610 research outputs found
Dynamic and Static Transmission Electron Microscopy Studies on Structural Evaluation of Au nano islands on Si (100) Surface
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) study on morphological changes in gold
nanostructures deposited on Si (100) upon annealing under different vacuum
conditions has been reported. Au thin films of thickness ~2.0 nm were deposited
under high vacuum condition (with the native oxide at the interface of Au and
Si) using thermal evaporation. In-situ, high temperature (from room temperature
(RT) to 850\degreeC) real time TEM measurements showed the evaluation of gold
nanoparticles into rectangular/square shaped gold silicide structures. This has
been attributed to selective thermal decomposition of native oxide layer.
Ex-situ annealing in low vacuum (10-2 mbar) at 850\degreeC showed no growth of
nano-gold silicide structures. Under low vacuum annealing conditions, the
creation of oxide could be dominating compared to the decomposition of oxide
layers resulting in the formation of barrier layer between Au and Si.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
The Effects of Foam Rolling on Hamstring Flexibility, Muscle Soreness and Power
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Limits on the Boron Isotopic Ratio in HD 76932
Data in the 2090 A B region of HD 76932 have been obtained at high S/N using
the HST GHRS echelle at a resolution of 90,000. This wavelength region has been
previously identified as a likely candidate for observing the B11/B10 isotopic
splitting.
The observations do not match a calculated line profile extremely well at any
abundance for any isotopic ratio. If the B abundance previously determined from
observations at 2500 A is assumed, the calculated line profile is too weak,
indicating a possible blending line. Assuming that the absorption at 2090 A is
entirely due to boron, the best-fit total B abundance is higher than but
consistent with that obtained at 2500 A, and the best-fit isotopic ratio
(B11/B10) is in the range ~10:1 to ~4:1. If the absorption is not entirely due
to B and there is an unknown blend, the best-fit isotopic ratio may be closer
to 1:1. Future observations of a similar metal-poor star known to have
unusually low B should allow us to distinguish between these two possibilities.
The constraints that can be placed on the isotopic ratio based on comparisons
with similar observations of HD 102870 and HD 61421 (Procyon) are also
discussed.Comment: Accepted for Nov 1998 Ap
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Masculinity and engagement in HIV care among male fisherfolk on HIV treatment in Uganda.
This study explored the intersection of masculinity and HIV care engagement among fishermen and other male fisherfolk on antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Wakiso District, Uganda. We conducted 30 in-depth interviews with men on ART recruited from HIV treatment sites and used a thematic analysis approach. Since HIV diagnosis and ART initiation, men had adopted masculine identities more conducive to HIV care engagement. The masculine roles of worker and provider, husband and sexual partner and the appearance of physical strength were compromised by HIV, but restored by ART's positive effects on health. Peers also emerged as facilitators to HIV care, with men supporting each other to seek testing and treatment. However, structural and occupational barriers to HIV care associated with the masculine role of worker remained a barrier to care engagement. Findings suggest that emphasising the benefits of ART in bolstering men's ability to fulfil the roles important to them may improve the effectiveness of HIV testing and treatment messaging for men. Differentiated care models that address structural-level barriers to care, and community-level gender-transformative programming to help fishermen engage in HIV care, may be beneficial
Toxicity and Cosmesis Outcomes for Single Fraction Intra-Operative Electron Radiotherapy (IOERT) for Breast Cancer
Background: Adjuvant radiation therapy is proven to reduce local recurrence in patients with early stage breast cancer. To reduce toxicity, improve geographic accuracy, and reduce treatment time, IOERT can be utilized as an alternative to external beam radiation therapy. The study’s objective was to determine the short term toxicity and cosmesis profile of single fraction IOERT given as definitive treatment in a community setting. Materials and Methods: From Mar 2012 to Jul 2014, 84 patients (3 bilateral), ages 45-91 y.o. with stage 0-II were treated with IOERT (Mobetron, IntraOp Medical, Sunnyvale, CA). A single 21 Gy fraction was administered to the tumor bed after resection. IOERT was delivered using 4.5 – 6 cm applicators with electron energies from 6-12 MeV. At 2w, 6mo and 12mo, toxicity was assessed according to CTCAE Version 4.0 (range 0-4) and cosmesis based on a scale derived for national trials. Results: The median pathologic tumor size was 13 mm (4 tumors \u3e 25mm) with 34 tumors being IDC, 4 ILC, 20 DCIS, and 29 mixed histologies. After the initial resection with IOERT, 85 breasts had a negative margin. Two required re-excision due to positive margins. 65 SLN biopsies were completed, 61 were negative, 4 positive (1 completion ALND). Median follow up was 57.1 weeks.
