15,636 research outputs found
Competing electronic orders on Kagome lattices at van Hove filling
The electronic orders in Hubbard models on a Kagome lattice at van Hove
filling are of intense current interest and debate. We study this issue using
the singular-mode functional renormalization group theory. We discover a rich
variety of electronic instabilities under short range interactions. With
increasing on-site repulsion , the system develops successively
ferromagnetism, intra unit-cell antiferromagnetism, and charge bond order. With
nearest-neighbor Coulomb interaction alone (U=0), the system develops
intra-unit-cell charge density wave order for small , s-wave
superconductivity for moderate , and the charge density wave order appears
again for even larger . With both and , we also find spin bond order
and chiral superconductivity in some particular
regimes of the phase diagram. We find that the s-wave superconductivity is a
result of charge density wave fluctuations and the squared logarithmic
divergence in the pairing susceptibility. On the other hand, the d-wave
superconductivity follows from bond order fluctuations that avoid the matrix
element effect. The phase diagram is vastly different from that in honeycomb
lattices because of the geometrical frustration in the Kagome lattice.Comment: 8 pages with 9 color figure
Spectral Normalized Dual Contrastive Regularization for Image-to-Image Translation
Existing image-to-image (I2I) translation methods achieve state-of-the-art
performance by incorporating the patch-wise contrastive learning into
Generative Adversarial Networks. However, patch-wise contrastive learning only
focuses on the local content similarity but neglects the global structure
constraint, which affects the quality of the generated images. In this paper,
we propose a new unpaired I2I translation framework based on dual contrastive
regularization and spectral normalization, namely SN-DCR. To maintain
consistency of the global structure and texture, we design the dual contrastive
regularization using different deep feature spaces respectively. In order to
improve the global structure information of the generated images, we formulate
a semantically contrastive loss to make the global semantic structure of the
generated images similar to the real images from the target domain in the
semantic feature space. We use Gram Matrices to extract the style of texture
from images. Similarly, we design style contrastive loss to improve the global
texture information of the generated images. Moreover, to enhance the stability
of model, we employ the spectral normalized convolutional network in the design
of our generator. We conduct the comprehensive experiments to evaluate the
effectiveness of SN-DCR, and the results prove that our method achieves SOTA in
multiple tasks
RC-SSFL: Towards Robust and Communication-efficient Semi-supervised Federated Learning System
Federated Learning (FL) is an emerging decentralized artificial intelligence
paradigm, which promises to train a shared global model in high-quality while
protecting user data privacy. However, the current systems rely heavily on a
strong assumption: all clients have a wealth of ground truth labeled data,
which may not be always feasible in the real life. In this paper, we present a
practical Robust, and Communication-efficient Semi-supervised FL (RC-SSFL)
system design that can enable the clients to jointly learn a high-quality model
that is comparable to typical FL's performance. In this setting, we assume that
the client has only unlabeled data and the server has a limited amount of
labeled data. Besides, we consider malicious clients can launch poisoning
attacks to harm the performance of the global model. To solve this issue,
RC-SSFL employs a minimax optimization-based client selection strategy to
select the clients who hold high-quality updates and uses geometric median
aggregation to robustly aggregate model updates. Furthermore, RC-SSFL
implements a novel symmetric quantization method to greatly improve
communication efficiency. Extensive case studies on two real-world datasets
demonstrate that RC-SSFL can maintain the performance comparable to typical FL
in the presence of poisoning attacks and reduce communication overhead by
A Common-Mode Voltage Suppression Strategy Based on Double Zero-Sequence Injection PWM for Two-Level Six-Phase VSIs
