Institution
Jožef Stefan Institute
Facility•Ljubljana, Slovenia•
About: Jožef Stefan Institute is a facility organization based out in Ljubljana, Slovenia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Liquid crystal & Dielectric. The organization has 3828 authors who have published 12614 publications receiving 291025 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the Na 0.5 Bi 0.3 -K 0.25 -TiO 3 (NBT-KBT) system, with its complex perovskite structure, was investigated as a promising material for piezoelectric applications.
Abstract: We have investigated the Na 0.5 Bi 0.5 TiO 3 –K 0.5 Bi 0.5 TiO 3 (NBT–KBT) system, with its complex perovskite structure, as a promising material for piezoelectric applications. The NBT–KBT samples were synthesized using a solid-state reaction method and characterized with XRD and SEM. Room-temperature XRD showed a gradual change in the crystal structure from tetragonal in the KBT to rhombohedral in the NBT, with the presence of an intermediate morphotropic region in the samples with a compositional fraction x between 0.17 and 0.25. The fitted perovskite lattice parameters confirmed an increase in the size of the crystal lattice from NBT towards KBT, which coincides with an increase in the ionic radii. Electrical measurements on the samples showed that the maximum values of the dielectric constant, the remanent polarization and the piezoelectric coefficient are reached at the morphotropic phase boundary (MPB) ( ɛ = 1140 at 1 MHz; P r = 40 μC/cm 2 ; d 33 = 134 pC/N).
153 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the presence of cerium, in an excess of 0.6% (w/w), is found to inhibit the transition from amorphous to crystalline phase during calcination at 400°C.
152 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse the constraints on dimension-six Δ F = 1 effective operators in models respecting the MFV hypothesis, both in the one-Higgs doublet case and in the two-higgs doublets scenario with large tan β.
152 citations
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TL;DR: It is proposed that an imbalance between cathepsins and cystatins may attenuate immune cell functions and facilitate tumor cell invasion and tumorigenesis and metastasis.
Abstract: Cystatins comprise a large superfamily of related proteins with diverse biological activities. They were initially characterised as inhibitors of lysosomal cysteine proteases, however, in recent years some alternative functions for cystatins have been proposed. Cystatins possessing inhibitory function are members of three families, family I (stefins), family II (cystatins) and family III (kininogens). Stefin A is often linked to neoplastic changes in epithelium while another family I cystatin, stefin B is supposed to have a specific role in neuredegenerative diseases. Cystatin C, a typical type II cystatin, is expressed in a variety of human tissues and cells. On the other hand, expression of other type II cystatins is more specific. Cystatin F is an endo/lysosome targeted protease inhibitor, selectively expressed in immune cells, suggesting its role in processes related to immune response. Our recent work points on its role in regulation of dendritic cell maturation and in natural killer cells functional inactivation that may enhance tumor survival. Cystatin E/M expression is mainly restricted to the epithelia of the skin which emphasizes its prominent role in cutaneous biology. Here, we review the current knowledge on type I (stefins A and B) and type II cystatins (cystatins C, F and E/M) in pathologies, with particular emphasis on their suppressive vs. promotional function in the tumorigenesis and metastasis. We proposed that an imbalance between cathepsins and cystatins may attenuate immune cell functions and facilitate tumor cell invasion.
152 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the freezing of the dynamic process in a 9/65/35 lanthanum lead zirconate-titanate (PLZT) ceramics has been investigated by measurements of the frequency-dependent complex dielectric constant and the quasistatic field-cooled (FC) and zero-field cooled (ZFC) susceptibilities.
Abstract: The freezing of the dynamic process in a 9/65/35 lanthanum lead zirconate-titanate (PLZT) ceramics has been investigated by measurements of the frequency-dependent complex dielectric constant and the quasistatic field-cooled (FC) and zero-field-cooled (ZFC) dielectric susceptibilities. It was found that the aging process is responsible for the difference in temperature variations of the FC static dielectric constant and the static dielectric constant determined in the dynamic ZFC experiment. Analysis of the complex dielectric susceptibility by a temperature-frequency plot has revealed that for an aged PLZT sample the ergodicity is broken due to the divergence of the longest relaxation time in the vicinity of 249 K, i.e., the temperature where the ferroelectric phase can also be induced by applying sufficiently high electric field. However, the bulk of the distribution of relaxation times was found to remain finite even below the freezing temperature. It is shown that the behavior of the relaxation spectrum and the splitting between the field-cooled and zero-field-cooled dielectric constants in PLZT relaxor is qualitatively similar to what was observed in the lead magnesium niobate (PMN) relaxor and is reminiscent of the nonergodic behavior reported in various spin glasses. Moreover, the temperature dependence of the third order nonlinear susceptibility indicates a glassy rather than ferroelectric multidomain nature of the nonergodic relaxor state in both PMN and PLZT systems.
151 citations
Authors
Showing all 3879 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Vladimir Cindro | 129 | 1157 | 82000 |
Igor Mandić | 128 | 1065 | 79498 |
Jure Leskovec | 127 | 473 | 89014 |
Matej Orešič | 82 | 352 | 26830 |
P. Križan | 78 | 749 | 26408 |
Jose Miguel Miranda | 76 | 336 | 18080 |
Vito Turk | 74 | 271 | 23205 |
Andrii Tykhonov | 73 | 270 | 24864 |
Masashi Yokoyama | 73 | 310 | 18817 |
Kostya Ostrikov | 72 | 763 | 21442 |
M. Starič | 71 | 530 | 19136 |
Boris Turk | 67 | 231 | 27006 |
Bostjan Kobe | 66 | 279 | 17592 |
Jure Zupan | 61 | 228 | 12054 |
Mario Sannino | 60 | 281 | 17144 |