294 research outputs found
Approaching the High Intrinsic Electrical Resistivity of NbO2 in Epitaxially Grown Films
NbO2 is a promising candidate for resistive switching devices due to an insulator-metal transition above room temperature, which is related to a phase transition from a distorted rutile structure to an undistorted one. However, the electrical resistivity of the NbO2 thin films produced so far has been too low to achieve high on-off switching ratios. Here, we report on the structural, electrical, and optical characterization of single-crystalline NbO2 (001) thin films grown by pulsed laser deposition on MgF2 (001) substrates. An annealing step reduced the full width at half maximum of the NbO2 (004) x-ray Bragg reflection by one order of magnitude, while the electrical resistivity of the films increased by two orders of magnitude to about 1k Omega cm at room temperature. Temperature-dependent resistivity measurements of an annealed sample revealed that below 650K, two deep-level defects with activation energies of 0.25eV and 0.37eV dominate the conduction, while above 650K, intrinsic conduction prevails. Optical characterization by spectroscopic ellipsometry and by absorption measurements with the electric field vector of the incident light perpendicular to the c-axis of the distorted rutile structure indicates the onset of fundamental absorption at about 0.76eV at room temperature, while at 4K, the onset shifts to 0.85eV. These optical transitions are interpreted to take place across the theoretically predicted indirect bandgap of distorted rutile NbO2
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Stability of ZnSe-Passivated Laser Facets Cleaved in Air and in Ultra-High Vacuum
Catastrophic optical mirror damage (COMD) is one of the main failure mechanisms limiting the reliability of GaAs based laser diodes. Here, we compare the facet stability of ZnSe-passivated ridge-waveguide lasers (RWLs) that are cleaved in air and subsequently cleaned using atomic hydrogen with RWLs that are cleaved in ultra-high vacuum. RWLs cleaved in ultra-high vacuum show a superior performance and reach power densities up to 58 MW/cm 2 under extended continuous wave operation at 1064 nm. This is attributed to the reduction of defects at the interface between ZnSe and the cleaved facet as evidenced by transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction
News on the Machtenstein H5 ordinary chondrite
第6回極域科学シンポジウム[OA] 南極隕石11月16日(月) 国立極地研究所1階交流アトリウ
Huge impact of compressive strain on phase transition temperatures in epitaxial ferroelectric KxNa1-xNbO3 thin films
We present a study in which ferroelectric phase transition temperatures in epitaxial KxNa1-xNbO3 films are altered systematically by choosing different (110)-oriented rare-earth scandate substrates and by variation of the potassium to sodium ratio. Our results prove the capability to continuously shift the ferroelectric-to-ferroelectric transition from the monoclinic MC to orthorhombic c-phase by about 400 °C via the application of anisotropic compressive strain. The phase transition was investigated in detail by monitoring the temperature dependence of ferroelectric domain patterns using piezoresponse force microscopy and upon analyzing structural changes by means of high resolution X-ray diffraction including X-ray reciprocal space mapping. Moreover, the temperature evolution of the effective piezoelectric coefficient d33,f was determined using double beam laser interferometry, which exhibits a significant dependence on the particular ferroelectric phase. © 2019 Author(s)
SU(2) symmetry in a Hubbard model with spin-orbit coupling
We study the underlying symmetry in a spin-orbit coupled tight-binding model
with Hubbard interaction. It is shown that, in the absence of the on-site
interaction, the system possesses the SU(2) symmetry arising from the
timereversal symmetry. The influence of the on-site interaction on the symmetry
depends on the topology of the networks: The SU(2) symmetry is shown to be the
spin rotation symmetry of a simply-connected lattice, so it still holds in the
presence of the Hubbard correlation. In contrary, the on-site interaction
breaks the SU(2) symmetry of a multi-connected lattice.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
A systematic review and meta-analysis of the direct effects of nutrients on corals
