9,509 research outputs found
Wind trajectory tracing for air pollution studies (AIRPOL)
Wind trajectory computer program, consisting of data handling program and analysis program, traces Los Angeles Basin wind patterns either backward or forward in time. Program may be applicable to other areas
Finding the Middle Ground in Collection Development: How Academic Law Libraries Can Shape Their Collections in Response to the Call for More Practice-Oriented Legal Education
To examine how academic law libraries can respond to the call for more practice-oriented legal education, the authors compared trends in collection management decisions regarding secondary sources at academic and law firm libraries along with law firm librarians’ perceptions of law school legal research training of new associates
Mechanical characterization of solution-derived nanoparticle silver ink thin films
Mechanical properties of sintered silver nanoparticles are investigated via substrate curvature and nanoindentation methods. Substrate curvature measurements reveal that permanent microstructural changes occur during initial heating while subsequent annealing results in nearly elastic behavior of the thinner films. Thicker films were found to crack upon thermal treatment. The coefficient of thermal expansion was determined from linear slopes of curvature curves to be 1.9±0.097 ppm/°C, with elastic modulus and hardness determined via nanoindentation. Accounting for substrate effects, nanoindentation hardness and modulus remained constant for different film thicknesses and did not appear to be a function of annealing conditions. Hardness of 0.91 GPa and modulus of 110 GPa are somewhat lower than expected for a continuous nanocrystalline silver film, most likely due to porosity
Fluorescence microscopy for the characterization of structural integrity
The absorption characteristics of light and the optical technique of fluorescence microscopy for enhancing metallographic interpretation are presented. Characterization of thermally sprayed coatings by optical microscopy suffers because of the tendency for misidentification of the microstructure produced by metallographic preparation. Gray scale, in bright field microscopy, is frequently the only means of differentiating the actual structural details of porosity, cracking, and debonding of coatings. Fluorescence microscopy is a technique that helps to distinguish the artifacts of metallographic preparation (pullout, cracking, debonding) from the microstructure of the specimen by color contrasting structural differences. Alternative instrumentation and the use of other dye systems are also discussed. The combination of epoxy vacuum infiltration with fluorescence microscopy to verify microstructural defects is an effective means to characterize advanced materials and to assess structural integrity
The Central Star Candidate of the Planetary Nebula Sh2-71: Photometric and Spectroscopic Variability
We present the analysis of several newly obtained and archived photometric
and spectroscopic datasets of the intriguing and yet poorly understood 13.5-mag
central star candidate of the bipolar planetary nebula Sh2-71. Photometric
observations confirmed the previously determined quasi-sinusoidal lightcurve
with a period of 68 days and also indicated periodic sharp brightness dips,
possibly eclipses, with a period of 17.2 days. In addition, the comparison
between U and V lightcurves revealed that the 68-day brightness variations are
accompanied by a variable reddening effect of .
Spectroscopic datasets demonstrated pronounced variations in spectral profiles
of Balmer, helium and singly ionised metal lines and indicated that these
variations occur on a time-scale of a few days. The most accurate verification
to date revealed that spectral variability is not correlated with the 68-day
brightness variations. The mean radial velocity of the observed star was
measured to be 26 km/s with an amplitude of 40 km/s. The spectral
type was determined to be B8V through spectral comparison with synthetic and
standard spectra. The newly proposed model for the central star candidate is a
Be binary with a misaligned precessing disc.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures (main article). 7 pages, 6 figures (appendix).
  Accepted for publication in MNRA
Intrinsic hole mobility and trapping in a regio-regular poly(thiophene)
The transport properties of high-performance thin-film transistors (TFT) made
with a regio-regular poly(thiophene) semiconductor (PQT-12) are reported. The
room-temperature field-effect mobility of the devices varied between 0.004
cm2/V s and 0.1 cm2/V s and was controlled through thermal processing of the
material, which modified the structural order. The transport properties of TFTs
were studied as a function of temperature. The field-effect mobility is
thermally activated in all films at T<200 K and the activation energy depends
on the charge density in the channel. The experimental data is compared to
theoretical models for transport, and we argue that a model based on the
existence of a mobility edge and an exponential distribution of traps provides
the best interpretation of the data. The differences in room-temperature
mobility are attributed to different widths of the shallow localized state
distribution at the edge of the valence band due to structural disorder in the
film. The free carrier mobility of the mobile states in the ordered regions of
the film is the same in all structural modifications and is estimated to be
between 1 and 4 cm2/V s.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
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