6,949 research outputs found
Phase behavior of a fluid with competing attractive and repulsive interactions
Fluids in which the interparticle potential has a hard core, is attractive at
moderate separations, and repulsive at greater separations are known to exhibit
novel phase behavior, including stable inhomogeneous phases. Here we report a
joint simulation and theoretical study of such a fluid, focusing on the
relationship between the liquid-vapor transition line and any new phases. The
phase diagram is studied as a function of the amplitude of the attraction for a
certain fixed amplitude of the long ranged repulsion. We find that the effect
of the repulsion is to substitute the liquid-vapor critical point and a portion
of the associated liquid-vapor transition line, by two first order transitions.
One of these transitions separates the vapor from a fluid of spherical
liquidlike clusters; the other separates the liquid from a fluid of spherical
voids. At low temperature, the two transition lines intersect one another and a
vapor-liquid transition line at a triple point. While most integral equation
theories are unable to describe the new phase transitions, the Percus Yevick
approximation does succeed in capturing the vapor-cluster transition, as well
as aspects of the structure of the cluster fluid, in reasonable agreement with
the simulation results.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figure
Effects of Martian Surface Materials on the Thermal Decomposition of Hydrogen Peroxide
While hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) has been detected in the martian atmosphere, it has not been detected in surface materials. Since the Viking lander mission, we have sent instruments to Mars with the capability to detect H2O2. The Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument onboard the Curiosity Rover and Thermal and Evolved Gas Analyzer (TEGA) instrument on the Phoenix lander both detected water and oxygen releases from analyzed sediments but whether or not peroxide could be the source of these gases has not been investigated. We are investigating the possible presence of H2O2 in martian materials by analyzing Mars-relevant minerals that have been mixed with hydrogen peroxide using lab instruments configured as analogs to Mars mission instruments. The object of this research is to use lab instruments to find the effects of Mars analog minerals on hydrogen peroxide gas release temperatures, specifically gas releases of water and oxygen and also determine the effect of the peroxide on the minerals. Data that we get from the lab can then be compared to the data collected from Mars. The minerals hematite, siderite, San Carlos olivine, magnetite and nontronite were chosen as our Mars analog minerals. ~20 mg of analog Mars minerals with 5l of 50% H2O2, and were either run immediately or placed in a sealed tube for 2, 4, or 9 days to look for changes over time with two reps being done at each time step to determine repeatability. Each sample was heated from -60 degC to 500 degC at 20 degC/min and the evolved gases were monitored with a mass spectrometer. Each sample was also analyzed with an X-ray diffraction instrument to look for changes in mineralogy. Preliminary results show three potential outcomes: 1) peroxide has no effect on the sample (e.g., hematite), 2) the mineral is unaffected but catalyzes peroxide decomposition (magnetite, siderite), or 3) peroxide alters the mineral (pyrrhotite, San Carlos olivine)
Development of a Mammal Hair Identification Guide for Common Species in New York
Identifying mammals by hair characteristics is valuable for wildlife management applications, law enforcement, and regulation of international treaties. Researchers use hair identification in scat-and gastrointestinal-based diet studies, genetic-based hair-snare collections, and monitoring trade of rare and protected species. No accessible mammalian hair identification key exists for New York or other northeastern states. Identification keys are beneficial for researchers, wildlife managers and interested members of the general public that attempt to identify specific taxa. We created a guard-hair identification key for common mammalian species in New York State. This key was needed to identify diet components during a suburban coyote study. We collected hair samples of common mammal species in New York from private fur collections, road-killed specimens, and museum archives. Hair samples were characterized using 10 categorical variables. We then used single-fusion, hierarchical cluster analysis (Program JMP 7.0) to rapidly facilitate the identification of unique patterns, similarities, and dissimilarities of the hair characteristics. This statistical-based analysis produced a dendrogram that was used as a road map for the structural organization of the hair key. JMP\u27s dynamical interface allowed us to select specific branches of the dendrogram, thus highlighting the observations in the data table, and quickly identifying the important characteristics that differentiated mammal groupings and subsets. This is a new application of a multivariate technique, hierarchical cluster analysis, to rapidly develop a mammalian guard-hair identification key. This method could be used to develop locally-customized identification keys for wildlife damage research and management
X-Ray Diffraction and Reflectance Spectroscopy of Murchison Powders (CM2) After Thermal Analysis Under Reducing Conditions to Final Temperatures Between 300 and 1300c
