2,521 research outputs found
Enhanced performance of Si MOS capacitors with HfTaOxNy gate dielectric by using AlOxNy or TaOxNy interlayer
Si MOS capacitors with HfTa oxide and oxynitride as gate dielectric were fabricated. Moreover, AlOxNy or TaOxN y was used as the interlayer between HfTa oxynitride and Si substrate to improve the electrical quality of the capacitors. Experimental results showed that the HfTaOxNy capacitor with TaO xNy interlayer achieved better performance with larger capacitance and smaller leakage current than its counterpart with AlO xNy interlayer. © 2008 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
Improved electrical properties of Ge p-MOSFET with HfO 2 gate dielectric by using TaO xN y interlayer
The electrical characteristics of germanium p-metal-oxide-semiconductor (p-MOS) capacitor and p-MOS field-effect transistor (FET) with a stack gate dielectric of HfO 2TaO xN y are investigated. Experimental results show that MOS devices exhibit much lower gate leakage current than MOS devices with only HfO 2 as gate dielectric, good interface properties, good transistor characteristics, and about 1.7-fold hole-mobility enhancement as compared with conventional Si p-MOSFETs. These demonstrate that forming an ultrathin passivation layer of TaO xN y on germanium surface prior to deposition of high- k dielectrics can effectively suppress the growth of unstable GeO x, thus reducing interface states and increasing carrier mobility in the inversion channel of Ge-based transistors. © 2008 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
Comparative study of HfTa-based gate-dielectric Ge metal-oxide- semiconductor capacitors with and without AlON interlayer
The electrical properties and high-field reliability of HfTa-based gate-dielectric metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) devices with and without AlON interlayer on Ge substrate are investigated. Experimental results show that theMOS capacitor with HfTaON/AlON stack gate dielectric exhibits low interface-state/oxide-charge densities, low gate leakage, small capacitance equivalent thickness (∼1.1 nm), and high dielectric constant (∼20). All of these should be attributed to the blocking role of the ultrathin AlON interlayer against interdiffusions of Ge, Hf, and Ta and penetration of O into the Ge substrate, with the latter effectively suppressing the unintentional formation of unstable poorquality low-k GeO x and giving a superior AlON/Ge interface. Moreover, incorporation of N into both the interlayer and high-k dielectric further improves the device reliability under high-field stress through the formation of strong Nrelated bonds. © Springer-Verlag 2009.published_or_final_versionSpringer Open Choice, 01 Dec 201
Improved electrical properties of Ge metal-oxide-semiconductor capacitor with HfTa-based gate dielectric by using TaOxNy interlayer
HfTa-based oxide and oxynitride with or without Ta Ox Ny interlayer are fabricated on Ge substrate to form metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) capacitors. Their electrical properties and reliabilities are measured and compared. The results show that the MOS capacitor with a gate stack of HfTa-based oxynitride and thin Ta Ox Ny interlayer exhibits low interface-state/oxide-charge densities, low gate leakage, small hysteresis, small capacitance equivalent thickness (∼0.94 nm), and high dielectric constant (∼24). All these should be attributed to the blocking role of the Ta Ox Ny interlayer against penetration of O into the Ge substrate and interdiffusions of Hf, Ge, and Ta, thus effectively suppressing the formation of unstable low- k Ge Ox and giving a superior Ta Ox Ny Ge interface. Moreover, incorporation of N into both the interlayer and high- k dielectric greatly improves device reliability through the formation of strong N-related bonds. © 2008 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio
Dual pulse shaping transmission with complementary nyquist pulses
© 2019 IEEE. The concept of complementary Nyquist pulse is introduced in this paper. Making use of a half rate Nyquist pulse and its complementary one, a dual pulse shaping transmission scheme is proposed, which achieves full Nyquist rate transmission with only a half of the sampling rate required by conventional Nyquist pulse shaping. This is essential for realizing high-speed digital communication systems with available and affordable data conversion devices. The condition for cross-symbol interference free transmission with the proposed dual pulse shaping is proved in theory, and two classes of ideal complementary Nyquist pulses are formulated assuming raised-cosine pulse shaping. Simulation results are also presented to demonstrate the improved spectral efficiency with dual pulse shaping and compare other system performance against conventional Nyquist pulse shaping
Impact of environmental and innate factors on the food habit of Chinese perch Siniperca chuatsi (Basilewsky) (Percichthyidae)
