596 research outputs found

    Reaktive Molekularstrahlepitaxie und Charakterisierung von GaN/(Al,Ga)N-Heterostrukturen auf SiC(0001)

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    Thema dieser Arbeit ist die Synthese von hexagonalen GaN/(Al,Ga)N-Heterostrukturen mittels reaktiver Molekularstrahlepitaxie (MBE) auf SiC(0001)-Substraten. Der Einfluß der Wachstumsbedingungen auf die strukturellen, morphologischen, optischen und elektrischen Eigenschaften der Proben wird untersucht. Die reaktive MBE von Gruppe-III-Nitriden nutzt die katalytische Dekomposition von NH3 als Stickstoff-Precursor. Im Vergleich zur plasma-unterstützten MBE und metall-organischen Gasphasenepitaxie (MOCVD) ist dieses Abscheideverfahren eine noch wenig etablierte Methode, um kristalline (Al,Ga)N-basierende Heterostrukturen herzustellen. Es wird eine Einführung in das Verfahren und die Oberflächenchemie der reaktiven MBE gegeben. Die Synthese von (Al,Ga)N-Pufferschichten auf SiC(0001) wird diskutiert. Eine Prozedur zur Präparation der SiC-Substrate wird vorgestellt. Eine Methode zur in situ-Kontrolle der Wachstumsparameter wird erarbeitet, die auf der Beugung von hochenergetischen Elektronen (RHEED) beruht und ein reproduzierbares (Al,Ga)N-Wachstum ermöglicht. Die Pufferschichten haben atomar glatte Oberflächen, die sich für eine weitere Abscheidung von GaN/(Al,Ga)N-Heterostrukturen eignen. Es werden die strukturellen und optischen Eigenschaften solcher Strukturen studiert und mit Proben verglichen, die mittels plasma-unterstützter MBE und MOCVD hergestellt werden. Im Vergleich zu den übrigen III-V-Halbleitern zeichnen sich die hexagonalen Nitride besonders durch die Größe ihrer elektrischen Polarisationsfelder aus. GaN/(Al,Ga)N-Multiquantenwell-Strukturen (MQWs) mit unterschiedlichen Well-Dicken werden auf GaN- und (Al,Ga)N-Pufferschichten gewachsen. Es werden die Auswirkungen der spontanen Polarisation und Piezopolarisation auf die optischen Eigenschaften der MQWs studiert. Im speziellen wird - experimentell und theoretisch - gezeigt, daß die polarisationsbedingten elektrischen Felder in GaN/(Al,Ga)N-MQWs nicht durch hohe Dichten von freien Ladungsträgern abgeschirmt werden können. Ferner wird der Einfluß der GaN/(Al,Ga)N-Grenzflächenmorphologie auf die optischen Eigenschaften studiert. Das Wachstum von (Al,Ga)N/GaN-Heterostruktur-Feldeffekt-Transistoren (HFETs) auf semiisolierenden (Al,Ga)N-Puffern wird untersucht. Diese Heterostrukturen zeichnen sich durch eine geringe Dichte an Fadenversetzungen (1-2 x 108 cm-2) und durch das Fehlen jeglicher Parallelleitfähigkeit aus. Für diese Strukturen, die Beweglichkeiten von bis zu 750 cm2/Vs bei Raumtemperatur zeigen, werden Simulationen der temperaturabhängigen Beweglichkeiten unter Beachtung aller wichtigen Streumechanismen durchgeführt. In Übereinstimmung mit der Sekundärionenspektrometrie an diesen Proben wird belegt, daß die Transistoreigenschaften dominant durch tiefe Störstellen - sehr wahrscheinlich As - begrenzt werden. Es wird die Synthese von spannungskompensierten GaN/(Al,Ga)N-Bragg-Reflektoren mit Reflektivitäten von über 90% im blauen Spektralbereich vorgestellt. Die experimentelle Realisierung basiert auf der exakten Bestimmung der individuellen Schichtdicken durch die Simulation der gemessenen Röntgenbeugungsprofile und Reflektivitätsspektren. Die mittels Laserstreuung abgeschätzten Reflektivitätsverluste können durch NH3-reiche Synthesebedingungen reduziert werden.In this thesis, we