237 research outputs found

    Electronic friction-based vibrational lifetimes of molecular adsorbates: Beyond the independent atom approximation

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    We assess the accuracy of vibrational damping rates of diatomic adsorbates on metal surfaces as calculated within the local-density friction approximation (LDFA). An atoms-in-molecules (AIM) type charge partitioning scheme accounts for intra-molecular contributions and overcomes the systematic underestimation of the non-adiabatic losses obtained within the prevalent independent atom approximation. The quantitative agreement obtained with theoretical and experimental benchmark data suggests the LDFA-AIM as an efficient and reliable approach to account for electronic dissipation in ab initio molecular dynamics simulations of surface chemical reactions.Comment: 5 pages including 2 figure

    Energy Dissipation during Diffusion at Metal Surfaces: Disentangling the Role of Phonons versus Electron-Hole Pairs

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    Helium spin echo experiments combined with ab initio\textit{ab initio} based Langevin molecular dynamics simulations are used to quantify the adsorbate-substrate coupling during the thermal diffusion of Na atoms on Cu(111). An analysis of trajectories within the local density friction approximation allows the contribution from electron-hole pair excitations to be separated from the total energy dissipation. Despite the minimal electronic friction coefficient of Na and the relatively small mass mismatch to Cu promoting efficient phononic dissipation, about (20±5)% of the total energy loss is attributable to electronic friction. The results suggest a significant role of electronic nonadiabaticity in the rapid thermalization generally relied upon in adiabatic diffusion theories.S. P. R. acknowledges the support of the Technische Universität München—Institute for Advanced Study, funded by the German Excellence Initiative and the European Union Seventh Framework Programme under Grant Agreement No. 291763

    Electronic Friction-Based Vibrational Lifetimes of Molecular Adsorbates: Beyond the Independent-Atom Approximation

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    Catalysis and Surface ChemistryTheoretical Chemistr

    False-negative PD-L1 immunostaining in ethanol-fixed EBUS-TBNA specimens of non-small cell lung cancer patients

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    Aims Programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) immunostaining is used to predict which non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients will respond best to treatment with programmed cell death protein 1/PD-L1 inhibitors. PD-L1 immunostaining is sometimes performed on alcohol-fixed cytological specimens instead of on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) biopsies or resections. We studied whether ethanol prefixation of clots from endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) results in diminished PD-L1 immunostaining as compared with formalin fixation. Methods and results FFPE cell blocks from EBUS-TBNA specimens of 54 NSCLC patients were identified. For each case, paired samples were available, consisting of clots directly immersed in formalin and clots prefixed in Fixcyt (50% ethanol). Serial sections were immunostained for PD-L1 by use of the standardised SP263 assay and the 22C3 antibody as a laboratory-developed test (LDT). PD-L1 positivity was determined with two cut-offs (1% and 50%). Concordance of PD-L1 positivity between the formalin-fixed (gold standard) and ethanol-prefixed material was assessed. When the 22C3 LDT was used, 30% and 36% of the ethanol-prefixed specimens showed false-negative results at the 1% and 50% cut-offs, respectively (kappa 0.64 and 0.68). When SP263 was used, 22% of the ethanol-prefixed specimens showed false-negative results at the 1% cut-off (kappa 0.67). At the 50% cut-off, concordance was higher (kappa 0.91), with 12% of the ethanol-prefixed specimens showing false-negative results. Conclusion Ethanol fixation of EBUS-TBNA specimens prior to formalin fixation can result in a considerable number of false-negative PD-L1 immunostaining results when a 1% cut-off is used and immunostaining is performed with SP263 or the 22C3 LDT. The same applies to use of the 50% cut-off when immunostaining is performed with the 22C3 LDT

    Ecological Guild Evolution and the Discovery of the World's Smallest Vertebrate

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    Living vertebrates vary drastically in body size, yet few taxa reach the extremely minute size of some frogs and teleost fish. Here we describe two new species of diminutive terrestrial frogs from the megadiverse hotspot island of New Guinea, one of which represents the smallest known vertebrate species, attaining an average body size of only 7.7 mm. Both new species are members of the recently described genus Paedophryne, the four species of which are all among the ten smallest known frog species, making Paedophryne the most diminutive genus of anurans. This discovery highlights intriguing ecological similarities among the numerous independent origins of diminutive anurans, suggesting that minute frogs are not mere oddities, but represent a previously unrecognized ecological guild

    Clinical applications of PD-L1 bioassays for cancer immunotherapy

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    Abstract Programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) has emerged as a biomarker that can help to predict responses to immunotherapies targeted against PD-L1 and its receptor (PD-1). Companion tests for evaluating PD-L1 expression as a biomarker of response have been developed for many cancer immunotherapy agents. These assays use a variety of detection platforms at different levels (protein, mRNA), employ diverse biopsy and surgical samples, and have disparate positivity cutoff points and scoring systems, all of which complicate the standardization of clinical decision-making. This review summarizes the current understanding and ongoing investigations regarding PD-L1 expression as a potential biomarker for clinical outcomes of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 immunotherapy

    Iron-catalysed, general and operationally simple formal hydrogenation using Fe(OTf)(3) and NaBH4

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    An operationally simple and environmentally benign formal hydrogenation protocol has been developed using highly abundant iron(iii) salts and an inexpensive, bench stable, stoichiometric reductant, NaBH(4), in ethanol, under ambient conditions. This reaction has been applied to the reduction of terminal alkenes (22 examples, up to 95% yield) and nitro-groups (26 examples, up to 95% yield). Deuterium labelling studies indicate that this reaction proceeds via an ionic rather than radical mechanism
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