111 research outputs found
Guiding and confining fast electrons by transient electric and magnetic fields with a plasma inverse cone
Copyright 2009 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Physics of Plasmas, 16(2), 020702, 2009 and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.307592
Surface energy engineering of graphene
Contact angle goniometry is conducted for epitaxial graphene on SiC. Although
only a single layer of epitaxial graphene exists on SiC, the contact angle
drastically changes from 69{\deg} on SiC substrates to 92{\deg} with graphene.
It is found that there is no thickness dependence of the contact angle from the
measurements of single, bi, and multi layer graphene and highly ordered
pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). After graphene is treated with oxygen plasma, the
level of damage is investigated by Raman spectroscopy and correlation between
the level of disorder and wettability is reported. By using low power oxygen
plasma treatment, the wettability of graphene is improved without additional
damage, which can solve the adhesion issues involved in the fabrication of
graphene devices
Corrections to the Electroweak Effective Action at Finite Temperature
We calculate contributions to the finite temperature effective action for the
electroweak phase transition (EWPT) at \O(g^4), {\it i.e.} at second order in
(g^2 T/\M) and all orders in (g^2 T^2/\M^2). This requires plasma-mass
corrections in the calculation of the effective potential, inclusion of the
``lollipop'' diagram, and an estimate of derivative corrections. We find the
EWPT remains too weakly first-order to drive baryogenesis. We calculate some
one loop kinetic energy corrections using both functional and diagrammatic
methods; these may be important for saddlepoint configurations such as the
bounce or sphaleron.Comment: LaTeX, 6 figures available by email, CALT-68-1795, HUTP-92-A027,
EFI-92-2
Observation of an electrically tunable band gap in trilayer graphene
A striking feature of bilayer graphene is the induction of a significant band
gap in the electronic states by the application of a perpendicular electric
field. Thicker graphene layers are also highly attractive materials. The
ability to produce a band gap in these systems is of great fundamental and
practical interest. Both experimental and theoretical investigations of
graphene trilayers with the typical ABA layer stacking have, however, revealed
the lack of any appreciable induced gap. Here we contrast this behavior with
that exhibited by graphene trilayers with ABC crystallographic stacking. The
symmetry of this structure is similar to that of AB stacked graphene bilayers
and, as shown by infrared conductivity measurements, permits a large band gap
to be formed by an applied electric field. Our results demonstrate the critical
and hitherto neglected role of the crystallographic stacking sequence on the
induction of a band gap in few-layer graphene.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, including the supplementary information on the
electron-hole asymmetry of ABA-stacked trilaye
Comparison of performance-based measures among native Japanese, Japanese-Americans in Hawaii and Caucasian women in the United States, ages 65 years and over: a cross-sectional study
BACKGROUND: Japanese (both in Japan and Hawaii) have a lower incidence of falls and of hip fracture than North American and European Caucasians, but the reasons for these differences are not clear. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A cross-sectional study. We compared neuromuscular risk factors for falls using performance-based measures (chair stand time, usual and rapid walking speed, and grip strength) among 163 Japanese women in Japan, 681 Japanese-American women in Hawaii and 9403 Caucasian women in the United States aged 65 years and over. RESULTS: After adjusting for age, the Caucasian women required about 40% more time to complete 5 chair stands than either group of Japanese. Walking speed was about 10% slower among Caucasians than native Japanese, whereas Japanese-American women in Hawaii walked about 11% faster than native Japanese. Grip strength was greatest in Japan, which may reflect the rural farming district that this sample was drawn from. Additional adjustment for height, weight or body mass index increased the adjusted means of chair stand time and grip strength among Japanese, but the differences remained significant. CONCLUSIONS: Both native Japanese and Japanese-American women in Hawaii performed better than Caucasians on chair stand time and walking speed tests, and native Japanese had greater grip strength than Japanese in Hawaii and Caucasians. The biological implications of these differences in performance are uncertain, but may be useful in planning future comparisons between populations
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