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Volume 10 Issue 2, February 2011

Metallic glasses are strong but are brittle once they yield. A novel Pd-based metallic glass now shows significantly enhanced fracture toughness. The unique combination of yield strength and toughness makes this glass comparable to the toughest as well as strongest materials known.

Article by Marios D. Demetriou et al.

Editorial

  • Would the publication of anonymous referee reports and editorial decision letters of published papers benefit the scientific debate? Results from a trial seem to suggest this.

    Editorial

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Research Highlights

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News & Views

  • By combining gene cloning and amplification techniques, a new one-pot, parallel synthesis method for the generation of long, repetitive genes is realized. The method promises to open up the discovery of protein polymer biomaterials.

    • Sheng Ding
    • Xiaoxiao Wang
    • Annelise E. Barron
    News & Views
  • A knot-containing protein is found to fold reversibly at biologically relevant timescales despite not having naturally evolved for this ability.

    • Eugene Shakhnovich
    News & Views
  • Bodies in relative motion, separated by nanometres of vacuum, experience a tiny friction force. Experiments involving a conductor–superconductor transition provide essential information for distinguishing the contribution of electrons from that of lattice vibrations in this non-contact form of friction.

    • Bernd Gotsmann
    News & Views
  • Metallic glasses are strong but can be brittle. The discovery of a metallic glass that also shows a high toughness against fracture is remarkable, and establishes metallic glasses, at least those based on noble metals, as materials with the highest known damage tolerance.

    • A. Lindsay Greer
    News & Views
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Review Article

  • Single dopants in semiconductors have an atom-like electron-energy spectrum whose discrete character gives them the potential for applications such as quantum information or transistors. This Review describes the marked advances in the past decade towards observing, controllably creating and manipulating single dopants, as well as their application in devices.

    • Paul M. Koenraad
    • Michael E. Flatté
    Review Article
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Letter

  • The control over phase transitions in complex oxides offers the possibility to control their electronic and structural properties. The discovery of a new route to ultrafast photoswitching of manganites via high-energy ‘hidden’ excited states offers the possibility of phase transitions free from thermal effects.

    • Hirohiko Ichikawa
    • Shunsuke Nozawa
    • Shin-ya Koshihara
    Letter
  • Plasmon lasers can operate at dimensions well below the diffraction limit. Their small size promises uses in nanophotonic circuits and for other size-critical applications. The demonstration of a sub-diffraction-limited plasmon laser with low losses, which enables its room-temperature operation, takes a significant step towards realizing the potential of these lasers.

    • Ren-Min Ma
    • Rupert F. Oulton
    • Xiang Zhang
    Letter
  • Considerable attention has been given in the past few years to two-dimensional electron gases formed at the interface between two bulk insulators. It is now shown that a similar electronic system can be created on the surface of an oxide insulator simply by exposure to UV light.

    • W. Meevasana
    • P. D. C. King
    • Z-X. Shen
    Letter
  • Is friction dominated by electrons or by lattice vibrations? A nano-contact experiment shows that on a Nb surface friction drops by a factor of three when crossing the superconductivity transition, showing that it has essentially an electronic nature in the metallic state, whereas the phononic contribution dominates in the superconducting state.

    • Marcin Kisiel
    • Enrico Gnecco
    • Ernst Meyer
    Letter
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Article

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Corrigendum

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