21,920 research outputs found
Bipolar current driver for memory circuits
Circuit which logically determines the state of a flip-flop and amplifies the current from a clock pulse provides a bipolar driving current to a memory circuit, the polarity of which is determined by the state of a flip-flop. This principle may be applied to various memory driving circuits where power dissipation must be minimized
Some notions of decentralization and coordination in large-scale dynamic systems
Some notions of decentralization and coordination in the control of large-scale dynamic systems are discussed. Decentralization and coordination have always been important concepts in the study of large systems. Roughly speaking decentralization is the process of dividing a large problem into subproblems so that it can be handled more easily. Coordination is the manipulation of the subproblem so that the original problem is solved. The various types of decentralization and coordination that have been used to control dynamic systems are discussed. The emphasis was to distinguish between on-line and off-line operations to understand the results available by indicating the aspects of the problem which are decentralized
Photon-induced entanglement of distant mesoscopic SQUID rings
An experiment that involves two distant mesoscopic SQUID rings is studied.
The superconducting rings are irradiated with correlated photons, which are
produced by a single microwave source. Classically correlated (separable) and
quantum mechanically correlated (entangled) microwaves are considered, and
their effect on the Josephson currents is quantified. It is shown that the
currents tunnelling through the Josephson junctions in the distant rings, are
correlated.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures; Kluwer Academic Proceedings; presented in IV
international workshop on "Macroscopic Quantum Coherence and Computing"
(Napoli, Italy, 2004
Gapped Symmetry Preserving Surface-State for the Electron Topological Insulator
It is well known that the 3D electronic topological insulator (TI) with
charge-conservation and time-reversal symmetry cannot have a trivial insulating
surface that preserves symmetry. It is often implicitly assumed that if the TI
surface preserves both symmetries then it must be gapless. Here we show that it
is possible for the TI surface to be both gapped and symmetry-preserving, at
the expense of having surface-topological order. In contrast to analogous
bosonic topological insulators, this symmetric surface topological order is
intrinsically non-Abelian. We show that the surface-topological order provides
a complete non-perturbative definition of the electron TI that transcends a
free-particle band-structure picture, and could provide a useful perspective
for studying strongly correlated topological Mott insulators.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, (published version
The vertical metal insulator semiconductor tunnel transistor: A proposed Fowler-Nordheim tunneling device
We propose a new field-effect transistor, the vertical metal insulator semiconductor tunnel transistor (VMISTT) which operates using gate modulation of the Fowler-Nordheim tunneling current through a metal insulator semiconductor (M-I-S) diode. The VMISTT has significant advantages over the metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor in device scaling. In order to allow room-temperature operation of the VMISTT, the tunnel oxide has to be optimized for the metal-to-insulator barrier height and the current-voltage characteristics. We have grown TiO2 layers as the tunnel insulator by oxidizing 7 and 10 nm thick Ti metal films vacuum-evaporated on silicon substrates, and characterized the films by current-voltage and capacitance-voltage techniques. The quality of the oxide films showed variations, depending on the oxidation temperatures in the range of 450-550 degrees C. Fowler-Nordheim tunneling was observed at low temperatures at bias voltage of 2 V and above and a barrier height of approximately 0.4 eV was calculated. Leakage currents present were due Schottky-barrier emission at room-temperature, and hopping at liquid nitrogen temperature
Phononic Rogue Waves
We present a theoretical study of extreme events occurring in phononic
lattices. In particular, we focus on the formation of rogue or freak waves,
which are characterized by their localization in both spatial and temporal
domains. We consider two examples. The first one is the prototypical nonlinear
mass-spring system in the form of a homogeneous Fermi-Pasta-Ulam-Tsingou (FPUT)
lattice with a polynomial potential. By deriving an approximation based on the
nonlinear Schroedinger (NLS) equation, we are able to initialize the FPUT model
using a suitably transformed Peregrine soliton solution of the NLS, obtaining
dynamics that resembles a rogue wave on the FPUT lattice. We also show that
Gaussian initial data can lead to dynamics featuring rogue wave for
sufficiently wide Gaussians. The second example is a diatomic granular crystal
exhibiting rogue wave like dynamics, which we also obtain through an NLS
reduction and numerical simulations. The granular crystal (a chain of particles
that interact elastically) is a widely studied system that lends itself to
experimental studies. This study serves to illustrate the potential of such
dynamical lattices towards the experimental observation of acoustic rogue
waves.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Flipflop interrogator and bi-polar current driver Patent
Interrogator and current driver circuit for combination with transistor flip-flop circui
UV-enhanced sacrificial layer stabilised graphene oxide hollow fibre membranes for nanofiltration
Graphene oxide (GO) membranes have demonstrated great potential in gas separation and liquid filtration. For upscale applications, GO membranes in a hollow fibre geometry are of particular interest due to the high-efficiency and easy-assembly features at module level. However, GO membranes were found unstable in dry state on ceramic hollow fibre substrates, mainly due to the drying-related shrinkage, which has limited the applications and post-treatments of GO membranes. We demonstrate here that GO hollow fibre membranes can be stabilised by using a porous poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) sacrificial layer, which creates a space between the hollow fibre substrate and the GO membrane thus allowing stress-free shrinkage. Defect-free GO hollow fibre membrane was successfully determined and the membrane was stable in a long term (1200 hours) gas-tight stability test. Post-treatment of the GO membranes with UV light was also successfully accomplished in air, which induced the creation of controlled microstructural defects in the membrane and increased the roughness factor of the membrane surface. The permeability of the UV-treated GO membranes was greatly enhanced from 0.07 to 2.8 L m(−2) h(−1) bar(−1) for water, and 0.14 to 7.5 L m(−2) h(−1) bar(−1) for acetone, with an unchanged low molecular weight cut off (~250 Da)
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