629 research outputs found
First principles determination of the Peierls stress of the shuffle screw dislocation in silicon
The Peierls stress of the a/2 screw dislocation belonging to the shuffle
set is calculated for silicon using density functional theory. We have checked
the effect of boundary conditions by using two models, the supercell method
where one considers a periodic array of dislocations, and the cluster method
where a single dislocation is embedded in a small cluster. The Peierls stress
is underestimated with the supercell and overestimated with the cluster. These
contributions have been calculated and the Peierls stress is determined in the
range between 2.4 x 10-2 and 2.8 x 10-2 eV {\AA}-3. When moving, the
dislocation follows the {111} plane going through a low energy metastable
configuration and never follows the 100 plane, which includes a higher energy
metastable core configuration
Stability of undissociated screw dislocations in zinc-blende covalent materials from first principle simulations
The properties of perfect screw dislocations have been investigated for
several zinc-blende materials such as diamond, Si, -SiC, Ge and GaAs, by
performing first principles calculations. For almost all elements, a core
configuration belonging to shuffle set planes is favored, in agreement with low
temperature experiments. Only for diamond, a glide configuration has the lowest
defect energy, thanks to an sp hybridization in the core
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Toward an Objective Characterization of an Anhedonic Phenotype: A Signal-Detection Approach
Background: Difficulties in defining and characterizing phenotypes has hindered progress in psychiatric genetics and clinical neuroscience. Decreased approach-related behavior and anhedonia (lack of responsiveness to pleasure) are considered cardinal features of depression, but few studies have used laboratory-based measures to objectively characterize these constructs. Methods: To assess hedonic capacity in relation to depressive, particularly anhedonic, symptoms, 62 participants completed a signal-detection task based on a differential reinforcement schedule. Anhedonia was operationalized as decreased reward responsiveness. Results: Unequal frequency of reward between two correct responses produced a response bias (i.e., a systematic preference to identify the stimulus paired with the more frequent reward). Subjects with elevated depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory scores ≥ 16) failed to show a response bias. Impaired reward responsiveness predicted higher anhedonic symptoms 1 month later, after controlling for general negative affectivity. Conclusions: Impaired tendency to modulate behavior as a function of prior reinforcement might underline diminished hedonic capacity in depression. When applied to a clinical population, objective assessments of participants’ propensity to modulate behavior as a function of reward might provide a powerful tool for improving the phenotypic definition of depression and thus offer a reliable behavioral screening approach for neuroscience studies of depression.Psycholog
Theoretical study of dislocation nucleation from simple surface defects in semiconductors
Large-scale atomistic calculations, using empirical potentials for modeling
semiconductors, have been performed on a stressed system with linear surface
defects like steps. Although the elastic limits of systems with surface defects
remain close to the theoretical strength, the results show that these defects
weaken the atomic structure, initializing plastic deformations, in particular
dislocations. The character of the dislocation nucleated can be predicted
considering both the resolved shear stress related to the applied stress
orientation and the Peierls stress. At low temperature, only glide events in
the shuffle set planes are observed. Then they progressively disappear and are
replaced by amorphization/melting zones at a temperature higher than 900 K
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Increased Perceived Stress is Associated with Blunted Hedonic Capacity: Potential Implications for Depression Research
Preclinical studies suggest that stress exerts depressogenic effects by impairing hedonic capacity, in humans, however, the precise mechanisms linking stress and depression are largely unknown. As an initial step towards better understanding the association between stress and anhedonia, the present study tested, in two independent samples, whether individuals reporting elevated stress exhibit decreased hedonic capacity. The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) measured the decree to which participants appraised their daily life as unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overwhelming. Hedonic capacity was objectively assessed using a signal-detection task based on a differential reinforcement schedule. Decreased reward responsiveness (i.e., the participants propensity to modulate behavior as a function of reward) was used as an operational measure of hedonic capacity. In both Study 1 (n = 88) and Study 2 (n = 80), participants with high PSS scores displayed blunted reward responsiveness and reported elevated anhedonic symptoms. Additionally, PSS scores predicted reduced reward responsiveness even after controlling for general distress and anxiety symptoms. These findings are consistent with preclinical data highlighting links between stress and anhedonia, and offer promising insights into potential mechanisms linking stress to depression.Psycholog
Increased Perceived Stress is Associated with Blunted Hedonic Capacity: Potential Implications for Depression Research
Preclinical studies suggest that stress exerts depressogenic effects by impairing hedonic capacity, in humans, however, the precise mechanisms linking stress and depression are largely unknown. As an initial step towards better understanding the association between stress and anhedonia, the present study tested, in two independent samples, whether individuals reporting elevated stress exhibit decreased hedonic capacity. The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) measured the decree to which participants appraised their daily life as unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overwhelming. Hedonic capacity was objectively assessed using a signal-detection task based on a differential reinforcement schedule. Decreased reward responsiveness (i.e., the participants propensity to modulate behavior as a function of reward) was used as an operational measure of hedonic capacity. In both Study 1 (n = 88) and Study 2 (n = 80), participants with high PSS scores displayed blunted reward responsiveness and reported elevated anhedonic symptoms. Additionally, PSS scores predicted reduced reward responsiveness even after controlling for general distress and anxiety symptoms. These findings are consistent with preclinical data highlighting links between stress and anhedonia, and offer promising insights into potential mechanisms linking stress to depression.Psycholog
Undissociated screw dislocations in silicon: calculations of core structure and energy
The stability of the perfect screw dislocation in silicon has been
investigated using both classical potentials and first-principles calculations.
