18,739 research outputs found
Work Function of Single-wall Silicon Carbide Nanotube
Using first-principles calculations, we study the work function of single
wall silicon carbide nanotube (SiCNT). The work function is found to be highly
dependent on the tube chirality and diameter. It increases with decreasing the
tube diameter. The work function of zigzag SiCNT is always larger than that of
armchair SiCNT. We reveal that the difference between the work function of
zigzag and armchair SiCNT comes from their different intrinsic electronic
structures, for which the singly degenerate energy band above the Fermi level
of zigzag SiCNT is specifically responsible. Our finding offers potential
usages of SiCNT in field-emission devices.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
A switch element in the autophagy E2 Atg3 mediates allosteric regulation across the lipidation cascade
Autophagy depends on the E2 enzyme, Atg3, functioning in a conserved E1-E2-E3 trienzyme cascade that catalyzes lipidation of Atg8-family ubiquitin-like proteins (UBLs). Molecular mechanisms underlying Atg8 lipidation remain poorly understood despite association of Atg3, the E1 Atg7, and the composite E3 Atg12-Atg5-Atg16 with pathologies including cancers, infections and neurodegeneration. Here, studying yeast enzymes, we report that an Atg3 element we term E123IR (E1, E2, and E3-interacting region) is an allosteric switch. NMR, biochemical, crystallographic and genetic data collectively indicate that in the absence of the enzymatic cascade, the Atg3(E123IR) makes intramolecular interactions restraining Atg3's catalytic loop, while E1 and E3 enzymes directly remove this brace to conformationally activate Atg3 and elicit Atg8 lipidation in vitro and in vivo. We propose that Atg3's E123IR protects the E2 similar to UBL thioester bond from wayward reactivity toward errant nucleophiles, while Atg8 lipidation cascade enzymes induce E2 active site remodeling through an unprecedented mechanism to drive autophagy
Nodeless superconductivity in Ca3Ir4Sn13: evidence from quasiparticle heat transport
We report resistivity and thermal conductivity measurements
on CaIrSn single crystals, in which superconductivity with K was claimed to coexist with ferromagnetic spin-fluctuations. Among
three crystals, only one crystal shows a small hump in resistivity near 20 K,
which was previously attributed to the ferromagnetic spin-fluctuations. Other
two crystals show the Fermi-liquid behavior at low temperature.
For both single crystals with and without the resistivity anomaly, the residual
linear term is negligible in zero magnetic field. In low fields,
shows a slow field dependence. These results demonstrate that
the superconducting gap of CaIrSn is nodeless, thus rule out
nodal gap caused by ferromagnetic spin-fluctuations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Adaptive geometric features based filtering impulse noise in colour images
An adaptive geometric features based filtering (AGFF) technique with a low computational complexity is proposed for removal of impulse noise in corrupted color images. The effective and efficient detection is based on geometric characteristics and features of the corrupted pixel and/or the pixel region. A progressive restoration mechanism is devised using multi-pass non-linear operations. Through extensive experiments conducted using a wide range of test color images, the proposed filtering technique has demonstrated superior performance to that of well-known benchmark techniques, in terms of objective measurements, the visual image quality and the computational complexity
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