666 results on '"Johnston, Steve"'
Search Results
652. Publisher Correction: Gallium arsenide solar cells grown at rates exceeding 300 µm h -1 by hydride vapor phase epitaxy.
- Author
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Metaferia W, Schulte KL, Simon J, Johnston S, and Ptak AJ
- Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
653. Gallium arsenide solar cells grown at rates exceeding 300 µm h -1 by hydride vapor phase epitaxy.
- Author
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Metaferia W, Schulte KL, Simon J, Johnston S, and Ptak AJ
- Abstract
We report gallium arsenide (GaAs) growth rates exceeding 300 µm h
-1 using dynamic hydride vapor phase epitaxy. We achieved these rates by maximizing the gallium to gallium monochloride conversion efficiency, and by utilizing a mass-transport-limited growth regime with fast kinetics. We also demonstrate gallium indium phosphide growth at rates exceeding 200 µm h-1 using similar growth conditions. We grew GaAs solar cell devices by incorporating the high growth rate of GaAs and evaluated its material quality at these high rates. Solar cell growth rates ranged from 35 to 309 µm h-1 with open circuit voltages ranging from 1.04 to 1.07 V. The best devices exceeded 25% efficiency under the AM1.5 G solar spectrum. The high open-circuit voltages indicate that high material quality can be maintained at these extremely high growth rates. These results have strong implications toward lowering the deposition cost of III-V materials potentially enabling the deposition of high efficiency devices in mere seconds.- Published
- 2019
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654. Pain Management Efficacy Study Between Continuous and Single-Administration Bupivacaine Following Lumbar Spinal Fusion.
- Author
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Tumulak J, Johnston S, and Adams P
- Subjects
- Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Injections, Subcutaneous, Lumbar Vertebrae, Male, Middle Aged, Pain Management, Pain Measurement, Random Allocation, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Anesthetics, Local administration & dosage, Bupivacaine administration & dosage, Pain, Postoperative drug therapy, Spinal Fusion
- Abstract
Poorly managed postoperative pain decreases patient satisfaction, impedes early patient mobilization, lengthens inpatient hospital stay, and increases healthcare costs. Multimodal analgesia with local anesthetics is considered most effective for postoperative pain management. This study compared patients undergoing lumbar fusion who received plain bupivacaine from May 2011 until August 2012 with those who received liposomal bupivacaine from September 2012 until May 2013. The aim was to determine which preparation reduced postoperative opioid use the most. All lumbar spinal fusion surgeries in the periods indicated were included in the study. Ninety-three patient charts were reviewed: 47 for the plain bupivacaine group and 46 for the liposomal bupivacaine group. The study found no statistical difference between liposomal and plain bupivacaine in providing postoperative pain control from lumbar fusion surgery. Liposomal bupivacaine is as effective as plain bupivacaine for postoperative pain control after lumbar fusion. However, a continuous infusion system carries substantial inherent drawbacks: need for training and setup, pump cost, risk of infection at the insertion site, or catheter migration. Therefore, liposomal bupivacaine becomes the logical and attractive choice to manage postoperative pain following lumbar fusion., Competing Interests: The authors have declared no financial relationships with any commercial interest related to the content of this activity. The authors did not discuss off-label use within the article., (Copyright© by the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists.)
- Published
- 2019
655. Realization of a Hole-Doped Mott Insulator on a Triangular Silicon Lattice.
- Author
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Ming F, Johnston S, Mulugeta D, Smith TS, Vilmercati P, Lee G, Maier TA, Snijders PC, and Weitering HH
- Abstract
The physics of doped Mott insulators is at the heart of some of the most exotic physical phenomena in materials research including insulator-metal transitions, colossal magnetoresistance, and high-temperature superconductivity in layered perovskite compounds. Advances in this field would greatly benefit from the availability of new material systems with a similar richness of physical phenomena but with fewer chemical and structural complications in comparison to oxides. Using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, we show that such a system can be realized on a silicon platform. The adsorption of one-third monolayer of Sn atoms on a Si(111) surface produces a triangular surface lattice with half filled dangling bond orbitals. Modulation hole doping of these dangling bonds unveils clear hallmarks of Mott physics, such as spectral weight transfer and the formation of quasiparticle states at the Fermi level, well-defined Fermi contour segments, and a sharp singularity in the density of states. These observations are remarkably similar to those made in complex oxide materials, including high-temperature superconductors, but highly extraordinary within the realm of conventional sp-bonded semiconductor materials. It suggests that exotic quantum matter phases can be realized and engineered on silicon-based materials platforms.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
656. Pain Management Efficacy Study Between Continuous and Single-Administration Bupivacaine Following Lumbar Spinal Fusion.
