1,736 research outputs found
Morphology and Orientation Selection of Non-Metallic Inclusions in Electrified Molten Metal
The effect of electric current on morphology and orientation selection of non-metallic inclusions in molten metal has been investigated using theoretical modelling and numerical calculation. Two geometric factors, namely the circularity (fc) and alignment ratio (fe) were introduced to describe the inclusions shape and configuration. Electric current free energy was calculated and the values were used to determine the thermodynamic preference between different microstructures. Electric current promotes the development of inclusion along the current direction by either expatiating directional growth or enhancing directional agglomeration. Reconfiguration of the inclusions to reduce the system electric resistance drives the phenomena. The morphology and orientation selection follows the routine to reduce electric free energy. The numerical results are in agreement with our experimental observations
Characterization study of GaN-based epitaxial layer and light-emitting diode on nature-patterned sapphire substrate
[[abstract]]Chemical wet etching on c-plane sapphire wafers by three etching solutions (H3PO4, H2SO4, and H3PO4/H2SO4 mixing solution) was studied. Among these etching agents, the mixing H3PO4/H2SO4 solution has the fastest etching rate (1.5 μm/min). Interestingly, we found that H2SO4 does not etch the c-plane sapphire wafer in thickness; instead, a facet pyramidal pattern is formed on the c-plane sapphire wafer. GaN light-emitting diode (LED) epitaxial structure was grown on the sapphire wafer with the pyramidal pattern and the standard flat sapphire wafer. X-ray diffraction and photoluminescence measurement show that the pyramidal pattern on the sapphire wafer improved crystalline quality but augmented the compressive stress level in the GaN LED epilayer. The horizontal LED chips fabricated on the pyramidal-patterned sapphire wafer have a larger light output than the horizontal LED chips fabricated on the standard flat sapphire wafer by 20%.[[notice]]補正完畢[[incitationindex]]SCI[[booktype]]紙本[[booktype]]電子
Magnetic phase diagram in EuLaFeAs single crystals
We have systematically measured resistivity, susceptibility and specific heat
under different magnetic fields (H) in EuLaFeAs single
crystals. It is found that a metamagnetic transition from A-type
antiferromagnetism to ferromagnetism occurs at a critical field for magnetic
sublattice of . The jump of specific heat is suppressed and shifts to
low temperature with increasing H up to the critical value, then shifts to high
temperature with further increasing H. Such behavior supports the metamagnetic
transition. Detailed H-T phase diagrams for x=0 and 0.15 crystals are given,
and possible magnetic structure is proposed. Magnetoresistance measurements
indicate that there exists a strong coupling between local moment of
and charge in Fe-As layer. These results are very significant to understand the
underlying physics of FeAs superconductors.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Spin-filtering and charge- and spin-switching effects in a quantum wire with periodically attached stubs
Spin-dependent electron transport in a periodically stubbed quantum wire in
the presence of Rashba spin-orbit interaction (SOI) is studied via the
nonequilibrium Green's function method combined with the Landauer-Buttiker
formalism. The coexistence of spin filtering, charge and spin switching are
found in the considered system. The mechanism of these transport properties is
revealed by analyzing the total charge density and spin-polarized density
distributions in the stubbed quantum wire. Furthermore, periodic spin-density
islands with high polarization are also found inside the stubs, owing to the
interaction between the charge density islands and the Rashba SOI-induced
effective magnetic field. The proposed nanostructure may be utilized to devise
an all-electrical multifunctional spintronic device.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Magneto-transport in a quantum network: Evidence of a mesoscopic switch
We investigate magneto-transport properties of a shaped three-arm
mesoscopic ring where the upper and lower sub-rings are threaded by
Aharonov-Bohm fluxes and , respectively, within a
non-interacting electron picture. A discrete lattice model is used to describe
the quantum network in which two outer arms are subjected to binary alloy
lattices while the middle arm contains identical atomic sites. It is observed
that the presence of the middle arm provides localized states within the band
of extended regions and lead to the possibility of switching action from a high
conducting state to a low conducting one and vice versa. This behavior is
justified by studying persistent current in the network. Both the total current
and individual currents in three separate branches are computed by using
second-quantized formalism and our idea can be utilized to study magnetic
response in any complicated quantum network. The nature of localized
eigenstates are also investigated from probability amplitudes at different
sites of the quantum device.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
The flavor-changing bottom-strange quark production in the littlest Higgs model with T parity at the ILC
In the littlest Higgs model with T-parity (LHT) the mirror quarks induce the
special flavor structures and some new flavor-changing (FC) couplings which
could greatly enhance the production rates of the FC processes. We in this
paper study some bottom and anti-strange production processes in the LHT model
at the International Linear Collider (ILC), i.e.,
and . The results show that the production
rates of these processes are sizeable for the favorable values of the
parameters. Therefore, it is quite possible to test the LHT model or make some