Chronic exposure of coral reefs to elevated nutrient conditions can modify the performance of the coral holobiont and shift the competitive interactions of reef organisms. Many studies have nowquantified the links between nutrients and coral performance, but fewhave translated these studies to directly address coastal water quality standards. To address this management need, we conducted a systematic review of peer-reviewed studies, public reports, and gray literature that examined the impacts of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN: nitrate, nitrite, and ammonium) and dissolved inorganic phosphorus (DIP: phosphate) on scleractinian corals. The systematic review resulted in 47 studies with comparable data on coral holobiont responses to nutrients: symbiont density, chlorophyll α (chl-α) concentration, photosynthesis, photosynthetic efficiency, growth, calcification, adult survival, juvenile survival, and fertilization. Mixed-effects meta-regression meta-analyses were used to determine the magnitude of the positive or negative effects of DIN and DIP on coral responses. Zooxanthellae density (DIN & DIP), chl-α concentration (DIN), photosynthetic rate (DIN), and growth (DIP) all exhibited positive responses to nutrient addition; maximum quantum yield (DIP), growth (DIN), larval survival (DIN), and fertilization (DIN) exhibited negative responses. In lieu of developing specific thresholds for the management of nutrients as a stressor on coral reefs, we highlight important inflection points in the magnitude and direction of the effects of inorganic nutrients and identify trends among coral responses. The responses of corals to nutrients are complex, warranting conservative guidelines for elevated nutrient concentrations on coral reefs
Predictive significance of the six-minute walk distance for long-term survival in chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure
Background: The 6-min walk distance ( 6-MWD) is a global marker of functional capacity and prognosis in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ( COPD), but less explored in other chronic respiratory diseases. Objective: To study the role of 6-MWD in chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure ( CHRF). Methods: In 424 stable patients with CHRF and non-invasive ventilation ( NIV) comprising COPD ( n = 197), restrictive diseases ( RD; n = 112) and obesity-hypoventilation- syndrome ( OHS; n = 115), the prognostic value of 6-MWD for long- term survival was assessed in relation to that of body mass index (BMI), lung function, respiratory muscle function and laboratory parameters. Results: 6-MWD was reduced in patients with COPD ( median 280 m; quartiles 204/350 m) and RD ( 290 m; 204/362 m) compared to OHS ( 360 m; 275/440 m; p <0.001 each). Overall mortality during 24.9 (13.1/40.5) months was 22.9%. In the 424 patients with CHRF, 6-MWD independently predicted mortality in addition to BMI, leukocytes and forced expiratory volume in 1 s ( p <0.05 each). In COPD, 6-MWD was strongly associated with mortality using the median {[} p <0.001, hazard ratio ( HR) = 3.75, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.24-6.38] or quartiles as cutoff levels. In contrast, 6-MWD was only significantly associated with impaired survival in RD patients when it was reduced to 204 m or less (1st quartile; p = 0.003, HR = 3.31, 95% CI: 1.73-14.10), while in OHS 6-MWD had not any prognostic value. Conclusions: In patients with CHRF and NIV, 6-MWD was predictive for long- term survival particularly in COPD. In RD only severely reduced 6-MWD predicted mortality, while in OHS 6-MWD was relatively high and had no prognostic value. These results support a disease-specific use of 6-MWD in the routine assessment of patients with CHRF. Copyright (C) 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Superlattice Growth via MBE and Green’s Function Techniques
A model has been developed to simulate the growth of arrays consisting of a substrate on which alternating layers of quantum dots (QDs) and spacer layers are epitaxially grown. The substrate and spacer layers are modeled as an anisotropic elastic half-space, and the QDs are modeled as point inclusions buried within the half-space. In this model, the strain at the free surface of this half-space due to the buried point QDs is calculated, and a scalar measure of the strain at the surface is subsequently determined. New point QDs are placed on the surface where the previously calculated scalar strain measure is a minimum. Following available DFT results, this scalar strain measure is a weighted average of the in-plane strains. This model is constructed under the assumption that diffusional anisotropy can be neglected, and thus, the results are more in agreement with results from experiments of growth of SiGe QDs than experiments involving QDs of (In,Ga)As
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