- Author
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Tumulak J, Johnston S, and Adams P
- Subjects
- Anesthetics, Local administration & dosage, Bupivacaine administration & dosage, Case-Control Studies, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Injections, Subcutaneous, Male, Middle Aged, Nurse Anesthetists, Pain Measurement, Pain, Postoperative nursing, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Anesthetics, Local therapeutic use, Bupivacaine therapeutic use, Lumbar Vertebrae, Pain, Postoperative drug therapy, Spinal Fusion
- Abstract
Poorly managed postoperative pain decreases patient satisfaction, impedes early patient mobilization, lengthens inpatient hospital stay, and increases healthcare costs. Multimodal analgesia with local anesthetics is considered most effective for postoperative pain management. This study compared patients undergoing lumbar fusion who received plain bupivacaine from May 2011 until August 2012 with those who received liposomal bupivacaine from September 2012 until May 2013. The aim was to determine which preparation reduced postoperative opioid use the most. All lumbar spinal fusion surgeries in the periods indicated were included in the study. Ninety-three patient charts were reviewed: 47 for the plain bupivacaine group and 46 for the liposomal bupivacaine group. The study found no statistical difference between liposomal and plain bupivacaine in providing postoperative pain control from lumbar fusion surgery. Liposomal bupivacaine is as effective as plain bupivacaine for postoperative pain control after lumbar fusion. However, a continuous infusion system carries substantial inherent drawbacks: need for training and setup, pump cost, risk of infection at the insertion site, or catheter migration. Therefore, liposomal bupivacaine becomes the logical and attractive choice to manage postoperative pain following lumbar fusion.
- Published
- 2017
657. Orbital-selective Mott phases of a one-dimensional three-orbital Hubbard model studied using computational techniques.
- Author
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Liu G, Kaushal N, Li S, Bishop CB, Wang Y, Johnston S, Alvarez G, Moreo A, and Dagotto E
- Abstract
A recently introduced one-dimensional three-orbital Hubbard model displays orbital-selective Mott phases with exotic spin arrangements such as spin block states [J. Rincón et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 106405 (2014)PRLTAO0031-900710.1103/PhysRevLett.112.106405]. In this publication we show that the constrained-path quantum Monte Carlo (CPQMC) technique can accurately reproduce the phase diagram of this multiorbital one-dimensional model, paving the way to future CPQMC studies in systems with more challenging geometries, such as ladders and planes. The success of this approach relies on using the Hartree-Fock technique to prepare the trial states needed in CPQMC. We also study a simplified version of the model where the pair-hopping term is neglected and the Hund coupling is restricted to its Ising component. The corresponding phase diagrams are shown to be only mildly affected by the absence of these technically difficult-to-implement terms. This is confirmed by additional density matrix renormalization group and determinant quantum Monte Carlo calculations carried out for the same simplified model, with the latter displaying only mild fermion sign problems. We conclude that these methods are able to capture quantitatively the rich physics of the several orbital-selective Mott phases (OSMP) displayed by this model, thus enabling computational studies of the OSMP regime in higher dimensions, beyond static or dynamic mean-field approximations.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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658. Electron-lattice interactions strongly renormalize the charge-transfer energy in the spin-chain cuprate Li2CuO2.
- Author
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Johnston S, Monney C, Bisogni V, Zhou KJ, Kraus R, Behr G, Strocov VN, Málek J, Drechsler SL, Geck J, Schmitt T, and van den Brink J
- Abstract
Strongly correlated insulators are broadly divided into two classes: Mott-Hubbard insulators, where the insulating gap is driven by the Coulomb repulsion U on the transition-metal cation, and charge-transfer insulators, where the gap is driven by the charge-transfer energy Δ between the cation and the ligand anions. The relative magnitudes of U and Δ determine which class a material belongs to, and subsequently the nature of its low-energy excitations. These energy scales are typically understood through the local chemistry of the active ions. Here we show that the situation is more complex in the low-dimensional charge-transfer insulator Li2CuO2, where Δ has a large non-electronic component. Combining resonant inelastic X-ray scattering with detailed modelling, we determine how the elementary lattice, charge, spin and orbital excitations are entangled in this material. This results in a large lattice-driven renormalization of Δ, which significantly reshapes the fundamental electronic properties of Li2CuO2.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
659. Charge disproportionation without charge transfer in the rare-earth-element nickelates as a possible mechanism for the metal-insulator transition.
