768 research outputs found

    The Life and Contributions of Lee Hafen to Athletics at Dixie College

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    Leland Hafen was born in Santa Clara, Utah, in 1895 and after a fine athletic career was signed as an athletic coach at Dixie in the fall of 1926. For the next twenty years Coach Hafen guided the athletic program at Dixie, and for a period of ten years (1926-1936) coached both the high school and college squads. Until 1963 Dixie College and Dixie High School were combined into what was called upper and lower divisions . From 1936 until 1946 Coach Hafen coached only the high school but was the athletic director and taught classes in history to both upper and lower division students . Coach Hafen\u27s record as an athletic coach was outstanding: it included as a college coach, one conference championship, one southern division championship, second place in the conference play-off on two different occasions, third in the conference two years, second in the southern division twice , and two seasons when his team placed fourth. His high school record was equally as eminent , having taken his Fliers to the state meet on thirteen occasions in this twenty-year span. His finishes were as follows: one championship , three second places , two third places, consolation was played for on four occasions , and on only two occasions did a Dixie team fail to compete all four nights of the tournament . Added to these fetes was the fact that at that time there was just one classification, no A or B alignments , so he was usually competing against much larger schools. Coach Hafen possessed a wonderful personality, and made friends wherever he went. He took a great deal of pride in Utah\u27s Dixie and enjoyed telling the many people he met about his homeland , which included all of Southern Utah. Coach Hafen held many positions of responsibility in both the Utah Activities Association and the I. C. A. C. Conference, and as athletic director of Dixie he realized a life long dream when in 1957 an ultra modern fieldhouse was built, which includes not only a fine athletic layout but also physical education facilities for both men and women. Physical Education for a ll age groups meant a lot to Coach Lee and he was a great advocate of fitness for both men and women as witnessed by the modern skillrooms dance studios, etc. , etc. , which can be found in the gym. On November 23, 1959 , Coach Hafen died of complications following surgery in the Dixie Memorial Hospital

    Localized vibration modes of defect pairs in silicon

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    Absorption bands and localized vibrational modes of silicon doped with boron compounds containing phosphorus, arsenic, antimony, or lithiu

    DIRBE External Calibrator (DEC)

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    Under NASA Contract No. NAS5-28185, the Center for Space Engineering at Utah State University has produced a calibration instrument for the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE). DIRBE is one of the instruments aboard the Cosmic Background Experiment Observatory (COBE). The calibration instrument is referred to as the DEC (Dirbe External Calibrator). DEC produces a steerable, infrared beam of controlled spectral content and intensity and with selectable point source or diffuse source characteristics, that can be directed into the DIRBE to map fields and determine response characteristics. This report discusses the design of the DEC instrument, its operation and characteristics, and provides an analysis of the systems capabilities and performance

    Enabling Highly Effective Boiling from Superhydrophobic Surfaces

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    Avariety of industrial applications such as power generation, water distillation, and high-density cooling rely on heat transfer processes involving boiling. Enhancements to the boiling process can improve the energy efficiency and performance across multiple industries. Highly wetting textured surfaces have shown promise in boiling applications since capillary wicking increases the maximum heat flux that can be dissipated. Conversely, highly nonwetting textured (superhydrophobic) surfaces have been largely dismissed for these applications as they have been shown to promote formation of an insulating vapor film that greatly diminishes heat transfer efficiency. The current Letter shows that boiling from a superhydrophobic surface in an initial Wenzel state, in which the surface texture is infiltrated with liquid, results in remarkably low surface superheat with nucleate boiling sustained up to a critical heat flux typical of hydrophilic wetting surfaces, and thus upends this conventional wisdom. Two distinct boiling behaviors are demonstrated on both micro- and nanostructured superhydrophobic surfaces based on the initial wetting state. For an initial surface condition in which vapor occupies the interstices of the surface texture (Cassie- Baxter state), premature film boiling occurs, as has been commonly observed in the literature. However, if the surface texture is infiltrated with liquid (Wenzel state) prior to boiling, drastically improved thermal performance is observed; in this wetting state, the three-phase contact line is pinned during vapor bubble growth, which prevents the development of a vapor film over the surface and maintains efficient nucleate boiling behavior

