9,837 research outputs found
A Continuous Review Inventory Model with Advance Policy Change and Obsolescence
In this paper, we consider a continuous review inventory system of a slow moving item for which the demand rate drops to a lower level at a pre-determined time. Inventory system is controlled according to one-for-one replenishment policy with fixed lead time. Adaptation to the lower demand rate is achieved by changing the control policy in advance and letting the demand take away the excess stocks. We showed that the timing of the control policy change primarily determines the tradeoff between backordering penalties and obsolescence costs. We propose an approximate solution for the optimal time to shift to the new control policy minimizing the expected total cost during the transient period. We found that the advance policy change results in significant cost savings and our model yields near optimal expected total costs.inventory control;obsolescence;spare parts;excess stock;installed base;advance policy changes
Charge transfer via a two-strand superexchange bridge in DNA
Charge transfer in a DNA duplex chain is studied by constructing a system
with virtual electrodes connected at the ends of each DNA strand. The systeym
is described by the tight-binding model and its transport is analyzed by the
transfer matrix method. The very weak distance dependence in long
(G:C)(T:A)_M(G:C)_3 DNA chain observed in experiment [B. Giese, et al., Nature
412, 318 (2001)] is explained by a unistep two-strand superexchange bridge
without the need for the multi-step thermally-induced hopping mechanism or the
dephasing effect. The crossover number M_c of (T:A) base pairs, where crossover
between strong and weak distance dependence occurs, reflects the ratio of
intra- and inter-strand neighboring base-base couplings.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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Hubbard ladders in a magnetic field
The behavior of a two leg Hubbard ladder in the presence of a magnetic field is studied by means of Abelian bosonization. We predict the appearance of a new (doping dependent) plateau in the magnetization curve of a doped 2-leg spin ladder in a wide range of couplings. We also discuss the extension to N-leg Hubbard ladders
A Mechanism for Cutting Carbon Nanotubes with a Scanning Tunneling Microscope
We discuss the local cutting of single-walled carbon nanotubes by a voltage
pulse to the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope. The tip voltage (~3.8 eV) is the key physical quantity in the cutting process. After
reviewing several possible physical mechanisms we conclude that the cutting
process relies on the weakening of the carbon-carbon bonds through a
combination of localized particle-hole excitations induced by inelastically
tunneling electrons and elastic deformation due to the electric field between
tip and sample. The carbon network releases part of the induced mechanical
stress by forming topological defects that act as nucleation centers for the
formation of dislocations that dynamically propagate towards bond-breaking.Comment: 7 pages, 6 postscript figures, submitted to PR
Electronic Transport Spectroscopy of Carbon Nanotubes in a Magnetic Field
We report magnetic field spectroscopy measurements in carbon nanotube quantum
dots exhibiting four-fold shell structure in the energy level spectrum. The
magnetic field induces a large splitting between the two orbital states of each
shell, demonstrating their opposite magnetic moment and determining transitions
in the spin and orbital configuration of the quantum dot ground state. We use
inelastic cotunneling spectroscopy to accurately resolve the spin and orbital
contributions to the magnetic moment. A small coupling is found between
orbitals with opposite magnetic moment leading to anticrossing behavior at zero
field.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy of Suspended Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes
We have performed low-temperature STM measurements on single-wall carbon
nanotubes that are freely suspended over a trench. The nanotubes were grown by
CVD on a Pt substrate with predefined trenches etched into it. Atomic
resolution was obtained on the freestanding portions of the nanotubes.
Spatially resolved spectroscopy on the suspended portion of both metallic and
semiconducting nanotubes was also achieved, showing a Coulomb-staircase
behavior superimposed on the local density of states. The spacing of the
Coulomb blockade peaks changed with tip position reflecting a changing tip-tube
capacitance
Ultrafast all-optical wavelength conversion in silicon waveguides using femtosecond pump-probe pulses
Experimental results on ultrafast all-optical wavelength conversion in silicon-on-insulator waveguides are presented. Red and blue shifts of 10nm have been observed in femtosecond pump-probe experiments. Alloptical switching and the importance of waveguide dispersion are discussed
Absence of magnetically-induced fractional quantization in atomic contacts
Using the mechanically controlled break junction technique at low
temperatures and under cryogenic vacuum conditions we have studied atomic
contacts of several magnetic (Fe, Co and Ni) and non-magnetic (Pt) metals,
which recently were claimed to show fractional conductance quantization. In the
case of pure metals we see no quantization of the conductance nor
half-quantization, even when high magnetic fields are applied. On the other
hand, features in the conductance similar to (fractional) quantization are
observed when the contact is exposed to gas molecules. Furthermore, the absence
of fractional quantization when the contact is bridged by H_2 indicates the
current is never fully polarized for the metals studied here. Our results are
in agreement with recent model calculations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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