277 research outputs found
Pressure-induced dramatic changes in organic-inorganic halide perovskites.
Organic-inorganic halide perovskites have emerged as a promising family of functional materials for advanced photovoltaic and optoelectronic applications with high performances and low costs. Various chemical methods and processing approaches have been employed to modify the compositions, structures, morphologies, and electronic properties of hybrid perovskites. However, challenges still remain in terms of their stability, the use of environmentally unfriendly chemicals, and the lack of an insightful understanding into structure-property relationships. Alternatively, pressure, a fundamental thermodynamic parameter that can significantly alter the atomic and electronic structures of functional materials, has been widely utilized to further our understanding of structure-property relationships, and also to enable emergent or enhanced properties of given materials. In this perspective, we describe the recent progress of high-pressure research on hybrid perovskites, particularly regarding pressure-induced novel phenomena and pressure-enhanced properties. We discuss the effect of pressure on structures and properties, their relationships and the underlying mechanisms. Finally, we give an outlook on future research avenues in which high pressure and related alternative methods such as chemical tailoring and interfacial engineering may lead to novel hybrid perovskites uniquely suited for high-performance energy applications
Antiperovskite Li3OCl Superionic Conductor Films for Solid-State Li-Ion Batteries.
Antiperovskite Li3OCl superionic conductor films are prepared via pulsed laser deposition using a composite target. A significantly enhanced ionic conductivity of 2.0 Ă— 10-4 S cm-1 at room temperature is achieved, and this value is more than two orders of magnitude higher than that of its bulk counterpart. The applicability of Li3OCl as a solid electrolyte for Li-ion batteries is demonstrated
Pre-gestational stress reduces the ratio of 5-HIAA to 5-HT and the expression of 5-HT1A receptor and serotonin transporter in the brain of foetal rat
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Many studies have found that stress before or during pregnancy is linked to an increased incidence of behavioural disorders in offspring. However, few studies have investigated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity and the serotonergic system as a consequence of pregestational stress. In the present study, we investigated the effect of pre-gestational stress on HPA axis activity in maternal rats and their foetuses and examined whether changes in HPA axis activity of maternal rats produced functional changes in the serotonergic system in the brain of foetuses.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We used the behavioural tests to assess the model of chronic unpredictable stress (CUS) in maternal rats. We found the activity in the open field and sucrose consumption was lower for rats with CUS than for the controls. Body weight but not brain weight was higher for control foetuses than those from the CUS group. Serum corticosterone and corticotrophin-releasing hormone levels were significantly higher for mothers with CUS before pregnancy and their foetuses than for the controls. Levels of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) were higher in the hippocampus and hypothalamus of foetuses in the CUS group than in the controls, and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) levels were lower in the hippocampus in foetuses in the CUS group than in the control group. Levels of 5-HIAA in the hypothalamus did not differ between foetuses in the CUS group and in the control group. The ratio of 5-HIAA to 5-HT was significantly lower for foetuses in the CUS group than in the control group. Levels of 5-HT1A receptor were significantly lower in the foetal hippocampus in the CUS group than in the control group, with no significant difference in the hypothalamus. The levels of serotonin transporter (SERT) were lower in both the foetal hippocampus and foetal hypothalamus in the CUS group than in the control group.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our data demonstrate that pre-gestational stress alters HPA axis activity in maternal rats and their foetuses, which is associated with functional changes in 5-HT activity (5-HT, 5-HIAA and ratio of 5-HIAA to 5-HT), as well as the levels of the 5-HT1A receptor and SERT in the hippocampus and hypothalamus of foetuses.</p
Visualization Experiments of a Specific Fuel Flow Through Quartz-glass Tubes Under both Sub- and Supercritical Conditions
AbstractThe present work is a visualization study of a typical kerosene (RP-3) flowing through vertical and horizontal quartz-glass tubes under both sub- and supercritical conditions by a high speed camera. The experiments are accomplished at temperatures of 300-730 K under pressures from 0.107-5 MPa. Six distinctive two-phase flow patterns are observed in upward flow and the critical point of RP-3 is identified as critical pressure pc=2.33 MPa and critical temperature Tc=645.04 K and it is found that when the fluid pressure exceeds 2.33 MPa the flow can be considered as a single phase flow. The critical opalescence phenomenon of RP-3 is observed when the temperature is between 643.16 K and 648.61 K and the pressure is between 2.308 MPa and 2.366 MPa. The region filled by the critical opalescence in the upward flow is clearly larger than that in the downward flow due to the interaction between the buoyancy force and fluid inertia. Morecover, obvious layered flow phenomenon is observed in horizontal flow under supercritical pressures due to the differences of gravity and density
ViTASD: Robust Vision Transformer Baselines for Autism Spectrum Disorder Facial Diagnosis
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a lifelong neurodevelopmental disorder with
very high prevalence around the world. Research progress in the field of ASD
facial analysis in pediatric patients has been hindered due to a lack of
well-established baselines. In this paper, we propose the use of the Vision
Transformer (ViT) for the computational analysis of pediatric ASD. The
presented model, known as ViTASD, distills knowledge from large facial
expression datasets and offers model structure transferability. Specifically,
ViTASD employs a vanilla ViT to extract features from patients' face images and
adopts a lightweight decoder with a Gaussian Process layer to enhance the
robustness for ASD analysis. Extensive experiments conducted on standard ASD
facial analysis benchmarks show that our method outperforms all of the
representative approaches in ASD facial analysis, while the ViTASD-L achieves a
new state-of-the-art. Our code and pretrained models are available at
https://github.com/IrohXu/ViTASD.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Accepted by the ICASSP 202
Dynamic Sparse Training via Balancing the Exploration-Exploitation Trade-off
Over-parameterization of deep neural networks (DNNs) has shown high
prediction accuracy for many applications. Although effective, the large number
of parameters hinders its popularity on resource-limited devices and has an
outsize environmental impact. Sparse training (using a fixed number of nonzero
weights in each iteration) could significantly mitigate the training costs by
reducing the model size. However, existing sparse training methods mainly use
either random-based or greedy-based drop-and-grow strategies, resulting in
local minimal and low accuracy. In this work, we consider the dynamic sparse
training as a sparse connectivity search problem and design an exploitation and
exploration acquisition function to escape from local optima and saddle points.