Although a recent study by Koizumi et al . stated that the stable screw
dislocation was located in both the 'shuffle' and the 'glide' sets of {111}
planes, it is shown that this result depends on the classical potential used,
and that the most stable configuration belongs to the 'shuffle' set only, in
the centre of one hexagon. We also investigated the stability of an sp 2
hybridization in the core of the dislocation, obtained for one metastable
configuration in the 'glide' set. The core structures are characterized in
several ways, with a description of the three-dimensional structure,
differential displacement maps and derivatives of the disregistry
Theoretical study of kinks on screw dislocation in silicon
Theoretical calculations of the structure, formation and migration of kinks
on a non-dissociated screw dislocation in silicon have been carried out using
density functional theory calculations as well as calculations based on
interatomic potential functions. The results show that the structure of a
single kink is characterized by a narrow core and highly stretched bonds
between some of the atoms. The formation energy of a single kink ranges from
0.9 to 1.36 eV, and is of the same order as that for kinks on partial
dislocations. However, the kinks migrate almost freely along the line of an
undissociated dislocation unlike what is found for partial dislocations. The
effect of stress has also been investigated in order to compare with previous
silicon deformation experiments which have been carried out at low temperature
and high stress. The energy barrier associated with the formation of a stable
kink pair becomes as low as 0.65 eV for an applied stress on the order of 1
GPa, indicating that displacements of screw dislocations likely occur via
thermally activated formation of kink pairs at room temperature
Dislocation dipoles and the nucleation of cracks in silicon nanopillars
To understand the brittle to ductile transtion at small scale in silicon nanopillars, plastic deformation of silicon nanopillars was investigated by atomistic simulations. Perfect dislocations were found to be nucleated from surfaces and nano cavities were evidenced resulting from dislocation dipoles annihilation. The formation of such cavities is consistent with previous atomistic calculations showing that the annihilation of dislocation vacancy dipole of perfect shuffle dislocations is associated to the formation of vacancy clusters in silicon and diamond [1]. In nanopillars such cavities contribute to the nucleation of cracks [2]. This mechanism of crack nucleation is relevant to single slip deformation and does not require any interactions between dislocations issued from intersecting glide planes as usually postulated for crack nucleation [3].
Incipient dipoles were also found nucleated on the glide plane swept by dislocations. These incipient dipoles result from bond flips and are similar to the Stone–Wales defects in graphene [4]. These defects could be similar and related to the “dislocations trails” found in the glide plane of dislocations in other deformation conditions, a long time and rather unsolved problem in silicon (see for example [5]). Under the applied stress those incipient dipoles appear to act as new nucleation centers for dislocations located in the glide plane. Those dislocations contribute to dislocation interactions in parallel slip planes and to the formation of nano cracks following the described above mechanism
Comparison between classical potentials and ab initio for silicon under large shear
The homogeneous shear of the {111} planes along the direction of bulk
silicon has been investigated using ab initio techniques, to better understand
the strain properties of both shuffle and glide set planes. Similar
calculations have been done with three empirical potentials, Stillinger-Weber,
Tersoff and EDIP, in order to find the one giving the best results under large
shear strains. The generalized stacking fault energies have also been
calculated with these potentials to complement this study. It turns out that
the Stillinger-Weber potential better reproduces the ab initio results, for the
smoothness and the amplitude of the energy variation as well as the
localization of shear in the shuffle set
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