553 research outputs found
New proposed conceptual mathematical models for biomass viability and membrane fouling of membrane bioreactor
The production and accumulation of soluble microbial products (SMP), extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) and colloidal inert compounds within a membrane bioreactor (MBR) may greatly affect the biomass viability and subsequently the permeability of the membrane. This paper aims at presenting new mathematical models of biomass viability and membrane fouling that has been conceptually developed through establishing links between these biomass parameters and operating parameters of the MBR. The proposed models can be used to predict the biomass viability and membrane fouling at any state of operation of MBR. Meanwhile, easily measurable parameters of the proposed model can also serve to estimate SMP/EPS concentration in the supernatant of MBR without the tedious and expensive measurement. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd
Graphene photodetectors for high-speed optical communications
While silicon has dominated solid-state electronics for more than four
decades, a variety of new materials have been introduced into photonics to
expand the accessible wavelength range and to improve the performance of
photonic devices. For example, gallium-nitride based materials enable the light
emission at blue and ultraviolet wavelengths, and high index contrast
silicon-on-insulator facilitates the realization of ultra dense and CMOS
compatible photonic devices. Here, we report the first deployment of graphene,
a two-dimensional carbon material, as the photo-detection element in a 10
Gbits/s optical data link. In this interdigitated metal-graphene-metal
photodetector, an asymmetric metallization scheme is adopted to break the
mirror symmetry of the built-in electric-field profile in conventional graphene
field-effect-transistor channels, allowing for efficient photo-detection within
the entire area of light illumination. A maximum external photo-responsivity of
6.1 mA/W is achieved at 1.55 {\mu}m wavelength, a very impressive value given
that the material is below one nanometer in thickness. Moreover, owing to the
unique band structure and exceptional electronic properties of graphene, high
speed photodetectors with an ultra-wide operational wavelength range at least
from 300 nm to 6 {\mu}m can be realized using this fascinating material.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Three-dimensional micromachining for microsystems by confined etchant layer technique
The micromachining of GaAs with three different truly three-dimensional (3D) molds were performed by the confined etchant layer technique (CELT). The etched patterns were found, approximately, to be the negative copy of the 3D molds. The general comparison of CELT with the existing micromachining techniques, such as two-dimensional (2D) projection lithography and electro-discharge machining, was made. The replication of the complex microstructures down to micrometer scale has been done by CELT in a single step. The photoresist layer, together with the procedures of exposure, developing and removal of resist, could be eliminated. The advantages of CELT over the existing lithography techniques and its potential applications are discussed briefly. It has been shown that CELT could be developed as a complementary technique to the existing micromachining techniques in fabricating microdevices for microsystems. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved
Dislocations and the enhancement of superconductivity in odd-parity superconductor SrRuO
We report observation of the enhancement of superconductivity near lattice
dislocations and the absence of the strengthening of vortex pinning in
odd-parity superconductor SrRuO, both surprising results in direct
contrast to the well known sensitivity of superconductivity in SrRuO to
disorder. The enhanced superconductivity appears to be related fundamentally to
the two-component nature of the superconducting order parameter, as revealed in
our phenomenological theory taking into account the effect of symmetry
reduction near a dislocation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Fabrication of surface-patterned ZnO thin films using sol-gel methods and nanoimprint lithography
Surface-patterned ZnO thin films were fabricated by direct imprinting on ZnO
sol and subsequent annealing process. The polymer-based ZnO sols were deposited
on various substrates for the nanoimprint lithography and converted to
surface-patterned ZnO gel films during the thermal curing nanoimprint process.
Finally, crystalline ZnO films were obtained by subsequent annealing of the
patterned ZnO gel films. The optical characterization indicates that the
surface patterning of ZnO thin films can lead to an enhanced transmittance.
