2,765 research outputs found
Current carrying capacity of carbon nanotubes
The current carrying capacity of ballistic electrons in carbon nanotubes that
are coupled to ideal contacts is analyzed. At small applied voltages, where
electrons are injected only into crossing subbands, the differential
conductance is . At applied voltages larger than
( is the energy level spacing of first non crossing subbands),
electrons are injected into non crossing subbands. The contribution of these
electrons to current is determined by the competing processes of Bragg
reflection and Zener type inter subband tunneling. In small diameter nanotubes,
Bragg reflection dominates, and the maximum differential conductance is
comparable to . Inter subband Zener tunneling can be non negligible as
the nanotube diameter increases because is inversely
proportional to the diameter. As a result, with increasing nanotube diameter,
the differential conductance becomes larger than , though not
comparable to the large number of subbands into which electrons are injected
from the contacts. These results may be relevant to recent experiments in large
diameter multi-wall nanotubes that observed conductances larger than .Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Characterization of a Plain Broadband Textile PIFA
Bandwidth characteristic of a wearable antenna is one of the major factors in determining its usability on the human body. In this work, a planar inverted-F antenna (PIFA) structure is proposed to achieve a large bandwidth to avoid serious antenna reflection coefficient detuning when placed in proximity of the body. The proposed structure is designed based on a simple structure, in order to provide practicality in application and maintain fabrication simplicity. Two different types of conductive textiles, namely Pure Copper Polyester Taffeta Fabric (PCPTF) and ShieldIt, are used in order to proof its concept, in comparison with a metallic antenna made from copper foil. The design is spaced and fabricated using a 6 mm thick fleece fabric. To cater for potential fabrication and material measurement inaccuracies, both antennas' performance are also investigated and analyzed with varying physical and material parameters. From this investigation, it is found that the proposed structure's extended bandwidth enabled the antenna to function with satisfactory on-body reflection coefficients, despite unavoidable gain and efficiency reduction
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Smartphone-based pathogen diagnosis in urinary sepsis patients.
BackgroundThere is an urgent need for rapid, sensitive, and affordable diagnostics for microbial infections at the point-of-care. Although a number of innovative systems have been reported that transform mobile phones into potential diagnostic tools, the translational challenge to clinical diagnostics remains a significant hurdle to overcome.MethodsA smartphone-based real-time loop-mediated isothermal amplification (smaRT-LAMP) system was developed for pathogen ID in urinary sepsis patients. The free, custom-built mobile phone app allows the phone to serve as a stand-alone device for quantitative diagnostics, allowing the determination of genome copy-number of bacterial pathogens in real time.FindingsA head-to-head comparative bacterial analysis of urine from sepsis patients revealed that the performance of smaRT-LAMP matched that of clinical diagnostics at the admitting hospital in a fraction of the time (~1 h vs. 18-28 h). Among patients with bacteremic complications of their urinary sepsis, pathogen ID from the urine matched that from the blood - potentially allowing pathogen diagnosis shortly after hospital admission. Additionally, smaRT-LAMP did not exhibit false positives in sepsis patients with clinically negative urine cultures.InterpretationThe smaRT-LAMP system is effective against diverse Gram-negative and -positive pathogens and biological specimens, costs less than $100 US to fabricate (in addition to the smartphone), and is configurable for the simultaneous detection of multiple pathogens. SmaRT-LAMP thus offers the potential to deliver rapid diagnosis and treatment of urinary tract infections and urinary sepsis with a simple test that can be performed at low cost at the point-of-care. FUND: National Institutes of Health, Chan-Zuckerberg Biohub, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Active and passive aperture coupled microstrip antenna design
Microstrip antennas has a few feeding technique applicable to them. One of them is the non-contacting feeds, which is the aperture-coupled feed techniques. The main mechanism of power transfer between its feed line and patch is the coupling mechanism through the aperture. This work is an effort to design, simulate, fabricate and measurement of passive and active rectangular patch with aperture coupled feed techniques. Simulation is being done using the Method of Moments (MoM). This is simulated in Microwave Office software. This design intends to focus on studying the differences in simulated and measured parameters of the antenna on its return loss, bandwidth and radiation pattern
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