4,128 research outputs found
Determining layer number of two dimensional flakes of transition-metal dichalcogenides by the Raman intensity from substrate
Transition-metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors have been widely studied
due to their distinctive electronic and optical properties. The property of TMD
flakes is a function of its thickness, or layer number (N). How to determine N
of ultrathin TMDs materials is of primary importance for fundamental study and
practical applications. Raman mode intensity from substrates has been used to
identify N of intrinsic and defective multilayer graphenes up to N=100.
However, such analysis is not applicable for ultrathin TMD flakes due to the
lack of a unified complex refractive index () from monolayer to bulk
TMDs. Here, we discuss the N identification of TMD flakes on the SiO/Si
substrate by the intensity ratio between the Si peak from 100-nm (or 89-nm)
SiO/Si substrates underneath TMD flakes and that from bare SiO/Si
substrates. We assume the real part of of TMD flakes as that of
monolayer TMD and treat the imaginary part of as a fitting
parameter to fit the experimental intensity ratio. An empirical ,
namely, , of ultrathin MoS, WS and WSe
flakes from monolayer to multilayer is obtained for typical laser excitations
(2.54 eV, 2.34 eV, or 2.09 eV). The fitted of MoS has
been used to identify N of MoS flakes deposited on 302-nm SiO/Si
substrate, which agrees well with that determined from their shear and
layer-breathing modes. This technique by measuring Raman intensity from the
substrate can be extended to identify N of ultrathin 2D flakes with N-dependent
. For the application purpose, the intensity ratio excited by
specific laser excitations has been provided for MoS, WS and
WSe flakes and multilayer graphene flakes deposited on Si substrates
covered by 80-110 nm or 280-310 nm SiO layer.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by Nanotechnolog
Neuroprotective effects of traditional Chinese medicine in treating glaucoma:A Meta-analysis
AIM:To assess the neuroprotective effects of traditional Chinese medicine in the treatment of glaucoma. METHODS:The electronic bibliographic databases were searched,including Medline(1966-01/2011-03), EMbase(1996-2010), Cochrane library, Wanfang database,VIP(1999-2011), CNKI, the radomized controlled trials of TCM treatment compares with Western medicine treatment of the glaucoma were assembled Data were extracted and evaluated by two reciewers independently with a designed extraction formation by Meta-analysis based on the Cochrane net suggestion. RESULTS:A total of 8 theses written in Chinese were retrieved,including 719 patients.The results of Meta-analysis showed the combination therapy of TCM and western therapy significant improves the effect of neuroprotection(P<0.01). In order to boost and qualify the curative effects of the aucupuncture, more precise samples should be designed and a multi-research central need to be bulit. however, according to the existing cases, the evidences of the effectiveness are weak due to the limited numbers of samples and the methodological defect. CONCLUSION: The existing evidence supports the combination therapy of TCM and western medicine stronger than the only used of western medicine(P<0.01). But owing to the limited studies and few number of TCM treatment for glaucoma's neuroprotection, the large sample andmulticenter random ized controlled trial is still needed to verify the superiority of TCM for neuroproctive effect of glaucoma's teatment
Segatron: Segment-Aware Transformer for Language Modeling and Understanding
Transformers are powerful for sequence modeling. Nearly all state-of-the-art
language models and pre-trained language models are based on the Transformer
architecture. However, it distinguishes sequential tokens only with the token
position index. We hypothesize that better contextual representations can be
generated from the Transformer with richer positional information. To verify
this, we propose a segment-aware Transformer (Segatron), by replacing the
original token position encoding with a combined position encoding of
paragraph, sentence, and token. We first introduce the segment-aware mechanism
to Transformer-XL, which is a popular Transformer-based language model with
memory extension and relative position encoding. We find that our method can
further improve the Transformer-XL base model and large model, achieving 17.1
perplexity on the WikiText-103 dataset. We further investigate the pre-training
masked language modeling task with Segatron. Experimental results show that
BERT pre-trained with Segatron (SegaBERT) can outperform BERT with vanilla
Transformer on various NLP tasks, and outperforms RoBERTa on zero-shot sentence
representation learning.Comment: Accepted by AAAI 202
Recovery of histidine-tagged nucleocapsid protein of Newcastle disease virus using immobilised metal affinity chromatography
