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This dissertation investigates the condition of skeletal muscle insulin resistance using bioinformatics and computational biology approaches. Drawing from several studies and numerous data sources, I have attempted to uncover molecular mechanisms at multiple levels. From the detailed atomistic simulations of a single protein, to datamining approaches applied at the systems

This dissertation investigates the condition of skeletal muscle insulin resistance using bioinformatics and computational biology approaches. Drawing from several studies and numerous data sources, I have attempted to uncover molecular mechanisms at multiple levels. From the detailed atomistic simulations of a single protein, to datamining approaches applied at the systems biology level, I provide new targets to explore for the research community. Furthermore I present a new online web resource that unifies various bioinformatics databases to enable discovery of relevant features in 3D protein structures.
ContributorsMielke, Clinton (Author) / Mandarino, Lawrence (Committee member) / LaBaer, Joshua (Committee member) / Magee, D. Mitchell (Committee member) / Dinu, Valentin (Committee member) / Willis, Wayne (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
While exercising mammalian muscle increasingly relies on carbohydrates for fuel as aerobic exercise intensity rises above the moderate range, flying birds are extraordinary endurance athletes and fuel flight, a moderate-high intensity exercise, almost exclusively with lipid. In addition, Aves have long lifespans compared to weight-matched mammals. As skeletal muscle mitochondria

While exercising mammalian muscle increasingly relies on carbohydrates for fuel as aerobic exercise intensity rises above the moderate range, flying birds are extraordinary endurance athletes and fuel flight, a moderate-high intensity exercise, almost exclusively with lipid. In addition, Aves have long lifespans compared to weight-matched mammals. As skeletal muscle mitochondria account for the majority of oxygen consumption during aerobic exercise, the primary goal was to investigate differences in isolated muscle mitochondria between these species and to examine to what extent factors intrinsic to mitochondria may account for the behavior observed in the intact tissue and whole organism. First, maximal enzyme activities were assessed in sparrow and rat mitochondria. Citrate synthase and aspartate aminotransferase activity were higher in sparrow compared to rat mitochondria, while glutamate dehydrogenase activity was lower. Sparrow mitochondrial NAD-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase activity was dependent on phosphate, unlike the mammalian enzyme. Next, the rate of oxygen consumption (JO), electron transport chain (ETC) activity, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production were assessed in intact mitochondria. Maximal rates of fat oxidation were lower than for carbohydrate in rat but not sparrow mitochondria. ETC activity was higher in sparrows, but no differences were found in ROS production between species. Finally, fuel selection and control of respiration at three rates between rest and maximum were assessed. Mitochondrial fuel oxidation and selection mirrored that of the whole body; in rat mitochondria the reliance on carbohydrate increased as the rate of oxygen consumption increased, whereas fat dominated under all conditions in the sparrow. These data indicate fuel selection, at least in part, can be modulated at the level of the mitochondrial matrix when multiple substrates are present at saturating levels. As an increase in matrix oxidation-reduction potential has been linked to a suppression of fat oxidation and high ROS production, the high ETC activity relative to dehydrogenase activity in avian compared to mammalian mitochondria may result in lower matrix oxidation-reduction potential, allowing fatty acid oxidation to proceed while also resulting in low ROS production in vivo.
ContributorsKuzmiak, Sarah (Author) / Willis, Wayne T (Thesis advisor) / Mandarino, Lawrence (Committee member) / Sweazea, Karen (Committee member) / Harrison, Jon (Committee member) / Gadau, Juergen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
The development of stab-resistant Kevlar armor has been an ongoing field of research
since the late 1990s, with the ultimate goal of improving the multi-threat capabilities of
traditional soft-body armor while significantly improving its protective efficiency - the amount
of layers of armor material required to defeat threats. To create a novel, superior

The development of stab-resistant Kevlar armor has been an ongoing field of research
since the late 1990s, with the ultimate goal of improving the multi-threat capabilities of
traditional soft-body armor while significantly improving its protective efficiency - the amount
of layers of armor material required to defeat threats. To create a novel, superior materials
system to reinforce Kevlar armor for the Norica Capstone project, this thesis set out to
synthesize, recover, and characterize zinc oxide nanowire colloids.

