298 research outputs found
Specific heat of aluminium-doped superconducting silicon carbide
The discoveries of superconductivity in heavily boron-doped diamond, silicon
and silicon carbide renewed the interest in the ground states of charge-carrier
doped wide-gap semiconductors. Recently, aluminium doping in silicon carbide
successfully yielded a metallic phase from which at high aluminium
concentrations superconductivity emerges. Here, we present a specific-heat
study on superconducting aluminium-doped silicon carbide. We observe a clear
jump anomaly at the superconducting transition temperature 1.5 K indicating
that aluminium-doped silicon carbide is a bulk superconductor. An analysis of
the jump anomaly suggests BCS-like phonon-mediated superconductivity in this
system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Superconductivity in heavily boron-doped silicon carbide
The discoveries of superconductivity in heavily boron-doped diamond (C:B) in
2004 and silicon (Si:B) in 2006 renew the interest in the superconducting state
of semiconductors. Charge-carrier doping of wide-gap semiconductors leads to a
metallic phase from which upon further doping superconductivity can emerge.
Recently, we discovered superconductivity in a closely related system:
heavily-boron doped silicon carbide (SiC:B). The sample used for that study
consists of cubic and hexagonal SiC phase fractions and hence this lead to the
question which of them participates in the superconductivity. Here we focus on
a sample which mainly consists of hexagonal SiC without any indication for the
cubic modification by means of x-ray diffraction, resistivity, and ac
susceptibility.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Superconductivity of hexagonal heavily-boron doped silicon carbide
In 2004 the discovery of superconductivity in heavily boron-doped diamond
(C:B) led to an increasing interest in the superconducting phases of wide-gap
semiconductors. Subsequently superconductivity was found in heavily boron-doped
cubic silicon (Si:B) and recently in the stochiometric ''mixture'' of heavily
boron-doped silicon carbide (SiC:B). The latter system surprisingly exhibits
type-I superconductivity in contrast to the type-II superconductors C:B and
Si:B. Here we will focus on the specific heat of two different superconducting
samples of boron-doped SiC. One of them contains cubic and hexagonal SiC
whereas the other consists mainly of hexagonal SiC without any detectable cubic
phase fraction. The electronic specific heat in the superconducting state of
both samples SiC:B can be described by either assuming a BCS-type exponentional
temperature dependence or a power-law behavior.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure
The Role of Arabidopsis ABCG9 and ABCG31 ATP Binding Cassette Transporters in Pollen Fitness and the Deposition of Steryl Glycosides on the Pollen Coat
The pollen coat protects pollen grains from harmful environmental stresses such as drought and cold. Many compounds in the pollen coat are synthesized in the tapetum. However, the pathway by which they are transferred to the pollen surface remains obscure. We found that two Arabidopsis thaliana ATP binding cassette transporters, ABCG9 and ABCG31, were highly expressed in the tapetum and are involved in pollen coat deposition. Upon exposure to dry air, many abcg9 abcg31 pollen grains shriveled up and collapsed, and this phenotype was restored by complementation with ABCG9(pro):GFP:ABCG9. GFP-tagged ABCG9 or ABCG31 localized to the plasma membrane. Electron microscopy revealed that the mutant pollen coat resembled the immature coat of the wild type, which contained many electron-lucent structures. Steryl glycosides were reduced to about half of wild-type levels in the abcg9 abcg31 pollen, but no differences in free sterols or steryl esters were observed. A mutant deficient in steryl glycoside biosynthesis, ugt80A2 ugt80B1, exhibited a similar phenotype. Together, these results indicate that steryl glycosides are critical for pollen fitness, by supporting pollen coat maturation, and that ABCG9 and ABCG31 contribute to the accumulation of this sterol on the surface of pollen.X1133Ysciescopu
Evidence for High-frequency Phonon Mediated S-wave Superconductivity : 11B-NMR Study of Al-doped MgB2
We report B-NMR study on Al-doped MgB that addresses a possible
mechanism for a high superconducting (SC) transition temperature () of
K in recently discovered MgB. The result of nuclear spin lattice
relaxation rate in the SC state revealed that the size in the SC gap is
not changed by substituting Al for Mg. The reduction on by Al-doping is
shown to be due to the decrease of . According to the McMillan
equation, the experimental relation between and the relative change in
allowed us to estimate a characteristic phonon frequency K and an electron-phonon coupling constant . These
results suggest that the high- superconductivity in MgB is mediated by
the strong electron-phonon coupling with high-frequency phonons.Comment: 6pages, 3figure
Genetic diversity and population structure of Striga hermonthica populations from Kenya and Nigeria
Article purchasedStriga hermonthica is a parasitic weed that poses a serious threat to the production of economically important cereals in sub-Saharan Africa. The existence of genetic diversity within and between S. hermonthica populations presents a challenge to the successful development and deployment of effective control technologies against this parasitic weed. Understanding the extent of diversity between S. hermonthica populations will facilitate the design and deployment of effective control technologies against the parasite. In the present study, S. hermonthica plants collected from different locations and host crops in Kenya and Nigeria were genotyped using single nucleotide polymorphisms. Statistically significant genetic differentiation (FST = 0.15, P = 0.001) was uncovered between populations collected from the two countries. Also, the populations collected in Nigeria formed three distinct subgroups. Unique loci undergoing selection were observed between the Kenyan and Nigerian populations and among the three subgroups found in Nigeria. Striga hermonthica populations parasitising rice in Kenya appeared to be genetically distinct from those parasitising maize and sorghum. The presence of distinct populations in East and West Africa and in different regions in Nigeria highlights the importance of developing and testing Striga control technologies in multiple locations, including locations representing the geographic regions in Nigeria where genetically distinct subpopulations of the parasite were found. Efforts should also be made to develop relevant control technologies for areas infested with ‘rice-specific’ Striga spp. populations in Kenya
Evidence for Strong-coupling S-wave Superconductivity in MgB2 :11B NMR Study
We have investigated a gap structure in a newly-discovered superconductor,
MgB2 through the measurement of 11B nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate,
^{11}(1/T_1). ^{11}(1/T_1) is proportional to the temperature (T) in the normal
state, and decreases exponentially in the superconducting (SC) state, revealing
a tiny coherence peak just below T_c. The T dependence of 1/T_1 in the SC state
can be accounted for by an s-wave SC model with a large gap size of 2\Delta
/k_BT_c \sim 5 which suggests to be in a strong-coupling regime.Comment: 2 pages with 1 figur
Superconductivity in a new layered triangular-lattice system Li2IrSi2
We report on the crystal structure and superconducting properties of a novel iridium-silicide, namely Li2IrSi2. It has a Ag2NiO2-type structure (space group R-3m) with the lattice parameters a = 4.028 30(6) Å and c = 13.161 80(15) Å. The crystal structure comprises IrSi2 and double Li layers stacked alternately along the c-axis. The IrSi2 layer includes a two-dimensional Ir equilateral-triangular lattice. Electrical resistivity and static magnetic measurements revealed that Li2IrSi2 is a type-II superconductor with critical temperature (Tc) of 3.3 K. We estimated the following superconducting parameters: lower critical field Hc1(0) ~ 42 Oe, upper critical field Hc2(0) ~ 1.7 kOe, penetration depth λ0 ~ 265 nm, coherence length ξ0 ~ 44 nm, and Ginzburg–Landau parameter κGL ~ 6.02. The specific-heat data suggested that superconductivity in Li2IrSi2 could be attributed to weak-coupling Cooper pairs
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