4,349 research outputs found
Dehalococcoides spp. in river sediments: insights in functional diversity and dechlorination activity
In dit proefschrift staan Dehaloccoides spp. centraal vanwege hun vermogen één van deze gechloreerde verbindingen, hexachloorbenzeen (HCB), af te breken tot een verbinding met minder chlooratomen. HCB werd tot voor kort voornamelijk toegepast als fungicide en pesticide en kan bijvoorbeeld vrijkomen bij de productie van synthetisch rubber. Daarnaast wordt het gevormd als bijproduct tijdens de productie van oplosmiddelen en pesticiden. HCB is kankerverwekkend, giftig en hoopt zich op in ecosystemen. Tegenwoordig is het gebruik ervan binnen de E.U. dan ook verboden, maar omdat de stof erg moeilijk afbreekbaar is zal deze nog gedurende lange tijd worden teruggevonden in het milieu. Grootschalig onderzoek is gedaan naar de aanwezigheid, activiteit en het dechlorinerende vermogen van Dehalococcoides spp. in riviersedimenten en de bodems in uiterwaarden van verschillende Europese rivieren (Elbe, Donau, Maas, Ebro, Brevilles)
The surface adhesion parameter: a measure for wafer bondability
A theory is presented which describes the initial direct wafer bonding process. The effect of surface microroughness on the bondability is studied on the basis of the theory of contact and adhesion of elastic solids. An effective bonding energy, the maximum of which is the specific surface energy of adhesion, is proposed to describe the real binding energy of the bonding interface including the influence of the wafer surface microroughness. Both the effective bonding energy and the real area of contact between rough surfaces depend on a dimensionless surface adhesion parameter, &thetas;. Using the adhesion parameter as a measure, three kinds of wafer contact interfaces can be identified with respect to their bondability; viz. the non-bonding regime (&thetas;>≈12), the bonding regime (&thetas;<≈1), and the adherence regime (1<&thetas;<12). Experimental data are in agreement with this theor
Metastability and the Casimir Effect in Micromechanical Systems
Electrostatic and Casimir interactions limit the range of positional
stability of electrostatically-actuated or capacitively-coupled mechanical
devices. We investigate this range experimentally for a generic system
consisting of a doubly-clamped Au suspended beam, capacitively-coupled to an
adjacent stationary electrode. The mechanical properties of the beam, both in
the linear and nonlinear regimes, are monitored as the attractive forces are
increased to the point of instability. There "pull-in" occurs, resulting in
permanent adhesion between the electrodes. We investigate, experimentally and
theoretically, the position-dependent lifetimes of the free state (existing
prior to pull-in). We find that the data cannot be accounted for by simple
theory; the discrepancy may be reflective of internal structural instabilities
within the metal electrodes.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 4 figure
Unidirectional Invisibility and PT-Symmetry with Graphene
We investigate the reflectionlessness and invisibility properties in the
transverse electric (TE) mode solution of a linear homogeneous optical system
which comprises the -symmetric structures covered by graphene
sheets. We derive analytic expressions, indicate roles of each parameter
governing optical system with graphene and justify that optimal conditions of
these parameters give rise to broadband and wide angle invisibility. Presence
of graphene turns out to shift the invisible wavelength range and to reduce the
required gain amount considerably, based on its chemical potential and
temperature. We substantiate that our results yield broadband reflectionless
and invisible configurations for realistic materials of small refractive
indices, usually around , and of small thickness sizes with graphene
sheets of rather small temperatures and chemical potentials. Finally, we
demonstrate that pure -symmetric graphene yields invisibility at
small temperatures and chemical potentials.Comment: 20 pages, 1 table 17 figure
Capillary origami of micro-machined micro-objects: Bi-layer conductive hinges
Recently, we demonstrated controllable 3D self-folding by means of capillary
forces of silicon-nitride micro-objects made of rigid plates connected to each
other by flexible hinges [1]. In this paper, we introduce platinum electrodes
running from the substrate to the plates over these bendable hinges. The
fabrication yield is as high as (77 +/- 2) % for hinges with a length less than
75 {\mu}m. The yield reduces to (18 +/- 2) % when the length increases above
100 {\mu}m. Most of the failures in conductivity are due to degradation of the
platinum/chromium layer stack during the final plasma cleaning step. The
bi-layer hinges survive the capillary folding process, even for extremely small
bending radii of 5 {\mu}m, nor does the bending have any impact on the
conductivity. Stress in the different layers deforms the hinges, which does not
affect the conductivity. Once assembled, the conductive hinges can withstand a
current density of (1.6 +/- 0.4) A/cm . This introduction of
conductive electrodes to elastocapillary self-folded silicon-based
micro-objects extends the range of their possible applications by allowing an
electronic functionality of the folded parts.Comment: Currently on a peer review process. 13 page
Elastocapillary folding using stop-programmable hinges fabricated by 3D micro-machining
We show elasto-capillary folding of silicon nitride objects with accurate
folding angles between flaps of 70.60.1{\deg} and demonstrate the
feasibility of such accurate micro-assembly with a final folding angle of
90{\deg}. The folding angle is defined by stop-programmable hinges that are
fabricated starting from silicon molds employing accurate three-dimensional
corner lithography. This nano-patterning method exploits the conformal
deposition and the subsequent timed isotropic etching of a thin film in a 3D
shaped silicon template. The technique leaves a residue of the thin film in
sharp concave corners which can be used as an inversion mask in subsequent
steps. Hinges designed to stop the folding at 70.6{\deg} were fabricated
batchwise by machining the V-grooves obtained by KOH etching in (110) silicon
wafers; 90{\deg} stop-programmable hinges were obtained starting from silicon
molds obtained by dry etching on (100) wafers. The presented technique is
applicable to any folding angle and opens a new route towards creating
structures with increased complexity, which will ultimately lead to a novel
method for device fabrication.Comment: Submitted to a peer reviewed journa
Nonequilibrium Electron Interactions in Metal Films
Ultrafast relaxation dynamics of an athermal electron distribution is
investigated in silver films using a femtosecond pump-probe technique with 18
fs pulses in off-resonant conditions. The results yield evidence for an
increase with time of the electron-gas energy loss rate to the lattice and of
the free electron damping during the early stages of the electron-gas
thermalization. These effects are attributed to transient alterations of the
electron average scattering processes due to the athermal nature of the
electron gas, in agreement with numerical simulations
Electronic band structure and carrier effective mass in calcium aluminates
First-principles electronic band structure investigations of five compounds
of the CaO-Al2O3 family, 3CaO.Al2O3, 12CaO.7Al2O3, CaO.Al2O3, CaO.2Al2O3 and
CaO.6Al2O3, as well as CaO and alpha-, theta- and kappa-Al2O3 are performed. We
find that the conduction band in the complex oxides is formed from the oxygen
antibonding p-states and, although the band gap in Al2O3 is almost twice larger
than in CaO, the s-states of both cations. Such a hybrid nature of the
conduction band leads to isotropic electron effective masses which are nearly
the same for all compounds investigated. This insensitivity of the effective
mass to variations in the composition and structure suggests that upon a proper
degenerate doping, both amorphous and crystalline phases of the materials will
possess mobile extra electrons
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