1,611 research outputs found

    Epidemiology and prevention of pediatric viral respiratory infections in health-care institutions.

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    Nosocomial viral respiratory infections cause considerable illness and death on pediatric wards. Common causes of these infections include respiratory syncytial virus and influenza. Although primarily a community pathogen, rhinovirus also occasionally results in hospitalization and serious sequelae. This article reviews effective infection control interventions for these three pathogens, as well as ongoing controversies

    Microscopic measurement of the linear compressibilities of two-dimensional fatty acid mesophases

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    The linear compressibility of two-dimensional fatty acid mesophases has determined by grazing incidence x-ray diffraction. Surface pressure vs molecular area isotherms were reconstructed from these measurements, and the linear compressibility (relative distortion along a given direction for isotropic applied stress) was determined both in the sample plane and in a plane normal to the aliphatic chain director (transverse plane). The linear compressibilities range over two orders of magnitude from 0.1 to 10 m/N and are distributed depending on their magnitude in 4 different sets which we are able to associate with different molecular mechanisms. The largest compressibilities (10m/N) are observed in the tilted phases. They are apparently independent of the chain length and could be related to the reorganization of the headgroup hydrogen-bounded network, whose role should be revalued. Intermediate compressibilities are observed in phases with quasi long-range order (directions normal to the molecular tilt in L_2 or L_2' phases, S phase), and could be related to the ordering of these phases. The lowest compressibilities are observed in the solid untilted CS phase and for 1 direction of the S and L_2'' phases. They are similar to the compressibility of crystalline polymers and correspond to the interactions between methyl groups in the crystal. Finally, negative compressibilities are observed in the transverse plane for L_2' and L_2'' phases and can be traced to subtle reorganizations upon untilting.Comment: 24 pages, 17 figure

    How to Avoid Common Pitfalls of Health IT Implementation

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    The stories in this guide were based on case studies about a specific intensive care IT system that integrates information from bedside monitors into a single intuitive display to provide better real-time information for clinicians

    Evidence of Water-related Discrete Trap State Formation in Pentacene Single Crystal Field-Effect Transistors

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    We report on the generation of a discrete trap state during negative gate bias stress in pentacene single crystal "flip-crystal" field-effect transistors with a SiO2 gate dielectric. Trap densities of up to 2*10^12 cm^-2 were created in the experiments. Trap formation and trap relaxation are distinctly different above and below ~280 K. In devices in which a self-assembled monolayer on top of the SiO2 provides a hydrophobic insulator surface we do not observe trap formation. These results indicate the microscopic cause of the trap state to be water adsorbed on the SiO2 surface.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter

    Density of bulk trap states in organic semiconductor crystals: discrete levels induced by oxygen in rubrene

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    The density of trap states in the bandgap of semiconducting organic single crystals has been measured quantitatively and with high energy resolution by means of the experimental method of temperature-dependent space-charge-limited-current spectroscopy (TD-SCLC). This spectroscopy has been applied to study bulk rubrene single crystals, which are shown by this technique to be of high chemical and structural quality. A density of deep trap states as low as ~ 10^{15} cm^{-3} is measured in the purest crystals, and the exponentially varying shallow trap density near the band edge could be identified (1 decade in the density of states per ~25 meV). Furthermore, we have induced and spectroscopically identified an oxygen related sharp hole bulk trap state at 0.27 eV above the valence band.Comment: published in Phys. Rev. B, high quality figures: http://www.cpfs.mpg.de/~krellner

    Hole mobility in organic single crystals measured by a "flip-crystal" field-effect technique

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    We report on single crystal high mobility organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) prepared on prefabricated substrates using a "flip-crystal" approach. This method minimizes crystal handling and avoids direct processing of the crystal that may degrade the FET electrical characteristics. A chemical treatment process for the substrate ensures a reproducible device quality. With limited purification of the starting materials, hole mobilities of 10.7, 1.3, and 1.4 cm^2/Vs have been measured on rubrene, tetracene, and pentacene single crystals, respectively. Four-terminal measurements allow for the extraction of the "intrinsic" transistor channel resistance and the parasitic series contact resistances. The technique employed in this study shows potential as a general method for studying charge transport in field-accumulated carrier channels near the surface of organic single crystals.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figure

    Coarsening in surface growth models without slope selection

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    We study conserved models of crystal growth in one dimension [tz(x,t)=xj(x,t)\partial_t z(x,t) =-\partial_x j(x,t)] which are linearly unstable and develop a mound structure whose typical size L increases in time (L=tnL = t^n). If the local slope (m=xzm =\partial_x z) increases indefinitely, nn depends on the exponent γ\gamma characterizing the large mm behaviour of the surface current jj (j=1/mγj = 1/|m|^\gamma): n=1/4n=1/4 for 1<γ<31< \gamma <3 and n=(1+γ)/(1+5γ)n=(1+\gamma)/(1+5\gamma) for γ>3\gamma>3.Comment: 7 pages, 2 EPS figures. To be published in J. Phys. A (Letter to the Editor

    Electron mean free path from angle-dependent photoelectron spectroscopy of aerosol particles

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    We propose angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of aerosol particles as an alternative way to determine the electron mean free path of low energy electrons in solid and liquid materials. The mean free path is obtained from fits of simulated photoemission images to experimental ones over a broad range of different aerosol particle sizes. The principal advantage of the aerosol approach is twofold. Firstly, aerosol photoemission studies can be performed for many different materials, including liquids. Secondly, the size-dependent anisotropy of the photoelectrons can be exploited in addition to size-dependent changes in their kinetic energy. These finite size effects depend in different ways on the mean free path and thus provide more information on the mean free path than corresponding liquid jet, thin film, or bulk data. The present contribution is a proof of principle employing a simple model for the photoemission of electrons and preliminary experimental data for potassium chloride aerosol particles
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