goodness of fit" statistics (Bayesian In-formation Criterion = 22916, Bootstrapped Likelihood Ratio Test of 3 vs. 2 classes = 514.12

    Electrical properties of ZnO nanorods studied by conductive atomic force microscopy

    Get PDF
    ZnO nanostructures are promising candidates for the development of novel electronic devices due to their unique electrical and optical properties. Here, we present a complementary electrical characterization of individual upright standing and lying ZnO nanorods using conductive atomic force microscopy (C-AFM). Initially, the electrical properties of the arrays of upright standing ZnO NRs were characterized using two-dimensional current maps. The current maps were recorded simultaneously with the topography acquired by contact mode AFM. Further, C-AFM was utilized to determine the local current-voltage (I-V) characteristics of the top and side facets of individual upright standing NRs. Current-voltage characterization revealed a characteristic similar to that of a Schottky diode. Detailed discussion of the electrical properties is based on local I-V curves, as well as on the 2D current maps recorded from specific areas. © 2011 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio

    Sex differences associated with adverse drug reactions resulting in hospital admissions

    Get PDF
    Background Adverse drug events, including adverse drug reactions (ADRs), are responsible for approximately 5% of unplanned hospital admissions: a major health concern. Women are 1.5-1.7 times more likely to develop ADRs. The main objective was to identify sex differences in the types and number of ADRs leading to hospital admission. Methods ADR-related hospital admissions between 2005 and 2017 were identified from the PHARMO Database Network using hospital discharge diagnoses. Patients aged >= 16 years with a drug possibly responsible for the ADR and dispensed within 3 months before admission were included. Age-adjusted odds ratios (OR) with 95% CIs for drug-ADR combinations for women versus men were calculated. Results A total of 18,469 ADR-related hospital admissions involving women (0.35% of all women admitted) and 14,678 admissions involving men (0.35% of all men admitted) were included. Most substantial differences were seen in ADRs due to anticoagulants and diuretics. Anticoagulants showed a lower risk of admission with persistent haematuria (ORadj 0.31; 95%CI 0.21, 0.45) haemoptysis (ORadj 0.47, 95%CI 0.30,0.74) and subdural haemorrhage (ORadj 0.61; 95%CI 0.42,0.88) in women than in men and a higher risk of rectal bleeding in women (ORadj 1.48; 95%CI 1.04,2.11). Also, there was a higher risk of admission in women using thiazide diuretics causing hypokalaemia (ORadj 3.03; 95%CI 1.58, 5.79) and hyponatraemia (ORadj 3.33, 95%CI 2.31, 4.81) than in men. Conclusions There are sex-related differences in the risk of hospital admission in specific drug-ADR combinations. The most substantial differences were due to anticoagulants and diuretics.Peer reviewe

    Ab initio study of step formation and self-diffusion on Ag(100)

    Full text link
    Using the plane wave pseudopotential method we performed density functional theory calculations on the stability of steps and self-diffusion processes on Ag(100). Our calculated step formation energies show that the {111}-faceted step is more stable than the {110}-faceted step. In accordance with experimental observations we find that the equilibrium island shape should be octagonal very close to a square with predominately {111}-faceted steps. For the (100) surface of fcc metals atomic migration proceeds by a hopping or an exchange process. For Ag(100) we find that adatoms diffuse across flat surfaces preferentially by hopping. Adatoms approaching the close-packed {111}-faceted step edges descend from the upper terrace to the lower level by an atomic exchange with an energy barrier almost identical to the diffusion barrier on flat surface regions. Thus, within our numerical accuracy (approx +- 0.05 eV) there is no additional step-edge barrier to descent. This provides a natural explanation for the experimental observations of the smooth two-dimensional growth in homoepitaxy of Ag(100). Inspection of experimental results of other fcc crystal surfaces indicates that our result holds quite generally.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev B (October 31, 1996
    • …
    corecore