152 research outputs found

    Visualizing stability in studies: the moving average meta-analysis (MA2)

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    Relative clinical benefits are often visually explored and formally analysed through a (cumulative) meta-analysis. In this manuscript, we introduce and further explore the moving average meta-analysis to aid towards the exploration and visualization of stability in a meta-analysis.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl

    ZBTB7A (zinc finger and BTB domain containing 7A)

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    Review on ZBTB7A (zinc finger and BTB domain containing 7A), with data on DNA, on the protein encoded, and where the gene is implicated

    General approaches for shear-correcting coordinate transformations in Bragg coherent diffraction imaging: Part 2

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    X-ray Bragg coherent diffraction imaging has been demonstrated as a powerful three-dimensional (3D) microscopy approach for the investigation of sub-micrometer-scale crystalline particles. It is based on the measurement of a series of coherent diffraction intensity patterns that are numerically inverted to retrieve an image of the spatial distribution of relative phase and amplitude of the Bragg structure factor of the scatterer. This 3D information, which is collected through an angular rotation of the sample, is necessarily obtained in a non-orthogonal frame in Fourier space that must be eventually reconciled. To deal with this, the currently favored approach (detailed in Part I) is to perform the entire inversion in conjugate non-orthogonal real and Fourier space frames, and to transform the 3D sample image into an orthogonal frame as a post-processing step for result analysis. In this article, a direct follow-up of Part I, we demonstrate two different transformation strategies that enable the entire inversion procedure of the measured data set to be performed in an orthogonal frame. The new approaches described here build mathematical and numerical frameworks that apply to the cases of evenly and non-evenly sampled data along the direction of sample rotation (the rocking curve). The value of these methods is that they rely on and incorporate significantly more information about the experimental geometry into the design of the phase retrieval Fourier transformation than the strategy presented in Part I. Two important outcomes are 1) that the resulting sample image is correctly interpreted in a shear-free frame, and 2) physically realistic constraints of BCDI phase retrieval that are difficult to implement with current methods are easily incorporated. Computing scripts are also given to aid readers in the implementation of the proposed formalisms

    Nondestructive three-dimensional imaging of crystal strain and rotations in an extended bonded semiconductor heterostructure

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    International audienceWe report the 3D mapping of strain and tilts of crystal planes in an extended InP nanostructured layer bonded onto silicon, measured without sample preparation. Our approach takes advantages of 3D x-ray Bragg ptychography combined to an optimized inversion process. The excellent agreement with the sample nominal structure validates the reconstruction while the evidence of spatial fluctuations hardly observable by other means, underlines the specificities of Bragg ptychography

    Electrode-induced lattice distortions in GaAs multi-quantum-dot arrays

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    Copyright © Materials Research Society 2019. Increasing the number of quantum bits while preserving precise control of their quantum electronic properties is a significant challenge in materials design for the development of semiconductor quantum computing devices. Semiconductor heterostructures can host multiple quantum dots that are electrostatically defined by voltages applied to an array of metallic nanoelectrodes. The structural distortion of multiple-quantum-dot devices due to elastic stress associated with the electrodes has been difficult to predict because of the large micrometer-scale overall sizes of the devices, the complex spatial arrangement of the electrodes, and the sensitive dependence of the magnitude and spatial variation of the stress on processing conditions. Synchrotron X-ray nanobeam Bragg diffraction studies of a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure reveal the magnitude and nanoscale variation of these distortions. Investigations of individual linear electrodes reveal lattice tilts consistent with a 28-MPa compressive residual stress in the electrodes. The angular magnitude of the tilts varies by up to 20% over distances of less than 200 nm along the length of the electrodes, consistent with heterogeneity in the metal residual stress. A similar variation of the crystal tilt is observed in multiple-quantum-dot devices, due to a combination of the variation of the stress and the complex electrode arrangement. The heterogeneity in particular can lead to significant challenges in the scaling of multiple-quantum-dot devices due to differences between the charging energies of dots and uncertainty in the potential energy landscape. Alternatively, if incorporated in design, stress presents a new degree of freedom in device fabrication
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