25 research outputs found
Antiferromagnetic behavior in CeCoGe
We investigate the novel intermetallic ternary compounds
\emph{R}CoGe with \emph{R} = La and Ce by means of -ray
diffraction, susceptibility and specific heat measurements. CeCoGe
crystallizes in the space group 4/ and is characterized by the
coexistence of two different magnetic sublattices. The Ce-based sublattice,
with an effective moment close to the expected value for a Ce-ion,
exhibits a magnetically ordered ground state with K. The
Co-based sublattice, however, exhibits magnetic moments due to itinerant 3
electrons. The magnetic specific heat contribution of the Ce-sublattice is
discussed in terms of a resonance-level model implying the interplay between an
antiferromagnetic phase transition and the Kondo-effect and an underlying
Schottky-anomaly indicating a crystal field level scheme splitting into three
twofold degenerated micro states ( K, K).Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, conference SCES0
Competing magnetic interactions in CeNi9-xCoxGe4
CeNi9Ge4 exhibits outstanding heavy fermion features with remarkable
non-Fermi- liquid behavior which is mainly driven by single-ion effects. The
substitution of Ni by Cu causes a reduction of both, the RKKY coupling and
Kondo interaction, coming along with a dramatic change of the crystal field
(CF) splitting. Thereby a quasi-quartet ground state observed in CeNi9Ge4
reduces to a two-fold degenerate one in CeNi8CuGe4. This leads to a
modiffcation of the effective spin degeneracy of the Kondo lattice ground state
and to the appearance of antiferromagnetic (AFM) order. To obtain a better
understanding of consequences resulting from a reduction of the effective spin
degeneracy, we stepwise replaced Ni by Co. Thereby an increase of the Kondo and
RKKY interactions through the reduction of the effective d-electron count is
expected. Accordingly, a paramagnetic Fermi liquid ground state should arise.
Our experimental studies, however, reveal AFM order already for small Co
concentrations, which becomes even more pronounced with increasing Co content
x. Thereby the modiffcation of the effective spin degeneracy seems to play a
crucial role in this system
Evolution of single-ion crystal field and Kondo features in CeLaNiCuGe
Starting with the heavy fermion compound CeNiGe, the substitution of
nickel by copper leads to a dominance of the RKKY interaction in competition
with the Kondo and crystal field interaction. Consequently, this results in an
antiferromagnetic phase transition in CeNiCuGe for ,
which is, however, not fully completed up to a Cu-concentration of . To
study the influence of single-ion effects on the AFM ordering by shielding the
-moments, we analyzed the spin diluted substitution series
LaCeNiCuGe by magnetic susceptibility
and specific heat measurements. For small Cu-amounts the data
reveal single-ion scaling with regard to the Ce-concentration, while for larger
Cu-concentrations the AFM transition (encountered in the
CeNiCuGe series) is found to be completely depressed.
Calculation of the entropy reveal that the Kondo-effect still shields the
4-moments of the Ce-ions in CeNiCuGe.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, conference SCES0
Evolution of quantum criticality in the system CeNi9Ge4
The heavy fermion system CeNi9Ge4 exhibits a paramagnetic ground state with
remarkable features such as: a record value of the electronic specific heat
coefficient in systems with a paramagnetic ground state, \gamma = C/T \simeq
5.5 J/molK^2 at 80 mK, a temperature-dependent Sommerfeld-Wilson ratio,
R=\chi/\gamma, below 1 K and an approximate single ion scaling of the
4f-magnetic specific heat and susceptibility. These features are related to a
rather small Kondo energy scale of a few Kelvin in combination with a
quasi-quartet crystal field ground state. Tuning the system towards long range
magnetic order is accomplished by replacing a few at.% of Ni by Cu or Co.
