458 research outputs found
Smearing of phase transition due to a surface effect or a bulk inhomogeneity in ferroelectric nanostructures
The boundary conditions, customarily used in the Landau-type approach to
ferroelectric thin films and nanostructures, have to be modified to take into
account that a surface of a ferroelectric (FE) is a defect of the ``field''
type. The surface (interface) field is coupled to a normal component of
polarization and, as a result, the second order phase transitions are generally
suppressed and anomalies in response are washed out. In FE films with a
compositional (grading) or some other type of inhomogeneity, the transition
into a monodomain state is suppressed, but a transition with formation of a
domain structure may occur.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure; the effective bias field is very large, the
estimate is adde
Contributions to the dielectric losses of textured SrTiO3 thin films with Pt electrodes
The factors controlling low frequency (1 MHz) dielectric losses of textured SrTiO3 thin films deposited by radio-frequency magnetron sputtering on platinized sapphire substrates were investigated. In particular, the influence of film texture, phase transformations, applied bias field, temperature and annealing atmospheres was studied. Films that were (111) textured showed a phase transformation at ~ 150 K, whereas films that were predominantly (110) oriented did not exhibit a phase transformation in the measured temperature range (100 K – 300 K). Two major contributions to the dielectric losses were identified: a low temperature loss increase for the (111) oriented film, which could be suppressed by an applied bias field, and a loss peak at ~ 250 K (at 1 MHz), which was strongly frequency dependent and likely associated with a relaxing defect. The low temperature loss mode was related to the appearance of a phase transformation and contributed to the dielectric losses even at temperatures that were more than 100 K above the phase transformation. In contrast to the leakage properties of the films, which were strongly dependent on annealing atmospheres, annealing under reducing conditions had no significant influence on any of the observed loss modes. Possible origins of the different loss contributions are discussed
Effects of Impurity Content on the Sintering Characteristics of Plasma-Sprayed Zirconia
Yttria-stabilized zirconia powders, containing different levels of SiO2 and Al2O3, have been plasma sprayed onto metallic substrates. The coatings were detached from their substrates and a dilatometer was used to monitor the dimensional changes they exhibited during prolonged heat treatments. It was found that specimens containing higher levels of silica and alumina exhibited higher rates of linear contraction, in both in-plane and through-thickness directions. The in-plane stiffness and the through-thickness thermal conductivity were also measured after different heat treatments and these were found to increase at a greater rate for specimens with higher impurity (silica and alumina) levels. Changes in the pore architecture during heat treatments were studied using Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry (MIP). Fine scale porosity (<_50 nm) was found to be sharply reduced even by relatively short heat treatments. This is correlated with improvements in inter-splat bonding and partial healing of intra-splat microcracks, which are responsible for the observed changes in stiffness and conductivity, as well as the dimensional changes
Adipose cells and tissues soften with lipid accumulation while in diabetes adipose tissue stiffens
Adipose tissue expansion involves both differentiation of new precursors and size increase of mature adipocytes. While the two processes are well balanced in healthy tissues, obesity and diabetes type II are associated with abnormally enlarged adipocytes and excess lipid accumulation. Previous studies suggested a link between cell stiffness, volume and stem cell differentiation, although in the context of preadipocytes, there have been contradictory results regarding stiffness changes with differentiation. Thus, we set out to quantitatively monitor adipocyte shape and size changes with differentiation and lipid accumulation. We quantified by optical diffraction tomography that differentiating preadipocytes increased their volumes drastically. Atomic force microscopy (AFM)-indentation and -microrheology revealed that during the early phase of differentiation, human preadipocytes became more compliant and more fluid-like, concomitant with ROCK-mediated F-actin remodelling. Adipocytes that had accumulated large lipid droplets were more compliant, and further promoting lipid accumulation led to an even more compliant phenotype. In line with that, high fat diet-induced obesity was associated with more compliant adipose tissue compared to lean animals, both for drosophila fat bodies and murine gonadal adipose tissue. In contrast, adipose tissue of diabetic mice became significantly stiffer as shown not only by AFM but also magnetic resonance elastography. Altogether, we dissect relative contributions of the cytoskeleton and lipid droplets to cell and tissue mechanical changes across different functional states, such as differentiation, nutritional state and disease. Our work therefore sets the basis for future explorations on how tissue mechanical changes influence the behaviour of mechanosensitive tissue-resident cells in metabolic disorders
Thermodynamic theory of epitaxial ferroelectric thin films with dense domain structures
A Landau-Ginsburg-Devonshire-type nonlinear phenomenological theory is
presented, which enables the thermodynamic description of dense laminar
polydomain states in epitaxial ferroelectric thin films. The theory explicitly
takes into account the mechanical substrate effect on the polarizations and
lattice strains in dissimilar elastic domains (twins). Numerical calculations
are performed for PbTiO3 and BaTiO3 films grown on (001)-oriented cubic
substrates. The "misfit strain-temperature" phase diagrams are developed for
these films, showing stability ranges of various possible polydomain and
single-domain states. Three types of polarization instabilities are revealed
for polydomain epitaxial ferroelectric films, which may lead to the formation
of new polydomain states forbidden in bulk crystals. The total dielectric and
piezoelectric small-signal responses of polydomain films are calculated,
resulting from both the volume and domain-wall contributions. For BaTiO3 films,
strong dielectric anomalies are predicted at room temperature near special
values of the misfit strain.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure
Seebeck coefficient of a quantum confined, high-electron-density electron gas in SrTiO 3
We report on the Seebeck coefficient of quantum confined electron gases in GdTiO3/SrTiO3heterostructures. These structures contain two-dimensional electron gases with very highsheet-carrier concentrations on the SrTiO3-side of the interface due to intrinsic interface doping.While the sheet carrier concentrations are independent of the thickness of the SrTiO3layer, theSeebeck coefficient initially increases with SrTiO3thickness before saturating at a value of300 lK/V. A model of the Seebeck coefficient, based on thermally populated, self-consistent,tight binding subbands, captures in a semi-quantitative manner the observed thickness dependence
Plasma proteome profiling discovers novel proteins associated with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
Synthetic Metabolism: Engineering Biology at the Protein and Pathway Scales
Biocatalysis has become a powerful tool for the synthesis of high-value compounds, particularly so in the case of highly functionalized and/or stereoactive products. Nature has supplied thousands of enzymes and assembled them into numerous metabolic pathways. Although these native pathways can be use to produce natural bioproducts, there are many valuable and useful compounds that have no known natural biochemical route. Consequently, there is a need for both unnatural metabolic pathways and novel enzymatic activities upon which these pathways can be built. Here, we review the theoretical and experimental strategies for engineering synthetic metabolic pathways at the protein and pathway scales, and highlight the challenges that this subfield of synthetic biology currently faces.Synthetic Biology Engineering Research CenterNational Science Foundation (Grant no. 0540879
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