constrains on the relevant parameters of the LHT through the detection of these
processes at the ILC.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Detection of herb-symptom associations from traditional chinese medicine clinical data
YesTraditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is an individualized medicine by observing the symptoms and signs (symptoms in brief) of patients. We aim to extract the meaningful herb-symptom relationships from large scale TCM clinical data. To investigate the correlations between symptoms and herbs held for patients, we use four clinical data sets collected from TCM outpatient clinical settings and calculate the similarities between patient pairs in terms of the herb constituents of their prescriptions and their manifesting symptoms by cosine measure. To address the large-scale multiple testing problems for the detection of herb-symptom associations and the dependence between herbs involving similar efficacies, we propose a network-based correlation analysis (NetCorrA) method to detect the herb-symptom associations. The results show that there are strong positive correlations between symptom similarity and herb similarity, which indicates that herb-symptom correspondence is a clinical principle adhered to by most TCM physicians. Furthermore, the NetCorrA method obtains meaningful herb-symptom associations and performs better than the chi-square correlation method by filtering the false positive associations. Symptoms play significant roles for the prescriptions of herb treatment. The herb-symptom correspondence principle indicates that clinical phenotypic targets (i.e., symptoms) of herbs exist and would be valuable for further investigations
Crossing w=-1 in Gauss-Bonnet Brane World with Induced Gravity
Recent type Ia supernovas data seemingly favor a dark energy model whose
equation of state crosses -1 very recently, which is a much more amazing
problem than the acceleration of the universe. In this paper we show that it is
possible to realize such a crossing without introducing any phantom component
in a Gauss-Bonnet brane world with induced gravity, where a four dimensional
curvature scalar on the brane and a five dimensional Gauss-Bonnet term in the
bulk are present. In this realization, the Gauss-Bonnet term and the mass
parameter in the bulk play a crucial role.Comment: Revtex 16 pages including 10 eps files, references added, to appear
in Comm. Theor. Phy
Investigation of protein-protein interactions: multibody docking, association/dissociation kinetics and macromolecular crowding
Protein-protein interactions are central to understanding how cells carry out
their wide array of functions and metabolic procedures. Conventional studies
on specific protein interactions focus either on details of one-to-one binding
interfaces, or on large networks that require a priori knowledge of binding
strengths. Moreover, specific protein interactions, occurring within a
crowded macromolecular environment, which is precisely the case for interactions
in a real cell, are often under-investigated.
A macromolecular simulation package, called BioSimz, has been developed
to perform Langevin dynamics simulations on multiple protein-protein
interactions at atomic resolution, aimed at bridging the gaps between
structural, kinetic and crowding studies on protein-protein interactions.
Simulations on twenty-seven experimentally determined protein-protein
interactions, indicated that the use of contact frequency information
of proteins forming specific encounters can guide docking algorithms towards
the most likely binding regions. Further evidence from eleven benchmarked
protein interactions showed that the association rate constant of a
complex, kon, can be estimated, with good agreement to experimental values,
based on the retention time of its specific encounter. Performing these
simulations with ten types of environmental protein crowders, it suggests,
from the change of kon, that macromolecular crowding improves the association
kinetics of slower-binding proteins, while it damps the association
kinetics of fast, electrostatics-driven protein-protein interactions.
It is hypothesised, based on evidence from docking, kinetics and crowding,
that the dynamics of specific protein-protein encounters is vitally important
in determining their association affinity. There are multiple factors
by which encounter dynamics, and subsequently the kon, can be influenced,
such as anchor residues, long-range forces, and environmental steering via
crowders’ electrostatics and/or volume exclusion. The capacity of emulating
these conditions on a common platform not only provides a holistic
view of interacting dynamics, but also offers the possibility of evaluating
and engineering protein-protein interactions from aspects that have never
been opened before
Hai Di Lao Hot Pot: From Employee Stimulation to Service Innovation
The management of Chinese restaurant chains has for some time followed the western model while accommodating Chinese customers. The new Hai Di Lao Hot Pot Restaurant chain has established its own management style, pioneering chain catering management to help the Chinese restaurant industry establish a professional image, explore a local management model, and maintain high standards of food safety. The objectives of this case study are to introduce the Hai Di Lao managerial strategy, investigate the secrets of its success from a human resources management perspective, to explore its innovative service, and to assess why it has inspired both marketers and the catering industry. The results show that human resources management can change employees’ behavior and emotional states by addressing a wide variety of needs. In addition, attention to service quality can improve customer satisfaction and retention
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