675 research outputs found
Weak and strong coupling limits of the two-dimensional Fr\"ohlich polaron with spin-orbit Rashba interaction
The continuous progress in fabricating low-dimensional systems with large
spin-orbit couplings has reached a point in which nowadays materials may
display spin-orbit splitting energies ranging from a few to hundreds of meV.
This situation calls for a better understanding of the interplay between the
spin-orbit coupling and other interactions ubiquitously present in solids, in
particular when the spin-orbit splitting is comparable in magnitude with
characteristic energy scales such as the Fermi energy and the phonon frequency.
In this article, the two-dimensional Fr\"ohlich electron-phonon problem is
reformulated by introducing the coupling to a spin-orbit Rashba potential,
allowing for a description of the spin-orbit effects on the electron-phonon
interaction. The ground state of the resulting Fr\"ohlich-Rashba polaron is
studied in the weak and strong coupling limits of the electron-phonon
interaction for arbitrary values of the spin-orbit splitting. The weak coupling
case is studied within the Rayleigh-Schr\"odinger perturbation theory, while
the strong-coupling electron-phonon regime is investigated by means of
variational polaron wave functions in the adiabatic limit. It is found that,
for both weak and strong coupling polarons, the ground state energy is
systematically lowered by the spin-orbit interaction, indicating that the
polaronic character is strengthened by the Rashba coupling. It is also shown
that, consistently with the lowering of the ground state, the polaron effective
mass is enhanced compared to the zero spin-orbit limit. Finally, it is argued
that the crossover between weakly and strongly coupled polarons can be shifted
by the spin-orbit interaction.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Has incentive payment improved venous thrombo-embolism risk assessment and treatment of hospital in-patients?
This paper focuses on financial incentives rewarding successful implementation of guidelines in the UK National Health Service (NHS). In particular, it assesses the implementation of National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) venous thrombo-embolism (VTE) guidance in 2010 on the risk assessment and secondary prevention of VTE in hospital in-patients and the financial incentives driving successful implementation introduced by the Commissioning for Quality and Innovation for Payment Framework (CQUIN) for 2010-2011. We systematically compared the implementation of evidence-based national guidance on VTE prevention across two specialities (general medicine and orthopaedics) in four hospital sites in the greater South West of England by auditing and evaluating VTE prevention activity for 2009 (i.e. before the 2010 NICE guideline) and late 2010 (almost a year after the guideline was published). Analysis of VTE prevention activity reported in 816 randomly selected orthopaedic and general medical in-patient medical records was complemented by a qualitative study into the practical responses to revised national guidance. This paper's contribution to knowledge is to suggest that by financially rewarding the implementation of national guidance on VTE prevention, paradoxes and contradictions have become apparent between the 'payment by volume system' of Healthcare Resource Groups and the 'payment by results' system of CQUIN
Search for double beta decay of Ce and Ce with HPGe gamma detector
Search for double decay of Ce and Ce was realized
with 732 g of deeply purified cerium oxide sample measured over 1900 h with the
help of an ultra-low background HPGe detector with a volume of 465
cm at the STELLA facility of the Gran Sasso National Laboratories of the
INFN (Italy). New improved half-life limits on double beta processes in the
cerium isotopes were set at the level of ~yr;
many of them are even two orders of magnitude larger than the best previous
results.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables; version accepted for publication on
Nucl. Phys.
New limits on , and decay of Ce and Ce with deeply purified cerium sample
A search for double electron capture (), electron capture with
positron emission (), and double positron emission
) in Ce and Ce was realized with a 465 cm
ultra-low background HP Ge spectrometer over 2299 h at the Gran Sasso
underground laboratory. A 627 g sample of cerium oxide deeply purified by
liquid-liquid extraction method was used as a source of quanta
expected in double decay of the cerium isotopes. New improved half-life
limits were set on different modes and channels of double decay of
Ce and Ce at the level of yr.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
Interventions to Reduce Adult Nursing Turnover: A Systematic Review of Systematic Reviews.
