Institution
ASM International
Other•Chardon, Ohio, United States•
About: ASM International is a other organization based out in Chardon, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Atomic layer deposition & Layer (electronics). The organization has 3340 authors who have published 3599 publications receiving 108041 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: RPA couples isothermal recombinase polymerase-driven primer targeting of template material with strand-displacement DNA synthesis and achieves exponential amplification with no need for pretreatment of sample DNA, thereby establishing an instrument-free DNA testing system.
Abstract: DNA amplification is essential to most nucleic acid testing strategies, but established techniques require sophisticated equipment or complex experimental procedures, and their uptake outside specialised laboratories has been limited. Our novel approach, recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), couples isothermal recombinase-driven primer targeting of template material with strand-displacement DNA synthesis. It achieves exponential amplification with no need for pretreatment of sample DNA. Reactions are sensitive, specific, and rapid and operate at constant low temperature. We have also developed a probe-based detection system. Key aspects of the combined RPA amplification/detection process are illustrated by a test for the pathogen methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. The technology proves to be sensitive to fewer than ten copies of genomic DNA. Furthermore, products can be detected in a simple sandwich assay, thereby establishing an instrument-free DNA testing system. This unique combination of properties is a significant advance in the development of portable and widely accessible nucleic acid-based tests.
1,655 citations
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01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: The architecture described in this paper is a roadmap for a future automated and flexible electric power distribution system that is suitable for plug-and-play of distributed renewable energy and distributed energy storage devices.
Abstract: This paper presents an architecture for a future electric power distribution system that is suitable for plug-and-play of distributed renewable energy and distributed energy storage devices. Motivated by the success of the (information) Internet, the architecture described in this paper was proposed by the NSF FREEDM Systems Center, Raleigh, NC, as a roadmap for a future automated and flexible electric power distribution system. In the envisioned “Energy Internet,” a system that enables flexible energy sharing is proposed for consumers in a residential distribution system. The key technologies required to achieve such a vision are presented in this paper as a result of the research partnership of the FREEDM Systems Center.
1,237 citations
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03 Oct 1997TL;DR: In this paper, the displacement units are provided with force actuators which each have a first part (47, 49; 117, 119; 215, 217) which is coupled to the relevant object holder and which is displaceable under the influence of a driving force relative to a second part (59, 61; 133, 135, 137, 139; 219, 221) which was fastened to a balancing unit (69, 149, 205).
Abstract: A positioning device (3, 97, 179) with a first displacement unit (25, 189) for displacing a first object holder (11, 181) and a second displacement unit (27, 191) for displacing a second object holder (13, 183). The object holders can be displaced by the positoning device alternately from a measuring position into an operational position and can be displaced by the respective displacement units independently of one another in the measuring position and in the operational position. The displacement units are provided with force actuators which each have a first part (47, 49; 117, 119; 215, 217) which is coupled to the relevant object holder and which is displaceable under the influence of a driving force relative to a second part (59, 61; 133, 135, 137, 139; 219, 221) which is fastened to a balancing unit (69, 149, 205) which is common to the two displacement units. The balancing unit is displaceably guided relative to a base (81, 209), so that reaction forces of the displacement units are converted into displacements of the balancing unit relative to the base, and mechanical vibrations in the balancing unit and the base are prevented. The use of the force actuators prevents the displacements of the balancing unit from disturbing the positions of the object holders relative to the base. The positioning device is further provided with a control unit (83, 169, 237) by means of which at least the parts (47, 49; 121, 123; 219, 221) directed parallel to an X-direction of the X-actuators (39, 41; 105, 107; 211, 213) coupled to the object holders are held in positions parallel to the X-direction. It is also prevented in this manner that positions of the object holders relative to the base are interfered with by rotations of the balancing unit caused by the reaction forces of the displacement units. The positioning device can be used in a lithographic device for the displacement of a semiconductor substrate relative to an exposure system of the lithographic device and for the displacement of a mask relative to the exposure system.
641 citations
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TL;DR: Maximization theory as mentioned in this paper is an alternative to reinforcement theory as a description of steady-state behavior, and it provides new insight into these situations and, because it takes context into account, has greater predictive power than reinforcement theory.
Abstract: Maximization theory, which is borrowed from economics, provides techniques for predicing the behavior of animals - including humans. A theoretical behavioral space is constructed in which each point represents a given combination of various behavioral alternatives. With two alternatives - behavior A and behavior B - each point within the space represents a certain amount of time spent performing behavior A and a certain amount of time spent performing behavior B. A particular environmental situation can be described as a constraint on available points (a circumscribed area) within the space. Maximization theory assumes that animals always choose the available point with the highest numerical value. The task of maximization theory is to assign to points in the behavioral space values that remain constant across various environmental situations; as those situations change, the point actually chosen is always the one with the highest assigned value.Maximization theory is an alternative to reinforcement theory as a description of steady-state behavior. Situations to which reinforcement theory has been directly applied (such as reinforcement of rats pressing levers and pigeons pecking keys in Skinner boxes) and situations to which reinforcement theory has occasionally been extended (such as human economic behavior and human self-control) can be described by maximization theory. This approach views behavior as a quantitative outcome of the interaction of the putative instrumental response, the reinforcer, and the other activities available in the situation. It provides new insight into these situations and, because it takes context into account, has greater predictive power than reinforcement theory.
558 citations
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19 Nov 2001TL;DR: In this article, the surface termination of the substrate with a low temperature radical treatment is used to facilitate subsequent deposition without depositing a layer of any appreciable thickness and without significantly affecting the bulk properties of the underlying material.
Abstract: Methods are provided herein for treating substrate surfaces in preparation for subsequent nucleation-sensitive depositions (e.g., polysilicon or poly-SiGe) and adsorption-driven deposition (e.g. atomic layer deposition or ALD). Prior to depositing, the surface is treated with non-depositing plasma products. The treated surface more readily nucleates polysilicon and poly-SiGe (such as for a gate electrode), or more readily adsorbs ALD reactants (such as for a gate dielectric). The surface treatment provides surface moieties more readily susceptible to a subsequent deposition reaction, or more readily susceptible to further surface treatment prior to deposition. By changing the surface termination of the substrate with a low temperature radical treatment, subsequent deposition is advantageously facilitated without depositing a layer of any appreciable thickness and without significantly affecting the bulk properties of the underlying material. Preferably less than 10 Å of the bulk material incorporates the excited species, which can include fluorine, chlorine and particularly nitrogen excited species.
483 citations
Authors
Showing all 3346 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Roberto Kolter | 120 | 315 | 52942 |
Markku Leskelä | 94 | 876 | 36881 |
Mikko Ritala | 91 | 584 | 29934 |
Lorenzo D. Botto | 58 | 191 | 14048 |
David E. Bergbreiter | 56 | 322 | 11181 |
Suvi Haukka | 54 | 132 | 9493 |
Irving Nachamkin | 54 | 202 | 10626 |
John L. Williams | 53 | 276 | 10125 |
Pierpaolo Mastroiacovo | 53 | 174 | 8580 |
Daniel Guyomar | 52 | 394 | 12243 |
Pierre Comon | 50 | 355 | 19921 |
Yalchin Efendiev | 50 | 311 | 9326 |
Christian Kübel | 48 | 293 | 8754 |
John H. Lau | 44 | 361 | 8540 |
Jim P. Zheng | 42 | 225 | 9377 |