Matching Items (154)
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Solid-state lithium-ion batteries are a major area of research due to their increased safety characteristics over conventional liquid electrolyte batteries. Lithium lanthanum zirconate (LLZO) is a promising garnet-type ceramic for use as a solid-state electrolyte due to its high ionic conductivity. The material exists in two dierent phases, one that

Solid-state lithium-ion batteries are a major area of research due to their increased safety characteristics over conventional liquid electrolyte batteries. Lithium lanthanum zirconate (LLZO) is a promising garnet-type ceramic for use as a solid-state electrolyte due to its high ionic conductivity. The material exists in two dierent phases, one that is cubic in structure and one that is tetragonal. One potential synthesis method that results in LLZO in the more useful, cubic phase, is electrospinning, where a mat of nanowires is spun and then calcined into LLZO. A phase containing lanthanum zirconate (LZO) and amorphous lithium occursas an intermediate during the calcination process. LZO has been shown to be a sintering aid for LLZO, allowing for lower sintering temperatures. Here it is shown the eects of internal LZO on the sintered pellets. This is done by varying the 700C calcination time to transform diering amounts of LZO and LLZO in electrospun nanowires, and then using the same sintering parameters for each sample. X-ray diraction was used to get structural and compositional analysis of both the calcined powders and sintered pellets. Pellets formed from wires calcined at 1 hour or longer contained only LLZO even if the calcined powder had only undergone the rst phase transformation. The relative density of the pellet with no initial LLZO of 61.0% was higher than that of the pellet with no LZO, which had a relative density of 57.7%. This allows for the same, or slightly higher, quality material to be synthesized with a shorter amount of processing time.
ContributorsLondon, Nathan Harry (Author) / Chan, Candace (Thesis director) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Committee member) / Department of Physics (Contributor) / Materials Science and Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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The free-base tetra-tolyl-porphyrin and the corresponding cobalt and iron porphyrin complexes were synthesized and characterized to show that this class of compound can be promising, tunable catalysts for carbon dioxide reduction. During cyclic voltammetry experiments, the iron porphyrin showed an on-set of ‘catalytic current’ at an earlier potential than the

The free-base tetra-tolyl-porphyrin and the corresponding cobalt and iron porphyrin complexes were synthesized and characterized to show that this class of compound can be promising, tunable catalysts for carbon dioxide reduction. During cyclic voltammetry experiments, the iron porphyrin showed an on-set of ‘catalytic current’ at an earlier potential than the cobalt porphyrin’s in organic solutions gassed with carbon dioxide. The cobalt porphyrin yielded larger catalytic currents, but at the same potential as the electrode. This difference, along with the significant changes in the porphyrin’s electronic, optical and redox properties, showed that its capabilities for carbon dioxide reduction can be controlled by metal ions, allotting it unique opportunities for applications in solar fuels catalysis and photochemical reactions.
ContributorsSkibo, Edward Kim (Author) / Moore, Gary (Thesis director) / Woodbury, Neal (Committee member) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor) / School of Sustainability (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experiences, or CUREs have become an increasingly popular way to integrate research opportunities into the undergraduate biology curriculum. Unlike traditional cookbook labs which provide students with a set experimental design and known outcome, CUREs offer students the opportunity to participate in novel and interesting research that is

Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experiences, or CUREs have become an increasingly popular way to integrate research opportunities into the undergraduate biology curriculum. Unlike traditional cookbook labs which provide students with a set experimental design and known outcome, CUREs offer students the opportunity to participate in novel and interesting research that is of interest to the greater biology community. While CUREs have been championed as a way to provide more students with the opportunity to experience, it is unclear whether students benefit differently from participating in different CURE with different structural elements. In this study we focused in on one proposed element of a CURE, collaboration, to determine whether student's perception of this concept change over the course of a CURE and whether it differs among students enrolled in different CUREs. We analyzed pre and post open-ended surveys asking the question "Why might collaboration be important in science?" in two CUREs with different structures of collaboration. We also compared CURE student responses to the responses of senior honors thesis students who had been conducting authentic research. Five themes emerged in response to students' conceptions of collaboration. Comparing two CURE courses, we found that students' conceptions of collaboration were varied within each individual CURE, as well as what students were leaving with compared to the other CURE course. Looking at how student responses compared between 5 different themes, including "Different Perspectives", "Validate/Verify Results", "Compare Results", "Requires Different Expertise", and "Compare results", students appeared to be thinking about collaboration in distinct different ways by lack of continuity in the amount of students discussing each of these among the classes. In addition, we found that student responses in each of the CURE courses were not significantly different for any of the themes except "Different Expertise" compared to the graduating seniors. However, due to the small (n) that the graduating seniors group had, 22, compared to each of the CURE classes composing of 155 and 98 students, this comparison must be taken in a preliminary manner. Overall, students thought differently about collaboration between different CUREs. Still, a gap filling what it means to "collaborate", and whether the structures of CUREs are effective to portray collaboration are still necessary to fully elaborate on this paper's findings.
ContributorsWassef, Cyril Alexander (Author) / Brownell, Sara (Thesis director) / Stout, Valerie (Committee member) / Cooper, Katelyn (Committee member) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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ABSTRACT Peptide microarrays may prove to be a powerful tool for proteomics research and clinical diagnosis applications. Fodor et al. and Maurer et al. have shown proof-of-concept methods of light- and electrochemically-directed peptide microarray fabrication on glass and semiconductor microchips respectively. In this work, peptide microarray fabrication based on the

ABSTRACT Peptide microarrays may prove to be a powerful tool for proteomics research and clinical diagnosis applications. Fodor et al. and Maurer et al. have shown proof-of-concept methods of light- and electrochemically-directed peptide microarray fabrication on glass and semiconductor microchips respectively. In this work, peptide microarray fabrication based on the abovementioned techniques were optimized. In addition, MALDI mass spectrometry based peptide synthesis characterization on semiconductor microchips was developed and novel applications of a CombiMatrix (CBMX) platform for electrochemically controlled synthesis were explored. We have investigated performance of 2-(2-nitrophenyl)propoxycarbonyl (NPPOC) derivatives as photo-labile protecting group. Specifically, influence of substituents on 4 and 5 positions of phenyl ring of NPPOC group on the rate of photolysis and the yield of the amine was investigated. The results indicated that substituents capable of forming a π-network with the nitro group enhanced the rate of photolysis and yield. Once such properly substituted NPPOC groups were used, the rate of photolysis/yield depended on the nature of protected amino group indicating that a different chemical step during the photo-cleavage process became the rate limiting step. We also focused on electrochemically-directed parallel synthesis of high-density peptide microarrays using the CBMX technology referred to above which uses electrochemically generated acids to perform patterned chemistry. Several issues related to peptide synthesis on the CBMX platform were studied and optimized, with emphasis placed on the reactions of electro-generated acids during the deprotection step of peptide synthesis. We have developed a MALDI mass spectrometry based method to determine the chemical composition of microarray synthesis, directly on the feature. This method utilizes non-diffusional chemical cleavage from the surface, thereby making the chemical characterization of high-density microarray features simple, accurate, and amenable to high-throughput. CBMX Corp. has developed a microarray reader which is based on electro-chemical detection of redox chemical species. Several parameters of the instrument were studied and optimized and novel redox applications of peptide microarrays on CBMX platform were also investigated using the instrument. These include (i) a search of metal binding catalytic peptides to reduce overpotential associated with water oxidation reaction and (ii) an immobilization of peptide microarrays using electro-polymerized polypyrrole.
ContributorsKumar, Pallav (Author) / Woodbury, Neal (Thesis advisor) / Allen, James (Committee member) / Johnston, Stephen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
In the Rare-earth-Tri-telluride family, (RTe3s) [R=La, Ce, Nd, Sm, Gd, Tb, Dy, Er, Ho, Tm] the emergence of Charge Density Waves, (CDW) has been under investigation for a long time due to broadly tunable properties by either chemical substitution or pressure application. These quasi 2D Layered materials RTe3s undergo Fermi

