2,310 research outputs found
Interactions and superconductivity in heavily doped MoS2
We analyze the microscopic origin and the physical properties of the
superconducting phase recently observed in MoS. We show how the combination
of the valley structure of the conduction band, the density dependence of the
screening of the long range Coulomb interactions, the short range electronic
repulsion, and the relative weakness of the electron-phonon interactions, makes
possible the existence of a phase where the superconducting order parameter has
opposite signs in different valleys, resembling the superconductivity found in
the pnictides and cuprates
Quantum walk on the line as an interference phenomenon
Published versio
Energetics of critical oscillators in active bacterial baths
We investigate the nonequilibrium energetics near a critical point of a non-linear oscillator immersed in an active bacterial bath. At the critical point, we reveal a scaling exponent of the average power exerted by a constant non-conservative torque ăW⧠ă ⌠(Da/Ï)1/4, where Da is the effective diffusivity and Ï the correlation time of the bacterial bath described by a Gaussian colored noise. Other features that we investigate are the average stationary power and the variance of the work both below and above the saddle-node bifurcation. Above the bifurcation, the average power attains an optimal, minimum value for finite Ï that is below its zero-temperature limit. Furthermore, we reveal a finite-time uncertainty relation for active matter which leads to values of the Fano factor of the work that can be below 2kBTeff, with Teff the effective temperature of the oscillator in the bacterial bath. We analyze different Markovian approximations to describe the nonequilibrium stationary state of the system. Finally, we illustrate our results in the experimental context by considering the example of driven colloidal particles in periodic optical potentials within an E. Coli bacterial bath
Extreme-value statistics of stochastic transport processes
We derive exact expressions for the finite-time statistics of extrema (maximum and minimum) of the spatial displacement and the fluctuating entropy flow of biased random walks. Our approach captures key features of extreme events in molecular motor motion along linear filaments. For one-dimensional biased random walks, we derive exact results which tighten bounds for entropy production extrema obtained with martingale theory and reveal a symmetry between the distribution of the maxima and minima of entropy production. Furthermore, we show that the relaxation spectrum of the full generating function, and hence of any moment, of the finite-time extrema distributions can be written in terms of the Marcenko-Pastur distribution of random-matrix theory. Using this result, we obtain efficient estimates for the extreme-value statistics of stochastic transport processes from the eigenvalue distributions of suitable Wishart and Laguerre random matrices. We confirm our results with numerical simulations of stochastic models of molecular motors
Semiempirical Modeling of Reset Transitions in Unipolar Resistive-Switching based Memristors
We have measured the transition process from the high to low resistivity states, i.e., the reset process of resistive switching based memristors based on Ni/HfO2/Si-n+ structures, and have also developed an analytical model for their electrical characteristics. When the characteristic curves are plotted in the current-voltage (I-V) domain a high variability is observed. In spite of that, when the same curves are plotted in the charge-flux domain (Q-phi), they can be described by a simple model containing only three parameters: the charge (Qrst) and the flux (rst) at the reset point, and an exponent, n, relating the charge and the flux before the reset transition. The three parameters can be easily extracted from the Q-phi plots. There is a strong correlation between these three parameters, the origin of which is still under study
Melatonin to rescue the aged heart: antiarrhythmic and antioxidant benefits
Aging comes with gradual loss of functions that increase the vulnerability to disease, senescence, and death. The mechanisms underlying these processes are linked to a prolonged imbalance between damage and repair. Damaging mechanisms include oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, chronodisruption, inflammation, and telomere attrition, as well as genetic and epigenetic alterations. Several endogenous tissue repairing mechanisms also decrease. These alterations associated with aging affect the entire organism. The most devastating manifestations involve the cardiovascular system and may lead to lethal cardiac arrhythmias. Together with structural remodeling, electrophysiological and intercellular communication alterations during aging predispose to arrhythmic events. Despite the knowledge on repairing mechanisms in the cardiovascular system, effective antiaging strategies able to reduce the risk of arrhythmias are still missing. Melatonin is a promising therapeutic candidate due to its pleiotropic actions. This indoleamine regulates chronobiology and endocrine physiology. Of relevance, melatonin is an antiaging, antioxidant, antiapoptotic, antiarrhythmic, immunomodulatory, and antiproliferative molecule. This review focuses on the protective effects of melatonin on age-induced cardiac functional and structural alterations, potentially becoming a new fountain of youth for the heart
The influence of oxygen vacancy and Ce3+ ion positions on the properties of small gold clusters supported on CeO2-x(111)
We studied the influence of oxygen vacancies on small Au clusters supported on CeO2 using dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D). Our results show that the effect of oxygen vacancies on Au clusters is highly dependent on the cluster size and the relative position of the cluster to the vacancy. We found that the Au particles are only affected by the vacancies if they are located directly within the cluster perimeter. Using Crystal Orbital Hamilton Population (COHP) analysis, we show that the oxygen vacancy can lead to the formation of AuâCe bonds under destabilisation of the bonds to the Au atom at the vacancy site and subsequent distortion of the cluster structure. However, we found that such AuâCe bond formation only occurs when the interactions between the Au atom at the vacancy site and the surrounding Au atoms are not critical for the overall cluster stability as, for example, in the case of the central atom in a planar Au7 cluster. The formation of an oxygen vacancy can change the charge of the supported gold cluster from positive (on stoichiometric CeO2) to neutral or negative on defective CeO2âx. Interestingly, the additional electron density is located only at the Au atom at the vacancy site and is not redistributed throughout the cluster. Investigation of the electrostatic potential of the cluster surface did not show any significant changes compared to the stoichiometric surface, other than those caused by structural changes of the Au cluster
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