784 research outputs found
Core-shell nanoparticle arrays double the strength of steel
Manipulating structure, defects and composition of a material at the atomic scale for enhancing its physical or mechanical properties is referred to as nanostructuring. Here, by combining advanced microscopy techniques, we unveil how formation of highly regular nano-arrays of nanoparticles doubles the strength of an Fe-based alloy, doped with Ti, Mo, and V, from 500 MPa to 1 GPa, upon prolonged heat treatment. The nanoparticles form at moving heterophase interfaces during cooling from the high-temperature face-centered cubic austenite to the body-centered cubic ferrite phase. We observe MoC and TiC nanoparticles at early precipitation stages as well as core-shell nanoparticles with a Ti-C rich core and a Mo-V rich shell at later precipitation stages. The core-shell structure hampers particle coarsening, enhancing the material's strength. Designing such highly organized metallic core-shell nanoparticle arrays provides a new pathway for developing a wide range of stable nano-architectured engineering metallic alloys with drastically enhanced properties. ?The Author(s) 2017.1116Ysciescopu
Theory of biopolymer stretching at high forces
We provide a unified theory for the high force elasticity of biopolymers
solely in terms of the persistence length, , and the monomer spacing,
. When the force f>\fh \sim k_BT\xi_p/a^2 the biopolymers behave as Freely
Jointed Chains (FJCs) while in the range \fl \sim k_BT/\xi_p < f < \fh the
Worm-like Chain (WLC) is a better model. We show that can be estimated
from the force extension curve (FEC) at the extension
(normalized by the contour length of the biopolymer). After validating the
theory using simulations, we provide a quantitative analysis of the FECs for a
diverse set of biopolymers (dsDNA, ssRNA, ssDNA, polysaccharides, and
unstructured PEVK domain of titin) for . The success of a specific
polymer model (FJC or WLC) to describe the FEC of a given biopolymer is
naturally explained by the theory. Only by probing the response of biopolymers
over a wide range of forces can the -dependent elasticity be fully
described.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
Measuring Temperature Gradients over Nanometer Length Scales
When a quantum dot is subjected to a thermal gradient, the temperature of
electrons entering the dot can be determined from the dot's thermocurrent if
the conductance spectrum and background temperature are known. We demonstrate
this technique by measuring the temperature difference across a 15 nm quantum
dot embedded in a nanowire. This technique can be used when the dot's energy
states are separated by many kT and will enable future quantitative
investigations of electron-phonon interaction, nonlinear thermoelectric
effects, and the effciency of thermoelectric energy conversion in quantum dots.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
HT-FED2004-56184 CFD ANALYSIS OF GAS-INSULATED TRANSFORMERS
ABSTRACT A thermal design of transformers has been performed using an empirical formula. In order to reduce the developing cost and time, CFD analysis is used in thermal design process for gas-insulated transformers. We calculated the pressure loss of coolant and the temperature rise of winding with empirical formulas and CFD analysis. Also, we constructed some real machines and compared the analytic results with the experimental data. The comparison shows a good agreement between the CFD calculations and experimental results
Screening of suitable cationic dopants for solar absorber material CZTS/Se: A first principles study
The earth abundant and non-toxic solar absorber material kesterite Cu2ZnSn(S/Se)(4) has been studied to achieve high power conversion efficiency beyond various limitations, such as secondary phases, antisite defects, band gap adjustment and microstructure. To alleviate these hurdles, we employed screening based approach to find suitable cationic dopant that can promote the current density and the theoretical maximum upper limit of the energy conversion efficiency (P(%)) of CZTS/Se solar devices. For this task, the hybrid functional (Heyd, Scuseria and Ernzerhof, HSE06) were used to study the electronic and optical properties of cation (Al, Sb, Ga, Ba) doped CZTS/Se. Our in-depth investigation reveals that the Sb atom is suitable dopant of CZTS/CZTSe and also it has comparable bulk modulus as of pure material. The optical absorption coefficient of Sb doped CZTS/Se is considerably larger than the pure materials because of easy formation of visible range exciton due to the presence of defect state below the Fermi level, which leads to an increase in the current density and P(%). Our results demonstrate that the lower formation energy, preferable energy gap and excellent optical absorption of the Sb doped CZTS/Se make it potential component for relatively high efficient solar cells
New insights into electron spin dynamics in the presence of correlated noise
The changes of the spin depolarization length in zinc-blende semiconductors
when an external component of correlated noise is added to a static driving
electric field are analyzed for different values of field strength, noise
amplitude and correlation time. Electron dynamics is simulated by a Monte Carlo
procedure which keeps into account all the possible scattering phenomena of the
hot electrons in the medium and includes the evolution of spin polarization.