Toxicity (Grade at 2 weeks, 6 months, and 12 months in %):
0: 49, 69, 62
1: 44, 29, 35
2: 7, 2, 3
Cosmesis(Appearance at 2 weeks, 6 months, 12 months in %):
Excellent: 71, 86, 79
Good: 28, 14, 21
Fair: 1, 0, 0
*No patients had a toxicity of 3 or 4; or a cosmesis of poor.
Conclusion: Single fraction IOERT was well tolerated by all patients with no grade 3+ toxicity up to 12 months. At one year, 97% of patients had 0-1 grade toxicity and 100% of patients had excellent or good cosmesis. This treatment, consistent with current reports, meets critical criteria for incorporation into practice and reduces treatment by 3-6 weeks
Synthesis, characterization and thermochemistry of synthetic Pb–As, Pb–Cu and Pb–Zn jarosites
The enthalpy of formation from the elements of well characterized Pb-As, Pb-Cu, and Pb-Zn synthetic jarosites, corresponding to chemical formulas (H3O)0.68±0.03Pb0.32±0.002Fe2.86±0.14(SO4)1.69±0.08(AsO4)0.31±0.02(OH)5.59±0.28(H2O)0.41±0.02, (H3O)0.67±0.03Pb0.33±0.02Fe2.71±0.14Cu0.25±0.01(SO4)2±0.00(OH)5.96±0.30(H2O)0.04±0.002 and (H3O)0.57±0.03Pb0.43±0.02Fe2.70±0.14Zn0.21±0.01(SO4)2±0.00(OH)5.95±0.30(H2O)0.05±0.002, was measured by high temperature oxide melt solution calorimetry and gave ΔH°f = -3691.2 ± 8.6 kJ/mol, ΔH°f = -3653.6 ± 8.2 kJ/mol, and ΔH°f = -3669.4 ± 8.4 kJ/mol, respectively. Using estimated entropies, the standard Gibbs free energy of formation from elements at 298 K ΔG°f of the three compounds were calculated to be -3164.8 ± 9.1 kJ/mol, -3131.4 ± 8.7 kJ/mol, and -3153.6 ± 8.9 kJ/mol, respectively. Based on these free energies, their logKsp values are -13.94 ± 1.89, -4.38 ± 1.81 and -3.75 ± 1.80, respectively. For this compounds, a log10{Pb2+} - pH diagram is presented. The diagram shows that the formation of Pb-As jarosite may decrease aqueous arsenic and lead concentrations to meet drinking water standards. The new thermodynamic data confirm that transformation of Pb-As jarosite to plumbojarosite is thermodynamically possible
Combination of indoor residual spraying with long-lasting insecticide-treated nets for malaria control in Zambezia, Mozambique: a cluster randomised trial and cost-effectiveness study protocol.
Background: Most of the reduction in malaria prevalence seen in Africa since 2000 has been attributed to vector control interventions. Yet increases in the distribution and intensity of insecticide resistance and higher costs of newer insecticides pose a challenge to sustaining these gains. Thus, endemic countries face challenging decisions regarding the choice of vector control interventions. Methods: A cluster randomised trial is being carried out in Mopeia District in the Zambezia Province of Mozambique, where malaria prevalence in children under 5 is high (68% in 2015), despite continuous and campaign distribution of long-lasting insecticide-treated nets (LLINs). Study arm 1 will continue to use the standard, LLIN-based National Malaria Control Programme vector control strategy (LLINs only), while study arm 2 will receive indoor residual spraying (IRS) once a year for 2 years with a microencapsulated formulation of pirimiphos-methyl (Actellic 300 CS), in addition to the standard LLIN strategy (LLINs+IRS). Prior to the 2016 IRS implementation (the first of two IRS campaigns in this study), 146 clusters were defined and stratified per number of households. Clusters were then randomised 1:1 into the two study arms. The public health impact and cost-effectiveness of IRS intervention will be evaluated over 2 years using multiple methods: (1) monthly active malaria case detection in a cohort of 1548 total children aged 6-59 months; (2) enhanced passive surveillance at health facilities and with community health workers; (3) annual cross-sectional surveys; and (4) entomological surveillance. Prospective microcosting of the intervention and provider and societal costs will be conducted. Insecticide resistance status pattern and changes in local Anopheline populations will be included as important supportive outcomes. Discussion: By evaluating the public health impact and cost-effectiveness of IRS with a non-pyrethroid insecticide in a high-transmission setting with high LLIN ownership, it is expected that this study will provide programmatic and policy-relevant data to guide national and global vector control strategies. Trial registration number: NCT02910934
Two Dimensional Incommensurate and Three Dimensional Commensurate Magnetic Order and Fluctuations in
We present neutron scattering measurements on single crystals of lightly
doped , with . These reveal the
evolution of the magnetism in this prototypical doped Mott insulator from a
three dimensional (3D) commensurate (C) antiferromagnetic ground state, which
orders at a relatively high TN, to a two dimensional (2D) incommensurate (IC)
ground state with finite ranged static correlations, which appear below a
relatively low effective TN. At low temperatures, the 2D IC magnetism co-exists
with the 3D C magnetism for doping concentrations as low as ? 0.0125. We find
no signal of a 3D C magnetic ground state by x ? 0.025, consistent with
the upper limit of x ? 0.02 observed in the sister family of doped Mott
insulators, . The 2D IC ground states observed for
are diagonal, and are rotated by 45 degrees within
the orthorhombic basal plane compared with those previously reported for
samples with superconducting ground states: , with $0.05
\leq? x \leq? 0.095. We construct a phase diagram based solely on magnetic
order parameter measurements, which displays much of the complexity of standard
high temperature superconductivity phase diagrams discussed in the literature.