Large-scale ZnO thin films with different patterns can be fabricated by various
easy-made ordered templates using this combination of sol-gel and nanoimprint
lithography techniques.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures; Published in Journal of Sol-Gel Science and
Technology, 201
Selective Synthesis of Fe2O3 and Fe3O4 Nanowires Via a Single Precursor: A General Method for Metal Oxide Nanowires
Hematite (α-Fe2O3) and magnetite (Fe3O4) nanowires with the diameter of about 100 nm and the length of tens of micrometers have been selectively synthesized by a microemulsion-based method in combination of the calcinations under different atmosphere. The effects of the precursors, annealing temperature, and atmosphere on the morphology and the structure of the products have been investigated. Moreover, Co3O4 nanowires have been fabricated to confirm the versatility of the method for metal oxide nanowires
Observation of an electrically tunable band gap in trilayer graphene
A striking feature of bilayer graphene is the induction of a significant band
gap in the electronic states by the application of a perpendicular electric
field. Thicker graphene layers are also highly attractive materials. The
ability to produce a band gap in these systems is of great fundamental and
practical interest. Both experimental and theoretical investigations of
graphene trilayers with the typical ABA layer stacking have, however, revealed
the lack of any appreciable induced gap. Here we contrast this behavior with
that exhibited by graphene trilayers with ABC crystallographic stacking. The
symmetry of this structure is similar to that of AB stacked graphene bilayers
and, as shown by infrared conductivity measurements, permits a large band gap
to be formed by an applied electric field. Our results demonstrate the critical
and hitherto neglected role of the crystallographic stacking sequence on the
induction of a band gap in few-layer graphene.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, including the supplementary information on the
electron-hole asymmetry of ABA-stacked trilaye
Genome-Wide Identification of Polycomb Target Genes Reveals a Functional Association of Pho with Scm in Bombyx mori
Polycomb group (PcG) proteins are evolutionarily conserved chromatin modifiers and act together in three multimeric complexes, Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1), Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), and Pleiohomeotic repressive complex (PhoRC), to repress transcription of the target genes. Here, we identified Polycomb target genes in Bombyx mori with holocentric centromere using genome-wide expression screening based on the knockdown of BmSCE, BmESC, BmPHO, or BmSCM gene, which represent the distinct complexes. As a result, the expressions of 29 genes were up-regulated after knocking down 4 PcG genes. Particularly, there is a significant overlap between targets of BmPho (331 out of 524) and BmScm (331 out of 532), and among these, 190 genes function as regulator factors playing important roles in development. We also found that BmPho, as well as BmScm, can interact with other Polycomb components examined in this study. Further detailed analysis revealed that the C-terminus of BmPho containing zinc finger domain is involved in the interaction between BmPho and BmScm. Moreover, the zinc finger domain in BmPho contributes to its inhibitory function and ectopic overexpression of BmScm is able to promote transcriptional repression by Gal4-Pho fusions including BmScm-interacting domain. Loss of BmPho expression causes relocalization of BmScm into the cytoplasm. Collectively, we provide evidence of a functional link between BmPho and BmScm, and propose two Polycomb-related repression mechanisms requiring only BmPho associated with BmScm or a whole set of PcG complexes
Regenerative oscillation and four-wave mixing in graphene optoelectronics
The unique linear and massless band structure of graphene, in a purely
two-dimensional Dirac fermionic structure, have led to intense research
spanning from condensed matter physics to nanoscale device applications
covering the electrical, thermal, mechanical and optical domains. Here we
report three consecutive first-observations in graphene-silicon hybrid
optoelectronic devices: (1) ultralow power resonant optical bistability; (2)
self-induced regenerative oscillations; and (3) coherent four-wave mixing, all
at a few femtojoule cavity recirculating energies. These observations, in
comparison with control measurements with solely monolithic silicon cavities,
are enabled only by the dramatically-large and chi(3) nonlinearities in
graphene and the large Q/V ratios in wavelength-localized photonic crystal
cavities. These results demonstrate the feasibility and versatility of hybrid
two-dimensional graphene-silicon nanophotonic devices for next-generation
chip-scale ultrafast optical communications, radio-frequency optoelectronics,
and all-optical signal processing.Comment: Accepted at Nature Photonics, July (2012
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