100 research outputs found
Quantum Transport and Field Induced Insulating States in Bilayer Graphene pnp Junctions
We perform transport measurements in high quality bilayer graphene pnp
junctions with suspended top gates. At a magnetic field B=0, we demonstrate
band gap opening by an applied perpendicular electric field, with an On/Off
ratio up to 20,000 at 260mK. Within the band gap, the conductance decreases
exponentially by 3 orders of magnitude with increasing electric field, and can
be accounted for by variable range hopping with a gate-tunable density of
states, effective mass, and localization length. At large B, we observe quantum
Hall conductance with fractional values, which arise from equilibration of edge
states between differentially-doped regions, and the presence of an insulating
state at filling factor {\nu}=0. Our work underscores the importance of bilayer
graphene for both fundamental interest and technological applications.Comment: 4 figures, to appear in Nano Lett. Minor typos correcte
A mechanistic basis for potent, glycoprotein B-directed gammaherpesvirus neutralization
Glycoprotein B (gB) is a conserved, essential component of gammaherpes virions and so potentially vulnerable to neutralization. However, few good gB-specific neutralizing antibodies have been identified. Here, we show that murid herpesvirus 4 is strongly neutralized by mAbs that recognize an epitope close to one of the gB fusion loops. Antibody binding did not stop gB interacting with its cellular ligands or initiating its fusion-associated conformation change, but did stop gB resolving stably to its post-fusion form, and so blocked membrane fusion to leave virions stranded in late endosomes. The conservation of gB makes this mechanism a possible general route to gammaherpesvirus neutralization
Suspension and Measurement of Graphene and Bi2Se3 Atomic Membranes
Coupling high quality, suspended atomic membranes to specialized electrodes
enables investigation of many novel phenomena, such as spin or Cooper pair
transport in these two dimensional systems. However, many electrode materials
are not stable in acids that are used to dissolve underlying substrates. Here
we present a versatile and powerful multi-level lithographical technique to
suspend atomic membranes, which can be applied to the vast majority of
substrate, membrane and electrode materials. Using this technique, we
fabricated suspended graphene devices with Al electrodes and mobility of 5500
cm^2/Vs. We also demonstrate, for the first time, fabrication and measurement
of a free-standing thin Bi2Se3 membrane, which has low contact resistance to
electrodes and a mobility of >~500 cm^2/Vs
Magnetoconductance Oscillations in High-Mobility Suspended Bilayer and Trilayer Graphene
We report pronounced magnetoconductance oscillations observed on suspended
bilayer and trilayer graphene devices with mobilities up to 270,000 cm2/Vs. For
bilayer devices, we observe conductance minima at all integer filling factors
nu between 0 and -8, as well as a small plateau at {\nu}=1/3. For trilayer
devices, we observe features at nu=-1, -2, -3 and -4, and at {\nu}~0.5 that
persist to 4.5K at B=8T. All of these features persist for all accessible
values of Vg and B, and could suggest the onset of symmetry breaking of the
first few Landau (LL) levels and fractional quantum Hall states.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Probing Charging and Localization in the Quantum Hall Regime by Graphene pnp Junctions
Using high quality graphene pnp junctions, we observe prominent conductance
fluctuations on transitions between quantum Hall (QH) plateaus as the top gate
voltage Vtg is varied. In the Vtg-B plane, the fluctuations form crisscrossing
lines that are parallel to those of the adjacent plateaus, with different
temperature dependences for the conductance peaks and valleys. These
fluctuations arise from Coulomb-induced charging of electron- or hole-doped
localized states when the device bulk is delocalized, underscoring the
importance of electronic interactions in graphene in the QH regime
Ultrathin two-dimensional superconductivity with strong spin-orbit coupling
We report on a study of epitaxially grown ultrathin Pb films that are only a few atoms thick and have parallel critical magnetic fields much higher than the expected limit set by the interaction of electron spins with a magnetic field, that is, the Clogston-Chandrasekhar limit. The epitaxial thin films are classified as dirty-limit superconductors because their mean-free paths, which are limited by surface scattering, are smaller than their superconducting coherence lengths. The uniformity of superconductivity in these thin films is established by comparing scanning tunneling spectroscopy, scanning superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometry, double-coil mutual inductance, and magneto-transport, data that provide average superfluid rigidity on length scales covering the range from microscopic to macroscopic. We argue that the survival of superconductivity at Zeeman energies much larger than the superconducting gap can be understood only as the consequence of strong spin-orbit coupling that, together with substrate-induced inversionsymmetry breaking, produces spin splitting in the normal-state energy bands that is much larger than the superconductor\u27s energy gap
The state of the Martian climate
60°N was +2.0°C, relative to the 1981–2010 average value (Fig. 5.1). This marks a new high for the record. The average annual surface air temperature (SAT) anomaly for 2016 for land stations north of starting in 1900, and is a significant increase over the previous highest value of +1.2°C, which was observed in 2007, 2011, and 2015. Average global annual temperatures also showed record values in 2015 and 2016. Currently, the Arctic is warming at more than twice the rate of lower latitudes
Herpesvirus Glycoproteins Undergo Multiple Antigenic Changes before Membrane Fusion
Herpesvirus entry is a complicated process involving multiple virion glycoproteins and culminating in membrane fusion. Glycoprotein conformation changes are likely to play key roles. Studies of recombinant glycoproteins have revealed some structural features of the virion fusion machinery. However, how the virion glycoproteins change during infection remains unclear. Here using conformation-specific monoclonal antibodies we show in situ that each component of the Murid Herpesvirus-4 (MuHV-4) entry machinery—gB, gH/gL and gp150—changes in antigenicity before tegument protein release begins. Further changes then occurred upon actual membrane fusion. Thus virions revealed their final fusogenic form only in late endosomes. The substantial antigenic differences between this form and that of extracellular virions suggested that antibodies have only a limited opportunity to block virion membrane fusion
Haematological and Biochemical Reference Values for Healthy Adults in the Middle Belt of Ghana
BACKGROUND: Reference values are very important in clinical management of patients, screening participants for enrollment into clinical trials and for monitoring the onset of adverse events during these trials. The aim of this was to establish gender-specific haematological and biochemical reference values for healthy adults in the central part of Ghana. METHODS: A total of 691 adults between 18 and 59 years resident in the Kintampo North Municipality and South District in the central part of Ghana were randomly selected using the Kintampo Health and Demographic Surveillance System and enrolled in this cross-sectional survey. Out of these, 625 adults made up of 316 males and 309 females were assessed by a clinician to be healthy. Median values and nonparametric 95% reference values for 16 haematology and 22 biochemistry parameters were determined for this population based on the Clinical Laboratory and Standards Institute guidelines. Values established in this study were compared with the Caucasian values being used currently by our laboratory as reference values and also with data from other African and western countries. RESULTS: REFERENCE VALUES ESTABLISHED INCLUDE: haemoglobin 113-164 g/L for males and 88-144 g/L for females; total white blood cell count 3.4-9.2 × 10(9)/L; platelet count 88-352 × 10(9)/L for males and 89-403 × 10(9)/L for females; alanine aminotransferase 8-54 U/L for males and 6-51 U/L for females; creatinine 56-119 µmol/L for males and 53-106 µmol/L for females. Using the haematological reference values based on the package inserts would have screened out up to 53% of potential trial participants and up to 25% of the population using the biochemical parameters. CONCLUSION: We have established a panel of locally relevant reference parameters for commonly used haematological and biochemical tests. This is important as it will help in the interpretation of laboratory results both for clinical management of patients and safety monitoring during a trial
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