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  • Life Sciences (General)  (1)
  • doping  (1)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1572-9605
    Keywords: Oxygen defects ; interstitial oxygen ; doping ; neutron diffraction ; oxygen vacancy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology , Physics
    Notes: Abstract Oxygen vacancy and interstitial defects can have a profound effect on the superconducting properties of copper oxide compounds. Recent work on compounds such as La2CuO4+x and HgBa2CuO4+x has provided new insight into the role of interstitial oxygen defects as a doping mechanism. The number of carriers created by each interstitial defect depends on the local defect structure. Studies of (La, Sr, Ca)3Cu2O6+x with various metal compositions and metalsite ordering show that interstitial oxygen defects that form between the CuO2 layers in this structure systematically lowerT c and eventually destroy superconductivity. Conversely, oxygen vacancies in the CuO2 planes have surprisingly little effect at concentrations below 3%. The infinite-layer compounds, ACuO2, where A=La, Sr, Ca, Nd, etc., in solid-solution combinations, could offer a similar environment for the formation of interstitial oxygen defects between the CuO2 planes, allowing interstitial oxygen defects to contribute to the doping of these compounds. However, neutron diffraction experiments on Sr0.9La0.1CuO2 (T c = 42 K) have not found any interstitial oxygen.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Regulation of circadian period in humans was thought to differ from that of other species, with the period of the activity rhythm reported to range from 13 to 65 hours (median 25.2 hours) and the period of the body temperature rhythm reported to average 25 hours in adulthood, and to shorten with age. However, those observations were based on studies of humans exposed to light levels sufficient to confound circadian period estimation. Precise estimation of the periods of the endogenous circadian rhythms of melatonin, core body temperature, and cortisol in healthy young and older individuals living in carefully controlled lighting conditions has now revealed that the intrinsic period of the human circadian pacemaker averages 24.18 hours in both age groups, with a tight distribution consistent with other species. These findings have important implications for understanding the pathophysiology of disrupted sleep in older people.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: Science (ISSN 0036-8075); 284; 5423; 2177-81
    Format: text
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