Export 2389 results:
Sort by: Author Title Type [ Year  (Desc)]
2009
Lopes, M. E., H. L. Gomes, M. C. R. Medeiros, P. Barquinha, L. Pereira, E. Fortunato, R. Martins, and I. Ferreira. "Gate-bias stress in amorphous oxide semiconductors thin-film transistors." Applied Physics Letters. 95.6 (2009): 063502-3. Abstract
n/a
Filonovich, SA, H. Aguas, I. Bernacka-Wojcik, C. Gaspar, M. Vilarigues, LB Silva, E. Fortunato, and R. Martins. "Highly conductive p-type nanocrystalline silicon films deposited by RF-PECVD using silane and trimethylboron mixtures at high pressure." Vacuum. 83.10 (2009): 1253-1256. Abstract
n/a
b b b b Filonovich, S.A.a, Águas Bernacka-Wojcik Gaspar Vilarigues Silva Fortunato Martins H. a I. b. "Highly conductive p-type nanocrystalline silicon films deposited by RF-PECVD using silane and trimethylboron mixtures at high pressure." Vacuum. 83 (2009): 1253-1256. AbstractWebsite

In this paper we present a study of boron-doped nc-Si:H films prepared by PECVD at high deposition pressure (≥4 mbar), high plasma power and low substrate temperature (≤200 °C) using trimethylboron (TMB) as a dopant gas. The influence of deposition parameters on electrical, structural and optical properties is investigated. We determine the deposition conditions that lead to the formation of p-type nanocrystalline silicon thin films with very high crystallinity, high value of dark conductivity (>7 (Ω cm)-1) and high optical band gap (≥1.7 eV). Modeling of ellipsometry spectra reveals that the film growth mechanism should proceed through a sub-surface layer mechanism that leads to silicon crystallization. The obtained films are very good candidates for application in amorphous and nanocrystalline silicon solar cells as a p-type window layer. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Filonovich, SA, H. Aguas, I. Bernacka-Wojcik, C. Gaspar, M. Vilarigues, LB Silva, E. Fortunato, and R. Martins. "Highly conductive p-type nanocrystalline silicon films deposited by RF-PECVD using silane and trimethylboron mixtures at high pressure." Vacuum. 83 (2009): 1253-1256. Abstract
n/a
Costa, P. M., M. S. Diniz, S. Caeiro, J. Lobo, M. Martins, A. M. Ferreira, M. Caetano, C. Vale, T. A. DelValls, and M. H. Costa. "Histological biomarkers in liver and gills of juvenile Solea senegalensis exposed to contaminated estuarine sediments: A weighted indices approach." Aquatic Toxicology. 92 (2009): 202-212. AbstractWebsite
n/a
Rivas, M. G., C. S. Mota, S. R. Pauleta, M. S. P. Carepo, F. Folgosa, S. L. A. Andrade, G. Fauque, AS Pereira, P. Tavares, JJ Calvete, I. Moura, and JJG Moura. "Isolation and characterization of a new Cu-Fe protein from Desulfovibrio aminophilus DSM12254." Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 103 (2009): 1314-1322. AbstractWebsite

The isolation and characterization of a new metalloprotein containing Cu and Fe atoms is reported. The as-isolated Cu-Fe protein shows an UV-visible spectrum with absorption bands at 320 nm, 409 nm and 615 nm. Molecular mass of the native protein along with denaturating electrophoresis and mass spectrometry data show that this protein is a multimer consisting of 14 +/- 1 subunits of 15254.3 +/- 7.6 Da. Mossbauer spectroscopy data of the as-isolated Cu-Fe protein is consistent with the presence of [2Fe-2S](2+) centers. Data interpretation of the dithionite reduced protein suggest that the metallic cluster could be constituted by two ferromagnetically coupled [2Fe-2S](+) spin delocalized pairs. The biochemical properties of the Cu-Fe protein are similar to the recently reported molybdenum resistance associated protein from Desulfovibrio, D. alaskensis. Further-more, a BLAST search from the DNA deduced amino acid sequence shows that the Cu-Fe protein has homology with proteins annotated as zinc resistance associated proteins from Desulfovibrio, D. alaskensis, D. vulgaris Hildenborough, D. piger ATCC 29098. These facts suggest a possible role of the Cu-Fe protein in metal tolerance. (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier Inc.