In the Rare-earth-Tri-telluride family, (RTe3s) [R=La, Ce, Nd, Sm, Gd, Tb, Dy, Er, Ho, Tm] the emergence of Charge Density Waves, (CDW) has been under investigation for a long time due to broadly tunable properties by either chemical substitution or pressure application. These quasi 2D Layered materials RTe3s undergo Fermi Surface Nesting leading to CDW instability. CDWs are electronic instabilities found in low-dimensional materials with highly anisotropic electronic structures. Since the CDW is predominantly driven by Fermi-surface (FS) nesting, it is especially sensitive to pressure-induced changes in the electronic structure. The FS of RTe3s is a function of p-orbitals of Tellurium atoms, which are arranged in two adjacent planes in the crystal structure. Although the FS and electronic structure possess a nearly four-fold symmetry, RTe3s form an incommensurate CDW.This dissertation is structured as follows: Chapter 1 includes basic ideas of Quantum materials, followed by an introduction to CDW and RTe3s. In Chapter 2, there are fundamentals of crystal growth by Chemical Vapor Transport, including various precursors, transport agent, temperature gradient, and rate of the reaction. After the growth, the crystals were confirmed for lattice vibrations by Raman, for composition by Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy; crystal structure and orientation were confirmed by X-ray Diffraction; magnetic ordering was established by Vibrating sample measurement. Detailed CDW study was done on various RTe3s by Raman spectroscopy. The basic mechanism and instrumentations used in these characterizations are explained in Chapter 3. Chapter 4 includes experimental data for crystal growth and results of these characterizations for Parent RTe3s. Chapter 5 includes fundamental insights on Cationic alloying of RTe3s, along with one alloy system’s crystal growth and characterization. This work tries to explain the behavior of CDW by a Temperature-dependent Raman study of RTe3s established the CDW transition temperature accompanied by Phonon softening; Angle-resolved Raman data confirming the nearly four-fold symmetry; thickness-dependent Raman spectroscopy resulting in the conclusion that as thickness decreases CDW transition temperature increases. Also, CDW transition is analyzed as a function of alloying.
ContributorsAttarde, Yashika (Author) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Thesis advisor) / Botana, Antia (Committee member) / Alford, Terry (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Globally, about two-thirds of the population is latently infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). HSV-1 is a large double stranded DNA virus with a genome size of ~150kbp. Small defective genomes, which minimally contain an HSV-1 origin of replication and packaging signal, arise naturally via recombination during viral

Globally, about two-thirds of the population is latently infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). HSV-1 is a large double stranded DNA virus with a genome size of ~150kbp. Small defective genomes, which minimally contain an HSV-1 origin of replication and packaging signal, arise naturally via recombination during viral DNA replication. These small defective genomes can be mimicked by constructing a bacterial plasmid containing the HSV-1 origin of replication and packaging signal, transfecting these recombinant plasmids into mammalian cells, and infecting with a replicating helper virus. The absence of most viral genes in the amplicon vector allows large pieces of foreign DNA (up to 150kbp) to be incorporated. The HSV-1 amplicon is replicated and packaged by the helper virus to form HSV-1 particles containing the amplicon DNA. We constructed a novel HSV-1 amplicon vector system containing lambda phage-derived attR sites to facilitate insertion of transgenes by Invitrogen Gateway recombination. To demonstrate that the amplicon vectors work as expected, we packaged the vector constructs expressing Emerald GFP using the replication-competent helper viruses OK-14 or HSV-mScartlet-I-UL25 in Vero cells and demonstrate that the vector stock can subsequently transduce and express Emerald GFP. In further work, we will insert transgenes into the amplicon vector using Invitrogen Gateway recombination to study their functionality.
ContributorsVelarde, Kimberly (Author) / Hogue, Ian B (Thesis advisor) / Manfredsson, Fredric (Committee member) / Sandoval, Ivette (Committee member) / Varsani, Arvind (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description

Caracals (Caracal caracal) are a felid species native to regions of southern Africa and western and central Asia. Despite their relatively high prevalence, the majority of research conducted on caracals has been undertaken on captive individuals, which encounter significantly different environments and exhibit different behaviors in comparison to caracals in

Caracals (Caracal caracal) are a felid species native to regions of southern Africa and western and central Asia. Despite their relatively high prevalence, the majority of research conducted on caracals has been undertaken on captive individuals, which encounter significantly different environments and exhibit different behaviors in comparison to caracals in the wild. Thereby, they likely have a vastly different virome. The goal of this study was to identify known and unknown DNA viruses associated with free-ranging caracals. Caracal fecal and organ samples were obtained from a caracal surveillance study undertaken in the Western Cape region of South Africa. Parasitic ticks found feeding on caracals were also obtained. Using a viral metagenomic informed approach, a novel circovirus (family Circoviridae) was detected and characterized in caracal fecal, kidney, spleen, and liver samples, as well as in ticks feeding on the caracals. To our knowledge, this is the first circovirus identified in caracals. The novel circovirus was determined to be closely related to a canine circovirus. These findings expand the knowledge of viral diversity and caracals and are greatly important to caracal conservation efforts as well as conservation efforts of other animals within their ecosystem.

