2,833 research outputs found
Finite-size effects in amorphous Fe90Zr10/Al75Zr25 multilayers
The thickness dependence of the magnetic properties of amorphous Fe90Zr10
layers has been explored using Fe90Zr10/Al75Zr25 multilayers. The Al75Zr25
layer thickness is kept at 40 \AA, while the thickness of the Fe90Zr10 layers
is varied between 5 and 20 \AA. The thickness of the Al75Zr25 layers is
sufficiently large to suppress any significant interlayer coupling. Both the
Curie temperature and the spontaneous magnetization decrease non-linearly with
decreasing thickness of the Fe90Zr10 layers. No ferromagnetic order is observed
in the multilayer with 5 {\AA} Fe90Zr10 layers. The variation of the Curie
temperature with the Fe90Zr10 layer thickness is fitted with a
finite-size scaling formula [1-\Tc(t)/\Tc(\infty)]=[(t-t')/t_0]^{-\lambda},
yielding , and a critical thickness \AA, below which the
Curie temperature is zero.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Progress in the understanding and modelling of components that could drive the overall fragility of a nuclear power plant
International audienc
Thermal Conversion of Guanylurea Dicyanamide into Graphitic Carbon Nitride via Prototype CNx Precursors
Guanylurea dicyanamide, [(H2N)C(-O)NHC(NH2)2][N(CN)2], has been synthesized by ion exchange reaction in aqueous solution and structurally characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (C2/c, a = 2249.0(5) pm, b = 483.9(1) pm, c = 1382.4(3) pm, β = 99.49(3)°, V = 1483.8(5) × 106 pm3, T = 130 K). The thermal behavior of the molecular salt has been studied by thermal analysis, temperature-programmed X-ray powder diffraction, FTIR spectroscopy, and mass spectrometry between room temperature and 823 K. The results were interpreted on a molecular level in terms of a sequence of thermally induced addition, cyclization, and elimination reactions. As a consequence, melamine (2,4,6-triamino-1,3,5-triazine) is formed with concomitant loss of HNCO. Further condensation of melamine yields the prototypic CNx precursor melem (2,6,10-triamino-s-heptazine, C6N7(NH2)3), which alongside varying amounts of directly formed CNxHy material transforms into layered CNxHy phases without significant integration of oxygen into the core framework owing to the evaporation of HNCO. Thus, further evidence can be added to melamine and its condensation product melem acting as “key intermediates” in the synthetic pathway toward graphitic CNxHy materials, whose exact constitution is still a point at issue. Due to the characteristic formation process and hydrogen content a close relationship with the polymer melon is evident. In particular, the thermal transformation of guanylurea dicyanamide clearly demonstrates that the formation of volatile compounds such as HNCO during thermal decomposition may render a large variety of previously not considered molecular compounds suitable CNx precursors despite the presence of oxygen in the starting material
Percutaneous ct fluoroscopy-guided core needle biopsy of mediastinal masses: Technical outcome and complications of 155 procedures during a 10-year period
Purpose: To evaluate technical outcome, diagnostic yield and safety of computed tomo-graphic fluoroscopy-guided percutaneous core needle biopsies in patients with mediastinal masses. Methods: Overall, 155 CT fluoroscopy-guided mediastinal core needle biopsies, performed from March 2010 to June 2020 were included. Size of lesion, size of needle, access path, number of success, number of biopsies per session, diagnostic yield, patient’s position, effective dose, rate of complications, tumor localization, size of tumor and histopathological diagnosis were considered. Post-interventional CT was performed, and patients observed for any complications. Complications were classified per the Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR). Results: 148 patients (age, 54.7 ± 18.2) underwent 155 CT-fluoroscopy-guided percutaneous biopsies with tumors in the anterior (114; 73.5%), middle (17; 11%) and posterior (24; 15.5%) mediastinum, of which 152 (98%) were technically successful. For placement of the biopsy needle, in 82 (52.9%) procedures a parasternal trajectory was chosen, in 36 (23.3%) a paravertebral access, in 20 (12.9%) through the lateral intercostal space and in 17 (11%) the thoracic anterior midline, respectively. A total of 136 (89.5%) of the biopsies were considered adequate for a specific histopathologic analysis. Total DLP (dose-length product) was 575.7 ± 488.8 mGy*cm. Mean lesion size was 6.0 ± 3.3 cm. Neoplastic pathology was diagnosed in 115 (75.7%) biopsies and 35 (23%) biopsy samples showed no evidence of malignancy. Minor complications were observed in 18 (11.6%) procedures and major pneumothorax requiring drainage insertion in 3 interventions (1.9%). Conclusion: CT fluoroscopy-guided percutaneous core needle biopsy of mediastinal masses is an effective and safe procedure for the initial assessment of patients with mediastinal tumors
A Hierarchical Diffusion Model Analysis of Age Effects on Visual Word Recognition
Reading is one of the most popular leisure activities and it is routinely
performed by most individuals even in old age. Successful reading enables