- Author
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Johnston S, Mukherjee A, Elfimov I, Berciu M, and Sawatzky GA
- Abstract
We study a model for the metal-insulator (M-I) transition in the rare-earth-element nickelates RNiO3, based upon a negative charge transfer energy and coupling to a rocksaltlike lattice distortion of the NiO6 octahedra. Using exact diagonalization and the Hartree-Fock approximation we demonstrate that electrons couple strongly to these distortions. For small distortions the system is metallic, with a ground state of predominantly d8L character, where L_ denotes a ligand hole. For sufficiently large distortions (δdNi-O∼0.05-0.10 Å), however, a gap opens at the Fermi energy as the system enters a periodically distorted state alternating along the three crystallographic axes, with (d8L_2)S=0(d8)S=1 character, where S is the total spin. Thus the M-I transition may be viewed as being driven by an internal volume "collapse" where the NiO6 octahedra with two ligand holes shrink around their central Ni, while the remaining octahedra expand accordingly, resulting in the (1/2, 1/2, 1/2) superstructure observed in x-ray diffraction in the insulating phase. This insulating state is an example of charge ordering achieved without any actual movement of the charge.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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660. Effect of Molecule-Surface Reaction Mechanism on the Electronic Characteristics and Photovoltaic Performance of Molecularly Modified Si.
- Author
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Yaffe O, Ely T, Har-Lavan R, Egger DA, Johnston S, Cohen H, Kronik L, Vilan A, and Cahen D
- Abstract
We report on the passivation properties of molecularly modified, oxide-free Si(111) surfaces. The reaction of 1-alcohol with the H-passivated Si(111) surface can follow two possible paths, nucleophilic substitution (S
N ) and radical chain reaction (RCR), depending on adsorption conditions. Moderate heating leads to the SN reaction, whereas with UV irradiation RCR dominates, with SN as a secondary path. We show that the site-sensitive SN reaction leads to better electrical passivation, as indicated by smaller surface band bending and a longer lifetime of minority carriers. However, the surface-insensitive RCR reaction leads to more dense monolayers and, therefore, to much better chemical stability, with lasting protection of the Si surface against oxidation. Thus, our study reveals an inherent dissonance between electrical and chemical passivation. Alkoxy monolayers, formed under UV irradiation, benefit, though, from both chemical and electronic passivation because under these conditions both SN and RCR occur. This is reflected in longer minority carrier lifetimes, lower reverse currents in the dark, and improved photovoltaic performance, over what is obtained if only one of the mechanisms operates. These results show how chemical kinetics and reaction paths impact electronic properties at the device level . It further suggests an approach for effective passivation of other semiconductors.- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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661. Determining the short-range spin correlations in the spin-chain Li2CuO2 and CuGeO3 compounds using resonant inelastic x-ray scattering.
- Author
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Monney C, Bisogni V, Zhou KJ, Kraus R, Strocov VN, Behr G, Málek J, Kuzian R, Drechsler SL, Johnston S, Revcolevschi A, Büchner B, Rønnow HM, van den Brink J, Geck J, and Schmitt T
- Abstract
We report a high-resolution resonant inelastic soft x-ray scattering study of the quantum magnetic spin-chain materials Li(2)CuO(2) and CuGeO(3). By tuning the incoming photon energy to the oxygen K edge, a strong excitation around 3.5 eV energy loss is clearly resolved for both materials. Comparing the experimental data to many-body calculations, we identify this excitation as a Zhang-Rice singlet exciton on neighboring CuO(4) plaquettes. We demonstrate that the strong temperature dependence of the inelastic scattering related to this high-energy exciton enables us to probe short-range spin correlations on the 1 meV scale with outstanding sensitivity.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
662. Unusual layer-dependent charge distribution, collective mode coupling, and superconductivity in multilayer cuprate Ba2Ca3Cu4O8F2.