ContributorsCollins, Courtney (Author) / Varsani, Arvind (Thesis director) / Dolby, Greer (Committee member) / Kraberger, Simona (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor)
Created2022-05
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Computational models have long been used to describe and predict the outcome of complex immunological processes. The dissertation work described here centers on the construction of multiscale computational immunology models that derives biological insights at the population, systems, and atomistic levels. First, SARS-CoV-2 mortality is investigated through the lens of

Computational models have long been used to describe and predict the outcome of complex immunological processes. The dissertation work described here centers on the construction of multiscale computational immunology models that derives biological insights at the population, systems, and atomistic levels. First, SARS-CoV-2 mortality is investigated through the lens of the predicted robustness of CD8+ T cell responses in 23 different populations. The robustness of CD8+ T cell responses in a given population was modeled by predicting the efficiency of endemic MHC-I protein variants to present peptides derived from SARS-CoV-2 proteins to circulating T cells. To accomplish this task, an algorithm, called EnsembleMHC, was developed to predict viral peptides with a high probability of being recognized by CD T cells. It was discovered that there was significant variation in the efficiency of different MHC-I protein variants to present SARS-CoV-2 derived peptides, and countries enriched with variants with high presentation efficiency had significantly lower mortality rates. Second, a biophysics-based MHC-I peptide prediction algorithm was developed. The MHC-I protein is the most polymorphic protein in the human genome with polymorphisms in the peptide binding causing striking changes in the amino acid compositions, or binding motifs, of peptide species capable of stable binding. A deep learning model, coined HLA-Inception, was trained to predict peptide binding using only biophysical properties, namely electrostatic potential. HLA-Inception was shown to be extremely accurate and efficient at predicting peptide binding motifs and was used to determine the peptide binding motifs of 5,821 MHC-I protein variants. Finally, the impact of stalk glycosylations on NL63 protein dynamics was investigated. Previous data has shown that coronavirus crown glycans play an important role in immune evasion and receptor binding, however, little is known about the role of the stalk glycans. Through the integration of computational biology, experimental data, and physics-based simulations, the stalk glycans were shown to heavily influence the bending angle of spike protein, with a particular emphasis on the glycan at position 1242. Further investigation revealed that removal of the N1242 glycan significantly reduced infectivity, highlighting a new potential therapeutic target. Overall, these investigations and associated innovations in integrative modeling.
ContributorsWilson, Eric Andrew (Author) / Anderson, Karen (Thesis advisor) / Singharoy, Abhishek (Thesis advisor) / Woodbury, Neal (Committee member) / Sulc, Petr (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
In the last few decades, extensive research efforts have been focused on scaling down silicon-based complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology to enable the continuation of Moore’s law. State-of-art CMOS includes fully depleted silicon-on-insulator (FDSOI) field-effect-transistors (FETs) with ultra-thin silicon channels (6 nm), as well as other three-dimensional (3D) device architectures