The asteroids Ryugu and Bennu have spectral characteristics in common with CI/CM type carbonaceous chondrites and are target bodies for JAXAs Hayabusa2 and NASAs OSIRIS-Rex missions, respectively. Analog studies, based primarily on the Murchison CM2 chondrite, provide a pathway to separate spectral properties resulting space weathering from those inherent to parent-body, mineralogy, chemistry, and processes. Ryugu shares spectral properties with thermally metamorphosed and partly dehydrated CI/CM chondrites. We have undertaken a multidisciplinary study of the thermal decomposition of Murchison powder samples as an analog to metamorphic process that may have occurred on Ryugu. Bulk analyses include thermal And evolved gas analysis, X-ray diffraction (XRD), and VIS-NIR and Mssbauer spectroscopy; micro- to nanoscale analyses included scanning and transmission electron microscopy and electron probe micro analysisWe report here XRD and VIS-NIR analyses of pre- and post-heated Murchison powders, and in a companion paper report results from multiple electron beam techniques
Exchange interactions and magnetic phases of transition metal oxides: benchmarking advanced ab initio methods
The magnetic properties of the transition metal monoxides MnO and NiO are
investigated at equilibrium and under pressure via several advanced
first-principles methods coupled with Heisenberg Hamiltonian MonteCarlo. The
comparative first-principles analysis involves two promising beyond-local
density functionals approaches, namely the hybrid density functional theory and
the recently developed variational pseudo-self-interaction correction method,
implemented with both plane-wave and atomic-orbital basis sets. The advanced
functionals deliver a very satisfying rendition, curing the main drawbacks of
the local functionals and improving over many other previous theoretical
predictions. Furthermore, and most importantly, they convincingly demonstrate a
degree of internal consistency, despite differences emerging due to
methodological details (e.g. plane waves vs. atomic orbitals
A model colloidal fluid with competing interactions: bulk and interfacial properties
Using a simple mean-field density functional theory theory (DFT), we
investigate the structure and phase behaviour of a model colloidal fluid
composed of particles interacting via a pair potential which has a hard core of
diameter , is attractive Yukawa at intermediate separations and
repulsive Yukawa at large separations. We analyse the form of the asymptotic
decay of the bulk fluid correlation functions, comparing results from our DFT
with those from the self consistent Ornstein-Zernike approximation (SCOZA). In
both theories we find rich crossover behaviour, whereby the ultimate decay of
correlation functions changes from monotonic to long-wavelength damped
oscillatory decay on crossing certain lines in the phase diagram, or sometimes
from oscillatory to oscillatory with a longer wavelength. For some choices of
potential parameters we find, within the DFT, a -line at which the
fluid becomes unstable with respect to periodic density fluctuations. SCOZA
fails to yield solutions for state points near such a -line. The
propensity to clustering of particles, which is reflected by the presence of a
long wavelength , slowly decaying oscillatory pair correlation
function, and a structure factor that exhibits a very sharp maximum at small
but non zero wavenumbers, is enhanced in states near the -line. We
present density profiles for the planar liquid-gas interface and for fluids
adsorbed at a planar hard wall. The presence of a nearby -transition
gives rise to pronounced long-wavelength oscillations in the one-body densities
at both types of interface.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure
Two-dimensional colloidal fluids exhibiting pattern formation
Fluids with competing short range attraction and long range repulsive
interactions between the particles can exhibit a variety of microphase
separated structures. We develop a lattice-gas (generalised Ising) model and
analyse the phase diagram using Monte Carlo computer simulations and also with
density functional theory (DFT). The DFT predictions for the structures formed
are in good agreement with the results from the simulations, which occur in the
portion of the phase diagram where the theory predicts the uniform fluid to be
linearly unstable. However, the mean-field DFT does not correctly describe the
transitions between the different morphologies, which the simulations show to
be analogous to micelle formation. We determine how the heat capacity varies as
the model parameters are changed. There are peaks in the heat capacity at state
points where the morphology changes occur. We also map the lattice model onto a
continuum DFT that facilitates a simplification of the stability analysis of
the uniform fluid.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figure
Intrinsic point defects and volume swelling in ZrSiO4 under irradiation
The effects of high concentration of point defects in crystalline ZrSiO4 as
originated by exposure to radiation, have been simulated using first principles
density functional calculations. Structural relaxation and vibrational studies
were performed for a catalogue of intrinsic point defects, with different
charge states and concentrations. The experimental evidence of a large
anisotropic volume swelling in natural and artificially irradiated samples is
used to select the subset of defects that give similar lattice swelling for the
concentrations studied, namely interstitials of O and Si, and the anti-site
Zr(Si), Calculated vibrational spectra for the interstitials show additional
evidence for the presence of high concentrations of some of these defects in
irradiated zircon.Comment: 9 pages, 7 (color) figure
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