28 research outputs found
Low-Energy Electron Microscopy Studies of Interlayer Mass Transport Kinetics on TiN(111)
In situ low-energy electron microscopy was used to study interlayer mass
transport kinetics during annealing of three-dimensional (3D) TiN(111) mounds,
consisting of stacked 2D islands, at temperatures T between 1550 and 1700 K. At
each T, the islands decay at a constant rate, irrespective of their initial
position in the mounds, indicating that mass is not conserved locally. From
temperature-dependent island decay rates, we obtain an activation energy of
2.8+/-0.3 eV. This is consistent with the detachment-limited decay of 2D TiN
islands on atomically-flat TiN(111) terraces [Phys. Rev. Lett. 89 (2002)
176102], but significantly smaller than the value, 4.5+/-0.2 eV, obtained for
bulk-diffusion-limited spiral step growth [Nature 429, 49 (2004)]. We model the
process based upon step flow, while accounting for step-step interactions, step
permeability, and bulk mass transport. The results show that TiN(111) steps are
highly permeable and exhibit strong repulsive temperature-dependent step-step
interactions that vary between 0.003 and 0.076 eV-nm. The rate-limiting process
controlling TiN(111) mound decay is surface, rather than bulk, diffusion in the
detachment-limited regime.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figure
UNITY : a low-field magnetic resonance neuroimaging initiative to characterize neurodevelopment in low and middle-income settings
DATA AVAILABILITY :
Data collected as part of the UNITY network will be made available to researchers from the academic communities at varying levels of granularity depending on site-specific IRB approvals. For some sites, full access to individual raw and processed data will be provided, whilst for others, owing to national policies (e.g., those located in India) may only be able to provide de-identified composite values (e.g., regional volumes, mean relaxometry measures, etc.). The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is committed to open access and broad data availability as permitted.Measures of physical growth, such as weight and height have long been the predominant outcomes for monitoring child health and evaluating interventional outcomes in public health studies, including those that may impact neurodevelopment. While physical growth generally reflects overall health and nutritional status, it lacks sensitivity and specificity to brain growth and developing cognitive skills and abilities. Psychometric tools, e.g., the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, may afford more direct assessment of cognitive development but they require language translation, cultural adaptation, and population norming. Further, they are not always reliable predictors of future outcomes when assessed within the first 12–18 months of a child’s life. Neuroimaging may provide more objective, sensitive, and predictive measures of neurodevelopment but tools such as magnetic resonance (MR) imaging are not readily available in many low and middle-income countries (LMICs). MRI systems that operate at lower magnetic fields (< 100mT) may offer increased accessibility, but their use for global health studies remains nascent. The UNITY project is envisaged as a global partnership to advance neuroimaging in global health studies. Here we describe the UNITY project, its goals, methods, operating procedures, and expected outcomes in characterizing neurodevelopment in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London, and through a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award and a Wellcome Trust Strategic Award.https://www.elsevier.com/locate/dcnhj2024Biochemistry, Genetics and Microbiology (BGM)ImmunologyPaediatrics and Child HealthRadiologySDG-03:Good heatlh and well-beingSDG-17:Partnerships for the goal
Fully dense, non-faceted 111-textured high power impulse magnetron sputtering TiN films grown in the absence of substrate heating and bias
We demonstrate the deposition of fully dense, stoichiometric TiN films on amorphous SiO2 by reactive high power impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS) in the absence of both substrate heating and applied bias. Contrary to the highly underdense layers obtained by reactive dc magnetron sputtering (dcMS) under similar conditions, the film nanostructure exhibits neither intra- nor intergrain porosity, exhibiting a strong 111 preferred orientation with flat surfaces. Competitive grain growth occurs only during the early stages of deposition 100 nm). The strong differences in the kinetically-limited nanostructural evolution for HiPIMS vs. dcMS are explained by high real-time deposition rates with long relaxation times, high ionization probabilities for Ti, and broad ion energy distributions