Browsing by Author "Xu, X."
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Item Open Access Effect of shell thickness on small-molecule solar cells enhanced by dual plasmonic gold-silica nanorods(AIP Publishing, 2014-09-19) Xu, X.; Du, Q.; Peng, B.; Xiong, Q.; Hong, L.; Demir, Hilmi Volkan; Wong, T. K. S.; Kyaw, A. K. K.; Sun, X. W.Chemically synthesized gold (Au)-silica nanorods with shell thickness of 0 nm-10 nm were incorporated into the bulk heterojunction of a small-molecule organic solar cell. At optimal (1 wt. %) concentration, Au-silica nanorods with 5 nm shell thickness resulted in the highest power conversion efficiency of 8.29% with 27% relative enhancement. Finite-difference time-domain simulation shows that the localized electric field intensity at the silica shell-organic layer interface decreases with the increase of shell thickness for both 520 nm and 680 nm resonance peaks. The enhanced haze factor for transmission/reflection of the organic layer is not strongly dependent on the shell thickness. Bare Au nanorods yielded the lowest efficiency of 5.4%. Light intensity dependence measurement of the short-circuit current density shows that the silica shell reduces bimolecular recombination at the Au surface. As a result, both localized field intensity and light scattering are involved in efficiency enhancement for an optimized shell thickness of 5 nm.Item Open Access Enhanced efficiency of solution-processed small-molecule solar cells upon incorporation of gold nanospheres and nanorods into organic layers(Royal Society of Chemistry, 2014) Xu, X.; Kyaw, A. K. K.; Peng, B.; Du, Q.; Hong, L.; Demir, Hilmi Volkan; Wong, T. K. S.; Xiong, Q.; Sun, X. W.The significantly enhanced performance upon incorporation of Au nanoparticles in solution-processed small-molecule solar cells is demonstrated. Simultaneously incorporating Au nanospheres into the hole transport layer and Au-silica nanorods into the active layer results in superior broadband absorption improvement in the device with a power conversion efficiency of 8.72% with 31% enhancement.Item Open Access A global reference for human genetic variation(Nature Publishing Group, 2015) Auton, A.; Abecasis, G. R.; Altshuler, D. M.; Durbin, R. M.; Bentley, D. R.; Chakravarti, A.; Clark, A. G.; Donnelly, P.; Eichler, E. E.; Flicek, P.; Gabriel, S. B.; Gibbs, R. A.; Green, E. D.; Hurles, M. E.; Knoppers, B. M.; Korbel, J. O.; Lander, E. S.; Lee, C.; Lehrach, H.; Mardis, E. R.; Marth, G. T.; McVean, G. A.; Nickerson, D. A.; Schmidt, J. P.; Sherry, S. T.; Wang, J.; Wilson, R. K.; Boerwinkle, E.; Doddapaneni, H.; Han, Y.; Korchina, V.; Kovar, C.; Lee, S.; Muzny, D.; Reid, J. G.; Zhu, Y.; Chang, Y.; Feng, Q.; Fang, X.; Guo, X.; Jian, M.; Jiang, H.; Jin, X.; Lan, T.; Li, G.; Li, J.; Li, Y.; Liu, S.; Liu, X.; Lu, Y.; Ma, X.; Tang, M.; Wang, B.; Wang, G.; Wu, H.; Wu, R.; Xu, X.; Yin, Y.; Zhang, D.; Zhang, W.; Zhao, J.; Zhao, M.; Zheng, X.; Gupta, N.; Gharani, N.; Toji, L. H.; Gerry, N. P.; Resch, A. M.; Barker, J.; Clarke, L.; Gil, L.; Hunt, S. E.; Kelman, G.; Kulesha, E.; Leinonen, R.; McLaren, W. M.; Radhakrishnan, R.; Roa, A.; Smirnov, D.; Smith, R. E.; Streeter, I.; Thormann, A.; Toneva, I.; Vaughan, B.; Zheng-Bradley, X.; Grocock, R.; Humphray, S.; James, T.; Kingsbury, Z.; Sudbrak, R.; Albrecht, M. W.; Amstislavskiy, V. S.; Borodina, T. A.; Lienhard, M.; Mertes, F.; Sultan, M.; Timmermann, B.; Yaspo, Marie-Laure; Fulton, L.; Ananiev, V.; Belaia, Z.; Beloslyudtsev, D.; Bouk, N.; Chen, C.; Church, D.; Cohen, R.; Cook, C.; Garner, J.; Hefferon, T.; Kimelman, M.; Liu, C.; Lopez, J.; Meric, P.; O'Sullivan, C.; Ostapchuk, Y.; Phan, L.; Ponomarov, S.; Schneider, V.; Shekhtman, E.; Sirotkin, K.; Slotta, D.; Zhang, H.; Balasubramaniam, S.; Burton, J.; Danecek, P.; Keane, T. M.; Kolb-Kokocinski, A.; McCarthy, S.; Stalker, J.; Quail, M.; Davies, C. J.; Gollub, J.; Webster, T.; Wong, B.; Zhan, Y.; Campbell, C. L.; Kong, Y.; Marcketta, A.; Yu, F.; Antunes, L.; Bainbridge, M.; Sabo, A.; Huang, Z.; Coin, L. J. M.; Fang, L.; Li, Q.; Li, Z.; Lin, H.; Liu, B.; Luo, R.; Shao, H.; Xie, Y.; Ye, C.; Yu, C.; Zhang, F.; Zheng, H.; Zhu, H.; Alkan, C.; Dal, E.; Kahveci, F.; Garrison, E. P.; Kural, D.; Lee, W. P.; Leong, W. F.; Stromberg, M.; Ward, A. N.; Wu, J.; Zhang, M.; Daly, M. J.; DePristo, M. A.; Handsaker, R. E.; Banks, E.; Bhatia, G.; Del Angel, G.; Genovese, G.; Li, H.; Kashin, S.; McCarroll, S. A.; Nemesh, J. C.; Poplin, R. E.; Yoon, S. C.; Lihm, J.; Makarov, V.; Gottipati, S.; Keinan, A.; Rodriguez-Flores, J. L.; Rausch, T.; Fritz, M. H.; Stütz, A. M.; Beal, K.; Datta, A.; Herrero, J.; Ritchie, G. R. S.; Zerbino, D.; Sabeti, P. C.; Shlyakhter, I.; Schaffner, S. F.; Vitti, J.; Cooper, D. N.; Ball, E. V.; Stenson, P. D.; Barnes, B.; Bauer, M.; Cheetham, R. K.; Cox, A.; Eberle, M.; Kahn, S.; Murray, L.; Peden, J.; Shaw, R.; Kenny, E. E.; Batzer, M. A.; Konkel, M. K.; Walker, J. A.; MacArthur, D. G.; Lek, M.; Herwig, R.; Ding, L.; Koboldt, D. C.; Larson, D.; Ye, K.; Gravel, S.; Swaroop, A.; Chew, E.; Lappalainen, T.; Erlich, Y.; Gymrek, M.; Willems, T. F.; Simpson, J. T.; Shriver, M. D.; Rosenfeld, J. A.; Bustamante, C. D.; Montgomery, S. B.; De La Vega, F. M.; Byrnes, J. K.; Carroll, A. W.; DeGorter, M. K.; Lacroute, P.; Maples, B. K.; Martin, A. R.; Moreno-Estrada, A.; Shringarpure, S. S.; Zakharia, F.; Halperin, E.; Baran, Y.; Cerveira, E.; Hwang, J.; Malhotra, A.; Plewczynski, D.; Radew, K.; Romanovitch, M.; Zhang, C.; Hyland, F. C. L.; Craig, D. W.; Christoforides, A.; Homer, N.; Izatt, T.; Kurdoglu, A. A.; Sinari, S. A.; Squire, K.; Xiao, C.; Sebat, J.; Antaki, D.; Gujral, M.; Noor, A.; Ye, K.; Burchard, E. G.; Hernandez, R. D.; Gignoux, C. R.; Haussler, D.; Katzman, S. J.; Kent, W. J.; Howie, B.; Ruiz-Linares, A.; Dermitzakis, E. T.; Devine, S. E.; Kang, H. M.; Kidd, J. M.; Blackwell, T.; Caron, S.; Chen, W.; Emery, S.; Fritsche, L.; Fuchsberger, C.; Jun, G.; Li, B.; Lyons, R.; Scheller, C.; Sidore, C.; Song, S.; Sliwerska, E.; Taliun, D.; Tan, A.; Welch, R.; Wing, M. K.; Zhan, X.; Awadalla, P.; Hodgkinson, A.; Li, Y.; Shi, X.; Quitadamo, A.; Lunter, G.; Marchini, J. L.; Myers, S.; Churchhouse, C.; Delaneau, O.; Gupta-Hinch, A.; Kretzschmar, W.; Iqbal, Z.; Mathieson, I.; Menelaou, A.; Rimmer, A.; Xifara, D. K.; Oleksyk, T. K.; Fu, Y.; Liu, X.; Xiong, M.; Jorde, L.; Witherspoon, D.; Xing, J.; Browning, B. L.; Browning, S. R.; Hormozdiari, F.; Sudmant, P. H.; Khurana, E.; Tyler-Smith, C.; Albers, C. A.; Ayub, Q.; Chen, Y.; Colonna, V.; Jostins, L.; Walter, K.; Xue, Y.; Gerstein, M. B.; Abyzov, A.; Balasubramanian, S.; Chen, J.; Clarke, D.; Fu, Y.; Harmanci, A. O.; Jin, M.; Lee, D.; Liu, J.; Mu, X. J.; Zhang, J.; Zhang, Y.; Hartl, C.; Shakir, K.; Degenhardt, J.; Meiers, S.; Raeder, B.; Casale, F. P.; Stegle, O.; Lameijer, E. W.; Hall, I.; Bafna, V.; Michaelson, J.; Gardner, E. J.; Mills, R. E.; Dayama, G.; Chen, K.; Fan, X.; Chong, Z.; Chen, T.; Chaisson, M. J.; Huddleston, J.; Malig, M.; Nelson, B. J.; Parrish, N. F.; Blackburne, B.; Lindsay, S. J.; Ning, Z.; Zhang, Y.; Lam, H.; Sisu, C.; Challis, D.; Evani, U. S.; Lu, J.; Nagaswamy, U.; Yu, J.; Li, W.; Habegger, L.; Yu, H.; Cunningham, F.; Dunham, I.; Lage, K.; Jespersen, J. B.; Horn, H.; Kim, D.; Desalle, R.; Narechania, A.; Sayres, M. A. W.; Mendez, F. L.; Poznik, G. D.; Underhill, P. A.; Mittelman, D.; Banerjee, R.; Cerezo, M.; Fitzgerald, T. W.; Louzada, S.; Massaia, A.; Yang, F.; Kalra, D.; Hale, W.; Dan, X.; Barnes, K. C.; Beiswanger, C.; Cai, H.; Cao, H.; Henn, B.; Jones, D.; Kaye, J. S.; Kent, A.; Kerasidou, A.; Mathias, R.; Ossorio, P. N.; Parker, M.; Rotimi, C. N.; Royal, C. D.; Sandoval, K.; Su, Y.; Tian, Z.; Tishkoff, S.; Via, M.; Wang, Y.; Yang, H.; Yang, L.; Zhu, J.; Bodmer, W.; Bedoya, G.; Cai, Z.; Gao, Y.; Chu, J.; Peltonen, L.; Garcia-Montero, A.; Orfao, A.; Dutil, J.; Martinez-Cruzado, J. C.; Mathias, R. A.; Hennis, A.; Watson, H.; McKenzie, C.; Qadri, F.; LaRocque, R.; Deng, X.; Asogun, D.; Folarin, O.; Happi, C.; Omoniwa, O.; Stremlau, M.; Tariyal, R.; Jallow, M.; Joof, F. S.; Corrah, T.; Rockett, K.; Kwiatkowski, D.; Kooner, J.; Hien, T. T.; Dunstan, S. J.; ThuyHang, N.; Fonnie, R.; Garry, R.; Kanneh, L.; Moses, L.; Schieffelin, J.; Grant, D. S.; Gallo, C.; Poletti, G.; Saleheen, D.; Rasheed, A.; Brooks, L. D.; Felsenfeld, A. L.; McEwen, J. E.; Vaydylevich, Y.; Duncanson, A.; Dunn, M.; Schloss, J. A.The 1000 Genomes Project set out to provide a comprehensive description of common human genetic variation by applying whole-genome sequencing to a diverse set of individuals from multiple populations. Here we report completion of the project, having reconstructed the genomes of 2,504 individuals from 26 populations using a combination of low-coverage whole-genome sequencing, deep exome sequencing, and dense microarray genotyping. We characterized a broad spectrum of genetic variation, in total over 88 million variants (84.7 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), 3.6 million short insertions/deletions (indels), and 60,000 structural variants), all phased onto high-quality haplotypes. This resource includes >99% of SNP variants with a frequency of >1% for a variety of ancestries. We describe the distribution of genetic variation across the global sample, and discuss the implications