16,014 research outputs found
Flow Blurring-Enabled Production of Polymer Filaments from Poly(ethylene oxide) Solutions
Flow blurring (FB) atomizers are relatively
simple yet robust devices used for the generation of sprays
from solutions of a wide range of viscosities. In this work, we
have demonstrated that FB devices may also be applied for
massive production of liquid filaments from polymeric
solutions. They can later be transformed into solid filaments
and fibers, leading to the production of so-called fiber mats.
The liquid precursors consisted of poly(ethylene oxide)
(PEO) solutions of varying molecular weights (105 [100k]
to 4 × 106 g/mol [4M]) and concentrations. The FB device
was operated in the gas pressure range of 3−6 bar. Except for
solutions of PEO 100k, all solutions exhibited a shear thinning
behavior. For massive filament production, a threshold
polymer concentration (ct) was identified for each molecular
weight. Below such concentration, the atomization resulted in droplets (the classical FB functioning mode). Such a threshold
value decreased as the PEO molecular weight increased, and it coincides with the polymer coil overlap concentration, c*. The
viscoelastic nature of the solutions was also observed to increase with the molecular weight. A 3.2 dependency of the zero-shear
rate viscosity on a so-called Bueche parameter was found for filament production, whereas a nearly linear dependency was found
for droplet production. In general, the mean diameter of the filaments decreased as they traveled downstream from the
atomization point. Furthermore, at a given distance from the atomizer outlet and gas pressure, the mean filament diameter
slightly shifted toward larger sizes with increasing PEO molecular weight. The tendency agrees well with the calculated
filaments’ Deborah number, which increases with PEO molecular weight. The approach presented herein describes a highthroughput
and efficient method for the massive production of viscous filaments. These may be transformed into fibers by an
on-line drying step.Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad DPI2016-78887-C3-1-
Continuous Time Random Walks in periodic systems: fluid limit and fractional differential equations on the circle
In this article, the continuous time random walk on the circle is studied. We
derive the corresponding generalized master equation and discuss the effects of
topology, especially important when Levy flights are allowed. Then, we work out
the fluid limit equation, formulated in terms of the periodic version of the
fractional Riemann-Liouville operators, for which we provide explicit
expressions. Finally, we compute the propagator in some simple cases. The
analysis presented herein should be relevant when investigating anomalous
transport phenomena in systems with periodic dimensions.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure. References added. Published versio
A Train-on-Target Strategy for Multilingual Spoken Language Understanding
[EN] There are two main strategies to adapt a Spoken Language
Understanding system to deal with languages different from the original
(source) language: test-on-source and train-on-target. In the train-ontarget
approach, a new understanding model is trained in the target language,
which is the language in which the test utterances are pronounced.
To do this, a segmented and semantically labeled training set for each
new language is needed. In this work, we use several general-purpose
translators to obtain the translation of the training set and we apply an
alignment process to automatically segment the training sentences. We
have applied this train-on-target approach to estimate the understanding
module of a Spoken Dialog System for the DIHANA task, which consists
of an information system about train timetables and fares in Spanish.
We present an evaluation of our train-on-target multilingual approach
for two target languages, French and EnglishThis work has been partially funded by the project ASLP-MULAN: Audio, Speech and Language Processing for Multimedia Analytics (MEC TIN2014-54288-C4-3-R).García-Granada, F.; Segarra Soriano, E.; Millán, C.; Sanchís Arnal, E.; Hurtado Oliver, LF. (2016). A Train-on-Target Strategy for Multilingual Spoken Language Understanding. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 10077:224-233. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-49169-1_22S22423310077Benedí, J.M., Lleida, E., Varona, A., Castro, M.J., Galiano, I., Justo, R., López de Letona, I., Miguel, A.: Design and acquisition of a telephone spontaneous speech dialogue corpus in Spanish: DIHANA. In: LREC 2006, pp. 1636–1639 (2006)Calvo, M., Hurtado, L.-F., García, F., Sanchís, E.: A Multilingual SLU system based on semantic decoding of graphs of words. In: Torre Toledano, D., Ortega Giménez, A., Teixeira, A., González Rodríguez, J., Hernández Gómez, L., San Segundo Hernández, R., Ramos Castro, D. (eds.) IberSPEECH 2012. CCIS, vol. 328, pp. 158–167. Springer, Heidelberg (2012). doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-35292-8_17Calvo, M., Hurtado, L.F., Garca, F., Sanchis, E., Segarra, E.: Multilingual spoken language understanding using graphs and multiple translations. Comput. Speech Lang. 38, 86–103 (2016)Dinarelli, M., Moschitti, A., Riccardi, G.: Concept segmentation and labeling for conversational speech. In: Interspeech, Brighton, UK (2009)Esteve, Y., Raymond, C., Bechet, F., Mori, R.D.: Conceptual decoding for spoken dialog systems. In: Proceedings of EuroSpeech 2003, pp. 617–620 (2003)García, F., Hurtado, L., Segarra, E., Sanchis, E., Riccardi, G.: Combining multiple translation systems for spoken language understanding portability. In: Proceedings of IEEE Workshop on Spoken Language Technology (SLT), pp. 282–289 (2012)Hahn, S., Dinarelli, M., Raymond, C., Lefèvre, F., Lehnen, P., De Mori, R., Moschitti, A., Ney, H., Riccardi, G.: Comparing stochastic approaches to spoken language understanding in multiple languages. IEEE Trans. Audio Speech Lang. Process. 