418 research outputs found

    Investigations of SrRuO3 and Sr2RuO4

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    The structural and magnetic properties of perovskites SrRuO3, CaRuO3. Sr(1-x)CaxRuO3 (x=0.5, 0.75) and the layered perovskite Sr2Ru04 have been investigated using X-ray diffraction, neutron scattering and SQUID measurements. SrRuO3 is ferromagnetic with a transition temperature of Tc=162K. It remains orthorhombic up to 450K. CaRuO3 is paramagnetic down to 2K and shows no structural phase transition between 2K and 300K. Sr2RuO4 is neither magnetically ordered nor does it change its crystallographic structure between 2K and 450K. The nature of the magnetism in SrRuO3 has been found to originate from itinerant 4d band electrons. CaRuO3 possesses a narrower 4d band compared to SrRuO3. The width of the 4d band in CaRuO3 does not allow any magnetic order. The unit cell differences between SrRuO3 and CaRuO3 are also due to the band structure. Paramagnetic neutron scattering also supports the notion of itinerant 4d band magnetism in these ruthenates

    Noncontact lateral-force gradient measurement on Si(111)-7×7 surface with small-amplitude off-resonance atomic force microscopy

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    In this work, the authors report on a quantitative investigation of lateral-force gradient and lateral force between a tungsten tip and Si(111)-(7×7) surface using combined noncontact lateral-force microscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy. Simultaneous lateral-force gradient and scanning tunneling microscopy images of single and multiatomic step are obtained. In our measurement, tunnel current is used as feedback. The lateral-stiffness contrast has been observed to be 2.5 N/m at a single atomic step, in contrast to 13 N/m at a multiatomic step on Si (111) surface. They also carried out a series of lateral stiffness-distance spectroscopy, which show a sharp increase in tip-surface interaction stiffness as the sample is approached toward the surface

    Full numerical simulations of multifluid flows

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    To fully understand the behavior of multifluid systems, one must have good insight into the basic micromechanisms that govern the evolution of a single ‘‘structure’’ (e.g., a bubble or a drop) and the interactions of a few such basic entities. In addition to the usual questions about the relative magnitude of the various physical effects (inertia, viscosity, and surface tension) for multifluid systems, the effects of surface phenomena such as contaminants must be addressed. Full numerical simulations are, in principle, ideally suited to provide this information. Not only are all the quantitative data readily available, but various physical processes can be turned on and off at will. In practice, however, simulations of multifluid problems are one of the difficult areas of computational fluid dynamics. Almost all current studies of multifluid problems make a number of simplifications, such as inviscidness, Stokes flow, two‐dimensionality, or axisymmetry. Although such models capture some of the important behavior, they often put severe constraints on the problems that can be investigated.Many of the fundamental processes in multifluid flow involve fully three‐dimensional flows, where both inertia and viscous effects must be accounted for. To address these effects, we have recently developed a front‐tracking method for multifluid, incompressible flows that appears to be both accurate and robust. The method has been implemented for both two‐ as well as fully three‐dimensional situations. In this paper, we will discuss two problems that we are currently investigating using this numerical method: the Rayleigh–Taylor instability and the motion of bubbles and drops. For fluid mixing induced by unstable stratification, the Rayleigh–Taylor instability where a heavy fluid falls into a lighter underlying fluid, is the prototypical example. Indeed, for such flows its importance is similar to that of the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability for fluid mixing induced by a shear flow. For small density stratification, we show that three‐dimensionality can lead to a large amplitude vortex structure that differs considerably from what two‐dimensional simulations predict. The different vortical configuration leads to more rapid nonlinear growth for the fully three‐dimensional case, even though the linear growth rate is the same. We also show how viscosity stratification modifies the evolution. For the weakly stratified case, where inviscid calculations predict symmetric evolution with respect to the heavy and the light fluid, viscosity stratification leads to considerable asymmetry, with the more viscous fluid forming big round bubbles and the less viscous one being confined to narrow fingers. The effect of density stratification for viscous three‐dimensional motion will also be discussed. For many mixing problems, the long‐time state consists of a dispersed phase that forms drops or bubbles in another phase. We will discuss preliminary investigations of such flows. Calculations of rising bubbles for various values of surface tension and viscosity (both in two and three dimensions) appear to correlate well with experimental observations and steady‐state calculations in the literature. The interactions of bubbles with each other, density interfaces, and vortices will also be discussed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/69841/2/PFADEB-3-5-1455-1.pd

    The nonlinear behavior of a sheared immiscible fluid interface

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    The two-dimensional Kelvin–Helmholtz instability of a sheared fluid interface separating immiscible fluids is studied by numerical simulations. The evolution is determined by the density ratio of the fluids, the Reynolds number in each fluid, and the Weber number. Unlike the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability of miscible fluids, where the sheared interface evolves into well-defined concentrated vortices if the Reynolds number is high enough, the presence of surface tension leads to the generation of fingers of interpenetrating fluids. In the limit of a small density ratio the evolution is symmetric, but for a finite density difference the large amplitude stage consists of narrow fingers of the denser fluid penetrating into the lighter fluid. The initial growth rate is well predicted by inviscid theory when the Reynolds numbers are sufficiently high, but the large amplitude behavior is strongly affected by viscosity and the mode that eventually leads to fingers is longer than the inviscidly most unstable one. © 2002 American Institute of Physics.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70733/2/PHFLE6-14-8-2871-1.pd