We further design an acquisition function and provide the theoretical
guarantees for the proposed method and clarify its convergence property.
Experimental results show that sparse models (up to 98\% sparsity) obtained by
our proposed method outperform the SOTA sparse training methods on a wide
variety of deep learning tasks. On VGG-19 / CIFAR-100, ResNet-50 / CIFAR-10,
ResNet-50 / CIFAR-100, our method has even higher accuracy than dense models.
On ResNet-50 / ImageNet, the proposed method has up to 8.2\% accuracy
improvement compared to SOTA sparse training methods
Mixing Dynamics at the Large Confluence Between the Yangtze River and Poyang Lake
Mixing processes downstream of river confluences impacts the ecology and the related environmental management of river networks. A clear understanding of such processes is challenging, especially for confluences having width-to-depth ratios larger than 100, due to the limited available field data.
In this study, four field surveys based on hydro-acoustic and conductivity measurements were conducted near
the confluence between the Yangtze River and the Poyang Lake, which are the largest river and freshwater
lake in China, respectively. It was found that mixing dynamics at the confluence were controlled by a complex interaction among the momentum flux ratio, secondary flow and the lock-exchange flow associated to the density contrast between the two tributaries. Slow mixing was observed during high-flow conditions that generated dual counter-rotating secondary cells, with the downwelling flow acting as a barrier in the post-confluence channel. In contrast, more rapid mixing was observed during low-flow conditions when only a single channel-scale secondary flow was identified. The mixing processes were also affected by the lock-exchange flow associated to the density difference between the two confluent flows. Such lock-exchange
enhanced mixing when the Yangtze River waters had higher temperature, that is, lower density than that of
the Poyang Lake. In low flow condition, the penetration of the much larger momentum flux of Yangtze River
created a “two-layers” structure with the contribution of the density difference, which further enhanced the
curvature-induced helicity. The findings from the present study improve our current understanding of mixing
dynamics in large river confluences
Encapsulation kinetics and dynamics of carbon monoxide in clathrate hydrate.
Carbon monoxide clathrate hydrate is a potentially important constituent in the solar system. In contrast to the well-established relation between the size of gaseous molecule and hydrate structure, previous work showed that carbon monoxide molecules preferentially form structure-I rather than structure-II gas hydrate. Resolving this discrepancy is fundamentally important to understanding clathrate formation, structure stabilization and the role the dipole moment/molecular polarizability plays in these processes. Here we report the synthesis of structure-II carbon monoxide hydrate under moderate high-pressure/low-temperature conditions. We demonstrate that the relative stability between structure-I and structure-II hydrates is primarily determined by kinetically controlled cage filling and associated binding energies. Within hexakaidecahedral cage, molecular dynamic simulations of density distributions reveal eight low-energy wells forming a cubic geometry in favour of the occupancy of carbon monoxide molecules, suggesting that the carbon monoxide-water and carbon monoxide-carbon monoxide interactions with adjacent cages provide a significant source of stability for the structure-II clathrate framework
Hydrodynamics, sediment transport and morphological features at the confluence between the Yangtze River and the Poyang Lake
Confluences act as critical nodes in a river network as they affect flow, sediment transport, water quality and ecological patterns. A complete knowledge about hydro-morpho-sedimentary processes at river confluences is still incompleted and it has been usually accepted that secondary flows are weak because of the significant role of form roughness in large rivers. In this study, two field surveys were conducted on the flow structure, suspended sediment transport and morphology of the confluence between the Yangtze River (the largest river in China) and the Poyang Lake (the largest freshwater lake in China). Dual counter-rotating cells were observed during high flow conditions and a single secondary cell appeared in low flow conditions. These helical cells restricted the core size of high sediment concentration and downwelling flows acted as a barrier hindering the exchange of sediment between the two rivers. Furthermore, the observed large scour hole was likely related to the downwelling and upwelling flows caused by helical motions. In low flow conditions the scour hole looked like a deep channel, which was likely related to a long-surviving helical cell. The scour hole disappeared further downstream, when either the helical motion got weak during low flow conditions, or when a reverse helical cell occurred during high flow conditions. Hydrodynamics, suspended sediment transport and morphological features observed at such a large confluence demonstrated that river planform geometry and discharge ratio affected the flow structure, especially the helical motion. This in turn affected sediment transport as well as the local bed morphology
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