670 research outputs found
A Study Focus on Concrete Replacing LD Slag as Fine Aggregate
Concrete is a composite material composed of fine and coarse granular aggregate (which acts as a filler material) embedded in a hard matrix of cement (which acts as binder) that fills the space among the aggregate particles and glue them together.
The main constituents being cement, fine aggregate (river sand), coarse aggregate and water. The increase in cement production and its USAge and also its impact on the environment is addressed widely throughout the world in recent years, which gave light to researches to use alternative materials to cement such as fly ash, silica fume, ggbs etc. But now the focus is also on the increase in demand of the other constituent materials of concrete such as fine and coarse aggregate. Following the same lines of research and in a verge to find a new alternative material for river sand which is available in sufficient quantity in India and other countries also as a potential to be use as sand in concrete as resulted in using LD slag ( granulated blast furnace slag) as a fine aggregate in concrete
Quantum Phase Transition of Randomly-Diluted Heisenberg Antiferromagnet on a Square Lattice
Ground-state magnetic properties of the diluted Heisenberg antiferromagnet on
a square lattice are investigated by means of the quantum Monte Carlo method
with the continuous-time loop algorithm. It is found that the critical
concentration of magnetic sites is independent of the spin size S, and equal to
the two-dimensional percolation threshold. However, the existence of quantum
fluctuations makes the critical exponents deviate from those of the classical
percolation transition. Furthermore, we found that the transition is not
universal, i.e., the critical exponents significantly depend on S.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages including 5 EPS figure
Classical Correlation-Length Exponent in Non-Universal Quantum Phase Transition of Diluted Heisenberg Antiferromagnet
Critical behavior of the quantum phase transition of a site-diluted
Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a square lattice is investigated by means of the
quantum Monte Carlo simulation with the continuous-imaginary-time loop
algorithm. Although the staggered spin correlation function decays in a power
law with the exponent definitely depending on the spin size , the
correlation-length exponent is classical, i.e., . This implies that
the length scale characterizing the non-universal quantum phase transition is
nothing but the mean size of connected spin clusters.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Disorder Induced Phase Transition in a Random Quantum Antiferromagnet
A two-dimensional Heisenberg model with random antiferromagnetic
nearest-neighbor exchange is studied using quantum Monte Carlo techniques. As
the strength of the randomness is increased, the system undergoes a transition
from an antiferromagnetically ordered ground state to a gapless disordered
state. The finite-size scaling of the staggered structure factor and
susceptibility is consistent with a dynamic exponent .Comment: Revtex 3.0, 10 pages + 5 postscript figures available upon request,
UCSBTH-94-1
Rare region effects at classical, quantum, and non-equilibrium phase transitions
Rare regions, i.e., rare large spatial disorder fluctuations, can
dramatically change the properties of a phase transition in a quenched
disordered system. In generic classical equilibrium systems, they lead to an
essential singularity, the so-called Griffiths singularity, of the free energy
in the vicinity of the phase transition. Stronger effects can be observed at
zero-temperature quantum phase transitions, at nonequilibrium phase
transitions, and in systems with correlated disorder. In some cases, rare
regions can actually completely destroy the sharp phase transition by smearing.
This topical review presents a unifying framework for rare region effects at
weakly disordered classical, quantum, and nonequilibrium phase transitions
based on the effective dimensionality of the rare regions. Explicit examples
include disordered classical Ising and Heisenberg models, insulating and
metallic random quantum magnets, and the disordered contact process.Comment: Topical review, 68 pages, 14 figures, final version as publishe
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