    A front-tracking method for viscous, incompressible, multi-fluid flows

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    A method to simulate unsteady multi-fluid flows in which a sharp interface or a front separates incompressible fluids of different density and viscosity is described. The flow field is discretized by a conservative finite difference approximation on a stationary grid, and the interface is explicitly represented by a separate, unstructured grid that moves through the stationary grid. Since the interface deforms continuously, it is necessary to restructure its grid as the calculations proceed. In addition to keeping the density and viscosity stratification sharp, the tracked interface provides a natural way to include surface tension effects. Both two- and three-dimensional, full numerical simulations of bubble motion are presented.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/30059/1/0000428.pd

    Computations of multi-fluid flows

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    Full numerical simulations of three-dimensional flows of two or more immiscible fluids of different densities and viscosities separated by a sharp interface with finite surface tension are discussed. The method used is based on a finite difference approximation of the full Navier-Stokes equations and explicit tracking of the interface between the fluids. Preliminary simulations of the Rayleigh-Taylor instability and the motion of bubbles are shown.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29741/1/0000078.pd

    Multifluid flows with weak and strong discontinuous interfaces using an elemental enriched space

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    In a previous paper, the authors presented an elemental enriched space to be used in a finite-element framework (EFEM) capable of reproducing kinks and jumps in an unknown function using a fixed mesh in which the jumps and kinks do not coincide with the interelement boundaries. In this previous publication, only scalar transport problems were solved (thermal problems). In the present work, these ideas are generalized to vectorial unknowns, in particular, the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations for multifluid flows presenting internal moving interfaces. The advantage of the EFEM compared with global enrichment is the significant reduction in computing time when the internal interface is moving. In the EFEM, the matrix to be solved at each time step has not only the same amount of degrees of freedom (DOFs) but also the same connectivity between the DOFs. This frozen matrix graph enormously improves the efficiency of the solver. Another characteristic of the elemental enriched space presented here is that it allows a linear variation of the jump, thus improving the convergence rate, compared with other enriched spaces that have a constant variation of the jump. Furthermore, the implementation in any existing finite-element code is extremely easy with the version presented here because the new shape functions are based on the usual finite-element method shape functions for triangles or tetrahedrals, and once the internal DOFs are statically condensed, the resulting elements have exactly the same number of unknowns as the nonenriched finite elements.Peer ReviewedPreprin

    Preliminary analysis of dry-steam geothermal power plant by employing exergy assessment: Case study in Kamojang geothermal power plant, Indonesia

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    The objectives of this study are to perform the exergy analysis and ambient temperature optimization of the Kamojang geothermal power plant by employing Engineering Equation Solver (EES). The geothermal capacity is 55 MW and the field is vapor-dominated reservoir with temperature 245 °C. In the initial state temperature, pressure and mass flow data are collected from the plant operation. The study results show that system has overall efficiency of 35.86% which means that only 111,138.92 kW electrical power can be extracted from 309,000 kW thermal power being produced by 10 production wells of Kamojang. This low efficiency is due to irreversibility associated with different processes and components in the system. The largest irreversibility occurs in condenser due to which 53% of total energy is disposed into the environment. Ambient temperature at Kamojang varies from 17 to 20 °C. The effect of this variation in temperature is also investigated and it is observed that higher temperature does not have any significant impact on system efficiency

    Staging and stratifying cognitive dysfunction in multiple sclerosis

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    BACKGROUND: The sequence in which cognitive domains become impaired in multiple sclerosis (MS) is yet to be formally demonstrated. It is unclear whether processing speed dysfunction temporally precedes other cognitive impairments, such as memory and executive function. OBJECTIVE: Determine the order in which different cognitive domains become impaired in MS and validate these findings using clinical and vocational outcomes. METHODS: In a longitudinal sample of 1073 MS patients and 306 healthy controls, we measured performance on multiple, consensus-standard, neurocognitive tests. We used an event-based staging approach to model the sequence in which cognitive domains become impaired. Linear and logistic mixed-effects models were used to explore associations between stages of impairment, neurological disability, and employment status. RESULTS: Our model suggested that the order of impairments was as follows: processing speed, visual learning, verbal learning, working memory/attention, and executive function. Stage of cognitive impairment predicted greater neurological disability, ÎČ = 0.16, SE = 0.02, p < 0.001, and probability of unemployment, ÎČ = 1.14, SE = 0.001, p < 0.001. CONCLUSION: This is the first study to introduce a cognitive staging and stratification system for MS. Findings underscore the importance of using the Symbol Digit Modalities Test in routine screening for cognitive impairment and memory testing to assess patients later in disease evolution

    Modelling the Interfacial Flow of Two Immiscible Liquids in Mixing Processes

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    This paper presents an interface tracking method for modelling the flow of immiscible metallic liquids in mixing processes. The methodology can provide an insight into mixing processes for studying the fundamental morphology development mechanisms for immiscible interfaces. The volume-of-fluid (VOF) method is adopted in the present study, following a review of various modelling approaches for immiscible fluid systems. The VOF method employed here utilises the piecewise linear for interface construction scheme as well as the continuum surface force algorithm for surface force modelling. A model coupling numerical and experimental data is established. The main flow features in the mixing process are investigated. It is observed that the mixing of immiscible metallic liquids is strongly influenced by the viscosity of the system, shear forces and turbulence. The numerical results show good qualitative agreement with experimental results, and are useful for optimisating the design of mixing casting processes
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