8 results on '"Ellen, Yan"'
Search Results
2. Experimental and Theoretical Comparison of Potential-dependent Methylation on Chemically Exfoliated WS2 and MoS2
- Author
-
Ellen Yan, Renata Balgley, Maureen B. Morla, Soonho Kwon, Charles B. Musgrave, Bruce S. Brunschwig, William A. Goddard, and Nathan S. Lewis
- Subjects
General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Giant Enhancement of Photoluminescence Emission in WS2-Two-Dimensional Perovskite Heterostructures
- Author
-
Jared Crochet, Harry A. Atwater, Aditya D. Mohite, Jean-Christophe Blancon, Tony Low, Ellen Yan, Hao Zhang, Joeson Wong, Mercouri G. Kanatzidis, Deep Jariwala, Yi Rung Lin, Arky Yang, and Wei Jiang
- Subjects
Photoluminescence ,Fabrication ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,Heterojunction ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Electronic structure ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Transition metal ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Electronic band structure ,Order of magnitude ,Perovskite (structure) - Abstract
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) and two-dimensional organic and inorganic hybrid lead halide perovskites (2DPVSKs) have emerged as highly promising materials for ultralight and ultrathin optoelectronics application. They both exhibit tunability of electronic properties such as band structure, and they can form heterostructures with various types of two-dimensional materials for novel physical properties not observed in single components. However, TMDCs exhibit poor emission efficiency due to defect states and direct-to-indirect interband transition, and 2DPVSKs suffer from poor stability in ambient atmosphere. Here we report that fabrication of TMDC-on-2DPVSK heterostructures using a solvent-free process leads to novel optical transitions unique to the heterostructure which arise from the hybrid interface and exhibit a strong photoluminescence. Moreover, a two orders of magnitude enhancement of the photoluminescence as compared to WS2 emission is observed. The TMDC on top of 2DPVSK also significantly improves the stability as compared to bare 2DPVSK. Enhanced emission can be explained by electronic structure modification of TMDC by novel interfacial interactions between TMDC and 2DPVSK materials, which shows promise of the heterostructure for high efficiency and stable optoelectronic devices.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Long-term Patterns of Patient Portal Use for Pediatric Patients at an Academic Medical Center
- Author
-
Ellen Yan, Bryan D. Steitz, Sharon E. Davis, Gretchen Purcell Jackson, and Robert M. Cronin
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Specialty ,Health Informatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient Portals ,Health Information Management ,Patient age ,030225 pediatrics ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Early childhood ,Child ,Academic Medical Centers ,Descriptive statistics ,business.industry ,Patient portal ,Infant ,Computer Science Applications ,Test (assessment) ,Child, Preschool ,Family medicine ,Secure messaging ,Female ,business ,Consumer health informatics - Abstract
Summary Background: Patient portal adoption has increased over the last two decades. Most research about patient portals has focused on adult populations in the primary care and medical specialty settings. Objective: We describe initial and long-term portal use by pediatric patients and their caregivers in a broadly deployed patient portal at an academic medical center. Methods: We analyzed portal usage for pediatric patients and their caregivers from 2008 to 2014. We recorded usage events with time stamps; user role defined as self, surrogate (i.e., parent or guardian), or delegate; and functions accessed. Usage events were grouped into sessions to calculate descriptive statistics by patient age, user role, and active use over time. Results: From 2008 to 2014, the number of portal accounts increased from 633 to 17,128. 15.9% of pediatric patients had their own account; 93.6%, a surrogate account; and 2.2% a delegate account. During the study period, 15,711 unique users initiated 493,753 sessions and accessed 1,491,237 functions. Most commonly used functions were secure messaging (accessed in 309,204 sessions; 62.6%); test results (174,239; 35.3%) and appointments (104,830; 21.2%). Function usage was greatest for patients ages 0-2 years (136,245 functions accessed; 23.1%) and 15-17 years (109,241;18.5%). Surrogate users conducted 83.2% of logins for adolescent patients. Portal accounts were actively used for < 1 year for 9,551 patients (55.8%), 1-2 years for 2,826 patients (16.5%), 2–3 years for 1,968 patients (11.5%) and over 3 years for 2,783 patients (16.3%). Conclusion: Pediatric patients and caregivers have avidly used messaging, test result, and appointment functions. The majority of access was done by surrogates. Adolescent portal usage increased with age. Most accounts for pediatric patients were only used actively for a few years, with peak usage for patients in early childhood and late adolescence.Citation: Steitz BD, Cronin RM, Davis SE, Yan Z, Jackson GP. Long-term Patterns of Patient Portal Use for Pediatric Patients at an Academic Medical Center. Appl Clin Inform 2017; 8: 779–793 https://doi.org/10.4338/ACI-2017-01-RA-0005
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Giant Enhancement of Photoluminescence Emission in WS
- Author
-
Arky, Yang, Jean-Christophe, Blancon, Wei, Jiang, Hao, Zhang, Joeson, Wong, Ellen, Yan, Yi-Rung, Lin, Jared, Crochet, Mercouri G, Kanatzidis, Deep, Jariwala, Tony, Low, Aditya D, Mohite, and Harry A, Atwater
- Abstract