Spin depolarization is studied by examinating the decay of the initial spin
polarization of the conduction electrons through the D'yakonov-Perel process,
the only relevant relaxation mechanism in III-V crystals. Our results show
that, for electric field amplitude lower than the Gunn field, the dephasing
length shortens with the increasing of the noise intensity. Moreover, a
nonmonotonic behavior of spin depolarization length with the noise correlation
time is found, characterized by a maximum variation for values of noise
correlation time comparable with the dephasing time. Instead, in high field
conditions, we find that, critically depending on the noise correlation time,
external fluctuations can positively affect the relaxation length. The
influence of the inclusion of the electron-electron scattering mechanism is
also shown and discussed.Comment: Published on "Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter" as "Fast Track
Communications", 11 pages, 9 figure
Deciphering the nuclear bile acid receptor FXR paradigm
Originally called retinoid X receptor interacting protein 14 (RIP14), the farnesoid X receptor (FXR) was renamed after the ability of its rat form to bind supra-physiological concentrations of farnesol. In 1999 FXR was de-orphanized since primary bile acids were identified as natural ligands. Strongly expressed in the liver and intestine, FXR has been shown to be the master transcriptional regulator of several entero-hepatic metabolic pathways with relevance to the pathophysiology of conditions such as cholestasis, fatty liver disease, cholesterol gallstone disease, intestinal inflammation and tumors. Furthermore, given the importance of FXR in the gut-liver axis feedbacks regulating lipid and glucose homeostasis, FXR modulation appears to have great input in diseases such as metabolic syndrome and diabetes. Exciting results from several cellular and animal models have provided the impetus to develop synthetic FXR ligands as novel pharmacological agents. Fourteen years from its discovery, FXR has gone from bench to bedside; a novel nuclear receptor ligand is going into clinical use
Origin of chirality in transition-metal dichalcogenides
Chirality is a ubiquitous phenomenon in which a symmetry between left- and
right-handed objects is broken, examples in nature ranging from subatomic
particles and molecules to living organisms. In particle physics, the weak
force is responsible for the symmetry breaking and parity violation in beta
decay, but in condensed matter systems interactions that lead to chirality
remain poorly understood. Here, we unravel the mechanism of chiral charge
density wave formation in the transition-metal dichalcogenide 1T-TiSe2. Using
representation analysis, we show that charge density modulations and ionic
displacements, which transform as a continuous scalar field and a vector field
on a discrete lattice, respectively, follow different irreducible
representations of the space group, despite the fact that they propagate with
the same wave-vectors and are strongly coupled to each other. This
charge-lattice symmetry frustration is resolved by further breaking of all
symmetries not common to both sectors through induced lattice distortions, thus
leading to chirality. Our theory is verified using Raman spectroscopy and
inelastic x-ray scattering, which reveal that all but translation symmetries
are broken at a level not resolved by state-of-the-art diffraction techniques.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Single-molecule derivation of salt dependent base-pair free energies in DNA
Accurate knowledge of the thermodynamic properties of nucleic acids is
crucial to predicting their structure and stability. To date most measurements
of base-pair free energies in DNA are obtained in thermal denaturation
experiments, which depend on several assumptions. Here we report measurements
of the DNA base-pair free energies based on a simplified system, the mechanical
unzipping of single DNA molecules. By combining experimental data with a
physical model and an optimization algorithm for analysis, we measure the 10
unique nearest-neighbor base-pair free energies with 0.1 kcal mol-1 precision
over two orders of magnitude of monovalent salt concentration. We find an
improved set of standard energy values compared with Unified Oligonucleotide
energies and a unique set of 10 base-pair-specific salt-correction values. The
latter are found to be strongest for AA/TT and weakest for CC/GG. Our new
energy values and salt corrections improve predictions of DNA unzipping forces
and are fully compatible with melting temperatures for oligos. The method
should make it possible to obtain free energies, enthalpies and entropies in
conditions not accessible by bulk methodologies.Comment: Main text: 27 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Supporting Information: 51
pages, 19 figures, 4 table
Anomalous Heat Conduction and Anomalous Diffusion in Low Dimensional Nanoscale Systems
Thermal transport is an important energy transfer process in nature. Phonon
is the major energy carrier for heat in semiconductor and dielectric materials.
In analogy to Ohm's law for electrical conductivity, Fourier's law is a
fundamental rule of heat transfer in solids. It states that the thermal
conductivity is independent of sample scale and geometry. Although Fourier's
law has received great success in describing macroscopic thermal transport in
the past two hundreds years, its validity in low dimensional systems is still
an open question. Here we give a brief review of the recent developments in
experimental, theoretical and numerical studies of heat transport in low
dimensional systems, include lattice models, nanowires, nanotubes and
graphenes. We will demonstrate that the phonon transports in low dimensional
systems super-diffusively, which leads to a size dependent thermal
conductivity. In other words, Fourier's law is breakdown in low dimensional
structures
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