2,162 research outputs found
Experimental observation of nanoscale radiative heat flow due to surface plasmons in graphene and doped silicon
Owing to its two dimensional electronic structure, graphene exhibits many
unique properties. One of them is a wave vector and temperature dependent
plasmon in the infrared range. Theory predicts that due to these plasmons,
graphene can be used as a universal material to enhance nanoscale radiative
heat exchange for any dielectric substrate. Here we report on radiative heat
transfer experiments between SiC and a SiO2 sphere which have non matching
phonon polariton frequencies, and thus only weakly exchange heat in near field.
We observed that the heat flux contribution of graphene epitaxially grown on
SiC dominates at short distances. The influence of plasmons on radiative heat
transfer is further supported with measurements for doped silicon. These
results highlight graphenes strong potential in photonic nearfield and energy
conversion devices.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
In situ imaging of field emission from individual carbon nanotubes and their structural damage
©2002 American Institute of Physics. The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://link.aip.org/link/?APPLAB/80/856/1DOI:10.1063/1.1446994Field emission of individual carbon nanotubes was observed by in situ
transmission electron microscopy. A fluctuation in emission current was due to a
variation in distance between the nanotube tip and the counter electrode owing
to a "head-shaking" effect of the nanotube during field emission. Strong
field-induced structural damage of a nanotube occurs in two ways: a
piece-by-piece and segment-by-segment pilling process of the graphitic layers,
and a concentrical layer-by-layer stripping process. The former is believed
owing to a strong electrostatic force, and the latter is likely due to heating
produced by emission current that flowed through the most outer graphitic
layers
Advanced imaging and spectroscopy techniques for body magnetic resonance
The aim of this thesis was to develop advanced body MR
techniques that can contribute to
the knowledge of the metabolic syndrome (MetS). Such techniques are important
since
the incidence of the metabolic syndrome is reaching pandemic proportions.
We looked In the first part of this thesis, consisting of chapters 2, 3 and
4, new techniques for body
MR were developed. Firstly high dielectric passive shimming was developed and
applied on liver imaging to increase image quality. Furthermore, the required
power was reduced by applying the passive shimming method. Secondly MR
spectroscopy was optimized to reliably measure lipid levels in the heart and
kidney. By looking at the various parameters and optimizing them individually
very high measurement reproducibility was reached. Even though MR
spectroscopy is a great tool for studying MetS the complexity of the
technique hampers broad application therefore, extra emphasis was placed on
the ease of use of the developed protocol. In the second part of the thesis
the previously mentioned methods were applied in a more clinical setting.
Nierstichting; HartstichtingLUMC / Geneeskund
Molecular and biological interactions in colorectal cancer.
The current thesis discusses the use of molecular and biological tumor markers to predict clinical outcome. By studying several key processes in the develepment of cancer as regulation of cell motility (non-receptor protein tyrosin adesion kinases, FAK, Src and paxillin, Apoptosis (caspase-3 activity and M30 expression) and regulation of cell growth (COX-2 expression). In addition the use of selective COX-2 inhibitors for the treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastases is investigated and discussed. The main outcomes of the thesis are that combined FAK/Src immunohistochemical expression is predictive of tumor recurrence in colorectal cancer, but is not overexpressed in liver metastases. Increased tumor cell apoptosis can have a positive or a negative impact on survival and local recurrence, depending on the location of the tumor in the large bowel . In rectal cancer caspase-3 activity can be used to preoperatively select patients who will not benefit from radiation therapy. COX-2 expression in rectal cancer is only of prognostic significance in irradiated rectal cancer patients, not in non-irradiated. Liver metastases in an animal model show deminished growth in the abcence of COX-2 expression and prostaglandin production.LEI Universiteit LeidenChirurgische oncologi
Tuning the electron-phonon coupling in multilayer graphene with magnetic fields
Magneto Raman scattering study of the E optical phonons in multi-layer
epitaxial graphene grown on a carbon face of SiC are presented. At 4.2K in
magnetic field up to 33 T, we observe a series of well pronounced avoided
crossings each time the optically active inter Landau level transition is tuned
in resonance with the E phonon excitation (at 196 meV). The width of the
phonon Raman scattering response also shows pronounced variations and is
enhanced in conditions of resonance. The experimental results are well
reproduced by a model that gives directly the strength of the electron-phonon
interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Effect of a magnetic field on the two-phonon Raman scattering in graphene
We have studied, both experimentally and theoretically, the change of the
so-called 2D band of the Raman scattering spectrum of graphene (the two-phonon
peak near 2700 cm-1) in an external magnetic field applied perpendicular to the
graphene crystal plane at liquid helium temperature. A shift to lower frequency
and broadening of this band is observed as the magnetic field is increased from
0 to 33 T. At fields up to 5--10 T the changes are quadratic in the field while
they become linear at higher magnetic fields. This effect is explained by the
curving of the quasiclassical trajectories of the photo-excited electrons and
holes in the magnetic field, which enables us (i) to extract the electron
inelastic scattering rate, and (ii) to conclude that electronic scattering
accounts for about half of the measured width of the 2D peak.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Highly-ordered graphene for two dimensional electronics
With expanding interest in graphene-based electronics, it is crucial that
high quality graphene films be grown. Sublimation of Si from the 4H-SiC(0001)
Si-terminated) surface in ultrahigh vacuum is a demonstrated method to produce
epitaxial graphene sheets on a semiconductor. In this paper we show that
graphene grown from the SiC (C-terminated) surface are of higher
quality than those previously grown on SiC(0001). Graphene grown on the C-face
can have structural domain sizes more than three times larger than those grown
on the Si-face while at the same time reducing SiC substrate disorder from
sublimation by an order of magnitude.Comment: Submitted to Appl. Phys. Let
Multi-shell gold nanowires under compression
Deformation properties of multi-wall gold nanowires under compressive loading
are studied. Nanowires are simulated using a realistic many-body potential.
Simulations start from cylindrical fcc(111) structures at T=0 K. After
annealing cycles axial compression is applied on multi-shell nanowires for a
number of radii and lengths at T=300 K. Several types of deformation are found,
such as large buckling distortions and progressive crushing. Compressed
nanowires are found to recover their initial lengths and radii even after
severe structural deformations. However, in contrast to carbon nanotubes
irreversible local atomic rearrangements occur even under small compressions.Comment: 1 gif figure, 5 ps figure
Symmetry breaking in commensurate graphene rotational stacking; a comparison of theory and experiment
Graphene stacked in a Bernal configuration (60 degrees relative rotations
between sheets) differs electronically from isolated graphene due to the broken
symmetry introduced by interlayer bonds forming between only one of the two
graphene unit cell atoms. A variety of experiments have shown that non-Bernal
rotations restore this broken symmetry; consequently, these stacking varieties
have been the subject of intensive theoretical interest. Most theories predict
substantial changes in the band structure ranging from the development of a Van
Hove singularity and an angle dependent electron localization that causes the
Fermi velocity to go to zero as the relative rotation angle between sheets goes
to zero. In this work we show by direct measurement that non-Bernal rotations
preserve the graphene symmetry with only a small perturbation due to weak
effective interlayer coupling. We detect neither a Van Hove singularity nor any
significant change in the Fermi velocity. These results suggest significant
problems in our current theoretical understanding of the origins of the band
structure of this material.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PR
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