Structural phase transitions and soft phonon modes pose a long-standing challenge to computing electron-phonon (e-ph) interactions in strongly anharmonic crystals. Here we develop a first-principles ...approach to compute e-ph scattering and charge transport in materials with anharmonic lattice dynamics. Our approach employs renormalized phonons to compute the temperature-dependent e-ph coupling for all phonon modes, including the soft modes associated with ferroelectricity and phase transitions. We show that the electron mobility in cubic SrTiO3 is controlled by scattering with longitudinal optical phonons at room temperature and with ferroelectric soft phonons below 200 K. Our calculations can accurately predict the temperature dependence of the electron mobility in SrTiO3 between 150–300 K, and reveal the microscopic origin of its roughly T−3 trend. Our approach enables first-principles calculations of e-ph interactions and charge transport in broad classes of crystals with phase transitions and strongly anharmonic phonons.
Major mental diseases such as autism, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and major depressive disorder are debilitating illnesses with complex etiologies. Recent findings show that the onset and ...development of these illnesses cannot be well described by the one‐gene; one‐disease approach. Instead, their clinical presentation is thought to result from the regulative interplay of a large number of genes. Even though the involvement of many genes are likely, up regulating and activation or down regulation and silencing of these genes by the environmental factors play a crucial role in contributing to their pathogenesis. Much of this interplay may be moderated by epigenetic changes. Similar to genetic mutations, epigenetic modifications such as DNA methylation, histone modifications, and RNA interference can influence gene expression and therefore may cause behavioral and neuronal changes observed in mental disorders. Environmental factors such as diet, gut microbiota, and infections have significant role in these epigenetic modifications. Studies show that bioactive nutrients and gut microbiota can alter either DNA methylation and histone signatures through a variety of mechanisms. Indeed, microbes within the human gut may play a significant role in the regulation of various elements of “gut–brain axis,” via their influence on inflammatory cytokines and production of antimicrobial peptides that affect the epigenome through their involvement in generating short chain fatty acids, vitamin synthesis, and nutrient absorption. In addition, they may participate in‐gut production of many common neurotransmitters. In this review we will consider the potential interactions of diet, gastrointestinal microbiome, inflammation, and epigenetic alterations in psychiatric disorders.
Recently, we demonstrated the first CMOS nonmagnetic nonreciprocal passive circulator based on N-path filters that uses time variance to break reciprocity. Here, the analysis of performance metrics, ...such as loss, isolation, linearity, and tuning range, is presented in terms of the design parameters. The analysis is verified by the measured performance of a 65-nm CMOS circulator prototype that exhibits 1.7 dB of loss in the transmitter-antenna (TX-ANT) and antenna-receiver (ANT-RX) paths, and has high isolation TX-RX, up to 50 dB through tuning and 20-dB bandwidth (BW) of 32 MHz and a tuning range of 610-850 MHz. Through an architectural feature specifically designed to enhance TX linearity, the circulator achieves an in-band TX-ANT input-referred third-order intercept point (IIP3) of +27.5 dBm, nearly two orders of magnitude higher than the ANT-RX IIP3 of +8.7 dBm. The circulator is also integrated with a self-interference-canceling full-duplex (FD) RX featuring an analog baseband (BB) SI canceller. The FD RX achieves 42-dB on-chip SI suppression across the circulator and analog BB domains over a 12-MHz signal BW. In conjunction with digital SI and its input-referred third-order intermodulation (IM3) cancellation, the FD RX demonstrates 85-dB overall SI suppression, enabling an FD link budget of -7-dBm TX average output power and -92-dBm noise floor.
We propose to measure the linear polarization of the external electromagnetic fields of a relativistic heavy ion through azimuthal asymmetries in dilepton production in ultraperipheral collisions. ...The asymmetries estimated with the equivalent photon approximation are shown to be sizable.
Perturbo is a software package for first-principles calculations of charge transport and ultrafast carrier dynamics in materials. The current version focuses on electron–phonon interactions and can ...compute phonon-limited transport properties such as the conductivity, carrier mobility and Seebeck coefficient. It can also simulate the ultrafast nonequilibrium electron dynamics in the presence of electron–phonon scattering. Perturbo uses results from density functional theory and density functional perturbation theory calculations as input, and employs Wannier interpolation to reduce the computational cost. It supports norm-conserving and ultrasoft pseudopotentials, spin–orbit coupling, and polar electron–phonon interactions for bulk and 2D materials. Hybrid MPI plus OpenMP parallelization is implemented to enable efficient calculations on large systems (up to at least 50 atoms) using high-performance computing. Taken together, Perturbo provides efficient and broadly applicable ab initio tools to investigate electron–phonon interactions and carrier dynamics quantitatively in metals, semiconductors, insulators, and 2D materials.
