3,432 research outputs found

    Photoelectron diffraction: from phenomenological demonstration to practical tool

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    The potential of photoelectron diffraction—exploiting the coherent interference of directly-emitted and elastically scattered components of the photoelectron wavefield emitted from a core level of a surface atom to obtain structural information—was first appreciated in the 1970s. The first demonstrations of the effect were published towards the end of that decade, but the method has now entered the mainstream armoury of surface structure determination. This short review has two objectives: First, to outline the way that the idea emerged and the way this evolved in my own collaboration with Neville Smith and his colleagues at Bell Labs in the early years: Second, to provide some insight into the current state-of-the art in application of (scanned-energy mode) photoelectron diffraction to address two key issue in quantitative surface structure determination, namely, complexity and precision. In this regard a particularly powerful aspect of photoelectron diffraction is its elemental and chemical-state specificity

    Effect of local injection of Corynebacterium parvum on the growth of a murine fibrosarcoma.

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    Local injection (i.e. injection at the site of tumour inoculation) of strains of C. Parvum which have a significant anti-tumour effect when given systemically (i.e. intravenously or, in the case of subcutaneous tumour transplant, intraperitoneally) strongly inhibits the growth of isogeneic transplants of a fibrosarcoma in intact CBA mice but has little or no effect on subcutaneous transplants of the same tumour in T-cell deprived mice. The anti-tumour effect of local injection of C. parvum, unlike that of systemic injection in this particular tumour system, thus appears to be T-cell dependent

    The Significance of Splenomegaly in Tumour-Bearing Mice

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    of the spleen and lvmph nodes occurred in (15713R mice which received transplants that enlargemelit of an A-strain tumour, Sarcoma 1, towhich thev were not susceptible. Thev attributed this to an immunological re,-,ction, but did not offer any explanation of the fact that splenic and 1Vmph node enlargement occurred also in susceptible (Astrain) mice which received transplants of the same tumour. The present investigation began with the observation that splenic enlargement occurred regularlv in A-strain female mice with spontaneous mammary cancer, and also in female A-strain Pnd (A x ASW)F1 hvbrid mice bearing transplants of ati A-strain mammarv carCinoma, but not;-C.9 a rule in mice of non-susceptible strains which received similar transplants. We h,,ive gone on to study the phenomenon in iiiore detail, aiid in particular to det-ermine firstlv-%A-hether splenomegalv can be produced in susceptible mice with cell-free tumour textracts, and secondly, whether it occurs when the tumour is transplai-ited to animals which are normall

    Evidence of Loss of Tumour-specific Antigen on Repeatedly Transplanting a Tumour in the Strain of Origin

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    SPLENOMEGALY has often been observed in mice bearing tumour transplants, and can occur even when the tumour originated in an animal isogenic with the recipient. This may sometimes be due, as has been suggested, to associated infection, or to extra-medullary haemopoiesis resulting from tumour-induced anaemia (van Ebbenhorst Tengbergen and Muhlbock, 1958). In experiments reported previously from this laboratory, however, splenomegaly developed regularly in the absence of infection in A-strain mice which received transplants of a spontaneous A-strain mammary carcinoma, or of the same tumour after 1-5 passages each of 2-3 weeks ' duration, and as the histological findings were characteristic of immunological stimulation it was concluded that the tumour possessed one or more antigens which were not represented in normal A-strain tissues (Woodruff and Symes, 1962). Subsequently, a chance observation suggested that after many passages the tumour was no longer capable of eliciting splenomegaly in the A-strain, and the following experiments were designed to investigate the matter

    The local adsorption geometry of benzenethiolate on Cu(1 0 0)

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    The local adsorption geometry of benzenethiolate in the ordered c(2 × 6) phase on Cu(1 0 0) has been investigated by a combination of S K-edge near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS), normal incidence X-ray standing waves (NIXSW) and S 1s scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction (PhD). NEXAFS and PhD show that the molecular plane is tilted from the surface normal by 20 ± 15°, while NIXSW clearly identifies the S head-group as occupying the four-fold coordinated hollow sites. PhD shows the S atoms lies 1.34 ± 0.04 Å above the outermost Cu atomic layer, leading to a Cu–S bondlength of 2.25 ± 0.02 Å. The combination of the PhD and NIXSW results shows the Cu surface layer has an outward relaxation of 0.15 ± 0.06 Å. Possible origins for this large adsorbate-induced relaxation are discussed

    The adsorption structure of furan on Pd(1 1 1)

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    The structure of molecular furan, C4H4O, on Pd(1 1 1) has been investigated by O K-edge near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) and C 1s scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction (PhD). NEXAFS shows the molecule to be adsorbed with the molecular plane close to parallel to the surface, a conclusion confirmed by the PhD analysis. Chemical-state specific C 1s PhD data were obtained for the two inequivalent C atoms in the furan, the α-C atoms adjacent to the O atom, and the ÎČ-C atoms bonded only to C atoms, but only the PhD modulations for the α-C emitters were of sufficiently large amplitude for detailed evaluation using multiple scattering calculations. This analysis shows the α-C atoms to be located approximately 0.6 Å off-atop surface Pd atoms with an associated C–Pd bondlength of 2.13 ± 0.03 Å. Two alternative local geometries consistent with the data place the O atom in off-atop or near-hollow locations, and for each of these local structures there are two equally-possible registries relative to the fcc and hcp hollow sites. The results are in good agreement with earlier density functional theory calculations which indicate that the fcc and hcp registries are equally probable, but the PhD results fail to distinguish the two distinct local bonding geometries

    Quantitative determination of the local structure of thymine on Cu(1 1 0) using scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction

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    The local adsorption structures of the surface species formed by interaction of thymine with a Cu(1 1 0) surface at room temperature, and after heating to not, vert, similar530 K, have been investigated. Initial characterisation by soft-X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and O K-edge near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) indicates the effect of sequential dehydrogenation of the NH species and provides information on the molecular orientation. O 1s and N 1s scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction shows the species at both temperatures bond to the surface through both carbonyl O atoms and the deprotonated N atom between them, each bonding atom adopting near-atop sites on the outermost Cu surface layer. The associated bondlengths are 1.96 ± 0.03 Å for Cu–N and 1.91 ± 0.03 Å and 2.03 ± 0.03 Å for the two inequivalent Cu--O bonds. The molecular plane lies almost exactly in the close-packed View the MathML source azimuth, but with a tilt relative to the surface normal of approximately 20°. Heating to not, vert, similar530 K, or deposition at this temperature, appears to lead to dehydrogenation of the second N atom in the ring, but no significant change in the adsorption geometry

    A structural study of a C3H3 species coadsorbed with CO on Pd(1 1 1)

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    The combination of chemical-state-specific C 1s scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction (PhD) and O K-edge near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) has been used to determine the local adsorption geometry of the coadsorbed C3H3 and CO species formed on Pd(1 1 1) by dissociation of molecular furan. CO is found to adopt the same geometry as in the Pd(1 1 1)c(4 × 2)-CO phase, occupying the two inequivalent three-fold coordinated hollow sites with the C–O axis perpendicular to the surface. C3H3 is found to lie with its molecular plane almost parallel to the surface, most probably with the two ‘outer’ C atoms in equivalent off-atop sites, although the PhD analysis formally fails to distinguish between two distinct local adsorption sites
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