Specific heat, susceptibility and resistivity studies reveal T_N \sim 0.2 K for
CeNi8CuGe4 and T_N \sim 1 K for CeNi8CoGe4. To gain insight whether the
transition from the paramagnetic NFL state to the magnetically ordered ground
state is connected with a heavy fermion quantum critical point we performed
specific heat and ac susceptibility studies and utilized the \mu SR technique
and quasi-elastic neutron scattering.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, will be published in J.Phys.: Conf. Series
(Proceedings of the International & Interdisciplinary Workshop on Novel
Phenomena in Intergrated Comples Sciences: From Living to Non-living Systems,
Japan, held in Kyoto, October 11-14, 2010
Crystal field studies on the heavy fermion compound CeNiCuGe
Substitution of nickel by copper in the heavy fermion system
CeNiCuGe alters the local crystal field environment of the
Ce-ions. This leads to a quantum phase transition near ,
which is not only driven by the competition between Kondo effect and RKKY
interaction, but also by a reduction of an effectively fourfold to a twofold
degenerate crystal field ground state. To study the consequences of a changing
crystal field in CeNiCuGe on its Kondo properties, inelastic neutron
scattering (INS) experiments were performed. Two well-defined crystal field
transitions were observed in the energy-loss spectra at 4 K. The crystal field
level scheme determined by neutron spectroscopy is compared with results from
specific heat measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, conference SCES0
Evolution of Quantum Criticality in CeNi_{9-x}Cu_xGe_4
Crystal structure, specific heat, thermal expansion, magnetic susceptibility
and electrical resistivity studies of the heavy fermion system
CeNi_{9-x}Cu_xGe_4 (0 <= x <= 1) reveal a continuous tuning of the ground state
by Ni/Cu substitution from an effectively fourfold degenerate non-magnetic
Kondo ground state of CeNi_9Ge_4 (with pronounced non-Fermi-liquid features)
towards a magnetically ordered, effectively twofold degenerate ground state in
CeNi_8CuGe_4 with T_N = 175 +- 5 mK. Quantum critical behavior, C/T ~ \chi ~
-ln(T), is observed for x about 0.4. Hitherto, CeNi_{9-x}Cu_xGe_4 represents
the first system where a substitution-driven quantum phase transition is
connected not only with changes of the relative strength of Kondo effect and
RKKY interaction, but also with a reduction of the effective crystal field
ground state degeneracy.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Sensitive Detection of p65 Homodimers Using Red-Shifted and Fluorescent Protein-Based FRET Couples
BACKGROUND: Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) between the green fluorescent protein (GFP) variants CFP and YFP is widely used for the detection of protein-protein interactions. Nowadays, several monomeric red-shifted fluorescent proteins are available that potentially improve the efficiency of FRET. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To allow side-by-side comparison of several fluorescent protein combinations for detection of FRET, yellow or orange fluorescent proteins were directly fused to red fluorescent proteins. FRET from yellow fluorescent proteins to red fluorescent proteins was detected by both FLIM and donor dequenching upon acceptor photobleaching, showing that mCherry and mStrawberry were more efficient acceptors than mRFP1. Circular permutated yellow fluorescent protein variants revealed that in the tandem constructs the orientation of the transition dipole moment influences the FRET efficiency. In addition, it was demonstrated that the orange fluorescent proteins mKO and mOrange are both suitable as donor for FRET studies. The most favorable orange-red FRET pair was mKO-mCherry, which was used to detect homodimerization of the NF-kappaB subunit p65 in single living cells, with a threefold higher lifetime contrast and a twofold higher FRET efficiency than for CFP-YFP. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The observed high FRET efficiency of red-shifted couples is in accordance with increased Förster radii of up to 64 A, being significantly higher than the Förster radius of the commonly used CFP-YFP pair. Thus, red-shifted FRET pairs are preferable for detecting protein-protein interactions by donor-based FRET methods in single living cells
Intracellular protein determination using droplet-based immunoassays
This paper describes the implementation of a sensitive, on-chip immunoassay for the analysis of intracellular proteins, developed using microdroplet technology. The system offers a number of analytical functionalities, enabling the lysis of low cell numbers, as well as protein detection and quantification, integrated within a single process flow. Cells were introduced into the device in suspension and were electrically lysed in situ. The cell lysate was subsequently encapsulated together with antibody-functionalized beads into stable, water-in-oil droplets, which were stored on-chip. The binding of intracellular proteins to the beads was monitored fluorescently. By analyzing many individual droplets and quantifying the data obtained against standard additions, we measured the level of two intracellular proteins, namely, HRas-mCitrine, expressed within HEK-293 cells, and actin-EGFP, expressed within MCF-7 cells. We determined the concentrations of these proteins over 5 orders of magnitude, from 50 pM to 1 μM. The results from this semiautomated method were compared to those for determinations made using Western blots, and were found not only to be faster, but required a smaller number of cells