Program Title:Perturbo
CPC Library link to program files:https://doi.org/10.17632/34m2p6v79t.1
Developer’s repository link:https://perturbo-code.github.io
Licensing provisions: GNU General Public Licence 3.0
Programming language:Fortran, Python
External routines/libraries:LAPACK, HDF5, MPI, OpenMP, FFTW, Quantum-ESPRESSO, Wannier90
Nature of problem: Computing transport properties from first-principles in materials, including the electrical conductivity, carrier mobility and Seebeck coefficient; Simulating ultrafast nonequilibrium electron dynamics, such as the relaxation of excited carriers via interactions with phonons.
Solution method: We implement the first-principles Boltzmann transport equation, which employs materials properties such as the electronic structure, lattice dynamics, and electron–phonon collision terms computed with density functional theory and density functional perturbation theory. The Boltzmann transport equation is solved numerically to compute charge transport and simulate ultrafast carrier dynamics. Wannier interpolation is employed to reduce the computational cost.
Additional comments: Hybrid MPI plus OpenMP parallelization is implemented to run large calculations and take advantage of high-performance computing. Most results are output to HDF5 file format, which is portable and convenient for post-processing using high-level languages such as Python and Julia.
FAK is a tyrosine kinase overexpressed in cancer cells and plays an important role in the progression of tumors to a malignant phenotype. Except for its typical role as a cytoplasmic kinase ...downstream of integrin and growth factor receptor signaling, related studies have shown new aspects of the roles of FAK in the nucleus. FAK can promote p53 degradation through ubiquitination, leading to cancer cell growth and proliferation. FAK can also regulate GATA4 and IL-33 expression, resulting in reduced inflammatory responses and immune escape. These findings establish a new model of FAK from the cytoplasm to the nucleus. Activated FAK binds to transcription factors and regulates gene expression. Inactive FAK synergizes with different E3 ligases to promote the turnover of transcription factors by enhancing ubiquitination. In the tumor microenvironment, nuclear FAK can regulate the formation of new blood vessels, affecting the tumor blood supply. This article reviews the roles of nuclear FAK in regulating gene expression. In addition, the use of FAK inhibitors to target nuclear FAK functions will also be emphasized.
The key issue holding back the application of solid polymeric electrolytes in high‐energy density lithium metal batteries is the contradictory requirements of high ion conductivity and mechanical ...stability. In this work, self‐healable solid polymeric electrolytes (SHSPEs) with rigid‐flexible backbones and high ion conductivity are synthesized by a facile condensation polymerization approach. The all‐solid Li metal full batteries based on the SHSPEs possess freely bending flexibility and stable cycling performance as a result of the more disciplined metal Li plating/stripping, which have great implications as long‐lifespan energy sources compatible with other wearable devices.
Solid but flexible: A self‐healing solid polymer electrolyte (featuring fast self‐healing within 60 s after a deep cut with a blade) endows solid Li metal full batteries with freely bending flexibility and superior cycling stability as demonstrated by the small capacity decay of 0.1 % per cycle over 100 cycles.
The Reed-Xiaoli (RX) algorithm has been widely used as an anomaly detector for hyperspectral images. Recently, kernel RX (KRX) has been proven to yield high performance in anomaly detection and ...change detection. In this paper, we present a generalization of the KRX algorithm. The novel algorithm is called cluster KRX (CKRX), which becomes KRX under certain conditions. The key idea is to group background pixels into clusters and then apply a fast eigendecomposition algorithm to generate the anomaly detection index. Both global and local versions of CKRX have been implemented. Application to anomaly detection using actual hyperspectral images is included. In addition to anomaly detection, the CKRX algorithm has been integrated with other prediction algorithms for change detection. Spatially registered visible and near-infrared hyperspectral images collected from a tower-based geometry have been used in the anomaly and change detection studies. Receiver operating characteristics curves and actual computation times were used to compare different algorithms. It was demonstrated that CKRX has comparable detection performance as KRX, but with much lower computational requirements.
GaN is a key material for lighting technology. Yet, the carrier transport and ultrafast dynamics that are central in GaN light-emitting devices are not completely understood. We present ...first-principles calculations of carrier dynamics in GaN, focusing on electron–phonon (e-ph) scattering and the cooling and nanoscale dynamics of hot carriers. We find that e-ph scattering is significantly faster for holes compared to electrons and that for hot carriers with an initial 0.5–1 eV excess energy, holes take a significantly shorter time (∼0.1 ps) to relax to the band edge compared to electrons, which take ∼1 ps. The asymmetry in the hot carrier dynamics is shown to originate from the valence band degeneracy, the heavier effective mass of holes compared to electrons, and the details of the coupling to different phonon modes in the valence and conduction bands. We show that the slow cooling of hot electrons and their long ballistic mean free paths (over 3 nm at room temperature) are a possible cause of efficiency droop in GaN light-emitting diodes. Taken together, our work sheds light on the ultrafast dynamics of hot carriers in GaN and the nanoscale origin of efficiency droop.
This note further investigates the locally and globally adaptive synchronization of an uncertain complex dynamical network. Several network synchronization criteria are deduced. Especially, our ...hypotheses and designed adaptive controllers for network synchronization are rather simple in form. It is very useful for future practical engineering design. Moreover, numerical simulations are also given to show the effectiveness of our synchronization approaches.