- Author
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Chen Y, Iyo A, Yang W, Ino A, Arita M, Johnston S, Eisaki H, Namatame H, Taniguchi M, Devereaux TP, Hussain Z, and Shen ZX
- Abstract
Low energy ultrahigh momentum resolution angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy study on four-layer self-doped high Tc superconductor Ba2Ca3Cu4O8F2 (F0234) revealed fine structure in the band dispersion, identifying the unconventional association of hole and electron doping with the inner and outer CuO2 layers, respectively. For the states originating from two inequivalent CuO2 layers, different energy scales are observed in dispersion kinks associated with the collective mode coupling, with the larger energy scale found in the electron (n-) doped state which also has stronger coupling strength. Given the earlier finding that the superconducting gap is substantially larger along the n-type Fermi surface, our observations connect the mode coupling energy and strength with magnitude of the pairing gap.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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663. Collection of semen by manual stimulation and ejaculate characteristics of the black flying-fox (Pteropus alecto).
- Author
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Melville DF, Crichton EG, Paterson-Wimberley T, and Johnston SD
- Abstract
Semen collection and preservation is the first step toward the development of an artificial insemination program in endangered Pteropus spp. Semen was collected by manual stimulation from a single "human-habituated" P. alecto. Manual stimulation resulted in the successful collection of motile spermatozoa on 17 of 34 attempts. The semen had a pH of 8.2 (n=2). With the exception of volume, seminal characteristics (concentration, motility, acrosome and plasma membrane status) were similar to those collected previously by electro-ejaculation. Zoo Biol 27:159-164, 2008. (c) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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664. Simultaneous observation of DNA fragmentation and protein loss in the boar spermatozoon following application of the sperm chromatin dispersion (SCD) test.
- Author
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de la Torre J, López-Fernández C, Pita M, Fernández JL, Johnston SD, and Gosálvez J
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA analysis, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Nucleoproteins analysis, Semen physiology, Spermatozoa ultrastructure, Swine, Chromatin ultrastructure, DNA Fragmentation, Spermatozoa cytology
- Abstract
DNA fragmentation and the nuclear protein matrix in boar spermatozoa were simultaneously assessed using a specific variant of the sperm chromatin dispersion (SCD) test that allows direct visualization of DNA and nuclear proteins under standard conditions of chemical lysis. Nuclear proteins remaining after lysis were stained with the fluorochrome 2,7-dibrom-4-hydroxy-mercury-fluorescein for specific protein staining. DNA and nuclear protein were stained in control-untreated (no lysis) and treated sperm cells (lysis), resulting in the identification of 3 cell types: type 1: nonlysed (control-untreated) cells; type 2: lysed cells showing nonfragmented DNA; and type 3: lysed cells showing fragmented DNA. DNA damage was also purposely induced by incubating the sperm in 0.015% H(2)O(2) for 48 hours at 37 degrees C; the cells were correspondingly stained for DNA fragmentation and protein. Nonlysed control sperm (type 1) nuclei showed no halos and stained strongly for protein in the postacrosomal region. Lysed spermatozoa with nonfragmented DNA (type 2) showed evidence of restricted DNA loop dispersions at the caudal extremity of the sperm head and a more homogenous but similar distribution of protein matrix in comparison with untreated spermatozoa. Lysed spermatozoa with fragmented DNA (type 3) exhibited large halos of DNA loops and a loss of the nuclear protein matrix component. Sperm cells exposed to 48 hours' incubation at 37 degrees C and then treated with the lysing agent showed a concurrent and progressive loss of nuclear protein in association with correspondingly increased levels of DNA fragmentation. Discriminant analysis of quantitative fluorescence using digital image analysis and conducted after SCD processing revealed that DNA fragmentation and protein could be evaluated in an automated system. Ninety-seven percent of the total analyzed cells were accurately classified according to previously defined cell types (1, 2, and 3). The results of the current study demonstrated a synergistic relationship between that of nuclear protein alteration and DNA damage in the boar sperm cell. The importance of abnormal nuclear protein alteration to DNA fragmentation and any related effect on fertility remains to be investigated.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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665. Effects of cryopreservation on mitochondrial function and heterogeneity, lipid raft stability and phosphatidylserine translocation in koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) spermatozoa.