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) and two-dimensional organic and inorganic hybrid lead halide perovskites (2DPVSKs) have emerged as highly promising materials for ultralight and ultrathin optoelectronics application. They both exhibit tunability of electronic properties such as band structure, and they can form heterostructures with various types of two-dimensional materials for novel physical properties not observed in single components. However, TMDCs exhibit poor emission efficiency due to defect states and direct-to-indirect interband transition, and 2DPVSKs suffer from poor stability in ambient atmosphere. Here we report that fabrication of TMDC-on-2DPVSK heterostructures using a solvent-free process leads to novel optical transitions unique to the heterostructure which arise from the hybrid interface and exhibit a strong photoluminescence. Moreover, a two orders of magnitude enhancement of the photoluminescence as compared to WS
- Published
- 2019
6. Modeling of DDR5 signaling from jitter sequences to accurate bit error rate (BER)
- Author
-
Alaeddin Aydiner, Jin Yan, Ellen Yan Fu, Yunhui Chu, Friar Robert J, and Oleg Mikulchenko
- Subjects
Computer science ,Histogram ,Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS ,Bit error rate ,Skew ,Extrapolation ,Topology (electrical circuits) ,Signal integrity ,Algorithm ,Jitter ,Communication channel - Abstract
Intel's signal integrity (SI) analysis for memory in the server segment has neither considered correlated jitter nor handled jitter amplification over channel when performing fast analytical signaling analyses. This inaccuracy is no longer feasible with the intended data rates of DDR5. Here, we propose a DDR5 flow that starts from jitter sequences or histograms and ends with signaling analysis via FastBER that can comprehend jitter amplification over I/O channels regardless of whether Tx jitter is correlated or uncorrelated. The paper contributes results of large scale testing of FastBER signaling in such a scenario and also offers solutions to practical issues like jitter extrapolation and time-margin skew due to setup and hold asymmetry.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Modeling of DDR5 signaling from jitter sequences to accurate bit error rate (BER)
- Author
-
Aydiner, Alaeddin A., primary, Chu, Yunhui, additional, Mikulchenko, Oleg, additional, Yan, Jin, additional, Friar, Robert J., additional, and Fu, Ellen Yan, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Association Between Patient Portal Access and Viral Suppression Among People Living with HIV in a Large Southeastern Clinical Cohort
- Author
-
Sally Bebawy, April C. Pettit, Sarah A. Scott, Carmen Bofill, Peter F Rebeiro, Zhou (Ellen) Yan, Gretchen Purcell Jackson, Megan Turner, and Cathy A. Jenkins
- Subjects
Gerontology ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical cohort ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Patient portal ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,medicine.disease_cause ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Abstracts ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Oncology ,Internal medicine ,Oral Abstract ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Viral suppression ,Association (psychology) ,business - Abstract
Background Viral suppression (VS) among people living with HIV (PLWH), the goal of the HIV care continuum, leads to improved patient outcomes and decreased HIV transmission. Patient portals are online tools that enable patient interaction with healthcare systems and may increase patient engagement and improve health outcomes. We examined whether portal access was associated with VS among PLWH. Methods We conducted an observational cohort study among PLWH aged ≥18 years who had ≥1 HIV healthcare provider visit at the Vanderbilt Comprehensive Care Clinic (Nashville, Tennessee) from January 1, 2011–December 31, 2015. Patient portal access was defined as being registered for a portal account at any point in the year prior. VS was defined as having ≥1 viral load (VL) measured and the last VL ≤200 copies/ml within a given year. The adjusted relative risk (aRR) of VS was estimated with modified Poisson regression and robust standard errors for multiple outcomes per individual. Models were adjusted for all covariates in the Figure and for year since first kept appointment. Missing data were multiply imputed. Results The study population included 4,237 PLWH; median age was 43 years (IQR 33–50), 78% were male, 41% were black, and 60% reported male–male sexual contact (MSM). Of the 57% who had portal access during the study period, median age was 42 years (IQR 31–49), 86% were male, 30% were black, and 75% were MSM. In adjusted analysis, portal access was independently associated with improved VS (aRR = 1.19, 95% CI 1.16–1.21 vs. no portal access) (Figure). Increasing age and sexual contact (vs. injection drug use) remained associated with improved VS; black race (vs. white race), lower socioeconomic status, and higher baseline VL remained associated with poor VS after accounting for portal access (Figure). Conclusion Portal access was independently associated with improved VS, although sociodemographic disparities in VS persisted. Additionally, there were sociodemographic disparities in patient portal access. There may be important unmeasured confounders such as health literacy and educational attainment. Additional prospective studies are needed to determine whether patient portal access leads to improved VS among PLWH. Disclosures P. Rebeiro, NIH: Grant Investigator, Research grant; G. Jackson, Vanderbilt Center for Effective Health Communication: Grant Investigator, Research grant; Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: Grant Investigator, Research grant; American Medical Informatics Association: Board Member, Research support; A. Pettit, NIH/NIAID - K08AI104352: Grant Investigator, Research grant
- Published
- 2017
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.