A common-mode voltage (CMV) suppression strategy, namely double zero-sequence injection common-mode voltage (DZICMV), is proposed in this paper for an asymmetrical six-phase induction motor fed by two-level dual three-phase voltage source inverters (VSIs). In this strategy, the sinusoidal waveforms injected by double zero-sequence signals are employed as modulation signals, and two opposite triangular waveforms are used as carriers. The fundamental period is divided into 24 sectors. In each sector, the carrier used by the medium amplitude phase is distinct from the carriers used by the other two phases in each set of three-phase windings. Using this method, the zero vectors (000) and (111) in each set of three-phase windings can be eliminated, and the peak values of sub-CMV and total CMV can be reduced from ±Udc/2 to ±Udc/6. The experiment results show that the root mean square (RMS) value of common-mode leakage current in DZICMV can be reduced by 51.83% compared with the double zero-sequence injection PWM (DZIPWM) strategy. It is also found in the other four existing benchmark CMV suppression strategies that the peak values of sub-CMV therein are nearly all ±Udc/2, and only in the low linear modulation region could one of these strategies suppress sub-CMV peak values to ±Udc/6. However, the proposed DZICMV can suppress the sub-CMV peak values to ±Udc/6 in the whole linear modulation range. Moreover, the maximum linear modulation index of the DZICMV is 1.15, which is larger than that of the four benchmark strategies, whose maximum modulation index is 1
Protective effect of Salvia miltiorrhiza in rheumatoid arthritis patients: A randomized, single-blind, placebocontrolled trial
Purpose: To study the protective effect of Salvia miltiorrhiza (SM) against rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in RA patients.Methods: Sixty RA patients were divided into two groups: SM (n = 30) and placebo (n =30) groups given SM at a dose of 250 mg/kg (3 capsules/day), and placebo (3 capsule/day), respectively, for 12 weeks. Patient responses based on American College of Rheumatology (ACR), health assessmentquestionnaire (HAQ) score, and global assessment of disease (GAD) were recorded. Moreover, Disease Activity Score (DAS) 28, pain score (visual analogue score, VAS), rheumatoid factor (Rh factor), and inflammatory cytokines (markers) were determined.Results: After 12 weeks of intervention with SM, ACR20 (30 %)/ACR50 patient response (13.3%, i.e., score for swelling and tenderness of joints), was significantly improved. There were considerable reductions in GAD, HAQ, DAS 28, pain score (VAS), and levels of erythrocyte sedimentation rate(ESR), acute phase reaction protein (CRP), Rh factor (IgM) and inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α), when compared to placebo (p < 0.01). Treatment with SM produced milder adverse effects than treatment with placebo (p < 0.01).Conclusion: Overall, SM produces better anti-RA effect than placebo by significantly altering ACR patient response, reducing GAD, HAQ, DAS 28 scores, Rh factor, ESR, CRP and inflammatory cytokines in RA patients. However, a large-scale clinical trial is needed before SM can be recommended for combating RA and its related symptoms.
Keywords: Salvia miltiorrhiza, Rheumatoid arthritis, DAS 28, Adverse effec
From Jeff=1/2 insulator to p-wave superconductor in single-crystal Sr2Ir1-xRuxO4 (0 < x< 1)
Sr2IrO4 is a magnetic insulator assisted by strong spin-orbit coupling (SOC)
whereas the Sr2RuO4 is a p-wave superconductor. The contrasting ground states
have been shown to result from the critical role of the strong SOC in the
iridate. Our investigation of structural, transport, and magnetic properties
reveals that substituting 4d Ru4+ (4d4) ions for 5d Ir4+(5d5) ions in Sr2IrO4
directly adds holes to the t2g bands, reduces the SOC and thus rebalances the
competing energies in single-crystal Sr2Ir1-xRuxO4. A profound effect of Ru
doping driving a rich phase diagram is a structural phase transition from a
distorted I41/acd to a more ideal I4/mmm tetragonal structure near x=0.50 that
accompanies a phase transition from an antiferromagnetic-insulating state to a
paramagnetic-metal state. We also make a comparison drawn with Rh doped
Sr2IrO4, highlighting important similarities and differences.Comment: 18 pages,7 figure
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