44 research outputs found
Prediction of higher thermoelectric performance in BiCuSeO by weakening electron-polar optical phonon scattering
BiCuSeO is a promising thermoelectric material, but its applications are hindered by low carrier mobility. We use first-principles calculations to analyse electron–phonon scattering mechanisms and evaluate their contributions to the thermoelectric figure of merit ZT. The combined scattering of carriers by polar optical (PO) and longitudinal acoustic (LA) phonons yields an intrinsic hole mobility of 32 cm^{2} V^{−1} s^{−1} at room temperature and a temperature power law of T^{−1.5} between 100–875 K, which agree well with experiments. We demonstrate that electron–phonon scattering in the Cu–Se layer dominates at low T (< 500 K), while contributions from the Bi–O layer become increasingly significant at higher T. At room temperature, ZT is calculated to be 0.48 and can be improved by 30% through weakening PO phonon scattering in the Cu–Se layer. This finding agrees with the experimental observation that weakening the electron–phonon interaction by Te substitution in the Cu–Se layer improves mobility and ZT. At high T, the figure of merit is improved by weakening the electron–PO phonon scattering in the Bi–O layer instead. The theoretical ZT limit of BiCuSeO is calculated to be 2.5 at 875 K
Modular Design via Multiple Anion Chemistry of the High Mobility van der Waals Semiconductor Bi₄O₄SeCl₂
Making new van der Waals materials with electronic or magnetic functionality is a chemical design challenge for the development of two-dimensional nanoelectronic and energy conversion devices. We present the synthesis and properties of the van der Waals material Bi4O4SeCl2, which is a 1:1 superlattice of the structural units present in the van der Waals insulator BiOCl and the three-dimensionally connected semiconductor Bi2O2Se. The presence of three anions gives the new structure both the bridging selenide anion sites that connect pairs of Bi2O2 layers in Bi2O2Se and the terminal chloride sites that produce the van der Waals gap in BiOCl. This retains the electronic properties of Bi2O2Se while reducing the dimensionality of the bonding network connecting the Bi2O2Se units to allow exfoliation of Bi4O4SeCl2 to 1.4 nm height. The superlattice structure is stabilized by the configurational entropy of anion disorder across the terminal and bridging sites. The reduction in connective dimensionality with retention of electronic functionality stems from the expanded anion compositional diversity
One Site, Two Cations, Three Environments: s2 and s0 Electronic Configurations Generate Pb-Free Relaxor Behavior in a Perovskite Oxide
The piezoelectric devices widespread in society use noncentrosymmetric Pb-based oxides because of their outstanding functional properties. The highest figures of merit reported are for perovskites based on the parent Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3 (PMN), which is a relaxor: a centrosymmetric material with local symmetry breaking that enables functional properties, which resemble those of a noncentrosymmetric material. We present the Pb-free relaxor (K1/2Bi1/2)(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3 (KBMN), where the thermal and (di)electric behavior emerges from the discrete structural roles of the s0 K+ and s2 Bi3+ cations occupying the same A site in the perovskite structure, as revealed by diffraction methods. This opens a distinctive route to Pb-free piezoelectrics based on relaxor parents, which we demonstrate in a solid solution of KBMN with the Pb-free ferroelectric (K1/2Bi1/2)TiO3, where the structure and function evolve together, revealing a morphotropic phase boundary, as seen in PMN-derived systems. The detailed multiple-length-scale understanding of the functional behavior of KBMN suggests that precise chemical manipulation of the more diverse local displacements in the Pb-free relaxor will enhance performance
An overview of the recent developments on fructooligosaccharide production and applications
Over the past years, many researchers have suggested
that deficiencies in the diet can lead to disease states
and that some diseases can be avoided through an adequate
intake of relevant dietary components. Recently, a great interest
in dietary modulation of the human gut has been registered.
Prebiotics, such as fructooligosaccharides (FOS), play a key
role in the improvement of gut microbiota balance and in
individual health. FOS are generally used as components of
functional foods, are generally regarded as safe (generally
recognized as safe status—from the Food and Drug Administration,
USA), and worth about 150€ per kilogram. Due to
their nutrition- and health-relevant properties, such as moderate
sweetness, low carcinogenicity, low calorimetric value,
and low glycemic index, FOS have been increasingly used
by the food industry. Conventionally, FOS are produced
through a two-stage process that requires an enzyme production
and purification step in order to proceed with the chemical
reaction itself. Several studies have been conducted on the
production of FOS, aiming its optimization toward the development
of more efficient production processes and their potential
as food ingredients. The improvement of FOS yield and
productivity can be achieved by the use of different fermentative
methods and different microbial sources of FOS producing
enzymes and the optimization of nutritional and
culture parameter; therefore, this review focuses on the latest
progresses in FOS research such as its production, functional
properties, and market data.Agencia de Inovacao (AdI)-Project BIOLIFE reference PRIME 03/347. Ana Dominguez acknowledges Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, Portugal, for her PhD grant reference SFRH/BD/23083/2005
Mining the human phenome using allelic scores that index biological intermediates
