664 research outputs found
Is innovation always beneficial? A meta-analysis of the relationship between innovation and performance in SMEs
The performance implications of innovation in small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) have attracted considerable interest among academics and practitioners. However, empirical research on the innovation–performance relationship in SMEs shows controversial results. This meta-analysis synthesizes empirical findings in order to obtain evidence whether and especially under which circumstances smaller, resource-scarce firms benefit from innovation. We find that innovation–performance relationship is context dependent. Factors such as the age of the firm, the type of innovation, and the cultural context affect the impact of innovation on firm performance to a large extent
Doped carrier formulation and mean-field theory of the tt't''J model
In the generalized-tJ model the effect of the large local Coulomb repulsion
is accounted for by restricting the Hilbert space to states with at most one
electron per site. In this case the electronic system can be viewed in terms of
holes hopping in a lattice of correlated spins, where holes are the carriers
doped into the half-filled Mott insulator. To explicitly capture the interplay
between the hole dynamics and local spin correlations we derive a new
formulation of the generalized-tJ model where doped carrier operators are used
instead of the original electron operators. This ``doped carrier'' formulation
provides a new starting point to address doped spin systems and we use it to
develop a new, fully fermionic, mean-field description of doped Mott insulators
This mean-field approach reveals a new mechanism for superconductivity, namely
spinon-dopon mixing, and we apply it to the tt't''J model as of interest to
high-temperature superconductors. In particular, we use model parameters
borrowed from band calculations and from fitting ARPES data to obtain a
mean-field phase diagram that reproduces semi-quantitatively that of hole and
electron doped cuprates. The mean-field approach hereby presented accounts for
the local antiferromagnetic and d-wave superconducting correlations which, we
show, provide a rational for the role of t' and t'' in strengthening
superconductivity as expected by experiments and other theoretical approaches.
As we discuss how t, t' and t'' affect the phase diagram, we also comment on
possible scenarios to understand the differences between as-grown and oxygen
reduced electron doped samples.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures. Homepage http://dao.mit.edu/~wen
Wick's Theorem and a New Perturbation Theory Around the Atomic Limit of Strongly Correlated Electron Systems
A new type of perturbation expansion in the mixing of localized orbitals
with a conduction-electron band in the Anderson model is
presented. It is built on Feynman diagrams obeying standard rules. The local
correlations of the unperturbed system (the atomic limit) are included exactly,
no auxiliary particles are introduced. As a test, an infinite-order ladder-type
resummation is analytically treated in the Kondo regime, recovering the correct
energy scale. An extension to the Anderson-lattice model is obtained via an
effective-site approximation through a cumulant expansion in on the
lattice. Relation to treatments in infinite spatial dimensions are indicated.Comment: selfextracting postscript file containing entire paper (10 pages)
including 3 figures, in case of trouble contact author for LaTeX-source or
hard copies (prep0994
Neel order, quantum spin liquids and quantum criticality in two dimensions
This paper is concerned with the possibility of a direct second order
transition out of a collinear Neel phase to a paramagnetic spin liquid in two
dimensional quantum antiferromagnets. Contrary to conventional wisdom, we show
that such second order quantum transitions can potentially occur to certain
spin liquid states popular in theories of the cuprates. We provide a theory of
this transition and study its universal properties in an expansion.
The existence of such a transition has a number of interesting implications for
spin liquid based approaches to the underdoped cuprates. In particular it
considerably clarifies existing ideas for incorporating antiferromagnetic long
range order into such a spin liquid based approach.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figure
Magnetic Collective Mode Dispersion in High Temperature Superconductors
Recent neutron scattering experiments in the superconducting state of YBCO
have been interpreted in terms of a magnetic collective mode whose dispersion
relative to the commensurate wavevector has a curvature opposite in sign to a
conventional magnon dispersion. The purpose of this article is to demonstrate
that simple linear response calculations are in support of a collective mode
interpretation, and to explain why the dispersion has the curvature it does.Comment: 3 pages, revtex, 4 encapsulated postscript figure
Where is the pi particle?
We discuss the interplay of particle-particle and particle-hole spin-triplet
channels in high-T_c superconductors using a quasiparticle dispersion motivated
by angle-resolved photoemission. Within a generalized RPA, we find a well
defined antibound state of two holes, the pi resonance of Demler and Zhang, as
well as a bound state of a particle and a hole, the spin exciton. We show that
the energy of the pi resonance always exceeds 2 Delta, twice the maximum d-wave
gap, therefore the neutron resonance observed in the cuprates around energy
Delta is most likely a spin exciton. At the same time, we speculate that the pi
particle can exist at higher energies and might be observed in neutron
scattering around 100 meV.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 4 eps figure
Deformation and phase transformation in polycrystalline cementite (FeC) during single- and multi-pass sliding wear
Cementite (FeC) plays a major role in the tribological performance of rail and bearing steels. Nonetheless, the current understanding of its deformation behavior during wear is limited because it is conventionally embedded in a matrix. Here, we investigate the deformation and chemical evolution of bulk polycrystalline cementite during single-pass sliding at a contact pressure of 31 GPa and reciprocating multi-pass sliding at 3.3 GPa. The deformation behavior of cementite was studied by electron backscatter diffraction for slip trace analysis and transmission electron microscopy. Our results demonstrate activation of several deformation mechanisms below the contact surface: dislocation slip, shear band formation, fragmentation, grain boundary sliding, and grain rotation. During sliding wear, cementite ductility is enhanced due to the confined volume, shear/compression domination, and potentially frictional heating. The microstructural alterations during multi-pass wear increase the subsurface nanoindentation hardness by up to 2.7 GPa. In addition, we report Hägg carbide (FeC) formation in the uppermost deformed regions after both sliding experiments. Based on the results of electron and X-ray diffraction, as well as atom probe tomography, we propose potential sources of excess carbon and mechanisms that promote the phase transformation
Predicting a Gapless Spin-1 Neutral Collective Mode branch for Graphite
Using the standard tight binding model of 2d graphite with short range
electron repulsion, we find a gapless spin-1, neutral collective mode branch
{\em below the particle-hole continuum} with energy vanishing linearly with
momenta at the and points in the BZ. This spin-1 mode has a wide
energy dispersion, 0 to and is not Landau damped. The `Dirac cone
spectrum' of electrons at the chemical potential of graphite generates our
collective mode; so we call this `spin-1 zero sound' of the `Dirac sea'.
Epithermal neutron scattering experiments, where graphite single crystals are
often used as analyzers (an opportunity for `self-analysis'!), and spin
polarized electron energy loss spectroscopy (SPEELS) can be used to confirm and
study our collective mode.Comment: 4 pages of LaTex file, 3 eps figure file
Exploring Entrepreneurial Skills and Competencies in Farm Tourism
Diversification to farm tourism is increasingly seen as a viable development strategy to promote a more diverse and sustainable rural economy and to counter declining farm incomes. However, our understanding of the dynamics of the modern farm tourism business and the entrepreneurial and competitive skills farmers require in making the transition from agriculture to a diversified - and service based - enterprise remains limited. Hence, the aim of this paper is to explore the range of skills and competencies that farmers in the North West of England identify as important when adopting a diversification strategy to farm tourism. With the findings indicating that that whilst a range of managerial skills are valued by farmers, they lack many of the additional business and entrepreneurial competencies required for success. Moreover, this paper acknowledges the need to generate consensus on the requisite skill-set that farm tourism operators require, along with a need for a currently fragmented rural tourism literature to acknowledge the significance of rural entrepreneurship and the characteristics of successful farmers and farm tourism ventures
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