An immobilised metal affinity packed bed adsorption chromatography (IMA-PBAC) for the purification of recombinant nucleocapsid protein (NP) of Newcastle disease virus (NDV) directly from clarified feedstock was developed. The XK 16/20 (i.d. = 16 mm) was used as a packed bed column and Streamline chelating adsorbent immobilised with Ni2+ ion was used as IMA adsorbent. This purification method has resulted in a 59% adsorption and 5.6% recovery of NP protein. Adsorbed NP proteins were successfully recovered using a two-step elution protocol which employed elution buffer 1 containing 50 mM imidazole to eliminate contaminating proteins and elution buffer 2 containing 350 mM imidazole to recover the NP protein at pH 8 with flow velocity of 10 cm h−1. About 70% of the adsorbed NP protein was eluted. The purity of the recovered NP protein was about 70% and the volume of processing fluid was reduced by a factor of 4. The antigenic features of purified NP proteins were confirmed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) analysis
Purification of recombinant nucleocapsid protein of Newcastle disease virus from unclarified feedstock using expanded bed adsorption chromatography
In the present work, a single-step purification of recombinant nucleocapsid protein (NP) of the Newcastle disease virus (NDV) directly from unclarified feedstock using an expanded bed adsorption chromatography (EBAC) was developed. Streamline 25 column (ID = 25 mm) was used as a contactor and Streamline chelating adsorbent immobilized with Ni2+ ion was used as affinity adsorbent. The dynamic binding capacity of Ni2+-loaded Streamline chelating adsorbent for the NP protein in unclarified feedstock was found to be 2.94 mg ml−1 adsorbent at a superficial velocity of 200 cm h−1. The direct purification of NP protein from unclarified feedstock using expanded bed adsorption has resulted in a 31% adsorption and 9.6% recovery of NP protein. The purity of the NP protein recovered was about 70% and the volume of processing fluid was reduced by a factor of 10. The results of the present study show that the IMA-EBAC developed could be used to combine the clarification, concentration and initial purification steps into a single-step operation
The ultra-low-frequency shear modes of 2-4 layer graphenes observed in their scroll structures at edges
The in-plane shear modes between neighbor-layers of 2-4 layer graphenes (LGs)
and the corresponding graphene scrolls rolled up by 2-4LGs were investigated by
Raman scattering. In contrast to that just one shear mode was observed in
3-4LGs, all the shear modes of 3-4LGs were observed in 3-4 layer scrolls (LSs),
whose frequencies agree well with the theoretical predication by both a
force-constant model and a linear chain model. In comparison to the broad width
(about 12cm) for the G band in graphite, all the shear modes exhibit an
intrinsic line width of about 1.0 cm. The local electronic structures
dependent on the local staking configurations enhance the intensity of the
shear modes in corresponding 2-4LSs zones, which makes it possible to observe
all the shear modes. It provides a direct evidence that how the band structures
of FLGs can be sensitive to local staking configurations. This result can be
extended to n layer graphene (n > 4) for the understanding of the basic phonon
properties of multi-layer graphenes. This observation of all-scale shear modes
can be foreseen in other 2D materials with similar scroll structures.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Gravitational resonances on -branes
In this work, we investigate the gravitational resonances in various
-brane models with the warp factor
. For three kinds
of , we give the solutions to the system. Besides, we consider the tensor
perturbation of vielbein and obtain the effective potentials by the
Kaluza-Klein (KK) decomposition. Then, we analyze what kind of effective
potential can produce the gravitational resonances. Effects of different
parameters on the gravitational resonances are analysed. The lifetimes of the
resonances could be long enough as the age of our universe in some ranges of
the parameters. This indicates that the gravitational resonances might be
considered as one of the candidates of dark matter. Combining the current
experimental observations, we constrain the parameters for these brane models.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figure
Characteristic modes of thick brane model: resonances and quasinormal modes
In this work, we investigate the gravitational quasinormal modes (QNMs) and
the gravitational resonances of a thick brane model. We use the asymptotic
iteration and shooting methods to obtain the quasinormal frequencies (QNFs) of
the brane. On the other hand, we investigate the resonances and their evolution
numerically. The results show that the oscillations of the resonances equal (up
to numerical error) to the real parts of the QNFs, while the damping rates of
the resonances equal to the imaginary parts of the QNFs. The QNMs and
resonances, both of them can be regarded as the characteristic modes of the
thick brane, are closely related with each other. In addition, the lifetimes of
the QNMs might reach the age of our universe. Such a long-lived Kaluza-Klein
modes could be a candidate for dark matter.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
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