330 research outputs found

    Surface and Interface Effects in VLSI

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    ABSTRACT The effect of cation on the CdSe/polysulfide photoelectrochemical (PEC) solar cell has been investigated. The currentpotential response of the polysulfide electrolyte on a platinum electrode was measured as a function of the alkali metal cation in solution. There was a -33 mV shift in the redox potential and an increase in the current when the cation was changed from Na § to Cs § The performance of the CdSe/polysulfide PEC cell with both polycrystalline and single-crystal semiconductor electrodes increased in the open-circuit potential, the short-circuit current, the fill factor, and the energy conversion efficiency when Cs polysulfide was used as compared with K or Na polysulfide. Impedance measurements were made on the electrodes in polysulfide solutions and hydroxide solutions with the different cations. The results for both electrolytes showed a negative shift in the flatband potential, an increase in the apparent charge-carrier concentration, and an increase in the frequency dispersion of the measurements with the addition of Cs +. The impedance measurements also showed a dependence on the orientation of the CdSe crystal. The effects above are related to a combination of a change in the solution and the surface of the semiconductor. The stoichiometric distribution of the polysulfide species changes with the addition of Cs + and the surface of the semiconductor changes, facilitating charge transfer across the semiconductor/ electrolyte interface. Initial work on the cadmium chalcogenide/polysulfide PEC solar cell was published by Gerischer ~ and Ellis et aI.2 A great deal of work has been performed since those original studies on improvements to the semiconductor, the surface condition of the semiconductor electrode, and the electrolyte. CdS, CdSe, CdTe and mixed CdSe~T%x 3-~ have been investigated to increase the energy-conversion efficiency and stability of the PEC cells. Several researchers have investigated cadmium chalcogenide PEC solar cells using polycrystalline electrodes. Long-term stabilities have been demonstrated with conversion efficiencies up to 5% for polycrystalline CdSe. 7-1~ The semiconductor/liquid junction solar cell is particularly well suited to low cost polycrystalline electrodes. Changes in the make-up of the polysulfide electrolyte have a large effect on the performance of the solar cell; the effect of hydroxide ion concentration and the sulfideto-sulfur ratio have been investigated by some researchers.~l~ Both the hydroxide ion and the sulfur-to-sulfide ratio affect the equilibrium concentration of the electroactive species, the stability of the solution, and the light absorption by the solution. Changing the cation in the solution leads to changes in the performance of the cell. ~6-~9 The cation is not involved directly in the redox reactions at the semiconductor electrode but the performance of the cell increases significantly when the cation in solution is changed from Na § or K § to Cs § The improvement is in the stability of the semiconductor, the open-circuit photovoltage (Voc) and the photocurrent response. The flatband potential (V~) also shifts negative with the addition of Cs*; yet the only difference between the cations is the ionic radius and thus the charge density. The change in cation can affect the surface of the semiconductor by altering the degree of adsorption, or by incorporation into the semicon-* Electrochemical Society Active Member. a Present address: IBM Corporation, Hopewell Junction, New York 12533-6531. ductor itself; or by changing the activity of the species in solution, or the distribution of the polysulfide species. The CdSe/polysulfide system is examined here. First, the current-potential response of polysulfide on a platinum electrode was measured. Impedance measurements then were made to determine how the change in cation affects the band energies and charge-carrier concentration of the semiconductor. The measurements were made in a variety of systems to separate the different effects: CdSe singlecrystal electrodes in hydroxide electrolytes with the different cations, CdSe single-crystal electrodes in polysulfide with the different cations, and with CdSe polycrystalline electrodes in polysulfide. The impedance measurements indicate changes in the performance of both single-crystal and polycrystalline CdSe/polysulfide PEC cells with the different cations. Polysulfide Electrolyte Polysulfide solutions have been studied extensively in the pulp and paper industry. The equilibrium relationships of the solution species are presented in The electroactive species and rate-limiting step at the photoanode have been the subject of several papers. 14' 24-2~ I

    An Action-Based Approach to Presence: Foundations and Methods

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    This chapter presents an action-based approach to presence. It starts by briefly describing the theoretical and empirical foundations of this approach, formalized into three key notions of place/space, action and mediation. In the light of these notions, some common assumptions about presence are then questioned: assuming a neat distinction between virtual and real environments, taking for granted the contours of the mediated environment and considering presence as a purely personal state. Some possible research topics opened up by adopting action as a unit of analysis are illustrated. Finally, a case study on driving as a form of mediated presence is discussed, to provocatively illustrate the flexibility of this approach as a unified framework for presence in digital and physical environment

    Triose Phosphate Isomerase Deficiency Is Caused by Altered Dimerization–Not Catalytic Inactivity–of the Mutant Enzymes