6(99), 1569–1583 (2010)He, Y., Young, S.: A data-driven spoken language understanding system. In: Proceedings of ASRU 2003, pp. 583–588 (2003)Hurtado, L., Segarra, E., García, F., Sanchis, E.: Language understanding using n-multigram models. In: Vicedo, J.L., Martínez-Barco, P., Muńoz, R., Saiz Noeda, M. (eds.) EsTAL 2004. LNCS (LNAI), vol. 3230, pp. 207–219. Springer, Heidelberg (2004). doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-30228-5_19Jabaian, B., Besacier, L., Lefèvre, F.: Comparison and combination of lightly supervised approaches for language portability of a spoken language understanding system. IEEE Trans. Audio Speech Lang. Process. 21(3), 636–648 (2013)Koehn, P., et al.: Moses: open source toolkit for statistical machine translation. In: Proceedings of ACL Demonstration Session, pp. 177–180 (2007)Lafferty, J., McCallum, A., Pereira, F.: Conditional random fields: probabilistic models for segmenting and labeling sequence data. In: International Conference on Machine Learning, pp. 282–289. Citeseer (2001)Lefèvre, F.: Dynamic Bayesian networks and discriminative classifiers for multi-stage semantic interpretation. In: IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, ICASSP 2007, vol. 4, pp. 13–16. IEEE (2007)Ortega, L., Galiano, I., Hurtado, L.F., Sanchis, E., Segarra, E.: A statistical segment-based approach for spoken language understanding. In: Proceedings of InterSpeech 2010, Makuhari, Chiba, Japan, pp. 1836–1839 (2010)Segarra, E., Sanchis, E., Galiano, M., García, F., Hurtado, L.: Extracting semantic information through automatic learning techniques. IJPRAI 16(3), 301–307 (2002)Servan, C., Camelin, N., Raymond, C., Bchet, F., Mori, R.D.: On the use of machine translation for spoken language understanding portability. In: Proceedings of ICASSP 2010, pp. 5330–5333 (2010)Tür, G., Mori, R.D.: Spoken Language Understanding: Systems for Extracting Semantic Information from Speech, 1st edn. Wiley, Hoboken (2011
Spin injection in Silicon at zero magnetic field
In this letter, we show efficient electrical spin injection into a SiGe based
\textit{p-i-n} light emitting diode from the remanent state of a
perpendicularly magnetized ferromagnetic contact. Electron spin injection is
carried out through an alumina tunnel barrier from a Co/Pt thin film exhibiting
a strong out-of-plane anisotropy. The electrons spin polarization is then
analysed through the circular polarization of emitted light. All the light
polarization measurements are performed without an external applied magnetic
field \textit{i.e.} in remanent magnetic states. The light polarization as a
function of the magnetic field closely traces the out-of-plane magnetization of
the Co/Pt injector. We could achieve a circular polarization degree of the
emitted light of 3 % at 5 K. Moreover this light polarization remains almost
constant at least up to 200 K.Comment: accepted in AP
The Capacity and Interference Statistics of High Car Traffic W-CDMA Street Cross-Shaped Micro-Cells (Uplink Analysis),
Since interference is related to the capacity and performance of W-CDMA system, it is necessary to investigate the interference characteristics (the mean value and the variance). Thus, the uplink capacity and the interference statistics of the sectors of the cross-shaped W-CDMA microcell have been analyzed using geometry with 17 microcells. A single slope propagation model with a lognormal shadowing factor has been used in the analysis. The cells have been assumed to exist in city streets with high car traffic. The capacity and the interference statistics of the sectors have been studied for different sector ranges, and different side-lobe level. The results show that the capacity increases with the increment of the sector range and with the reduction of the side-lobe level of the antennas used
A New Quasi-Optimum Power Control Scheme for Downlink in W-CDMA Macro Cellular System
The downlink power control problem in W-CDMA is studied using a new proposed model. The downlink cell capacity is given for the old model given by Gejji and our new model. A capacity increase of 16 % for the special case = 0 (no orthogonality between users) and a generalization of the old model in terms of the propagation exponent and orthogonality factor is introduced
Intelligent FDSS Overlay on GSM System (Uplink Analysis)
The overlay of an intelligent frequency diversity spread spectrum system (FDSS) on the (GSM) system is studied. The uplink capacity of both systems is given using a model of 36 hexagonal macrocells. Performance of GSM and FDSS users is investigated. An original GSM system with 48 users/macrocell can be substituted by a mixed system, which has GSM system capacity of 48 users/macrocell and FDSS system capacity of 128 users/macrocell
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