J. Kaprio ja M-L. Lokki työryhmien jäseniä.It is common practice in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to focus on the relationship between disease risk and genetic variants one marker at a time. When relevant genes are identified it is often possible to implicate biological intermediates and pathways likely to be involved in disease aetiology. However, single genetic variants typically explain small amounts of disease risk. Our idea is to construct allelic scores that explain greater proportions of the variance in biological intermediates, and subsequently use these scores to data mine GWAS. To investigate the approach's properties, we indexed three biological intermediates where the results of large GWAS meta-analyses were available: body mass index, C-reactive protein and low density lipoprotein levels. We generated allelic scores in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, and in publicly available data from the first Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium. We compared the explanatory ability of allelic scores in terms of their capacity to proxy for the intermediate of interest, and the extent to which they associated with disease. We found that allelic scores derived from known variants and allelic scores derived from hundreds of thousands of genetic markers explained significant portions of the variance in biological intermediates of interest, and many of these scores showed expected correlations with disease. Genome-wide allelic scores however tended to lack specificity suggesting that they should be used with caution and perhaps only to proxy biological intermediates for which there are no known individual variants. Power calculations confirm the feasibility of extending our strategy to the analysis of tens of thousands of molecular phenotypes in large genome-wide meta-analyses. We conclude that our method represents a simple way in which potentially tens of thousands of molecular phenotypes could be screened for causal relationships with disease without having to expensively measure these variables in individual disease collections.Peer reviewe
Prediction of higher thermoelectric performance in BiCuSeO by weakening electron-polar optical phonon scattering
Targeting electron–polar optical (PO) phonon scattering for higher thermoelectric performance in BiCuSeO.</p
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Magnetic and electronic properties of CaMn2Bi2: A possible hybridization gap semiconductor
We report the magnetic and electronic properties of CaMn2Bi2, which has a structure based on a triangular bilayer of Mn, rather than the ThCr2Si2 structure commonly encountered for 122 compounds in intermetallic systems. CaMn2Bi2 has an antiferromagnetic ground state, with a T-N of 150 K, and for a 250 K temperature range above TN does not exhibit Curie-Weiss behavior, indicating the presence of strong magnetic correlations at high temperatures. Resistivity measurements show that CaMn2Bi2 exhibits semiconducting properties at low temperatures, with an energy gap of only 62 meV, indicating it to be a very narrow band gap semiconductor. The electronic structure of CaMn2Bi2, examined via ab-initio electronic structure calculations, indicates that Mn 3d orbital hybridization is essential for the formation of the band gap, suggesting that CaMn2Bi2 may be a hybridization-gap semiconductor
O sexo dos anjos: um olhar sobre a anatomia e a produção do sexo (como se fosse) natural The sex of angels: analyzing anatomy and the construction of (as if it were) a natural sex
Este artigo analisa as representações corporais e práticas sociais acionadas no que se refere às crianças e jovens intersex, contrastando a perspectiva de profissionais médicos com a dos familiares envolvidos. Parte-se de dois eixos analíticos: o olhar generificado sobre a anatomia e as visibilidades/invisibilidades do sexo. Os argumentos centrais propostos são que o sexo é tão construído na cultura quanto o gênero e que as fronteiras entre o natural e o não-natural são facilmente borradas quando se trata de definí-las a partir do que é considerado dentro ou fora das normas sociais.<br>This paper analyzes body representations and social practices related to intersex children and teenagers by contrasting the viewpoints of medical doctors and the patients' relatives. It is based upon two analytical categories: the gendered view of anatomy and the visibility/invisibility of sex. The main arguments suggested here are that sex is as culturally-built as gender, and that the boundaries between the natural and not-natural are easily blurred when it comes to defining what fits and what does not fit social norms
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Three-dimensional Dirac semimetals: Design principles and predictions of new materials
Design principles and predictions of new three-dimensional (3D) Dirac semimetals are presented and placed in the context of currently known materials. Three different design principles are presented (cases I, II, and III), each of which yields predictions for new candidates. For case I, 3D Dirac semimetals based on charge-balanced compounds BaAgBi, SrAgBi, YbAuSb, PtBi2, and SrSn2As2 are identified as candidates. For case II, 3D Dirac semimetals in analogy to graphene, BaGa2 is identified as a candidate, and BaPt and Li2Pt are discussed. For case III, 3D Dirac semimetals based on glide planes and screw axes, TlMo3Te3 and the AMo(3)X(3) family, in general (A = K, Na, In, Tl; X = Se, Te), as well as the Group IVb trihalides such as HfI3, are identified as candidates. Finally, we discuss conventional intermetallic compounds with Dirac cones and identify Cr2B as a potentially interesting material
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Comparison of Sn-doped and nonstoichiometric vertical-Bridgman-grown crystals of the topological insulator Bi2Te2Se
A comparative study of the properties of topological insulator Bi2Te2Se (BTS) crystals grown by the vertical Bridgeman method is described. Two defect mechanisms that create acceptor impurities to compensate for the native n-type carriers are compared: Bi excess, and light Sn doping. Both methods yield low carrier concentrations and an n-p crossover over the length of the grown crystal boules, but lower carrier concentrations and higher resistivities are obtained for the Sn-doped crystals, which reach carrier concentrations as low as 8 x 10(14) cm(-3). Further, the temperature dependent resistivities for the Sn-doped crystals display strongly activated behavior at high temperatures, with a characteristic energy of half the bulk band gap. The (001) cleaved Sn-doped BTS crystals display high quality Shubnikov de Haas (SdH) quantum oscillations due to the topological surface state electrons. Angle resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES) characterization shows that the Fermi energy (E-F) for the Sn-doped crystals falls cleanly in the surface states with no interference from the bulk bands, which the Dirac point for the surface states lies approximately 60meV below the top of the bulk valence band maximum, and allows for a determination of the bulk and surface state carrier concentrations as a function of Energy near EF. Electronic structure calculations that compare Bi excess and Sn dopants in BTS demonstrate that Sn acts as a special impurity, with a localized impurity band that acts as a charge buffer occurring inside the bulk band gap. We propose that the special resonant level character of Sn in BTS gives rise to the exceptionally low carrier concentrations and activated resistivities observed. (C) 2014 AIP Publishing LLC