5,972 research outputs found
Effects of transverse electric fields on Landau subbands in bilayer zigzag graphene nanoribbons
The magnetoelectronic properties of quasi-one-dimensional zigzag graphene
nanoribbons are investigated by using the Peierls tight-binding model.
Quasi-Landau levels (QLLs), dispersionless Landau subbands within a certain
region of k-space, are resulted from the competition between magnetic and
quantum confinement effects. In bilayer system, the interlayer interactions
lead to two groups of QLLs, one occurring at the Fermi level and the other one
occurring at higher energies. Transverse electric fields are able to distort
energy spectrum, tilt two groups of QLLs and cause semiconductor-metal
transition. From the perspective of wave functions, the distribution of
electrons is explored, and the evolution of Landau states under the influence
of electric fields is clearly discussed. More interestingly, the band mixing
phenomena exhibited in the energy spectrum are related to the state mixing,
which can be apparently seen in the wave functions. The density of states,
which could be verified through surface inspections and optical experiments,
such as scanning tunneling spectroscopy and absorption spectroscopy, is
provided at last
Tunable Versatile High Input Impedance Voltage-Mode Universal Biquadratic Filter Based on DDCCs
A high input impedance voltage-mode universal biquadratic filter with three input terminals and seven output terminals is presented. The proposed circuit uses three differential difference current conveyors (DDCCs), four resistors and two grounded capacitors. The proposed circuit can realize all the standard filter functions, namely, lowpass, bandpass, highpass, notch and allpass, simultaneously. The proposed circuit offers the features of high input impedance, using only grounded capacitors, and orthogonal controllability of resonance angular frequency and quality factor
Luminescent Cyclometalated Gold(III) Alkyl Complexes: Photophysical and Photochemical Properties
published_or_final_versio
Luminescent Cyclometalated Gold(III) Alkyl Complexes: Photophysical and Photochemical Properties
published_or_final_versio
Capillarity Theory for the Fly-Casting Mechanism
Biomolecular folding and function are often coupled. During molecular
recognition events, one of the binding partners may transiently or partially
unfold, allowing more rapid access to a binding site. We describe a simple
model for this flycasting mechanism based on the capillarity approximation and
polymer chain statistics. The model shows that flycasting is most effective
when the protein unfolding barrier is small and the part of the chain which
extends towards the target is relatively rigid. These features are often seen
in known examples of flycasting in protein-DNA binding. Simulations of
protein-DNA binding based on well-funneled native-topology models with
electrostatic forces confirm the trends of the analytical theory
An Exact No Free Lunch Theorem for Community Detection
A precondition for a No Free Lunch theorem is evaluation with a loss function
which does not assume a priori superiority of some outputs over others. A
previous result for community detection by Peel et al. (2017) relies on a
mismatch between the loss function and the problem domain. The loss function
computes an expectation over only a subset of the universe of possible outputs;
thus, it is only asymptotically appropriate with respect to the problem size.
By using the correct random model for the problem domain, we provide a
stronger, exact No Free Lunch theorem for community detection. The claim
generalizes to other set-partitioning tasks including core/periphery
separation, -clustering, and graph partitioning. Finally, we review the
literature of proposed evaluation functions and identify functions which
(perhaps with slight modifications) are compatible with an exact No Free Lunch
theorem
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