643 research outputs found
Room-Temperature Formation of Intermixing Layer for Adhesion Improvement of Cu/Glass Stacks
Reliable and high-precision Cu/glass stacks are particularly desirable for microelectromechanical systems and packaging technologies. One solution for improving the adhesion strength of Cu/glass stacks is to form adhesion layers between the Cu films and the glass substrate. Many studies have shown that a strong adhesion layer is formed at the interface by high-temperature annealing when a Cu alloy is used instead of pure Cu. It is important to reduce the temperature and process time in order to reduce the thermal budget and fabrication cost. Therefore, the room-temperature process for fabrication of Cu/glass stack is desirable. In this chapter, typical advanced low-temperature processes including room-temperature process are introduced
Topology optimization and device fabrication of wavelength-scale metal-clad semiconductor lasery optimization and device fabrication of wavelength-scale metal-clad semiconductor lasery
学位の種別: 修士University of Tokyo(東京大学
Ground-state properties of neutron-rich Mg isotopes
We analyze recently-measured total reaction cross sections for 24-38Mg
isotopes incident on 12C targets at 240 MeV/nucleon by using the folding model
and antisymmetrized molecular dynamics(AMD). The folding model well reproduces
the measured reaction cross sections, when the projectile densities are
evaluated by the deformed Woods-Saxon (def-WS) model with AMD deformation.
Matter radii of 24-38Mg are then deduced from the measured reaction cross
sections by fine-tuning the parameters of the def-WS model. The deduced matter
radii are largely enhanced by nuclear deformation. Fully-microscopic AMD
calculations with no free parameter well reproduce the deduced matter radii for
24-36Mg, but still considerably underestimate them for 37,38Mg. The large
matter radii suggest that 37,38Mg are candidates for deformed halo nucleus. AMD
also reproduces other existing measured ground-state properties (spin-parity,
total binding energy, and one-neutron separation energy) of Mg isotopes.
Neutron-number (N) dependence of deformation parameter is predicted by AMD.
Large deformation is seen from 31Mg with N = 19 to a drip-line nucleus 40Mg
with N = 28, indicating that both the N = 20 and 28 magicities disappear. N
dependence of neutron skin thickness is also predicted by AMD.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Light–dark condition regulates sirtuin mRNA levels in the retina
AbstractSirtuins (Sirt1–7) are nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)-dependent protein deacetylases/ADP-ribosyltransferases that modulate many metabolic responses affecting aging. Sirtuins expressed in tissues and organs involved in systemic metabolism have been extensively studied. However, the characteristics of sirtuins in the retina, where local energy expenditure changes dynamically in response to light stimuli, are largely unknown. Here we analyzed sirtuin mRNA levels by real-time PCR, and found that all seven sirtuins are highly expressed in the retina compared with other tissues, such as liver. We then analyzed the sirtuin mRNA profiles in the retina over time, under a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle (LD condition) and in constant darkness (DD condition). All seven sirtuins showed significant daily variation under the LD condition, with all except Sirt6 being increased in the dark phase. The expression patterns were different under the DD condition, suggesting that sirtuin mRNA levels except Sirt6 are affected by light–dark condition. These findings were not obtained in the brain and liver. In addition, the mRNA expression patterns of Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator (PGC1α), and transcription factor A, mitochondrial (Tfam) in the retina, were similar to those of the sirtuins except Sirt6. Our observations provide new insights into the metabolic mechanisms of the retina and the sirtuins' regulatory systems
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