investigate the synthesis of wurtzite (Al,Ga)N heterostructures on SiC(0001) by reactive molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). We examine the impact of growth conditions on the structural, morphological, optical and electrical properties of the films. MBE of group-III nitrides is almost entirely based on the use of an N2 plasma discharge for providing reactive N. However, an alternative and attractive candidate for producing N radicals is NH3, which decomposes on the growth front by a catalytic reaction even at comparatively low temperatures. The basic growth technique and surface chemistry of reactive MBE is introduced. The deposition of (Al,Ga)N buffer layers on SiC(0001) substrates is discussed. An ex-situ cleaning procedure for the SiC substrates is presented. An in-situ method for the reproducible growth of these buffers layers is developed based on reflection high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED). The layers have atomically smooth surfaces well suited for the growth of GaN/(Al,Ga)N heterostructures. The structural and optical properties of these buffers are compared to such layers grown by plasma-assisted MBE and metal organic vapor phase deposition (MOCVD), respectively. Compared to other III-V semiconductors hexagonal nitrides exhibit huge electrical polarization fields. GaN/(Al,Ga)N multiple quantum wells (MQWs) with different well thicknesses are deposited on GaN and (Al,Ga)N buffer layers, respectively. It is demonstrated that the electric field in the quantum wells (QWs) leads to a quantum-confined Stark shift of the QW emission, which thus can fall well below the bulk GaN band-gap energy. In the opposite, it is proved that the strain state of the QWs alone has little impact on the electric fields in MQWs. The optical properties of these heterostructures are studied by stationary and time-resolved photoluminescence and compared with the results of self-consistent Schrödinger-Poisson calculations. It is shown that the recombination dynamics in heavily doped MQWs (7 x 1018 cm-3) is still controlled by residual fields, contrary to the common assumption that flat-band conditions are achieved at this doping level. Furthermore, the influence of the interface roughness on the QW emission widths is analyzed. The growth of (Al,Ga)N/GaN heterostructure field effect transistors (HFETs) on semi-insulating (Al,Ga)N buffers is studied. Temperature dependent Hall measurements show a mobility of up to 750 cm2/Vs and 1400 cm2/Vs at 300 K and 77 K, respectively. Transmission electron microscopy reveals the (Al,Ga)N/GaN interface to be abrupt and the dislocation density to be too low to limit the HFET mobility. However, secondary ion mass spectroscopy detects a significant concentration of As in the channel region. Indeed, an excellent fit to the temperature dependence of the mobility is obtained by including scattering with As. The synthesis and analysis of highly reflective and conductive GaN/(Al,Ga)N Bragg reflectors is examined. The realization of these Bragg mirrors is based on the exact determination of the structural parameters by simulating x-ray diffraction profiles and corresponding reflectivity spectra. To prevent cracking from these thick stacks, a concept of strain-balanced multilayer structure is employed. It is demonstrated that the difference between the theoretical and the measured maximum reflectivity can be minimized by growing the Bragg mirrors under NH3 stable growth conditions

