Morgan Mayer (minddesert1)

Excitons in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) provide a paradigm of composite Boson in a two-dimensional system. This Letter reports a photoluminescence and reflectance study of excitons in monolayer molybdenum diselenide (MoSe2) with electrostatic gating. We observe the repulsive and attractive Fermi polaron modes of the band edge exciton, its excited state, and the spin-off excitons, which the simple three-particle trion model is insufficient to explain. The contrasting energy shift between the exciton and charge-bound excitons (repulsive and attractive polaron modes) and the remarkably different gate dependence of the polaron energy splitting between the ground state and the excited state excitons unambiguously support the Fermi polaron picture for excitons in monolayer TMDs.Colloidal semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) have long established their versatility and utility for the visualization of biological interactions. On the single-particle level, QDs have demonstrated superior photophysical properties compared to organic dye molecules or fluorescent proteins, but it remains an open question as to which of these fundamental characteristics are most significant with respect to the performance of QDs for imaging beyond the diffraction limit. Here, we demonstrate significant enhancement in achievable localization precision in QD-labeled neurons compared to neurons labeled with an organic fluorophore. Additionally, we identify key photophysical parameters of QDs responsible for this enhancement and compare these parameters to reported values for commonly used fluorophores for super-resolution imaging.In this work, we demonstrate a process having the capability to realize single-digit nanometer lithography using single heavy ions. By adopting 2.15 GeV 86Kr26+ ions as the exposure source and hydrogen silsesquioxane (HSQ) as a negative-tone inorganic resist, ultrahigh-aspect-ratio nanofilaments with sub-5 nm feature size, following the trajectory of single heavy ions, were reliably obtained. Control experiments and simulation analysis indicate that the high-resolution capabilities of both HSQ resist and the heavy ions contribute the sub-5 nm fabrication result. Our work on the one hand provides a robust evidence that single heavy ions have the potential for single-digit nanometer lithography and on the other hand proves the capability of inorganic resists for reliable sub-5 nm patterning. Along with the further development of heavy-ion technology, their ultimate patterning resolution is supposed to be more accessible for device prototyping and resist evaluation at the single-digit nanometer scale.A cobalt-catalyzed dearomatization of indoles via transfer hydrogenation with HBpin and H2O has been developed. This reaction offered a straightforward platform to access hexahydropyrido[1,2-a]indoles in high regio- and chemoselectivity. A preliminary reaction mechanism was proposed on the basis of deuterium-labeling experiments, and a cobalt hydride species was involved in the reaction.Myocilin-associated glaucoma is a new addition to the list of diseases linked to protein misfolding and amyloid formation. Single point variants of the ∼257-residue myocilin olfactomedin domain (mOLF) lead to mutant myocilin aggregation. Here, we analyze the 12-residue peptide P1 (GAVVYSGSLYFQ), corresponding to residues 326-337 of mOLF, previously shown to form amyloid fibrils in vitro and in silico. We applied solid-state NMR structural measurements to test the hypothesis that P1 fibrils adopt one of three predicted structures. Our data are consistent with a U-shaped fibril arrangement for P1, one that is related to the U-shape predicted previously in silico. Our data are also consistent with an antiparallel fibril arrangement, likely driven by terminal electrostatics. Our proposed structural model is reminiscent of fibrils formed by the Aβ(1-40) Iowa mutant peptide, but with a different arrangement of molecular turn regions. Taken toget