Laboratory and field investigations were conducted to study the food habit of Chinese perch Siniperca chuatsi (Basilewsky) from first feeding through adult stage. Only fish larvae were consumed by Chinese perch larvae (2-21 days from hatching), and the presence of zooplankton did not have any significant effect on their survival rate. The ability of Chinese perch to feed on zooplankton is clearly limited by some innate factor. Instead of gill rakers, Chinese perch larvae have well-developed sharp teeth at the first feeding stage, and are well adapted to the piscivorous feeding habit unique to the larvae of Chinese perch, e.g. they bite and ingest the tails of other fish larvae. At the first feeding stage (2 days from hatching), daily rations were both very low, either in light or complete darkness. Although early-staged Chinese perch larvae (7-17 days from hatching) could feed in complete darkness, their daily rations were always significantly higher in light than in complete darkness. Late-staged Chinese perch larvae (21 days from hatching) were able to feed in complete darkness as well as in light, similar to the case of Chinese perch yearlings. Chinese perch yearlings (total length, 14-16 cm) consumed prey fish only and refused shrimp when visual cues were available (in light), but they consumed both prey when visual cues were not available (in complete darkness), suggesting that prey consumption by Chinese perch yearlings is affected by their sensory modality in predation. Both prey were found in the stomachs of similar-sized Chinese perch (total length, 14-32 cm) from their natural habitat, suggesting that shrimp are consumed by Chinese perch at night. Prey selection of Chinese perch with a length >38 cm, which consumed only fish in the field, appears to be based upon prey size instead of prey type. These results suggest that although environmental factors (e.g. light intensity) affect prey detection by Chinese perch, this fish is anatomically and behaviourally predisposed to prey on live fish from first feeding. This makes it a difficult fish to cultivate using conventional feeds.Laboratory and field investigations were conducted to study the food habit of Chinese perch Siniperca chuatsi (Basilewsky) from first feeding through adult stage. Only fish larvae were consumed by Chinese perch larvae (2-21 days from hatching), and the presence of zooplankton did not have any significant effect on their survival rate. The ability of Chinese perch to feed on zooplankton is clearly limited by some innate factor. Instead of gill rakers, Chinese perch larvae have well-developed sharp teeth at the first feeding stage, and are well adapted to the piscivorous feeding habit unique to the larvae of Chinese perch, e.g. they bite and ingest the tails of other fish larvae. At the first feeding stage (2 days from hatching), daily rations were both very low, either in light or complete darkness. Although early-staged Chinese perch larvae (7-17 days from hatching) could feed in complete darkness, their daily rations were always significantly higher in light than in complete darkness. Late-staged Chinese perch larvae (21 days from hatching) were able to feed in complete darkness as well as in light, similar to the case of Chinese perch yearlings. Chinese perch yearlings (total length, 14-16 cm) consumed prey fish only and refused shrimp when visual cues were available (in light), but they consumed both prey when visual cues were not available (in complete darkness), suggesting that prey consumption by Chinese perch yearlings is affected by their sensory modality in predation. Both prey were found in the stomachs of similar-sized Chinese perch (total length, 14-32 cm) from their natural habitat, suggesting that shrimp are consumed by Chinese perch at night. Prey selection of Chinese perch with a length >38 cm, which consumed only fish in the field, appears to be based upon prey size instead of prey type. These results suggest that although environmental factors (e.g. light intensity) affect prey detection by Chinese perch, this fish is anatomically and behaviourally predisposed to prey on live fish from first feeding. This makes it a difficult fish to cultivate using conventional feeds
Copy number variation analysis based on AluScan sequences
BACKGROUND: AluScan combines inter-Alu PCR using multiple Alu-based primers with opposite orientations and next-generation sequencing to capture a huge number of Alu-proximal genomic sequences for investigation. Its requirement of only sub-microgram quantities of DNA facilitates the examination of large numbers of samples. However, the special features of AluScan data rendered difficult the calling of copy number variation (CNV) directly using the calling algorithms designed for whole genome sequencing (WGS) or exome sequencing. RESULTS: In this study, an AluScanCNV package has been assembled for efficient CNV calling from AluScan sequencing data employing a Geary-Hinkley transformation (GHT) of read-depth ratios between either paired test-control samples, or between test samples and a reference template constructed from reference samples, to call the localized CNVs, followed by use of a GISTIC-like algorithm to identify recurrent CNVs and circular binary segmentation (CBS) to reveal large extended CNVs. To evaluate the utility of CNVs called from AluScan data, the AluScans from 23 non-cancer and 38 cancer genomes were analyzed in this study. The glioma samples analyzed yielded the familiar extended copy-number losses on chromosomes 1p and 9. Also, the recurrent somatic CNVs identified from liver cancer samples were similar to those reported for liver cancer WGS with respect to a striking enrichment of copy-number gains in chromosomes 1q and 8q. When localized or recurrent CNV-features capable of distinguishing between liver and non-liver cancer samples were selected by correlation-based machine learning, a highly accurate separation of the liver and non-liver cancer classes was attained. CONCLUSIONS: The results obtained from non-cancer and cancerous tissues indicated that the AluScanCNV package can be employed to call localized, recurrent and extended CNVs from AluScan sequences. Moreover, both the localized and recurrent CNVs identified by this method could be subjected to machine-learning selection to yield distinguishing CNV-features that were capable of separating between liver cancers and other types of cancers. Since the method is applicable to any human DNA sample with or without the availability of a paired control, it can also be employed to analyze the constitutional CNVs of individuals.published_or_final_versio
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