1,297 research outputs found
Gated nonlinear transport in organic polymer field effect transistors
We measure hole transport in poly(3-hexylthiophene) field effect transistors
with channel lengths from 3 m down to 200 nm, from room temperature down
to 10 K. Near room temperature effective mobilities inferred from linear regime
transconductance are strongly dependent on temperature, gate voltage, and
source-drain voltage. As is reduced below 200 K and at high source-drain
bias, we find transport becomes highly nonlinear and is very strongly modulated
by the gate. We consider whether this nonlinear transport is contact limited or
a bulk process by examining the length dependence of linear conduction to
extract contact and channel contributions to the source-drain resistance. The
results indicate that these devices are bulk-limited at room temperature, and
remain so as the temperature is lowered. The nonlinear conduction is consistent
with a model of Poole-Frenkel-like hopping mechanism in the space-charge
limited current regime. Further analysis within this model reveals consistency
with a strongly energy dependent density of (localized) valence band states,
and a crossover from thermally activated to nonthermal hopping below 30 K.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, accepted to J. Appl. Phy
Effect of Tube Geometry on Regenerative Cooling Performance
The flowfield characteristics in a rocket engine coolant channels are analyzed by use of a commercial CFD and multiphysics software developed by the CFD Research Corp. called CFD-ACE+. The channels are characterized by high Reynolds number flow, varying aspect ratio, varying curvature, asymmetric and symmetric heating. The supercritical hydrogen coolant introduces large property variations that have a strong influence on the developing flow and the resulting heat transfer. This paper only shows the effect of aspect ratio and curvature for constant properties
Prolonged expression of the γ-H2AX DNA repair biomarker correlates with excess acute and chronic toxicity from radiotherapy treatment
The normal tissue tolerance levels to fractionated radiotherapy have been appreciated by a century of careful clinical observations and radiobiological studies in animals. During clinical fractionated radiotherapy, these normal tissue tolerance levels are respected, and severe sequelae of radiotherapy are avoided in the majority of patients. Notwithstanding, a minority of patients experience unexpectedly severe normal tissue reactions. The ability to predict which patients might form this minority would be important. We have conducted a study to develop a rapid and reliable diagnostic test to predict excessive normal tissue toxicity (NTT) in radiotherapy patients. A flow cytometric immunocytochemical assay was used to measure DNA damage in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from cancer patients exposed to 2-Gy gamma radiation. DNA damage and repair was measured by induction of cellular γ-H2AX in unirradiated and exposed cells at specific time points following exposure. In 12 cancer patients that experienced severe atypical NTT following radiotherapy, there was a failure to repair DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) as measured by γ-H2AX induction and persistence. In ten cancer patients that experienced little or no NTT and in seven normal (noncancer controls), efficient repair of DNA DSB was observed in the γ-H2AX assay. We conclude that a flow cytometric assay based on γ-H2AX induction in PBL of radiotherapy patients may represent a robust, rapid and reliable biomarker to predict NTT during radiotherapy. Further research is required with a larger patient cohort to validate this important study
Facilitating goal-oriented behaviour in the Stroop task: when executive control is influenced by automatic processing.
A portion of Stroop interference is thought to arise from a failure to maintain goal-oriented behaviour (or goal neglect). The aim of the present study was to investigate whether goal- relevant primes could enhance goal maintenance and reduce the Stroop interference effect. Here it is shown that primes related to the goal of responding quickly in the Stroop task (e.g. fast, quick, hurry) substantially reduced Stroop interference by reducing reaction times to incongruent trials but increasing reaction times to congruent and neutral trials. No effects of the primes were observed on errors. The effects on incongruent, congruent and neutral trials are explained in terms of the influence of the primes on goal maintenance. The results show that goal priming can facilitate goal-oriented behaviour and indicate that automatic processing can modulate executive control
Understanding and utilization of Thematic Mapper and other remotely sensed data for vegetation monitoring
The TM Tasseled Cap transformation, which provides both a 50% reduction in data volume with little or no loss of important information and spectral features with direct physical association, is presented and discussed. Using both simulated and actual TM data, some important characteristics of vegetation and soils in this feature space are described, as are the effects of solar elevation angle and atmospheric haze. A preliminary spectral haze diagnostic feature, based on only simulated data, is also examined. The characteristics of the TM thermal band are discussed, as is a demonstration of the use of TM data in energy balance studies. Some characteristics of AVHRR data are described, as are the sensitivities to scene content of several LANDSAT-MSS preprocessing techniques