Analysis of high energy-resolution inelastic neutron scattering at moderately
low temperatures shows a progressive depletion of the very low energy dynamic
magnetic susceptibility as x increases from 0.0125 to 0.035. This low energy,
dynamic susceptibility falls off? with increasing temperature on a scale much
higher than the effective 2D IC TN appropriate to these materials. Appreciable
dynamic 2D IC magnetic fluctuations inhabit much of the "pseudogap" regime of
the phase diagram.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Carbon Nanotubes by a CVD Method. Part II: Formation of Nanotubes from (Mg, Fe)O Catalysts
The aim of this paper is to study the formation of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) from different Fe/MgO oxide powders that were prepared by combustion synthesis and characterized in detail in a companion paper. Depending on the synthesis conditions, several iron species are present in the starting oxides including Fe2+ ions, octahedral Fe3+ ions, Fe3+ clusters, and MgFe2O4-like nanoparticles. Upon reduction during heating at 5 °C/min up to 1000 °C in H2/CH4 of the oxide powders, the octahedral Fe3+ ions tend to form Fe2+ ions, which are not likely to be reduced to metallic iron whereas the MgFe2O4-like particles are directly reduced to metallic iron. The reduced phases are R-Fe, Fe3C, and ç-Fe-C. Fe3C appears as the postreaction phase involved in the formation of carbon filaments (CNTs and thick carbon nanofibers). Thick carbon nanofibers are formed from catalyst particles originating from poorly dispersed species (Fe3+ clusters and MgFe2O4-like particles). The nanofiber outer diameter is determined by the particle size. The reduction of the iron ions and clusters that are well dispersed in the MgO lattice leads to small catalytic particles (<5 nm), which tend to form SWNTS and DWNTs with an inner diameter close to 2 nm. Well-dispersed MgFe2O4-like particles can also be reduced to small metal particles with a narrow size distribution, producing SWNTs and DWNTs. The present results will help in tailoring oxide precursors for the controlled formation of CNTs
A Study of the Formation of Single- and Double-Walled Carbon Nanotubes by a CVD Method
The reduction in H2/CH4 atmosphere of aluminum-iron oxides produces metal particles small enough to catalyze the formation of single-walled carbon nanotubes. Several experiments have been made using the same temperature profile and changing only the maximum temperature (800-1070 °C). Characterizations of the catalyst materials are performed using notably 57Fe Mo¨ssbauer spectroscopy. Electron microscopy and a macroscopical method are used to characterize the nanotubes. The nature of the iron species (Fe3+, R-Fe, ç-Fe-C, Fe3C) is correlated to their location in the material. The nature of the particles responsible for the high-temperature formation of the nanotubes is probably an Fe-C alloy which is, however, found as Fe3C by postreaction analysis. Increasing the reduction temperature increases the reduction yield and thus favors the formation of surface-metal particles, thus producing more nanotubes. The obtained carbon nanotubes are mostly single-walled and double-walled with an average diameter close to 2.5 nm. Several formation mechanisms are thought to be active. In particular, it is shown that the second wall can grow inside the first one but that subsequent ones are formed outside. It is also possible that under given experimental conditions, the smallest (<2 nm) catalyst particles preferentially produce double-walled rather than single-walled carbon nanotubes
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