4,457 research outputs found
Identification of Si-vacancy related room temperature qubits in 4H silicon carbide
Identification of microscopic configuration of point defects acting as
quantum bits is a key step in the advance of quantum information processing and
sensing. Among the numerous candidates, silicon vacancy related centers in
silicon carbide (SiC) have shown remarkable properties owing to their
particular spin-3/2 ground and excited states. Although, these centers were
observed decades ago, still two competing models, the isolated negatively
charged silicon vacancy and the complex of negatively charged silicon vacancy
and neutral carbon vacancy [Phys. Rev. Lett.\ \textbf{115}, 247602 (2015)] are
argued as an origin. By means of high precision first principles calculations
and high resolution electron spin resonance measurements, we here unambiguously
identify the Si-vacancy related qubits in hexagonal SiC as isolated negatively
charged silicon vacancies. Moreover, we identify the Si-vacancy qubit
configurations that provide room temperature optical readout.Comment: 3 figure
A Recipe to Make Zeolite Ion Source for Plasma Diagnostics Beam
A mathematical model is presented to describe the replacement process to make zeolite containing a particular species of alkali ions for the beam source. The fraction of the alkali ions trapped in zeolite lattice can be expressed as a function of the times of substitution reaction in a concise recursion formula. The formula is used for a simple estimation of efficiency for making alkali zeolite in terms of time and cost. A rough comparison between the model and a trial is presented
Consideration of magnetic field fluctuation measurements in torus plasma with a heavy ion beam probe
The article proposes a method of magnetic fluctuation measurement using a heavy ion beam probe (HIBP) in an axisymmetric torus configuration. The method is based on the detection of the toroidal position (not velocity) of the secondary beam in the analyzer. However, the method needs careful consideration with respect to path integral fluctuations along the probing beam orbit to evaluate local magnetic fluctuation, similarly to density fluctuation measurements with a HIBP. Here, we present an analytic formula to estimate and calculate the path integral effects for different fluctuation patterns in the profile, the correlation length, the radial wavelength, and the poloidal mode number. As a result, it is found that a large distance between the plasma and the detector lessens the importance of the path integral effect, and that local fluctuation of the magnetic field can be properly detected with a HIBP
Ion size effects on the electrokinetics of salt-free concentrated suspensions in ac fields
We analyze the influence of finite ion size effects in the response of a
salt-free concentrated suspension of spherical particles to an oscillating
electric field. Salt-free suspensions are just composed of charged colloidal
particles and the added counterions released by the particles to the solution,
that counterbalance their surface charge. In the frequency domain, we study the
dynamic electrophoretic mobility of the particles and the dielectric response
of the suspension. We find that the Maxwell-Wagner-O'Konski process associated
with the counterions condensation layer, is enhanced for moderate to high
particle charges, yielding an increment of the mobility for such frequencies.
We also find that the increment of the mobility grows with ion size and
particle charge. All these facts show the importance of including ion size
effects in any extension attempting to improve standard electrokinetic models.Comment: J. Colloid Interface Sci., in press, 13 pages, 9 figure
Single-photon emitting diode in silicon carbide
Electrically driven single-photon emitting devices have immediate
applications in quantum cryptography, quantum computation and single-photon
metrology. Mature device fabrication protocols and the recent observations of
single defect systems with quantum functionalities make silicon carbide (SiC)
an ideal material to build such devices. Here, we demonstrate the fabrication
of bright single photon emitting diodes. The electrically driven emitters
display fully polarized output, superior photon statistics (with a count rate
of 300 kHz), and stability in both continuous and pulsed modes, all at room
temperature. The atomic origin of the single photon source is proposed. These
results provide a foundation for the large scale integration of single photon
sources into a broad range of applications, such as quantum cryptography or
linear optics quantum computing.Comment: Main: 10 pages, 6 figures. Supplementary Information: 6 pages, 6
figure
Nucleotide bias of DCL and AGO in plant anti-virus gene silencing
Plant Dicer-like (DCL) and Argonaute (AGO) are the key enzymes involved in anti-virus post-transcriptional gene silencing (AV-PTGS). Here we show that AV-PTGS exhibited nucleotide preference by calculating a relative AV-PTGS efficiency on processing viral RNA substrates. In comparison with genome sequences of dicot-infecting Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) and monocot-infecting Cocksfoot streak virus (CSV), viral-derived small interfering RNAs (vsiRNAs) displayed positive correlations between AV-PTGS efficiency and G+C content (GC%). Further investigations on nucleotide contents revealed that the vsiRNA populations had G-biases. This finding was further supported by our analyses of previously reported vsiRNA populations in diverse plant-virus associations, and AGO associated Arabidopsis endogenous siRNA populations, indicating that plant AGOs operated with G-preference. We further propose a hypothesis that AV-PTGS imposes selection pressure(s) on the evolution of plant viruses. This hypothesis was supported when potyvirus genomes were analysed for evidence of GC elimination, suggesting that plant virus evolution to have low GC% genomes would have a unique function, which is to reduce the host AV-PTGS attack during infections
- …