Water samples were taken from Lake Ohnuma and a river which flows into it. Concentrations of organically-bound iron and nitrate in both the lake and the river were measured throughout one year.
The charge-density-wave (CDW) order of low-dimensional inorganic conductor ZrTe3 is found to increase
with increasing pressure, while the superconductivity with filamentary nature is significantly suppressed. It was
evidenced in resistivity measurements under pressure up to 0.8 Cpa. The present results suggest that competition
between the superconductivity and the CDW is not simply explained by a nesting effect of the Fermi surface, but
other origin is needed. Non-metallic behaviour is also found below 4 K under high pressures above 0.6 Gpa. The
relationship between the non-metallic state and the pressure-enhanced CDW is expected, although yet inexplicable.
A 3 µm bubble 80 kbit chip was designed by 1/2 scaling from the pattern for 6 µm bubble chip. To obtain a 1 µm minimum feature over a 5 mm square, projection printing was employed.
By reducing the reflectance of the surface to be exposed below 33%, standing wave effects with monochromatic illumination could be minimized, and uniform 2 µm width and 1 µm gap pattern could be obtained, notwithstanding the variation in photoresist thickness and the unevenness of substrate. A standard deviation of this distribution in the pattern gap width in the fabricated 80 kbit chips was 0.067 µm when the flatness of the wafer is less than 0.5 µm/chip size. The effects of the variation in the pattern gap on the propagate margins could be ignored, if it fell in the range of 1.03 µm to 1.38 µm. Consequently, the resolution of 1±0.3 µm and uniform bias margin over 80 kbit chip area could be achieved with high yield.
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