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    Triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) deficiency is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by various mutations in the gene encoding the key glycolytic enzyme TPI. A drastic decrease in TPI activity and an increased level of its substrate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, have been measured in unpurified cell extracts of affected individuals. These observations allowed concluding that the different mutations in the TPI alleles result in catalytically inactive enzymes. However, despite a high occurrence of TPI null alleles within several human populations, the frequency of this disorder is exceptionally rare. In order to address this apparent discrepancy, we generated a yeast model allowing us to perform comparative in vivo analyses of the enzymatic and functional properties of the different enzyme variants. We discovered that the majority of these variants exhibit no reduced catalytic activity per se. Instead, we observed, the dimerization behavior of TPI is influenced by the particular mutations investigated, and by the use of a potential alternative translation initiation site in the TPI gene. Additionally, we demonstrated that the overexpression of the most frequent TPI variant, Glu104Asp, which displays altered dimerization features, results in diminished endogenous TPI levels in mammalian cells. Thus, our results reveal that enzyme deregulation attributable to aberrant dimerization of TPI, rather than direct catalytic inactivation of the enzyme, underlies the pathogenesis of TPI deficiency. Finally, we discovered that yeast cells expressing a TPI variant exhibiting reduced catalytic activity are more resistant against oxidative stress caused by the thiol-oxidizing reagent diamide. This observed advantage might serve to explain the high allelic frequency of TPI null alleles detected among human populations

    Gendered endings: Narratives of male and female suicides in the South African Lowveld

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    This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11013-012-9258-y. Copyright @ Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012.Durkheim’s classical theory of suicide rates being a negative index of social solidarity downplays the salience of gendered concerns in suicide. But gendered inequalities have had a negative impact: worldwide significantly more men than women perpetrate fatal suicides. Drawing on narratives of 52 fatal suicides in Bushbuckridge, South Africa, this article suggests that Bourdieu’s concepts of ‘symbolic violence’ and ‘masculine domination’ provide a more appropriate framework for understanding this paradox. I show that the thwarting of investments in dominant masculine positions have been the major precursor to suicides by men. Men tended to take their own lives as a means of escape. By contrast, women perpetrated suicide to protest against the miserable consequences of being dominated by men. However, contra the assumption of Bourdieu’s concept of ‘habitus’, the narrators of suicide stories did reflect critically upon gender constructs

    Towards ‘Onlife’ Education. How Technology is Forcing Us to Rethink Pedagogy

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    [EN] The objective of this chapter is twofold: on the one hand, to provide an explanation for the need we have today to rethink pedagogy based on new realities and the scenarios in which we live, also in education, generated by the technology of our time and, on the other hand, to point out the direction in which we can find a path that leads us to that reflection in the face of the inevitable convergence between technology and pedagogy in which we are today

    Rolled-Up Nanotech: Illumination-Controlled Hydrofluoric Acid Etching of AlAs Sacrificial Layers

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>The effect of illumination on the hydrofluoric acid etching of AlAs sacrificial layers with systematically varied thicknesses in order to release and roll up InGaAs/GaAs bilayers was studied. For thicknesses of AlAs below 10 nm, there were two etching regimes for the area under illumination: one at low illumination intensities, in which the etching and releasing proceeds as expected and one at higher intensities in which the etching and any releasing are completely suppressed. The &#8220;etch suppression&#8221; area is well defined by the illumination spot, a feature that can be used to create heterogeneously etched regions with a high degree of control, shown here on patterned samples. Together with the studied self-limitation effect, the technique offers a way to determine the position of rolled-up micro- and nanotubes independently from the predefined lithographic pattern.</p

    Kiyang-yang, a West-African Postwar Idiom of Distress

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    In 1984, a healing cult for young barren women in southern Guinea Bissau developed into a movement, Kiyang-yang, that shook society to its foundations and had national repercussions. “Idiom of distress” is used here as a heuristic tool to understand how Kiyang-yang was able to link war and post-war-related traumatic stress and suffering on both individual and group levels. An individual experience born from a traumatic origin may be generalized into an idiom that diverse sectors of society could embrace for a range of related reasons. We argue that, for an idiom to be understood and appropriated by others, there has to be resonance at the level of symbolic language and shared experiences as well as at the level of the culturally mediated contingent emotions it communicates. We also argue that through its symbolic references to structural causes of suffering, an idiom of distress entails a danger for those in power. It can continue to exist only if its etiology is not exposed or the social suffering it articulates is not eliminated. We finally argue that idioms of distress are not to be understood as discrete diagnostic categories or as monodimensional expressions of “trauma” that can be addressed

    Strategies for conducting situated studies of technology use in hospitals

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    Ethnographic methods are widely used for understanding situated practices with technology. When authors present their data gathering methods, they almost invariably focus on the bare essentials. These enable the reader to comprehend what was done, but leave the impression that setting up and conducting the study was straightforward. Text books present generic advice, but rarely focus on specific study contexts. In this paper, we focus on lessons learnt by non-clinical researchers studying technology use in hospitals: gaining access; developing good relations with clinicians and patients; being outsiders in healthcare settings; and managing the cultural divide between technology human factors and clinical practice. Drawing on case studies across various hospital settings, we present a repertoire of ways of working with people and technologies in these settings. These include engaging clinicians and patients effectively, taking an iterative approach to data gathering and being responsive to the demands and opportunities provided by the situation. The main contribution of this paper is to make visible many of the lessons we have learnt in conducting technology studies in healthcare, using these lessons to present strategies that other researchers can take up
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