608 research outputs found
Interwell relaxation times in p-Si/SiGe asymmetric quantum well structures: the role of interface roughness
We report the direct determination of nonradiative lifetimes in Si∕SiGe asymmetric quantum well structures designed to access spatially indirect (diagonal) interwell transitions between heavy-hole ground states, at photon energies below the optical phonon energy. We show both experimentally and theoretically, using a six-band k∙p model and a time-domain rate equation scheme, that, for the interface quality currently achievable experimentally (with an average step height ⩾1 Å), interface roughness will dominate all other scattering processes up to about 200 K. By comparing our results obtained for two different structures we deduce that in this regime both barrier and well widths play an important role in the determination of the carrier lifetime. Comparison with recently published experimental and theoretical data obtained for mid-infrared GaAs∕AlxGa1−xAs multiple quantum well systems leads us to the conclusion that the dominant role of interface roughness scattering at low temperature is a general feature of a wide range of semiconductor heterostructures not limited to IV-IV material
The role of endotoxin/lipopolysaccharide in surgically induced tumour growth in a murine model of metastatic disease
Surgical removal of a primary tumour is often followed by rapid growth of previously dormant metastases. Endotoxin or lipopolysaccharide, a cell wall constituent of Gram-negative bacteria, is ubiquitously present in air and may be introduced during surgery. BALB/c mice received a tail vein injection of 105 4T1 mouse mammary carcinoma cells. Two weeks later, animals were subjected to surgical trauma or an intraperitoneal injection of endotoxin (10 μg per animal). Five days later, animals which underwent open surgery, laparoscopy with air sufflation or received an endotoxin injection displayed increased lung metastasis compared to anaesthetic controls. These increases in metastatic tumour growth were reflected in increased tumour cell proliferation and decreased apoptosis within lung metastases. Circulating levels of the angiogenic cytokine, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), were also elevated in these groups and correlated with increased plasma levels of endotoxin. Endotoxin treatment for 18 h (>10 ng ml–1) directly up-regulated VEGF production by the 4T1 tumour cells in vitro. Metastatic tumour growth in mice undergoing carbon dioxide laparoscopy, where air is excluded, was similar to anaesthetic controls. These data indicate that endotoxin introduced during surgery is associated with the enhanced growth of metastases following surgical trauma, by altering the critical balances governing cellular growth and angiogenesis. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig
Development of an eight-band theory for quantum-dot heterostructures
We derive a nonsymmetrized 8-band effective-mass Hamiltonian for quantum-dot
heterostructures (QDHs) in Burt's envelope-function representation. The 8x8
radial Hamiltonian and the boundary conditions for the Schroedinger equation
are obtained for spherical QDHs. Boundary conditions for symmetrized and
nonsymmetrized radial Hamiltonians are compared with each other and with
connection rules that are commonly used to match the wave functions found from
the bulk kp Hamiltonians of two adjacent materials. Electron and hole energy
spectra in three spherical QDHs: HgS/CdS, InAs/GaAs, and GaAs/AlAs are
calculated as a function of the quantum dot radius within the approximate
symmetrized and exact nonsymmetrized 8x8 models. The parameters of dissymmetry
are shown to influence the energy levels and the wave functions of an electron
and a hole and, consequently, the energies of both intraband and interband
transitions.Comment: 36 pages, 10 figures, E-mail addresses: [email protected],
[email protected]
Spin sensitive bleaching and monopolar spin orientation in quantum wells
Spin sensitive bleaching of the absorption of far-infrared radiation has been
observed in -type GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well structures. The absorption of
circularly polarized radiation saturates at lower intensities than that of
linearly polarized light due to monopolar spin orientation in the first heavy
hole subband. Spin relaxation times of holes in -type material in the range
of tens of ps were derived from the intensity dependence of the absorption.Comment: Figures have been updated due to technical printing problems
(Postscript mismatch
Effect of the Surface on the Electron Quantum Size Levels and Electron g-Factor in Spherical Semiconductor Nanocrystals
The structure of the electron quantum size levels in spherical nanocrystals
is studied in the framework of an eight--band effective mass model at zero and
weak magnetic fields. The effect of the nanocrystal surface is modeled through
the boundary condition imposed on the envelope wave function at the surface. We
show that the spin--orbit splitting of the valence band leads to the
surface--induced spin--orbit splitting of the excited conduction band states
and to the additional surface--induced magnetic moment for electrons in bare
nanocrystals. This additional magnetic moment manifests itself in a nonzero
surface contribution to the linear Zeeman splitting of all quantum size energy
levels including the ground 1S electron state. The fitting of the size
dependence of the ground state electron g factor in CdSe nanocrystals has
allowed us to determine the appropriate surface parameter of the boundary
conditions. The structure of the excited electron states is considered in the
limits of weak and strong magnetic fields.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The myth of meeting needs revisited: the case of Educational research
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleOur primary objective in this paper is revisit a debate that was articulated 25 years ago in this
journal in which it was argued that the idea of meeting needs in adult and continuing education
is a myth. We extend the original analysis of need and apply it to the case of educational
research. We look at the policy context, which has, in the intervening period, increasingly
reflected the neo-liberal emphasis upon accountability and measurement. Taking into
account the discussion stimulated by Hargreaves and followed through by Tooley on the
supposed ‘poverty’ of educational research in the UK, we show how the discourse of need has
been sustained. Using the Transforming Learning Cultures (TLC) project in the Teaching
and Learning Research Programme (TLRP) as an exemplar, we show that, despite the
constraints that are imposed upon researchers by the funding and accountability frameworks
of the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), the researchers on that project have
nonetheless made significant and important contributions in the field that they have
researched. By way of outcomes, we argue for an approach to the commissioning of educational
research from bodies such as the ESRC that will allow researchers to frame their
projects in ways that do not meet current prescriptions. In conclusion, we suggest that what is
needed is a greater level of trust which will allow researchers to set the research agenda themselves,
rather than be driven by the needs identified and specified by policymakers.
Introduction
In this paper we revisit a debate that was first articulated 25 years ago in this journal,
where it was argued that the idea of meeting needs in adult and continuing education
was a myth (Armstrong 1982). Intending to challenge the liberal ideologies that
subscribed to, and supported the idea that needs have an objective reality of their
own, the claim of the original paper was that needs are manufactured political
constructions. Whilst there appeared to be some considerable support for the
critique at the time, it did not have the effect on the academy that initial indications
had suggested. Writing about recent 14–19 education policy in the UK, Lumby and
Wilson (2003) suggest:
Robert Law
- …