Background: Nurse turnover is an issue of concern in health care systems internationally. Understanding which interventions are effective to reduce turnover rates is important to managers and health care organisations. Despite a plethora of reviews of such interventions, strength of evidence is hard to determine. Objective: We aimed to review literature on interventions to reduce turnover in nurses working in the adult health care services in developed economies. Method: We conducted an overview (systematic review of systematic reviews) using the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, CINAHL plus and SCOPUS and forward searching. We included reviews published between 1990 and January 2015 in English. We carried out parallel blinded selection, extraction of data and assessment of bias, using the Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews. We carried out a narrative synthesis. Results: Despite the large body of published reviews, only seven reviews met the inclusion criteria. These provide moderate quality review evidence, albeit from poorly controlled primary studies. They provide evidence of effect of a small number of interventions which decrease turnover or increase retention of nurses, these being preceptorship of new graduates and leadership for group cohesion. Conclusion: We highlight that a large body of reviews does not equate with a large body of high quality evidence. Agreement as to the measures and terminology to be used together with well-designed, funded primary research to provide robust evidence for nurse and human resource managers to base their nurse retention strategies on is urgently required
Transitions/relaxations in polyester adhesive/PET system
The correlations between the transitions and the dielectric relaxation processes of the oriented poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) pre-impregnated of the polyester thermoplastic adhesive have been investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic dielectric spectroscopy (DDS). The thermoplastic polyester adhesive and the oriented PET films have been studied as reference samples. This study evidences that the adhesive chain segments is responsible for the physical structure evolution in the PET-oriented film. The transitions and dielectric relaxation modes’ evolutions in the glass transition region appear characteristic of the interphase between adhesive and PET film, which is discussed in terms of molecular mobility. The storage at room temperature of the adhesive tape involves the heterogeneity of the physical structure, characterized by glass transition dissociation. Thus, the correlation between the transitions and the dielectric relaxation processes evidences a segregation of the amorphous phases. Therefore, the physical structure and the properties of the material have been linked to the chemical characteristics
Surface alignment and anchoring transitions in nematic lyotropic chromonic liquid crystal
The surface alignment of lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals (LCLCs) can be
not only planar (tangential) but also homeotropic, with self-assembled
aggregates perpendicular to the substrate, as demonstrated by mapping optical
retardation and by three-dimensional imaging of the director field. With time,
the homeotropic nematic undergoes a transition into a tangential state. The
anchoring transition is discontinuous and can be described by a double-well
anchoring potential with two minima corresponding to tangential and homeotropic
orientation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. (Accepted Wednesday Jun
02, 2010
Public health engagement: detection of suspicious skin lesions, screening and referral behaviour of UK based chiropractors.
BACKGROUND: UK morbidity and mortality rates from skin cancer are increasing despite existing preventative strategies involving education and early detection. Manual therapists are ideally placed to support these goals as they see greater quantities of exposed patient skin more often than most other healthcare professionals. The purpose of this study therefore was to ascertain the ability of manual therapists to detect, screen and refer suspicious skin lesions. METHOD: A web-based questionnaire and quiz was used in a sample of UK chiropractic student clinicians and registered chiropractors to gather data during 2011 concerning skin screening and referral behaviors for suspicious skin lesions. RESULTS: A total of 120 questionnaires were included. Eighty one percent of participants agreed that screening for suspicious skin lesions was part of their clinical role, with nearly all (94%) assessing their patients for lesions during examination. Over 90% of the participants reported regularly having the opportunity for skin examination; with nearly all (98%) agreeing they would refer patients with suspicious skin lesions to a medical practitioner. A third of respondents had referred a total of 80 suspicious lesions within the last 12 months with 67% warranting further investigation. CONCLUSIONS: Nearly all respondents agreed that screening patients for suspicious skin lesions was part of their clinical role, with a significant number already referring patients with lesions
Tensile Fracture of Welded Polymer Interfaces: Miscibility, Entanglements and Crazing
Large-scale molecular simulations are performed to investigate tensile
failure of polymer interfaces as a function of welding time . Changes in the
tensile stress, mode of failure and interfacial fracture energy are
correlated to changes in the interfacial entanglements as determined from
Primitive Path Analysis. Bulk polymers fail through craze formation, followed
by craze breakdown through chain scission. At small welded interfaces are
not strong enough to support craze formation and fail at small strains through
chain pullout at the interface. Once chains have formed an average of about one
entanglement across the interface, a stable craze is formed throughout the
sample. The failure stress of the craze rises with welding time and the mode of
craze breakdown changes from chain pullout to chain scission as the interface
approaches bulk strength. The interfacial fracture energy is calculated
by coupling the simulation results to a continuum fracture mechanics model. As
in experiment, increases as before saturating at the average
bulk fracture energy . As in previous simulations of shear strength,
saturation coincides with the recovery of the bulk entanglement density. Before
saturation, is proportional to the areal density of interfacial
entanglements. Immiscibiltiy limits interdiffusion and thus suppresses
entanglements at the interface. Even small degrees of immisciblity reduce
interfacial entanglements enough that failure occurs by chain pullout and
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