    The Role of Dynamic Wetting Behavior during Bubble Growth and Departure from a Solid Surface

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    Surface wettability is known to have a major influence on the ebullition characteristics of a bubble growing from a solid surface. Yet, simplistic static characterization of the wetting behavior is still relied upon to indicate performance characteristics during boiling. In this study, a theoretical framework is developed for the wetting and dewetting processes occurring during bubble growth based upon the dynamic contact angles. This framework is incorporated into adiabatic volume-of-fluid simulations to capture the influence of the surface wettability on contact line and contact angle dynamics during bubble growth and departure. The simulations span a large range of dynamic wetting behaviors and fluid properties. The receding contact angle is shown to govern the early stages of bubble growth as the contact line recedes outward from the bubble center and is the dominant wetting characteristic that determines the maximum contact diameter and departure size. The advancing contact angle dictates the departure morphology as the contact line retracts inward and has a secondary role in determining the departure size. Following, improved reduced-order models are developed that establish fluid-property-independent correlations for the maximum contact diameter and departure diameter as a function of the dynamic contact angles. The results call for the need to redefine wettability classifications based on dynamic contact angles rather than static contact angle in the context of boiling. Hygrophilicity and hygrophobicity are redefined in this context, and an additional classification, ambiphilicity, is introduced for boiling surfaces exhibiting low receding contact angles and high advancing contact angles

    The Petal Effect of Parahydrophobic Surfaces offers Low Receding Contact Angles that Promote Effective Boiling

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    Despite extensive study of boiling processes and their widespread use in industry, critical interactions between the fluid and surface during boiling remain poorly understood. Simplistic, static descriptions of the contact angle are still relied upon to describe the effects of surface wettability on dynamic interfacial processes that govern boiling. This work demonstrates the critical role of the dynamic wettability characteristics of a surface on bubble growth dynamics and boiling performance. In spite of their superior nucleation behavior, hydrophobic surfaces have received little attention for boiling applications due to their typically premature transition from efficient nucleate boiling to inefficient film boiling. Evaluation of hydrophobic surfaces with high contact angle hysteresis reveals that the heat transfer efficacy of these surfaces can be exploited in boiling, so long as the receding contact angle of the surface is sufficiently small to mitigate vapor spreading and thereby extend the nucleate boiling regime. A new paradigm of textured boiling surfaces – parahydrophobic surfaces that exhibit the “petal effect” and mimic the wetting behavior of a rose petal – are shown to have untapped potential in boiling applications resulting from highly hydrophobic behavior coupled with low receding contact angles

    Extreme Sensitivity of Superconductivity to Stoichiometry in FeSe (Fe1+dSe)

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    The recently discovered iron arsenide superconductors, which display superconducting transition temperatures as high as 55 K, appear to share a number of general features with high-Tc cuprates, including proximity to a magnetically ordered state and robustness of the superconductivity in the presence of disorder. Here we show that superconductivity in Fe1+dSe, the parent compound of the superconducting arsenide family, is destroyed by very small changes in stoichiometry. Further, we show that non-superconducting Fe1+dSe is not magnetically ordered down to low temperatures. These results suggest that robust superconductivity and immediate instability against an ordered magnetic state should not be considered as intrinsic characteristics of iron-based superconducting systems, and that Fe1+dSe may present a unique opportunity for determining which materials characteristics are critical to the existence of superconductivity in high Tc iron arsenide superconductors and which are not.Comment: Updated to reflect final version and include journal referenc

    Mapping of agricultural subsurface drainage systems using a frequency-domain ground penetrating radar and evaluating its performance using a single-frequency multi-receiver electromagnetic induction instrument

