1,131 research outputs found

    Superconductivity in a new hexagonal high entropy alloy

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    High entropy alloys (HEAs) are the new class of materials with an attractive combination of tunable mechanical and physicochemical properties. They crystallize mainly in cubic structures, however, for practical applications, HEAs with hexagonal close-packed (hcp) structure are highly desirable in connection to their in general high hardness. Herein, we report the synthesis, structure and detailed superconducting properties of Re0.56_{0.56}Nb0.11_{0.11}Ti0.11_{0.11}Zr0.11_{0.11}Hf0.11_{0.11}-the first hexagonal superconducting high entropy alloy (HEA) composed of five randomly distributed transition-metals. Combination of room temperature precession electron diffraction, precession electron diffraction tomography and powder X-ray diffraction is utilized to determine the room temperature crystal structure. Transport, magnetic and heat capacity measurements show that the material is a type-II superconductor with the bulk superconducting transition at TcT_{c} = 4.4 K, lower critical field Hc1H_{c1}(0) = 2.3 mT and upper critical field Hc2H_{c2}(0) = 3.6 T. Low-temperature specific heat measurement indicates that Re0.56_{0.56}Nb0.11_{0.11}Ti0.11_{0.11}Zr0.11_{0.11}Hf0.11_{0.11} is a phonon-mediated superconductor in the weak electron-phonon coupling limit with a normalized specific heat jump ΔCelγnTc\frac{\Delta C_{el}}{\gamma_{n}T_{c}} = 1.32. Further, hexagonal to cubic structural transition is observed by lowering the valence electron counts and TcT_{c} follows crystalline-like behaviour.Comment: 6 Pages, 9 Figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1804.1009

    Surviving sepsis: going beyond the guidelines

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    The Surviving Sepsis Campaign is a global effort to improve the care of patients with severe sepsis and septic shock. The first Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines were published in 2004 with an updated version published in 2008. These guidelines have been endorsed by many professional organizations throughout the world and come regarded as the standard of care for the management of patients with severe sepsis. Unfortunately, most of the recommendations of these guidelines are not evidence-based. Furthermore, the major components of the 6-hour bundle are based on a single-center study whose validity has been recently under increasing scrutiny. This paper reviews the validity of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign 6-hour bundle and provides a more evidence-based approach to the initial resuscitation of patients with severe sepsis
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