    Contributions to the geology of the Table Mountain Group

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    Modern analysis of Table Mountain Group sediments began with I. C. Rust's D.Sc. thesis "On the sedimentation of the Table Mountain Group in the western Cape Province" in 1967. Rust defined the stratigraphy of the Table Mountain Group, produced computer generated isopach and palaeocurrent maps for each formation and attempted palaeoenvironmental analyses based on what data he had available. For work dated prior to 1967 the reader is directed to Rust's excellent review in Chapter 2 of his thesis. The thesis served as a basis for Rust's later published work on the Cape Supergroup. Current published palaeoenvironmental models of the lower Table Mountain Group (the Piekenierskloof, Graafwater and Peninsula Formations) are based on a transgressive fluvial - littoral - shallow shelf model (Tankard et al., 1982) following earlier facies and palaeoenvironmental analyses (Tankard and Hobday, 1977: Rust, 1977; Hobday and Tankard, 1978: Vos and Tankard, 1981). The validity of this model has recently been questioned (Turner, 1986; 1987) although no comprehensive alternative has been proposed to date. The sedimentology of the upper Table Mountain Group i.e. the Pakhuis, Cedarberg, Rietvlei, Skurweberg and Goudini Formations (the latter three the newly named Nardouw Subgroup) has not been studied systematically. Good progress has recently been made on the fossil content of the Cedarberg Formation (Gray et al., 1986; Cocks and Fortey, 1986) and palaeoenvironmental analyses initiated in the Nardouw Formation. This thesis documents contributions to the geology of the Table Mountain Group. It is not the intention of the author to present an extensive overview and treatise on the lower Table Mountain Group, but rather to concentrate on three topics that can provide some insight into Table Mountain Group geology. The following three topics were selected 1) Petrology and Diagenesis of lower Palaeozoic sandstones in the s.w. Cape Sandveldt (Clanwilliam and Piketberg Discricts). 2) Palaeoenvironmental indicators in the Faroo Member, (Graafwater Formation) at Carstensberg Pass, R364. 3) Facies analysis of conglomerates and sandstones in the Piekenierskloof Formation: Processes and implications for pre-Devonian braid-plain sedimentology. These topics form the basis of the thesis

    EXTRAPOLATION DES SPANNUNGSINTENSITÄTSFAKTORS AUF GRUND EXPERIMENTELLER RESULTATE

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    The stress intensity factor (SIF) is defined usually by following formulas for the fracture-modes l and II, respectively, with the full or half crack-Iength, α, the "far-field" stress σ₀ or τ₀ and a dimensionsless quantity k₁ and k₁₁ depending on the boundary conditions. It is shown, that the actual influence of the crack-length upon the SIF is diminishing with its growing value and in many cases the SIF depends practically on the far-field stress only. This makes an extrapolation method possible, which is checked by two photoelastic experiments

    Heavy vector resonances at the LHC

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    This contribution discusses a model-independent approach to study heavy vector triplets at the LHC. The simplified model parameterizes single production and decay of the heavy vectors. Specific, weakly and strongly coupled models can be easily matched to the simplified Lagrangian. Thus, if experimental results are presented in terms of these simplified model parameters, the interpretation of experimental limits in a wide range of explicit models is straightforward. Finite width effects have to be accounted for in order to set reliably model-independent bounds

    Temporal Analysis of Activity Patterns of Editors in Collaborative Mapping Project of OpenStreetMap

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    In the recent years Wikis have become an attractive platform for social studies of the human behaviour. Containing millions records of edits across the globe, collaborative systems such as Wikipedia have allowed researchers to gain a better understanding of editors participation and their activity patterns. However, contributions made to Geo-wikis_wiki-based collaborative mapping projects_ differ from systems such as Wikipedia in a fundamental way due to spatial dimension of the content that limits the contributors to a set of those who posses local knowledge about a specific area and therefore cross-platform studies and comparisons are required to build a comprehensive image of online open collaboration phenomena. In this work, we study the temporal behavioural pattern of OpenStreetMap editors, a successful example of geo-wiki, for two European capital cities. We categorise different type of temporal patterns and report on the historical trend within a period of 7 years of the project age. We also draw a comparison with the previously observed editing activity patterns of Wikipedia.Comment: Submitte

    Biological imaging in radiation treatment planning for brain tumours

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    Direct evidence of dust growth in L183 from MIR light scattering