Santos-Silva, T., F. Ferroni, A. Thapper, J. Marangon, P. J. González, A. C. Rizzi, I. Moura, JJG Moura, MJ Romão, and CD Brondino. "Kinetic, structural, and EPR studies reveal that aldehyde oxidoreductase from Desulfovibrio gigas does not need a sulfido ligand for catalysis and give evidence for a direct Mo-C interaction in a biological system." Journal of the American Chemical Society. 131 (2009): 7990-7998. Abstract
n/a
Liu, Yan, Angelina S. Palma, Wengang Chai, Claudia Muhle-Goll, Yukishige Ito, and Ten Feizi. "The Latest on Malectin - A Lectin of the Endoplasmic Reticulum." Glycobiology. 19 (2009): 1301-1302. Abstract
n/a
Godinho, M. H., D. Filip, I. Costa, A. - L. Carvalho, J. L. Figueirinhas, and E. M. Terentjev. "Liquid crystalline cellulose derivative elastomer films under uniaxial strain." Cellulose. 16 (2009): 199-205. Abstract
n/a
Godinho, M. H., D. Filip, I. Costa, A. - L. Carvalho, J. L. Figueirinhas, and E. M. Terentjev. "Liquid crystalline cellulose derivative elastomer films under uniaxial strain." Cellulose. 16.2 (2009): 199-205. Abstract
n/a
Ferreira, J., I. Bastos, L. Oliveira, JP Oliveira, T. Michalak, P. Pankiewicz, B. Nowacki, P. Makosa, and A. Rybarczyk. "LNA, oscillator and mixer co-design for compact RF-CMOS ISM receivers." Mixed Design of Integrated Circuits & Systems, 2009. MIXDES'09. MIXDES-16th International Conference. IEEE, 2009. 291-295. Abstract
n/a
Oliveira, JP, L. B. Oliveira, J. Ferreira, I. Bastos, T. Michalak, P. Pankiewicz, B. Nowacki, P. Makosa, and A. Rybarczyk. "LNA, Oscillator and Mixer Co-Design Strategy Approach for RF-CMOS." Electronics and Telecommunications Quartely (2009). Abstract
n/a
Silva, V., J. Fernandes, L. B. Oliveira, M. Véstias, and H. Neto. "Magnetic RAM Reconfigurable Array." (2009). Abstract
n/a
Martins, R., Leandro Raniero, Luis Pereira, Daniel Costa†, Hugo Aguas, Sonia Pereira, Leonardo Silva, A. Gonçalves, I. Ferreira, and E. Fortunato. "Nanostructured silicon and its application to solar cells, position sensors and thin film transistors." Philosophical Magazine. 89.28-30 (2009): 2699-2721. Abstract
n/a
Martins, R., Leandro Raniero, Luis Pereira, Daniel Costa, Hugo Aguas, Sonia Pereira, Leonardo Silva, A. Gonçalves, I. Ferreira, and E. Fortunato. "Nanostructured silicon and its application to solar cells, position sensors and thin film transistors." Philosophical Magazine. 89 (2009): 2699-2721. Abstract
n/a
Amaral, P., L. M. Fernandes, J. Júdice, and H. D. Sherali. "On optimal zero-preserving corrections for inconsistent linear systems." Journal of Global Optimization. 45 (2009): 645-666. Abstract

This paper addresses the problem of finding an optimal correction of an inconsistent linear system, where only the nonzero coefficients of the constraint matrix are allowed to be perturbed for reconstructing a consistent system. Using the Frobenius norm as a measure of the distance to feasibility, a nonconvex minimization problem is formulated, whose objective function is a sum of fractional functions. A branch-and-bound algorithm for solving this nonconvex program is proposed, based on suitably overestimating the denominator function for computing lower bounds. Computational experience is presented to demonstrate the efficacy of this approach.

Ferreira, J., I. Bastos, L. B. Oliveira, JP Oliveira, T. Michalak, P. Pankiewicz, P. Makosa, B. Nowacki, and A. Rybarczyk. "Outstanding Paper Award: LNA, Oscillator, and Mixer, Co-Design for Compact RF-CMOS ISM Receivers." (2009). Abstract
n/a
Capelo, J. L., R. Carreira, M. Diniz, L. Fernandes, M. Galesio, C. Lodeiro, H. M. Santos, and G. Vale. "Overview on modern approaches to speed up protein identification workflows relying on enzymatic cleavage and mass spectrometry-based techniques." Analytica Chimica Acta. 650 (2009): 151-159. AbstractWebsite
n/a
Fortunato, Elvira, Luis Pereira, Pedro Barquinha, Isabel Ferreira, Rathinasamy Prabakaran, Goncalo Goncalves, Alexandra Goncalves, and R. Martins. "Oxide semiconductors: Order within the disorder." Philosophical Magazine. 89.28-30 (2009): 2741-2758. Abstract
n/a
Fortunato, E., Pereira Barquinha Ferreira Prabakaran Gonçalves Gonçalves Martins L. P. I. "Oxide semiconductors: Order within the disorder." Philosophical Magazine. 89 (2009): 2741-2758. AbstractWebsite

