1,090 research outputs found

    Screen Printed PZT Thick Films Using Composite Film Technology

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    A spin coating composite sol gel technique for producing lead zirconate titanate (PZT) thick films has been modified for use with screen printing techniques. The resulting screen printing technique can be used to produce 10 ?m thick films in a single print. The resultant films are porous but the density can be increased through the use of repeated sol infiltration/pyrolysis treatments to yield a high density film. When fired at 710°C the composite screen printed films have dielectric and piezoelectric properties comparable to, or exceeding, those of films produced using a 'conventional' powder/glass frit/oil ink and fired at 890°C

    Pyroelectric effect enhancement in laminate composites under short circuit condition

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    The pyroelectric coefficients of laminate composites under short circuit condition have been investigated by analytical modeling and numerical simulations. Indicators for various pyroelectric/non-pyroelectric material pairs that can be utilized to determine their pyroelectric coefficient enhancement credentials have been identified. Six pyroelectric materials were paired with six non-pyroelectric/elastic materials and their pyroelectric coefficient enhancement potential and figure of merit for efficiency were investigated. The best performing partnership out of the 36 pairs was lead zirconate titanate (PZT5H)-chlorinated polyvinyl chloride thermoplastic (CPVC) for thickness ratios (R) below 0.09 and PZT5H-zinc for R larger than 0.09 with both demonstrating total pyroelectric coefficient of approximately -20x10(-4) C m(-2) K(-1) at R=0.09, which corresponds to approximately 300% increase in the coefficient. PZT5H-CPVC also showed maximum of 800% rise in the pyroelectric coefficient while figure of merit for efficiency indicated up to twentyfold increase in its electrical response output per given thermal stimuli when compared to that of PZT5H by itself

    Wnt4 antagonises Wnt3a mediated increases in growth and glucose stimulated insulin secretion in the pancreatic beta-cell line, INS-1

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.The Wnt signalling pathway in beta-cells has been linked to the development of type 2 diabetes. Investigating the impact of a non-canonical Wnt ligand, Wnt4, on beta-cell function we found that in INS-1 cells, Wnt4 was able to completely block Wnt3a stimulated cell growth and insulin secretion. However, despite high levels of Wnt4 protein being detected in INS-1 cells, reducing the expression of Wnt4 had no impact on cell growth or Wnt3a signalling. As such, the role of the endogenously expressed Wnt4 in beta-cells is unclear, but the data showing that Wnt4 can act as a negative regulator of canonical Wnt signalling in beta-cells suggests that this pathway could be a potential target for modulating beta-cell function.This work was supported by the Northcott Devon Medical Foundation (grant TB/MG/NO5002/141109 to HJW)

    Electrocaloric Cooling Cycles in Lead Scandium Tantalate with True Regeneration via Field Variation

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    There is growing interest in heat pumps based on materials that show thermal changes when phase transitions are driven by changes of electric, magnetic or stress field. Importantly, regeneration permits sinks and loads to be thermally separated by many times the changes of temperature that can arise in the materials themselves. However, performance and parameterization are compromised by net heat transfer between caloric working bodies and heat transfer fluids. Here we show that this net transfer can be avoided-resulting in true, balanced regeneration-if one varies the applied electric field while an electrocaloric (EC) working body dumps heat on traversing a passive fluid regenerator. Our EC working body is represented by bulk PbSc0.5Ta0.5O3 (PST) near its first-order ferroelectric phase transition, where we record directly measured adiabatic temperature changes of up to 2.2 K. Indirectly measured adiabatic temperature changes of similar magnitude were identified, unlike normal, from adiabatic measurements of polarization, at nearby starting temperatures, without assuming a constant heat capacity. The resulting high-resolution field-temperature-entropy maps of our material, and a small clamped companion sample, were used to construct cooling cycles that assume the use of an ideal passive regenerator in order to span \leq20 K. These cooling cycles possess well defined coefficients of performance that are bounded by well defined Carnot limits, resulting in large (>>50%) well defined efficiencies that are not unduly compromised by a small field hysteresis. Our approach permits the limiting performance of any caloric material in a passive regenerator to be established, optimized and compared; provides a recipe for true regeneration in prototype cooling devices; and could be extended to balance active regeneration.Gates Cambridge, the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainabilit

    ATP-Binding Cassette Systems of Brucella

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    Brucellosis is a prevalent zoonotic disease and is endemic in the Middle East, South America, and other areas of the world. In this study, complete inventories of putative functional ABC systems of five Brucella species have been compiled and compared. ABC systems of Brucella melitensis 16M, Brucella abortus 9-941, Brucella canis RM6/66, Brucella suis 1330, and Brucella ovis 63/290 were identified and aligned. High numbers of ABC systems, particularly nutrient importers, were found in all Brucella species. However, differences in the total numbers of ABC systems were identified (B. melitensis, 79; B. suis, 72; B. abortus 64; B. canis, 74; B. ovis, 59) as well as specific differences in the functional ABC systems of the Brucella species. Since B. ovis is not known to cause human brucellosis, functional ABC systems absent in the B. ovis genome may represent virulence factors in human brucellosis

    Rapid identification of Brucella isolates to the species level by real time PCR based single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Brucellosis, caused by members of the genus <it>Brucella</it>, remains one of the world's major zoonotic diseases. Six species have classically been recognised within the family <it>Brucella </it>largely based on a combination of classical microbiology and host specificity, although more recently additional isolations of novel <it>Brucella </it>have been reported from various marine mammals and voles. Classical identification to species level is based on a biotyping approach that is lengthy, requires extensive and hazardous culturing and can be difficult to interpret. Here we describe a simple and rapid approach to identification of <it>Brucella </it>isolates to the species level based on real-time PCR analysis of species-specific single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that were identified following a robust and extensive phylogenetic analysis of the genus.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Seven pairs of short sequence Minor Groove Binding (MGB) probes were designed corresponding to SNPs shown to possess an allele specific for each of the six classical <it>Brucella </it>spp and the marine mammal <it>Brucella</it>. Assays were optimised to identical reaction parameters in order to give a multiple outcome assay that can differentiate all the classical species and <it>Brucella </it>isolated from marine mammals. The scope of the assay was confirmed by testing of over 300 isolates of <it>Brucella</it>, all of which typed as predicted when compared to other phenotypic and genotypic approaches. The assay is sensitive being capable of detecting and differentiating down to 15 genome equivalents. We further describe the design and testing of assays based on three additional SNPs located within the 16S rRNA gene that ensure positive discrimination of <it>Brucella </it>from close phylogenetic relatives on the same platform.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The multiple-outcome assay described represents a new tool for the rapid, simple and unambiguous characterisation of <it>Brucella </it>to the species level. Furthermore, being based on a robust phylogenetic framework, the assay provides a platform that can readily be extended in the future to incorporate newly identified <it>Brucella </it>groups, to further type at the subspecies level, or to include markers for additional useful characteristics.</p

    Ultra high resolution of PZT 30/70 domains as imaged by PFM

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    iezoforce microscopy (PFM) has been used to determine the domain structure of lead zirconate titanate (PZT) (30/70) on an indium tin oxide (ITO)/glass substrate with a TiO2 boundary layer. The PZT nucleates into the perovskite form in a random crystallographic manner, which leads to a random domain structure in the final film. Using PFM it has been possible to visualize the domain structure of the PZT and determine that the domain structure has features as fine as 8 nm herringbone patterns. The possible impact of these structures for future devices utilizing nanoscale features of PZT and especially FeRAM developments is highlighted

    Pyroelectric response of lead zirconate titanate thin films on silicon: Effect of thermal stresses

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    Ferroelectric lead zirconate titanate [Pb(ZrxTi1-xO)(3), (PZT x:1-x)] has received considerable interest for applications related to uncooled infrared devices due to its large pyroelectric figures of merit near room temperature, and the fact that such devices are inherently ac coupled, allowing for simplified image post processing. For ferroelectric films made by industry-standard deposition techniques, stresses develop in the PZT layer upon cooling from the processing/growth temperature due to thermal mismatch between the film and the substrate. In this study, we use a non-linear thermodynamic model to investigate the pyroelectric properties of polycrystalline PZT thin films for five different compositions (PZT 40:60, PZT 30:70, PZT 20:80, PZT 10:90, PZT 0:100) on silicon as a function of processing temperature (25-800 degrees C). It is shown that the in-plane thermal stresses in PZT thin films alter the out-of-plane polarization and the ferroelectric phase transformation temperature, with profound effect on the pyroelectric properties. PZT 30:70 is found to have the largest pyroelectric coefficient (0.042 mu C cm(-2)degrees C-1, comparable to bulk values) at a growth temperature of 550 degrees C; typical to what is currently used for many deposition processes. Our results indicate that it is possible to optimize the pyroelectric response of PZT thin films by adjusting the Ti composition and the processing temperature, thereby, enabling the tailoring of material properties for optimization relative to a specific deposition process. (C) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC
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