6,188 research outputs found
Non-collinear magnetic structure and multipolar order in EuIrO
The magnetic properties of the pyrochlore iridate material EuIrO
(5) have been studied based on the first principle calculations, where the
crystal field splitting , spin-orbit coupling (SOC) and
Coulomb interaction within Ir 5 orbitals are all playing significant
roles. The ground state phase diagram has been obtained with respect to the
strength of SOC and Coulomb interaction , where a stable anti-ferromagnetic
ground state with all-in/all-out (AIAO) spin structure has been found. Besides,
another anti-ferromagnetic states with close energy to AIAO have also been
found to be stable. The calculated nonlinear magnetization of the two stable
states both have the d-wave pattern but with a phase difference, which
can perfectly explain the experimentally observed nonlinear magnetization
pattern. Compared with the results of the non-distorted structure, it turns out
that the trigonal lattice distortion is crucial for stabilizing the AIAO state
in EuIrO. Furthermore, besides large dipolar moments, we also find
considerable octupolar moments in the magnetic states.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, supplemental material is included in the source
file, accepted for publication in PR
Why a local moment induces an antiferromagnetic ordering: An RVB picture
Based on a Gutzwiller projected BCS wavefunction, it is shown that a local
S=1/2 moment is present around a vacancy site (zinc impurity) in a form of
staggered magnetic moments, which is a direct consequence of the short-ranged
resonating-valence-bond (RVB) pairing in the spin background.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Microengineered synthetic cellular microenvironment for stem cells
Stem cells possess the ability of self‐renewal and differentiation into specific cell types. Therefore, stem cells have great potentials in fundamental biology studies and clinical applications. The most urgent desire for stem cell research is to generate appropriate artificial stem cell culture system, which can mimic the dynamic complexity and precise regulation of the in vivo biochemical and biomechanical signals, to regulate and direct stem cell behaviors. Precise control and regulation of the biochemical and biomechanical stimuli to stem cells have been successfully achieved using emerging micro/nanoengineering techniques. This review provides insights into how these micro/nanoengineering approaches, particularly microcontact printing and elastomeric micropost array, are applied to create dynamic and complex environment for stem cells culture. WIREs Nanomed Nanobiotechnol 2012, 4:414–427. doi: 10.1002/wnan.1175 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website .Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/92053/1/1175_ftp.pd
Conetronics in 2D Metal-Organic Frameworks: Double Dirac Cones, Magnetic Half Dirac Cones and Quantum Anomalous Hall Effect
Based on recently synthesized Ni3C12S12 class 2D metal-organic frameworks, we
predict electronic properties of M3C12S12 and M3C12O12, where M is Zn, Cd, Hg,
Be, or Mg with no M orbital contributions to bands near Fermi level. For
M3C12S12, their band structures exhibit double Dirac cones with different Fermi
velocities that are n and p type, respectively, which are switchable by
few-percent strain. The crossing of two cones are symmetry-protected to be
non-hybridizing, leading to two independent channels in 2D node-line semimetals
at the same k-point akin to spin-channels in spintronics, rendering conetronics
device possible. The node line rings right at their crossing, which are both
electron and hole pockets at the Fermi level, can give rise to
magnetoresistance that will not saturate when the magnetic field is infinitely
large, due to perfect n-p compensation. For M3C12O12, together with conjugated
metal-tricatecholate polymers M3(HHTP)2, the spin-polarized slow Dirac cone
center is pinned precisely at the Fermi level, making the systems conducting in
only one spin or cone channel. Quantum anomalous Hall effect can arise in MOFs
with non-negligible spin-orbit coupling like Cu3C12O12. Compounds of M3C12S12
and M3C12O12 with different M, can be used to build spintronic and
cone-selecting heterostructure devices, tunable by strain or electrostatic
gating
Synergistic effect of phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor and serum on migration of endotoxin-stimulated macrophages.
Macrophage migration is an essential step in host defense against infection and wound healing. Elevation of cAMP by inhibiting phosphodiesterase 4 (PDE4), enzymes that specifically degrade cAMP, is known to suppress various inflammatory responses in activated macrophages, but the role of PDE4 in macrophage migration is poorly understood. Here we show that the migration of Raw 264.7 macrophages stimulated with LPS was markedly and dose-dependently induced by the PDE4 inhibitor rolipram as assessed by scratch wound healing assay. Additionally, this response required the involvement of serum in the culture medium as serum starvation abrogated the effect. Further analysis revealed that rolipram and serum exhibited synergistic effect on the migration, and the influence of serum was independent of PDE4 mRNA expression in LPS-stimulated macrophages. Moreover, the enhanced migration by rolipram was mediated by activating cAMP/exchange proteins directly activated by cAMP (Epac) signaling, presumably via interaction with LPS/TLR4 signaling with the participation of unknown serum components. These results suggest that PDE4 inhibitors, together with serum components, may serve as positive regulators of macrophage recruitment for more efficient pathogen clearance and wound repair
Spin-orbit coupling in bulk GaAs
We study the spin-orbit coupling in the whole Brillouin zone for GaAs using
both the and nearest-neighbor tight-binding
models. In the -valley, the spin splitting obtained is in good
agreement with experimental data. We then further explicitly present the
coefficients of the spin splitting in GaAs and valleys. These results
are important to the realization of spintronic device and the investigation of
spin dynamics far away from equilibrium.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Physica E, in pres
Strain-induced partially flat band, helical snake states, and interface superconductivity in topological crystalline insulators
Topological crystalline insulators in IV-VI compounds host novel topological
surface states consisting of multi-valley massless Dirac fermions at low
energy. Here we show that strain generically acts as an effective gauge field
on these Dirac fermions and creates pseudo-Landau orbitals without breaking
time-reversal symmetry. We predict the realization of this phenomenon in IV-VI
semiconductor heterostructures, due to a naturally occurring misfit dislocation
array at the interface that produces a periodically varying strain field.
Remarkably, the zero-energy Landau orbitals form a flat band in the vicinity of
the Dirac point, and coexist with a network of snake states at higher energy.
We propose that the high density of states of this flat band gives rise to
interface superconductivity observed in IV-VI semiconductor multilayers at
unusually high temperatures, with non-BCS behavior. Our work demonstrates a new
route to altering macroscopic electronic properties to achieve a partially flat
band, and paves the way for realizing novel correlated states of matter.Comment: Accepted by Nature Physic
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