The effect is considered of order and disorder on the electrical and optical performance of ionic oxide semiconductors used to produce optoelectronic devices such as p-n heterojunction solar cells and thin-film transistors (TFTs). The results obtained show that p-type c-Si/a-IZO/poly-ZGO solar cells exhibit efficiencies above 14% in device areas of about 2.34 cm2, whereas amorphous oxide TFTs based on the Ga-Zn-Sn-O system demonstrate superior performance to the polycrystalline ZnO TFTs, with ION/I OFF ratio exceeding 107, turn-on voltage below 1-2 V and saturation mobility above 25 cm2 V-1 s-1. In addition, preliminary data on a p-type oxide TFT based on the Zn-Cu-O system are presented. © 2009 Taylor & Francis.

Fortunato, E., Nuno Correia, Pedro Barquinha, Claudia Costa, Luis Pereira, Goncalo Goncalves, and Rodrigo Martins. "Paper Field Effect Transistor." Zinc Oxide Materials and Devices Iv. Eds. F. H. Teherani, C. W. Litton, and D. J. Rogers. Vol. 7217. Proceedings of SPIE, 7217. 2009. Abstract
n/a
b Fortunato, E.a, Correia Barquinha Costa Pereira Gonçalves Martins N. a P. a. "Paper field effect transistor." Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering. Vol. 7217. 2009. Abstract

In this paper we report the use of a sheet of cellulose fiber-based paper as the dielectric layer used in oxide based semiconductor thin film field-effect transistors (FETs). In this new approach we are using the cellulose fiber-based paper in an "interstate" structure since the device is build on both sides of the cellulose sheet. Such hybrid FETs present excellent operating characteristics such as high channel saturation mobility (>30 cm 2/Vs), drain-source current on/off modulation ratio of approximately 104, near-zero threshold voltage, enhancement n-type operation and sub-threshold gate voltage swing of 0.8 V/decade. The cellulose fiber-based paper FETs characteristics have been measured in air ambient conditions and present good stability. The obtained results outpace those of amorphous Si TFTs and rival with the same oxide based TFTs produced on either glass or crystalline silicon substrates. The compatibility of these devices with large-scale/large-area deposition techniques and low cost substrates as well as their very low operating bias delineates this as a promising approach to attain high-performance disposable electronics like paper displays, smart labels, smart packaging, RFID and point-of-care systems for self analysis in bio-applications, among others. © 2009 SPIE.

Chaves, M. M., J. Flexas, and C. Pinheiro. "Photosynthesis under drought and salt stress: regulation mechanisms from whole plant to cell." Annals of Botany. 103 (2009): 551-560. AbstractWebsite

Plants are often subjected to periods of soil and atmospheric water deficits during their life cycle as well as, in many areas of the globe, to high soil salinity. Understanding how plants respond to drought, salt and co-occurring stresses can play a major role in stabilizing crop performance under drought and saline conditions and in the protection of natural vegetation. Photosynthesis, together with cell growth, is among the primary processes to be affected by water or salt stress. The effects of drought and salt stresses on photosynthesis are either direct (as the diffusion limitations through the stomata and the mesophyll and the alterations in photosynthetic metabolism) or secondary, such as the oxidative stress arising from the superimposition of multiple stresses. The carbon balance of a plant during a period of salt/water stress and recovery may depend as much on the velocity and degree of photosynthetic recovery, as it depends on the degree and velocity of photosynthesis decline during water depletion. Current knowledge about physiological limitations to photosynthetic recovery after different intensities of water and salt stress is still scarce. From the large amount of data available on transcript-profiling studies in plants subjected to drought and salt it is becoming apparent that plants perceive and respond to these stresses by quickly altering gene expression in parallel with physiological and biochemical alterations; this occurs even under mild to moderate stress conditions. From a recent comprehensive study that compared salt and drought stress it is apparent that both stresses led to down-regulation of some photosynthetic genes, with most of the changes being small (ratio threshold lower than 1) possibly reflecting the mild stress imposed. When compared with drought, salt stress affected more genes and more intensely, possibly reflecting the combined effects of dehydration and osmotic stress in salt-stressed plants.

Chaves, M. M., J. Flexas, and C. Pinheiro. "Photosynthesis under drought and salt stress: regulation mechanisms from whole plant to cell." Annals of Botany. 103 (2009): 551-560. AbstractWebsite
n/a
Freire, Filipe, Maria Joao Romao, Anjos L. Macedo, Susana S. Aveiro, Brian J. Goodfellow, and Ana Luisa Carvalho. "Preliminary structural characterization of human SOUL, a haem-binding protein." Acta Crystallographica Section F-Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications. 65 (2009): 723-726. Abstract
n/a