for common disease studies. © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.Item Open Access Influence of gold-silica nanoparticles on the performance of small-molecule bulk heterojunction solar cells(Elsevier BV * North-Holland, 2015) Xu, X.; Kyaw, A. K. K.; Peng, B.; Xiong, Q.; Demir, Hilmi Volkan; Wang Y.; Wong, T. K. S.; Sun, X. W.Light trapping by gold (Au)-silica nanospheres and nanorods embedded in the active layer of small-molecule (SM) organic solar cell has been systematically compared. Nanorod significantly outperforms nanosphere because of more light scattering and higher quality factor for localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) triggered by nanorods. The optimum concentration of nanorod was characterized by charge carrier transport and morphology of the active layers. At optimum nanorod concentration, almost no change in the morphology of the active layer reveals that LSPR and scattering effects rather than the morphology are mainly responsible for the enhanced power conversion efficiency. In addition, the preliminary lifetime studies of the SM solar cells with and without Au-silica nanorods were conducted by measuring the current density-voltage characteristics over 20 days. The results show that plasmonic device with nanorods has no adverse impact on the device stabilityItem Open Access Large-scale exome sequencing study implicates both developmental and functional changes in the neurobiology of autism(Elsevier, 2020-02-06) Satterstrom, F. K.; Kosmicki, J. A.; Wang, J.; Breen, M. S.; De Rubeis, S.; An, J. - Y.; Peng, M.; Collins, R.; Grove, J.; Klei, L.; Stevens, C.; Reichert, J.; Mulhern, M. S.; Artomov, M.; Gerges, S.; Sheppard, B.; Xu, X.; Bhaduri, A.; Norman, Utku; Brand, H.; Schwartz, G.; Nguyen, R.; Guerrero, E. E.; Dias, C.; Autism Sequencing Consortium; iPSYCH-Broad Consortium; Betancur, C; Cook, E; Gallagher, L; Gill, M; Sutcliffe, J; Thurm, A; Zwick, M; State, M; Çicek, A. Ercüment; Talkowski, M; Cutler, D; Devlin, B.; Sanders, S; Roeder, K.; Daly, M; Buxbaum, J.We present the largest exome sequencing study ofautism spectrum disorder (ASD) to date (n = 35,584total samples, 11,986 with ASD). Using an enhancedanalytical framework to integratedenovoand case-control rare variation, we identify 102 risk genes at afalse discovery rate of 0.1 or less. Of these genes, 49show higher frequencies of disruptivedenovovari-ants in individuals ascertained to have severe neuro-developmental delay, whereas 53 show higher fre-quencies in individuals ascertained to have ASD;comparing ASD cases with mutations in thesegroups reveals phenotypic differences. Expressedearly in brain development, most risk genes haveroles in regulation of gene expression or neuronal communication (i.e., mutations effect neurodevelop-mental and neurophysiological changes), and 13 fallwithin loci recurrently hit by copy number variants.In cells from the human cortex, expression of riskgenes is enriched in excitatory and inhibitoryneuronal lineages, consistent with multiple paths toan excitatory-inhibitory imbalance underlying ASD.