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    Subsurface drainage systems are commonly used to remove surplus water from the soil profile of a poorly drained farmland. Traditional methods for drainage mapping involve the use of tile probes and trenching equipment that are time-consuming, labor-intensive, and invasive, thereby entailing an inherent risk of damaging the drainpipes. Effective and efficient methods are needed in order to map the buried drain lines: (1) to comprehend the processes of leaching and offsite release of nutrients and pesticides and (2) for the installation of a new set of drain lines between the old ones to enhance the soil water removal. Non-invasive geophysical soil sensors provide a potential alternative solution. Previous research has mainly showcased the use of time-domain ground penetrating radar, with variable success, depending on local soil and hydrological conditions and the central frequency of the specific equipment used. The objectives of this study were: (1) to test the use of a stepped-frequency continuous wave three-dimensional ground penetrating radar (3D-GPR) with a wide antenna array for subsurface drainage mapping and (2) to evaluate its performance with the use of a single-frequency multi-receiver electromagnetic induction (EMI) sensor in-combination. This sensor combination was evaluated on twelve different study sites with various soil types with textures ranging from sand to clay till. While the 3D-GPR showed a high success rate in finding the drainpipes at five sites (sandy, sandy loam, loamy sand, and organic topsoils), the results at the other seven sites were less successful due to the limited penetration depth of the 3D-GPR signal. The results suggest that the electrical conductivity estimates produced by the inversion of apparent electrical conductivity data measured by the EMI sensor could be a useful proxy for explaining the success achieved by the 3D-GPR in finding the drain lines

    Mapping subsurface drainage in agricultural areas using a frequency-domain ground penetrating radar

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    Artificial subsurface drainage systems are installed in agricultural areas to remove excess water and convert poorly naturally drained soils into productive cropland. Some of the most productive agricultural regions in the world are a result of subsurface drainage practices. Drain lines provide a shortened pathway for the release of nutrients and pesticides into the environment, which presents a potentially increased risk for eutrophication and contamination of surface water bodies. Knowledge of drain line locations is often lacking. This complicates the understanding of the local hydrology and solute dynamics and the consequent planning of mitigation strategies such as constructed wetlands, saturated buffers, bioreactors, and nitrate and phosphate filters. In addition, accurate knowledge of the existing subsurface drainage system is required in designing the installation of a new set of drain lines to enhance soil water removal efficiency. The traditional methods of drainage mapping involve the use of tile probes and trenching equipment which are time-consuming, tiresome, and invasive, thereby carrying an inherent risk of damaging the drain pipes. Non-invasive geophysical sensors provide a potential alternative solution to the problem. Previous research has focused on the use of time-domain ground penetrating radar (GPR) with variable success depending on local soil and hydrological conditions and the center frequency of the specific equipment used. For example, 250 MHz antennas proved to be more suitable for drain line mapping. Recent technological advancements enabled the collection of high-resolution spatially exhaustive data. In this study, we present the use of a stepped-frequency continuous wave (SFCW) 3D-GPR (GeoScope Mk IV 3D-Radar with DXG1820 antenna array) mounted in a motorized survey configuration with real-time georeferencing for subsurface drainage mapping. The 3D-GPR system offers more flexibility for application to different (sub)surface conditions due to the coverage of wide frequency bandwidth (60-3000 MHz). In addition, the wide array swathe of the antenna array (1.5 m covered by 20 measurement channels) enables effective coverage of three-dimensional (3D) space. The surveys were performed on twelve different study sites with various soil types with textures ranging from sand to clay till. While we achieved good success in finding the drainage pipes at five sites with sandy, sandy loam, loamy sand and organic topsoils, the results at the other seven sites with more clay-rich soils were less successful. The high attenuation of electromagnetic waves in highly conductive clay-rich soils, which limits the penetration depth of the 3D-GPR system, can explain our findings obtained in this research
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