261 research outputs found

    Cryogenic Microwave Imaging of Metal-Insulator Transition in Doped Silicon

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    We report the instrumentation and experimental results of a cryogenic scanning microwave impedance microscope. The microwave probe and the scanning stage are located inside the variable temperature insert of a helium cryostat. Microwave signals in the distance modulation mode are used for monitoring the tip-sample distance and adjusting the phase of the two output channels. The ability to spatially resolve the metal-insulator transition in a doped silicon sample is demonstrated. The data agree with a semi-quantitative finite-element simulation. Effects of the thermal energy and electric fields on local charge carriers can be seen in the images taken at different temperatures and DC biases.Comment: 10 pages, 5 Figures, Accepted to Review of Scientific Instrumen

    Anonymizing Periodical Releases of SRS Data by Fusing Differential Privacy

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    Spontaneous reporting systems (SRS) have been developed to collect adverse event records that contain personal demographics and sensitive information like drug indications and adverse reactions. The release of SRS data may disclose the privacy of the data provider. Unlike other microdata, very few anonymyization methods have been proposed to protect individual privacy while publishing SRS data. MS(k, {\theta}*)-bounding is the first privacy model for SRS data that considers multiple individual records, mutli-valued sensitive attributes, and rare events. PPMS(k, {\theta}*)-bounding then is proposed for solving cross-release attacks caused by the follow-up cases in the periodical SRS releasing scenario. A recent trend of microdata anonymization combines the traditional syntactic model and differential privacy, fusing the advantages of both models to yield a better privacy protection method. This paper proposes the PPMS-DP(k, {\theta}*, {\epsilon}) framework, an enhancement of PPMS(k, {\theta}*)-bounding that embraces differential privacy to improve privacy protection of periodically released SRS data. We propose two anonymization algorithms conforming to the PPMS-DP(k, {\theta}*, {\epsilon}) framework, PPMS-DPnum and PPMS-DPall. Experimental results on the FAERS datasets show that both PPMS-DPnum and PPMS-DPall provide significantly better privacy protection than PPMS-(k, {\theta}*)-bounding without sacrificing data distortion and data utility.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure

    Ultra-thin Topological Insulator Bi2Se3 Nanoribbons Exfoliated by Atomic Force Microscopy

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    Ultra-thin topological insulator nanostructures, in which coupling between top and bottom surface states takes place, are of great intellectual and practical importance. Due to the weak Van der Waals interaction between adjacent quintuple layers (QLs), the layered bismuth selenide (Bi2Se3), a single Dirac-cone topological insulator with a large bulk gap, can be exfoliated down to a few QLs. In this paper, we report the first controlled mechanical exfoliation of Bi2Se3 nanoribbons (> 50 QLs) by an atomic force microscope (AFM) tip down to a single QL. Microwave impedance microscopy is employed to map out the local conductivity of such ultra-thin nanoribbons, showing drastic difference in sheet resistance between 1~2 QLs and 4~5 QLs. Transport measurement carried out on an exfoliated (\leq 5 QLs) Bi2Se3 device shows non-metallic temperature dependence of resistance, in sharp contrast to the metallic behavior seen in thick (> 50 QLs) ribbons. These AFM-exfoliated thin nanoribbons afford interesting candidates for studying the transition from quantum spin Hall surface to edge states

    Modification of Transition-Metal Redox by Interstitial Water in Hexacyanometalate Electrodes for Sodium-Ion Batteries.

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    A sodium-ion battery (SIB) solution is attractive for grid-scale electrical energy storage. Low-cost hexacyanometalate is a promising electrode material for SIBs because of its easy synthesis and open framework. Most hexacyanometalate-based SIBs work with aqueous electrolyte, and interstitial water in the material has been found to strongly affect the electrochemical profile, but the mechanism remains elusive. Here we provide a comparative study of the transition-metal redox in hexacyanometalate electrodes with and without interstitial water based on soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy and theoretical calculations. We found distinct transition-metal redox sequences in hydrated and anhydrated NaxMnFe(CN)6·zH2O. The Fe and Mn redox in hydrated electrodes are separated and are at different potentials, leading to two voltage plateaus. On the contrary, mixed Fe and Mn redox in the same potential range is found in the anhydrated system. This work reveals for the first time how transition-metal redox in batteries is strongly affected by interstitial molecules that are seemingly spectators. The results suggest a fundamental mechanism based on three competing factors that determine the transition-metal redox potentials. Because most hexacyanometalate electrodes contain water, this work directly reveals the mechanism of how interstitial molecules could define the electrochemical profile, especially for electrodes based on transition-metal redox with well-defined spin states
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