58 research outputs found
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Efficacious symmetry-adapted atomic displacement method for lattice dynamical studies
Small displacement methods have been successfully used to calculate the
lattice dynamical properties of crystals. It involves displacing atoms by a
small amount in order to calculate the induced forces on all atoms in a
supercell for the computation of force constants. Even though these methods are
widely in use, to our knowledge, there is no systematic discussion of optimal
displacement directions from the crystal's symmetry point of view nor a
rigorous error analysis of such methods. Based on the group theory and point
group symmetry of a crystal, we propose displacement directions, with an
equivalent concept of the group of , deduced directly in the Cartesian
coordinates rather than the usual fractional coordinates, that maintain the
theoretical maximum for the triple product spanned by the three
displacements to avoid possible severe roundoff errors. The proposed
displacement directions are generated from a minimal set of irreducible atomic
displacements that keep the required independent force calculations to a
minimum. We find the error in the calculated force constant explicitly depends
on the inverse of and inaccuracy of the forces. Test systems such as Si,
graphene, and orthorhombic Sb2S3 are used to illustrate the method. Our
displacement method is shown to be very robust in treating low-symmetry cells
with a large `aspect ratio' due to huge differences in lattice parameters, use
of a large vacuum height, or a very oblique unit cell due to unconventional
choice of primitive lattice vectors. It is expected that our displacement
strategy can be used to address higher-order interatomic interactions to
achieve good accuracy and efficiency
Rapid Turnover of 2-LTR HIV-1 DNA during Early Stage of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy
BACKGROUND: Despite prolonged treatment with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), the infectious HIV-1 continues to replicate and resides latently in the resting memory CD4+ T lymphocytes, which blocks the eradication of HIV-1. The viral persistence of HIV-1 is mainly caused by its proviral DNA being either linear nonintegrated, circular nonintegrated, or integrated. Previous reports have largely focused on the dynamics of HIV-1 DNA from the samples collected with relatively long time intervals during the process of disease and HAART treatment, which may have missed the intricate changes during the intervals in early treatment. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study, we investigated the dynamics of HIV-1 DNA in patients during the early phase of HARRT treatment. Using optimized real time PCR, we observed significant changes in 2-LTR during the first 12-week of treatment, while total and integrated HIV-1 DNA remained stable. The doubling time and half-life of 2-LTR were not correlated with the baseline and the rate of changes in plasma viral load and various CD4+ T-cell populations. Longitudinal analyses on 2-LTR sequences and plasma lipopolysaccharide (LPS) levels did not reveal any significant changes in the same treatment period. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our study revealed the rapid changes in 2-LTR concentration in a relatively large number of patients during the early HAART treatment. The rapid changes indicate the rapid infusion and clearance of cells bearing 2-LTR in the peripheral blood. Those changes are not expected to be caused by the blocking of viral integration, as our study did not include the integrase inhibitor raltegravir. Our study helps better understand the dynamics of HIV-DNA and its potential role as a biomarker for the diseases and for the treatment efficacy of HAART
A case control study on passive smoking and childhood hospitalization due to respiratory illnesses
Conferenc Theme: Transformation in Hospital Service
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The bright side and dark side of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites
The previously developed bistable amphoteric native defect (BAND) model is used for a comprehensive explanation of the unique photophysical properties and for understanding the remarkable performance of perovskites as photovoltaic materials. It is shown that the amphoteric defects in the donor (acceptor) configuration capture a fraction of photoexcited electrons (holes) dividing them into two groups: higher-energy bright and lower-energy dark electrons (holes). The spatial separation of the dark electrons and dark holes and the k-space separation of the bright and dark charge carriers reduce electron-hole recombination rates, emulating the properties of an ideal photovoltaic material with a balanced, spatially separated transport of electrons and holes. The BAND model also offers a straightforward explanation for the exceptional insensitivity of the photovoltaic performance of polycrystalline perovskite films to structural and optical inhomogeneities. The blue-shifted radiative recombination of bright electrons and holes results in a large anti-Stokes effect that provides a quantitative explanation for the spectral dependence of the laser cooling effect measured in perovskite platelets
SnS44-, SbS43-, and AsS33- Metal Chalcogenide Surface Ligands: Couplings to Quantum Dots, Electron Transfers, and All-Inorganic Multi layered Quantum Dot Sensitized Solar Cells
Three inorganic capping ligands (ICLs) for quantum dots (QDs), SnS44-, SbS43- and AsS33-, were synthesized and the energy levels determined. Proximity between the ICL LUMO and QD conduction level governed the electronic couplings such as absorption shift upon ligand exchange, and electron transfer rate to TiO2. QD-sensitized solar cells were fabricated, using the ICL-QDs and also using QD multilayers layer-by-layer assembled by bridging coordinations, and studied as a function of the ICL ligand and the number of QD layers.111310sciescopu
A case control study on passive smoking and childhood hospitalization due to respiratory illness
Conferenc Theme: Transformation in Hospital ServicesAbstrac
Giant second-harmonic generation in ferroelectric NbOI2
Implementing nonlinear optical components in nanoscale photonic devices is challenged by phase-matching conditions requiring thicknesses in the order of hundreds of wavelengths, and is disadvantaged by the short optical interaction depth of nanometre-scale materials and weak photon–photon interactions. Here we report that ferroelectric NbOI2 nanosheets exhibit giant second-harmonic generation with conversion efficiencies that are orders of magnitude higher than commonly reported nonlinear crystals. The nonlinear response scales with layer thickness and is strain- and electrical-tunable; a record >0.2% absolute SHG conversion efficiency and an effective nonlinear susceptibility χ(2)eff in the order of 10−9 m V−1 are demonstrated at an average pump intensity of 8 kW cm–2. Due to the interplay between anisotropic polarization and excitonic resonance in NbOI2, the spatial profile of the polarized SHG response can be tuned by the excitation wavelength. Our results represent a new paradigm for ultrathin, efficient nonlinear optical components
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