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    Theoretical arguments suggest that dust grains should grow in the dense cold parts of molecular clouds. Evidence of larger grains has so far been gathered in near/mid infrared extinction and millimeter observations. Interpreting the data is, however, aggravated by the complex interplay of density and dust properties (as well as temperature for thermal emission). We present new Spitzer data of L183 in bands that are sensitive and insensitive to PAHs. The visual extinction AV map derived in a former paper was fitted by a series of 3D Gaussian distributions. For different dust models, we calculate the scattered MIR radiation images of structures that agree agree with the AV map and compare them to the Spitzer data. The Spitzer data of L183 show emission in the 3.6 and 4.5 micron bands, while the 5.8 micron band shows slight absorption. The emission layer of stochastically heated particles should coincide with the layer of strongest scattering of optical interstellar radiation, which is seen as an outer surface on I band images different from the emission region seen in the Spitzer images. Moreover, PAH emission is expected to strongly increase from 4.5 to 5.8 micron, which is not seen. Hence, we interpret this emission to be MIR cloudshine. Scattered light modeling when assuming interstellar medium dust grains without growth does not reproduce flux measurable by Spitzer. In contrast, models with grains growing with density yield images with a flux and pattern comparable to the Spitzer images in the bands 3.6, 4.5, and 8.0 micron.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic

    A Transcriptome Atlas of Physcomitrella patens Provides Insights into the Evolution and Development of Land Plants

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    Post-print version of the article.Identifying the genetic mechanisms that underpin the evolution of new organ and tissue systems is an aim of evolutionary developmental biology. Comparative functional genetic studies between angiosperms and bryophytes can define those genetic changes that were responsible for developmental innovations. Here, we report the generation of a transcriptome atlas covering most phases in the life cycle of the model bryophyte Physcomitrella patens, including detailed sporophyte developmental progression. We identified a comprehensive set of sporophyte-specific transcription factors, and found that many of these genes have homologs in angiosperms that function in developmental processes such as flowering and shoot branching. Deletion of the PpTCP5 transcription factor results in development of supernumerary sporangia attached to a single seta, suggesting that it negatively regulates branching in the moss sporophyte. Given that TCP genes repress branching in angiosperms, we suggest that this activity is ancient. Finally, comparison of P. patens and Arabidopsis thaliana transcriptomes led us to the identification of a conserved core of transcription factors expressed in tip-growing cells. We identified modifications in the expression patterns of these genes that could account for developmental differences between P. patens tip-growing cells and A. thaliana pollen tubes and root hairs.ERA-NET: (2nd call ERA-NET for Coordinating Plant Sciences); Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

    Characterisation of the Immunophenotype of Dogs with Primary Immune-Mediated Haemolytic Anaemia

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    Immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia (IMHA) is reported to be the most common autoimmune disease of dogs, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality in affected animals. Haemolysis is caused by the action of autoantibodies, but the immunological changes that result in their production have not been elucidated.To investigate the frequency of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and other lymphocyte subsets and to measure serum concentrations of cytokines and peripheral blood mononuclear cell expression of cytokine genes in dogs with IMHA, healthy dogs and dogs with inflammatory diseases.19 dogs with primary IMHA, 22 dogs with inflammatory diseases and 32 healthy control dogs.Residual EDTA-anti-coagulated blood samples were stained with fluorophore-conjugated monoclonal antibodies and analysed by flow cytometry to identify Tregs and other lymphocyte subsets. Total RNA was also extracted from peripheral blood mononuclear cells to investigate cytokine gene expression, and concentrations of serum cytokines (interleukins 2, 6 10, CXCL-8 and tumour necrosis factor α) were measured using enhanced chemiluminescent assays. Principal component analysis was used to investigate latent variables that might explain variability in the entire dataset.There was no difference in the frequency or absolute numbers of Tregs among groups, nor in the proportions of other lymphocyte subsets. The concentrations of pro-inflammatory cytokines were greater in dogs with IMHA compared to healthy controls, but the concentration of IL-10 and the expression of cytokine genes did not differ between groups. Principal component analysis identified four components that explained the majority of the variability in the dataset, which seemed to correspond to different aspects of the immune response.The immunophenotype of dogs with IMHA differed from that of dogs with inflammatory diseases and from healthy control dogs; some of these changes could suggest abnormalities in peripheral tolerance that permit development of autoimmune disease. The frequency of Tregs did not differ between groups, suggesting that deficiency in the number of these cells is not responsible for development of IMHA
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