2,883 research outputs found
Growth and arsenic uptake by Chinese brake fern inoculated with an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus
Very fast formation of superconducting MgB2/Fe wires with high Jc
In this paper we have investigated the effects of sintering time and
temperature on the formation and critical current densities of Fe-clad MgB2
wires. MgB2 wires were fabricated using the powder-in-tube process and sintered
for different periods of time at predetermined temperatures. All the samples
were examined using XRD, SEM and magnetisation measurements. In contrast to the
common practice of sintering for several hours, the present results show that
there is no need for prolonged heat treatment in the fabrication of Fe-clad
MgB2 wires. A total time in the furnace of several minutes is more than enough
to form nearly pure MgB2 with high performance characteristics. The results
from Tc, Jc and Hirr show convincingly that the samples which were sintered for
3 minutes above 800 oC are as good as those sintered for longer times. In fact,
the Jc field performance for the most rapidly sintered sample is slightly
better than for all other samples. Jc of 4.5 times 10 ^5 A/cm2 in zero field
and above 10 ^5 A/cm2 in 2T at 15 K has been achieved for the best Fe-clad MgB2
wires. As a result of such a short sintering there is no need for using high
purity argon protection and it is possible to carry out the heat treatment in a
much less protective atmosphere or in air. These findings substantially
simplify the fabrication process, making it possible to have a continuous
process for fabrication and reducing the costs for large-scale production of
MgB2 wires.Comment: 15 pages, one table, 9 figures, submitted to Physica C on June 8,
200
Local disorder and optical properties in V-shaped quantum wires : towards one-dimensional exciton systems
The exciton localization is studied in GaAs/GaAlAs V-shaped quantum wires
(QWRs) by high spatial resolution spectroscopy. Scanning optical imaging of
different generations of samples shows that the localization length has been
enhanced as the growth techniques were improved. In the best samples, excitons
are delocalized in islands of length of the order of 1 micron, and form a
continuum of 1D states in each of them, as evidenced by the sqrt(T) dependence
of the radiative lifetime. On the opposite, in the previous generation of QWRs,
the localization length is typically 50 nm and the QWR behaves as a collection
of quantum boxes. These localization properties are compared to structural
properties and related to the progresses of the growth techniques. The presence
of residual disorder is evidenced in the best samples and explained by the
separation of electrons and holes due to the large in-built piezo-electric
field present in the structure.Comment: 8 figure
Flux Jumping and a Bulk-to-Granular Transition in the Magnetization of a Compacted and Sintered MgB2 Superconductor
The recent discovery of intermediate-temperature superconductivity (ITC) in
MgB2 by Akimitsu et al. and its almost simultaneous explanation in terms of a
hole-carrier-based pairing mechanism by Hirsch, has triggered an avalanche of
studies of its structural, magnetic and transport properties. As a further
contribution to the field we report the results of field (H) and temperature
(T) dependent magnetization (M) measurements of a pellet of uniform,
large-grain sintered MgB2. We show that at low temperatures the size of the
pellet and its critical current density, Jc(H) - i.e. its M(H) - ensure low
field flux jumping, which of course ceases when M(H) drops below a critical
value. With further increase of H and T the individual grains decouple and the
M(H) loops drop to lower lying branches, unresolved in the usual full M(H)
representation. After taking into account the sample size and grain size,
respectively, the bulk sample and the grains were deduced to exhibit the same
magnetically determined Jc s (e.g. 105 A/cm2, 20 K, 0T) and hence that for each
temperature of measurement Jc(H) decreased monotonically with H over the entire
field range, except for a gap within the grain-decoupling zone.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Changes: Fig 6 Vertical scale an order of
magnitude out (changed figure and associated text). Also corrected typo in
last sectio
Molecular evidence of the haploid origin in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) with Aegilops kotschyi cytoplasm and whole genome expression profiling after haploidization