- Author
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Zee YP, Holt WV, Allen CD, Nicolson V, Burridge M, Lisle A, Carrick FN, and Johnston SD
- Subjects
- Animals, Cryoelectron Microscopy, Cryopreservation, Freezing, Male, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial physiology, Mitochondria physiology, Phosphatidylserines physiology, Cryoprotective Agents pharmacology, Membrane Microdomains drug effects, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial drug effects, Mitochondria drug effects, Phascolarctidae physiology, Spermatozoa drug effects
- Abstract
Koala sperm mitochondria were examined by cryomicroscopy using the fluorescent probe JC-1, which distinguishes high (red) and low (green) mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP). At normal body temperature, approximately 70% of live and untreated spermatozoa exhibited high MMP whereas <3% of live untreated spermatozoa exhibited low potential. A third class, in which single midpieces contained mixed mitochondrial populations, was also detected. Heterogeneity was noted in the level of MMP between individual koalas, individual spermatozoa and even between mitochondrial gyres within single midpieces. MMP of the live sperm population was not significantly affected by glycerol but was suppressed by freezing and thawing treatments. After thawing, MMP declined significantly during rewarming, especially as the temperature increased from 5 to 35 degrees C. The distribution of the ganglioside GM1 was examined using fluorescent-labelled cholera toxin B. In fresh, untreated koala spermatozoa GM1 was detected on the head and midpiece, but not on the principal piece. No significant redistribution of GM1 was observed after chilling and cryotreatment. Phosphatidylserine translocation across the plasma membrane was examined using fluorescent-labelled annexin V. Few fresh spermatozoa exhibited phosphatidylserine translocation (approximately 1%); this was not increased by chilling or cryopreservation, thus implying that cryotreatment had little effect on plasma membrane lipid asymmetry.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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666. Anesthesia of captive African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) using a medetomidine-ketamine-atropine combination.
- Author
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Ward DG, Blyde D, Lemon J, and Johnston S
- Subjects
- Adjuvants, Anesthesia administration & dosage, Adjuvants, Anesthesia pharmacology, Anesthesia Recovery Period, Anesthetics, Combined administration & dosage, Anesthetics, Dissociative administration & dosage, Anesthetics, Dissociative pharmacology, Animals, Animals, Wild, Atropine administration & dosage, Atropine pharmacology, Blood Chemical Analysis veterinary, Hypnotics and Sedatives administration & dosage, Hypnotics and Sedatives pharmacology, Injections, Intramuscular veterinary, Ketamine administration & dosage, Ketamine pharmacology, Male, Medetomidine administration & dosage, Medetomidine pharmacology, Time Factors, Anesthetics, Combined pharmacology, Blood Gas Analysis veterinary, Carnivora physiology
- Abstract
Seven captive male African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) weighing 25-32 kg each, were anesthetized by i.m. injection via hand syringe with a combination of 1.5 mg/kg ketamine, 40 microg/kg medetomidine, and 0.05 mg/kg atropine. Following endotracheal intubation, each animal was connected to a bain closed-circuit system that delivered 1.5% isoflurane and 2 L/min oxygen. Atipamezole (0.1 mg/kg i.v.; 0.1 mg/kg i.m.) was given at the end of each procedure (60 min following injection of medetomidine/ketamine/atropine). Time to sternal recumbency was 5-8 min. Times to standing after atipamezole administration were 8-20 min. This anesthetic regimen was repeated on three separate occasions (September 2000, February 2002, and October 2002) on all males to perform electroejaculation procedures. Each procedure was <80 min from injection to standing. Dogs showed excellent muscle relaxation during the procedures. Arterial blood samples were collected at 10-min intervals for blood gases in one procedure (September 2000). Separate venous samples were taken from each dog during each procedure for hematology and biochemistry. These values were within the normal range for this species. Arterial hemoglobin oxygen saturation (SpO2) and heart rate (HR) were monitored continuously in addition to other anesthesia monitoring procedures (body temperature, respiratory rate [RR], capillary refill time, blink response, pupil position, deep pain perception reflex). All dogs maintained relatively stable SpO2 profiles during monitoring, with a mean (+/-SD) SpO2 of 92% +/-5.4%. All other physiological variables (HR, RR, body temperature, blood pressure) were within normal limits. Following each procedure, normal behavior was noted in all dogs. All the dogs were reunited into the pack at completion of their anesthetic procedures. An injectable medetomidine-ketamine-atropine combination with maintenance by gaseous isoflurane and oxygen provides an inexpensive, reliable anesthetic for captive African wild dogs.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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