The materials synthesized were successfully utilized in the wider Capstone effort to
dramatically enhance the protective abilities of Kevlar, while the data obtained on the 14
hydrothermal synthesis attempts and numerous challenges at recovery provided critical
information on the synthesis parameters involved in the reliable, scalable mass production of the
nanomaterial additive. Additionally, recovery was unconventionally facilitated in the absence of
a vacuum filtration apparatus with nanoscale filters by intentionally inducing electrostatic
agglomeration of the nanowires during standard gravity filtration. The subsequent application of
these nanowires constituted a pioneering use in the production of nanowire-reinforced
STF-based Kevlar coatings, and support the future development and, ultimately, the
commercialization of lighter and more-protective soft armor systems.
ContributorsDurso, Michael Nathan (Author) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Thesis director) / Zhuang, Houlong (Committee member) / Materials Science and Engineering Program (Contributor, Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05
Description
With renewable energy on the rise, researchers have turned their funding and their focus towards new solar cell technologies, and perovskites are a major source of interest. This class of materials is particularly interesting due to their quick, simple synthesis as well as their physical and electrical superiority when compared

With renewable energy on the rise, researchers have turned their funding and their focus towards new solar cell technologies, and perovskites are a major source of interest. This class of materials is particularly interesting due to their quick, simple synthesis as well as their physical and electrical superiority when compared to current silicon-based solar cells. Through this thesis, we will explore the synthesis of various types of perovskites and their subsequent characterization, which includes optical microscopy, photoluminescence spectroscopy, Raman microscopy, and X-ray diffraction. Analyzing two different perovskites both before and after a two-week period of storage revealed that while synthesis is indeed experiment-friendly, these materials have a concerning lack of stability even in ideal conditions.
ContributorsBuzas, Benjamin Joseph (Author) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Thesis director) / Muhich, Christopher (Committee member) / Materials Science and Engineering Program (Contributor, Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2020-05
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Description
Graphene is a very strong two-dimensional material with a lot of potential applications in microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). In this research, graphene is being optimized for use in a 5 m x 5 m graphene resonator. To work properly, this graphene resonator must have a uniform strain across all manufactured devices.

Graphene is a very strong two-dimensional material with a lot of potential applications in microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). In this research, graphene is being optimized for use in a 5 m x 5 m graphene resonator. To work properly, this graphene resonator must have a uniform strain across all manufactured devices. To reduce strain induced in graphene sheets grown for use in these resonators, evaporated platinum has been used in this investigation due to its relatively lower surface roughness compared to copper films. The final goal is to have the layer of ultrathin platinum (<=200 nm) deposited on the MEMS graphene resonator and used to grow graphene directly onto the devices to remove the manual transfer step due to its inscalability. After growth, graphene is coated with polymer and the platinum is then etched. This investigation concentrated on the transfer process of graphene onto Si/SiO2 substrate from the platinum films. It was determined that the ideal platinum etchant was aqua regia at a volumetric ratio of 6:3:1 (H2O:HCl:HNO3). This concentration was dilute enough to preserve the polymer and graphene layer, but strong enough to etch within a day. Type and thickness of polymer support layers were also investigated. PMMA at a thickness of 200 nm was ideal because it was easy to remove with acetone and strong enough to support the graphene during the etch process. A reference growth recipe was used in this investigation, but now that the transfer has been demonstrated, growth can be optimized for even thinner films.
ContributorsCayll, David Richard (Author) / Tongay, Sefaattin (Thesis director) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
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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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
Traditional Reinforcement Learning (RL) assumes to learn policies with respect to reward available from the environment but sometimes learning in a complex domain requires wisdom which comes from a wide range of experience. In behavior based robotics, it is observed that a complex behavior can be described by a combination

Traditional Reinforcement Learning (RL) assumes to learn policies with respect to reward available from the environment but sometimes learning in a complex domain requires wisdom which comes from a wide range of experience. In behavior based robotics, it is observed that a complex behavior can be described by a combination of simpler behaviors. It is tempting to apply similar idea such that simpler behaviors can be combined in a meaningful way to tailor the complex combination. Such an approach would enable faster learning and modular design of behaviors. Complex behaviors can be combined with other behaviors to create even more advanced behaviors resulting in a rich set of possibilities. Similar to RL, combined behavior can keep evolving by interacting with the environment. The requirement of this method is to specify a reasonable set of simple behaviors. In this research, I present an algorithm that aims at combining behavior such that the resulting behavior has characteristics of each individual behavior. This approach has been inspired by behavior based robotics, such as the subsumption architecture and motor schema-based design. The combination algorithm outputs n weights to combine behaviors linearly. The weights are state dependent and change dynamically at every step in an episode. This idea is tested on discrete and continuous environments like OpenAI’s “Lunar Lander” and “Biped Walker”. Results are compared with related domains like Multi-objective RL, Hierarchical RL, Transfer learning, and basic RL. It is observed that the combination of behaviors is a novel way of learning which helps the agent achieve required characteristics. A combination is learned for a given state and so the agent is able to learn faster in an efficient manner compared to other similar approaches. Agent beautifully demonstrates characteristics of multiple behaviors which helps the agent to learn and adapt to the environment. Future directions are also suggested as possible extensions to this research.
ContributorsVora, Kevin Jatin (Author) / Zhang, Yu (Thesis advisor) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Praharaj, Sarbeswar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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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