197,344 research outputs found
Nanoscale electrochemical patterning reveals the active sites for catechol oxidation at graphite surfaces
Graphite-based electrodes (graphite, graphene, and nanotubes) are used widely in electrochemistry, and there is a long-standing view that graphite step edges are needed to catalyze many reactions, with the basal surface considered to be inert. In the present work, this model was tested directly for the first time using scanning electrochemical cell microscopy reactive patterning and shown to be incorrect. For the electro-oxidation of dopamine as a model process, the reaction rate was measured at high spatial resolution across a surface of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite. Oxidation products left behind in a pattern defined by the scanned electrochemical cell served as surface-site markers, allowing the electrochemical activity to be correlated directly with the graphite structure on the nanoscale. This process produced tens of thousands of electrochemical measurements at different locations across the basal surface, unambiguously revealing it to be highly electrochemically active, with step edges providing no enhanced activity. This new model of graphite electrodes has significant implications for the design of carbon-based biosensors, and the results are additionally important for understanding electrochemical processes on related sp2-hybridized materials such as pristine graphene and nanotubes
Consequences of Cadmium exposure on growth and reproduction across three generations of earthworm
Heavy metal pollution disturbs the soil ecosystem by negatively affecting soil fauna and flora. In term of biomass and activity Annelids are a very important part of the soil invertebrate community. They are one of the first organisms affected by heavy metal contamination in soil and as such are good model organisms for assessing soil contamination. The aim of this research is to observe how Cd impacts on health and reproduction in three consecutive generations of E. fetida. [...]falseOnlin
Compositional changes on GaN surfaces under low-energy ion bombardment studied by synchrotron-based spectroscopies
We have investigated compositional changes on GaNsurfaces under Ar-ion bombardment using synchrotron-based high-resolution x-rayphotoemission (PES) and near-edge x-ray absorption fine structure(NEXAFS)spectroscopy. The low-energy ion bombardment of GaN produces a Ga-rich surface layer which transforms into a metallic Ga layer at higher bombarding energies. At the same time, the photoemissionspectra around Nā1s core levels reveal the presence of both uncoordinated nitrogen and nitrogen interstitials, which we have analyzed in more details by x-rayabsorption measurements at NāK edge. We have demonstrated that PES and NEXAFS provide a powerful combination for studying the compositional changes on GaNsurfaces. A mechanism for the relocation and loss of nitrogen during ion bombardment in agreement with some recent experimental and theoretical studies of defect formation in GaN has been proposed.P.N.K.D. is grateful for the financial
support of the Australian Research Council
A note on q-Bernoulli numbers and polynomials
By using p-adic q-integrals, we study the q-Bernoulli numbers and polynomials
of higher order.Comment: 8 page
A note on q-Bernstein polynomials
In this paper we constructed new q-extension of Bernstein polynomials. Fron
those q-Berstein polynomials, we give some interesting properties and we
investigate some applications related this q-Bernstein polynomials.Comment: 13 page
CEDM constraints on modified sfermion universality and spontaneous CP violation
We discuss the supersymmetric CP problem that arises when the sfermion soft
mass universality is modified. We place the 3rd generation SU(5) ten-plet
sfermion masses in the weak scale in view of the naturalness. The other
sfermion masses are assumed to be universal and a TeV scale in order to weaken
the flavor changing neutral current processes and electric dipole moment (EDM)
constraints. However this modification generically induces too large up quark
chromo-EDM (CEDM) via the weak scale stop loop. In order to suppress this CEDM,
we propose certain type of flavor structure where the parameters of the
up-(s)quark sector are real whereas those of the down-(s)quark and the charged
(s)lepton sectors are complex at the GUT scale. It is shown that, in this set
up, up quark CEDM can be suppressed within the range where the current and
future experiments have their sensitivity. We briefly illustrate the simple
realization of these particular forms of the modified sfermion universality
with real up-(s)quark sector by spontaneous CP violation in E SUSY GUT with
SU(2) flavor symmetry.Comment: Hg EDM bound updated, content modified, figure added, typos
corrected, references adde
Two non-commutative parameters and regular cosmological phase transition in the semi-classical dilaton cosmology
We study cosmological phase transitions from modified equations of motion by
introducing two non-commutative parameters in the Poisson brackets, which
describes the initial- and future-singularity-free phase transition in the
soluble semi-classical dilaton gravity with a non-vanishing cosmological
constant. Accelerated expansion and decelerated expansion corresponding to the
FRW phase appear alternatively, and then it ends up with the second accelerated
expansion. The final stage of the universe approaches the flat spacetime
independent of the initial state of the curvature scalar as long as the product
of the two non-commutative parameters is less than one. Finally, we show that
the initial-singularity-free condition is related to the second accelerated
expansion of the universe.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures; v2. to appear in Mod. Phys. Lett.
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