Aegiolops kotschyi cytoplasmic male sterile system often results in part of haploid plants in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). To elucidate the origin of haploid, 235 wheat microsatellite (SSR) primers were randomly selected and screened for polymorphism between haploid (2n = 3x = 21 ABD) and its parents, male-sterile line YM21 (2n = 6x = 42 AABBDD) and male fertile restorer YM2 (2n = 6x = 42 AABBDD). About 200 SSR markers yielded clear bands from denatured PAGE, of which 180 markers have identifiable amplification patterns, and 20 markers (around 8%) resulted in different amplification products between the haploid and the restorer, YM2. There were no SSR markers that were found to be distinguishable between the haploid and the male sterile line YM21. In addition, different distribution of HMW-GS between endosperm and seedlings from the same seeds further confirmed that the haploid genomes were inherited from the maternal parent. After haploidization, 1.7% and 0.91% of total sites were up- and down-regulated exceeding twofold in the shoot and the root of haploid, respectively, and most of the differentially expressed loci were up/down-regulated about twofold. Out of the sensitive loci in haploid, 94 loci in the shoot, 72 loci in the root can be classified into three functional subdivisions: biological process, cellular component and molecular function, respectively
Process mapping of laser surface modification of AISI 316L stainless steel for biomedical applications
A 1.5-kW CO2 laser in pulsed mode at 3 kHz was used to investigate the effects of varied laser process parameters and resulting morphology of AISI 316L stainless steel. Irradiance and residence time were varied between 7.9 to 23.6 MW/cm2 and 50 to 167 µs respectively. A strong correlation between irradiance, residence time, depth of processing and roughness of processed steel was established. The high depth of altered microstructure and increased roughness were linked to higher levels of both irradiance and residence times. Energy fluence and surface temperature models were used to predict levels of melting occurring on the surface through the analysis of roughness and depth of the region processed. Microstructural images captured by the SEM revealed significant grain structure changes at higher irradiances, but due to increased residence times, limited to the laser in use, the hardness values were not improved
Elementary operations for quantum logic with a single trapped two-level cold ion beyond Lamb-Dicke limit
A simple alternative scheme for implementing quantum gates with a single
trapped cold two-level ion beyond the Lamb-Dicke (LD) limit is proposed. Basing
on the quantum dynamics for the laser-ion interaction described by a
generalized Jaynes-Cummings model, one can introduce two kinds of elementary
quantum operations i.e., the simple rotation on the bare atomic state,
generated by applying a resonant pulse, and the joint operation on the internal
and external degrees of the ion, performed by using an off-resonant pulse.
Several typical quantum gates, including Hadamard gate, controlled-Z and
controlled-NOT gates , can thus be implemented exactly by using these
elementary operations. The experimental parameters including the LD parameter
and the durations of the applied laser pulses, for these implementation are
derived analytically and numerically. Neither the LD approximation for the
laser-ion interaction nor the auxiliary atomic level is needed in the present
scheme.Comment: 5 pages, no figure, to appear in Opt. Com
Aerosol particles at a high-altitude site on the Southeast Tibetan Plateau, China: Implications for pollution transport from South Asia
Bulk aerosol samples were collected from 16 July 2008 to 26 July 2009 at Lulang, a high-altitude (>3300m above sea level) site on the southeast Tibetan Plateau (TP); objectives were to determine chemical characteristics of the aerosol and identify its major sources. We report aerosol (total suspended particulate, TSP) mass levels and the concentrations of selected elements, carbonaceous species, and water-soluble inorganic ions. Significant buildup of aerosol mass and chemical species (organic carbon, element carbon, nitrate, and sulfate) occurred during the premonsoon, while lower concentrations were observed during the monsoon. Seasonal variations in aerosol and chemical species were driven by precipitation scavenging and atmospheric circulation. Two kinds of high-aerosol episodes were observed: one was enriched with dust indicators (Fe and Ca2+), and the other was enhanced with organic and elemental carbon (OC and EC), SO42−, NO3−, and Fe. The TSP loadings during the latter were 3 to 6 times those on normal days. The greatest aerosol optical depths (National Centers for Environmental Protection/National Center for Atmospheric Research reanalysis) occurred upwind, in eastern India and Bangladesh, and trajectory analysis indicates that air pollutants were transported from the southwest. Northwesterly winds brought high levels of natural emissions (Fe, Ca2+) and low levels of pollutants (SO42−, NO3−, K+, and EC); this was consistent with high aerosol optical depths over the western deserts and Gobi. Our work provides evidence that both geological and pollution aerosols from surrounding regions impact the aerosol population of the TP
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