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Constraining uncertainty in aerosol direct forcing
The uncertainty in present-day anthropogenic forcing is dominated by uncertainty in the strength of the contribution from aerosol. Much of the uncertainty in the direct aerosol forcing can be attributed to uncertainty in the anthropogenic fraction of aerosol in the present-day atmosphere, due to a lack of historical observations. Here we present a robust relationship between total present-day aerosol optical depth and the anthropogenic contribution across three multi-model ensembles and a large single-model perturbed parameter ensemble. Using observations of aerosol optical depth, we determine a reduced likely range of the anthropogenic component and hence a reduced uncertainty in the direct forcing of aerosol
Improving precision and reducing bias in biological surveys: estimating false-negative error rates
The use of presence/absence data in wildlife management and biological surveys is widespread. There is a growing interest in quantifying the sources of error associated with these data. We show that false-negative errors (failure to record a species when in fact it is present) can have a significant impact on statistical estimation of habitat models using simulated data. Then we introduce an extension of logistic modeling, the zero-inflated binomial (ZIB) model that permits the estimation of the rate of false-negative errors and the correction of estimates of the probability of occurrence for false-negative errors by using repeated. visits to the same site. Our simulations show that even relatively low rates of false negatives bias statistical estimates of habitat effects. The method with three repeated visits eliminates the bias, but estimates are relatively imprecise. Six repeated visits improve precision of estimates to levels comparable to that achieved with conventional statistics in the absence of false-negative errors In general, when error rates are less than or equal to50% greater efficiency is gained by adding more sites, whereas when error rates are >50% it is better to increase the number of repeated visits. We highlight the flexibility of the method with three case studies, clearly demonstrating the effect of false-negative errors for a range of commonly used survey methods
Structure, magnetic and transport properties of Ti-substituted La0.7Sr0.3MnO3
Ti-substituted perovskites, La0.7Sr0.3Mn1-xTixO3, with x between 0 to 0.20,
were investigated by neutron diffraction, magnetization, electric resistivity,
and magnetoresistance (MR) measurements. All samples show a rhombohedral
structure (space group R3c) from 10 K to room temperature. At room temperature,
the cell parameters a, c and the unit cell volume increase with increasing Ti
content. However, at 10 K, the cell parameter a has a maximum value for x =
0.10, and decreases for x greater than 0.10, while the unit cell volume remains
nearly constant for x greater than 0.10. The average (Mn,Ti)-O bond length
increases up to x=0.15, and the (Mn,Ti)-O-(Mn,Ti) bond angle decreases with
increasing Ti content to its minimum value at x=0.15 at room temperature. Below
the Curie temperature T_C, the resistance exhibits metallic behavior for the x
_ 0.05 samples. A metal (semiconductor) to insulator transition is observed for
the x_ 0.10 samples. A peak in resistivity appears below T_C for all samples,
and shifts to a lower temperature as x increases. The substitution of Mn by Ti
decreases the 2p-3d hybridization between O and Mn ions, reduces the bandwidth
W, and increases the electron-phonon coupling. Therefore, the TC shifts to a
lower temperature and the resistivity increases with increasing Ti content. A
field-induced shift of the resistivity maximum occurs at x less than or equal
to 0.10. The maximum MR effect is about 70% for La0.7Sr0.3Mn0.8Ti0.2O3. The
separation of TC and the resistivity maximum temperature Tmax enhances the MR
effect in these compounds due to the weak coupling between the magnetic
ordering and the resistivity as compared with La0.7Sr0.3MnO3.Comment: zip fil
Fluorescence decay in aperiodic Frenkel lattices
We study motion and capture of excitons in self-similar linear systems in
which interstitial traps are arranged according to an aperiodic sequence,
focusing our attention on Fibonacci and Thue-Morse systems as canonical
examples. The decay of the fluorescence intensity following a broadband pulse
excitation is evaluated by solving the microscopic equations of motion of the
Frenkel exciton problem. We find that the average decay is exponential and
depends only on the concentration of traps and the trapping rate. In addition,
we observe small-amplitude oscillations coming from the coupling between the
low-lying mode and a few high-lying modes through the topology of the lattice.
These oscillations are characteristic of each particular arrangement of traps
and they are directly related to the Fourier transform of the underlying
lattice. Our predictions can be then used to determine experimentally the
ordering of traps.Comment: REVTeX 3.0 + 3PostScript Figures + epsf.sty (uuencoded). To appear in
Physical Review
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