In the last few decades, extensive research efforts have been focused on scaling down silicon-based complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology to enable the continuation of Moore’s law. State-of-art CMOS includes fully depleted silicon-on-insulator (FDSOI) field-effect-transistors (FETs) with ultra-thin silicon channels (6 nm), as well as other three-dimensional (3D) device architectures like Fin-FETs, nanosheet FETs, etc. Significant research efforts have characterized these technologies towards various applications, and at different conditions including a wide range of temperatures from room temperature (300 K) down to cryogenic temperatures. Theoretical efforts have studied ultrascaled devices using Landauer theory to further understand their transport properties and predict their performance in the quasi-ballistic regime.Further scaling of CMOS devices requires the introduction of new semiconducting channel materials, as now established by the research community. Here, two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors have emerged as a promising candidate to replace silicon for next-generation ultrascaled CMOS devices. These emerging 2D semiconductors also have applications beyond CMOS, for example in novel memory, neuromorphic, and spintronic devices. Graphene is a promising candidate for spintronic devices due to its outstanding spin transport properties as evidenced by numerous studies in non-local lateral spin valve (LSV) geometries. The essential components of graphene-based LSV, such as graphene FETs, metal-graphene contacts, and tunneling barriers, were individually investigated as part of this doctoral dissertation. In this work, several contributions were made to these CMOS and beyond CMOS technologies. This includes comprehensive characterization and modeling of FDSOI nanoscale FETs from room temperature down to cryogenic temperatures. Using Landauer theory for nanoscale transistors, FDSOI devices were analyzed and modeled under quasi-ballistic operation. This was extended towards a virtual-source modeling approach that accounts for temperature-dependent quasi-ballistic transport and back-gate biasing effects. Additionally, graphene devices with ultrathin high-k gate dielectrics were investigated towards FETs, non-volatile memory, and spintronic devices. New contributions were made relating to charge trapping effects and their impact on graphene device electrostatics (Dirac voltage shifts) and transport properties (impact on mobility and conductivity). This work also studied contact resistance and tunneling effects using transfer length method (TLM) graphene FET structures and magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) towards graphene-based LSV.
ContributorsZhou, Guantong (Author) / Sanchez Esqueda, Ivan (Thesis advisor) / Vasileska, Dragica (Committee member) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Committee member) / Thornton, Trevor (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
The research of alternative materials and new device architectures to exceed the limits of conventional silicon-based devices has been sparked by the persistent pursuit of semiconductor technology scaling. The development of tungsten diselenide (WSe2) and molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), well-known member of the transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) family, has made great

The research of alternative materials and new device architectures to exceed the limits of conventional silicon-based devices has been sparked by the persistent pursuit of semiconductor technology scaling. The development of tungsten diselenide (WSe2) and molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), well-known member of the transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) family, has made great strides towards ultrascaled two-dimensional (2D) field-effect-transistors (FETs). The scaling issues facing silicon-based complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technologies can be solved by 2D FETs, which show extraordinary potential.This dissertation provides a comprehensive experimental analysis relating to improvements in p-type metal-oxide-semiconductor (PMOS) FETs with few-layer WSe2 and high-κ metal gate (HKMG) stacks. Compared to this works improved methods, standard metallization (more damaging to underlying channel) results in significant Fermi-level pinning, although Schottky barrier heights remain small (< 100 meV) when using high work function metals. Temperature-dependent analysis reveals a dominant contribution to contact resistance from the damaged channel access region. Thus, through less damaging metallization methods combined with strongly scaled HKMG stacks significant improvements were achieved in contact resistance and PMOS FET overall performance. A clean contact/channel interface was achieved through high-vacuum evaporation and temperature-controlled stepped deposition. Theoretical analysis using a Landauer transport adapted to WSe2 Schottky barrier FETs (SB-FETs) elucidates the prospects of nanoscale 2D PMOS FETs indicating high-performance towards the ultimate CMOS scaling limit. Next, this dissertation discusses how device electrical characteristics are affected by scaling of equivalent oxide thickness (EOT) and by adopting double-gate FET architectures, as well as how this might support CMOS scaling. An improved gate control over the channel is made possible by scaling EOT, improving on-off current ratios, carrier mobility, and subthreshold swing. This study also elucidates the impact of EOT scaling on FET gate hysteresis attributed to charge-trapping effects in high-κ-dielectrics prepared by atomic layer deposition (ALD). These developments in 2D FETs offer a compelling alternative to conventional silicon-based devices and a path for continued transistor scaling. This research contributes to ongoing efforts in 2D materials for future semiconductor technologies. Finally, this work introduces devices based on emerging Janus TMDs and bismuth oxyselenide (Bi2O2Se) layered semiconductors.
ContributorsPatoary, Md Naim Hossain (Author) / Sanchez Esqueda, Ivan (Thesis advisor) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Committee member) / Vasileska, Dragica (Committee member) / Goodnick, Stephen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023