older people to master and actively participate in everyday life and maintain
functional independence. Yet, reading comprises a multitude of subprocesses
and it is undoubtedly one of the most complex accomplishments of the human
brain. Not surprisingly, findings of age-related effects on word recognition
and reading have been partly contradictory and are often confined to only one
of four central reading subprocesses, i.e., sublexical, orthographic,
phonological and lexico-semantic processing. The aim of the present study was
therefore to systematically investigate the impact of age on each of these
subprocesses. A total of 1,807 participants (young, N = 384; old, N = 1,423)
performed four decision tasks specifically designed to tap one of the
subprocesses. To account for the behavioral heterogeneity in older adults,
this subsample was split into high and low performing readers. Data were
analyzed using a hierarchical diffusion modeling approach, which provides more
information than standard response time/accuracy analyses. Taking into account
incorrect and correct response times, their distributions and accuracy data,
hierarchical diffusion modeling allowed us to differentiate between age-
related changes in decision threshold, non-decision time and the speed of
information uptake. We observed longer non-decision times for older adults and
a more conservative decision threshold. More importantly, high-performing
older readers outperformed younger adults at the speed of information uptake
in orthographic and lexico-semantic processing, whereas a general age-
disadvantage was observed at the sublexical and phonological levels. Low-
performing older readers were slowest in information uptake in all four
subprocesses. Discussing these results in terms of computational models of
word recognition, we propose age-related disadvantages for older readers to be
caused by inefficiencies in temporal sampling and activation and/or inhibition
processes
Nuclear electric dipole moments in chiral effective field theory
We provide a consistent and complete calculation of the electric dipole moments of the deuteron, helion, and triton in the framework of chiral effective field theory. The CP-conserving and CP-violating interactions are treated on equal footing and we consider CP-violating one-, two-, and three-nucleon operators up to next-to-leading-order in the chiral power counting. In particular, we calculate for the first time EDM contributions induced by the CP-violating three-pion operator. We find that effects of CP-violating nucleon-nucleon contact interactions are larger than those found in previous studies based on phenomenological models for the CP-conserving nucleon-nucleon interactions. Our results which apply to any model of CP violation in the hadronic sector can be used to test various scenarios of CP violation. As examples, we study the implications of our results on the QCD θ-term and the minimal left-right symmetric model
Implementation and comparison of algebraic and machine learning based tensor interpolation methods applied to fiber orientation tensor fields obtained from CT images
Fiber orientation tensors (FOT) are used as a compact form of representing the mechanically important quantity of fiber orientation in fiber reinforced composites. While they can be obtained via image processing methods from micro computed tomography scans (CT), the specimen size needs to be sufficiently small for adequate resolution – especially in the case of carbon fibers. In order to avoid massive workload by scans and image evaluation when determining full-field FOT distributions for a plaque or a part, e.g., for comparison with process simulations, the possibilities of a direct interpolation of a few measured FOT at specific support points were opened in this paper. Hence, three different tensor interpolation methods were implemented and compared qualitatively with the help of visualization through tensor glyphs and quantitatively by calculating originally measured tensors at support points and evaluating the deviations. The methods compared in this work include two algebraic approaches, firstly, a Euclidean component averaging and secondly, a decomposition approach based on separate invariant and quaternion weighting, as well as an artificial intelligence (AI)-based method using an artificial neural network (ANN). While the decomposition method showed the best results visually, quantitatively the component averaging method and the neural network behaved better (that is for the type of quantitative error assessment used in this paper) with mean absolute errors of 0.105 and 0.114 when calculating previously measured tensors and comparing the components. With each method providing different advantages, the use for further application as well as necessary improvement is discussed. The authors would like to highlight the novelty of the methods being used with small and CT-based tensor datasets
Pablo Pineau, Marcelo Marino, Nicolas Arata, Belén Mercado
Pablo Pineau, Marcelo Marino, Nicolas Arata, Belén Mercado. El principio del fin. Políticas y memorias de la educación en la ultima dictadura militar. (1976-1883
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