10,194 research outputs found
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
Demonstration of dispersive rarefaction shocks in hollow elliptical cylinder chains
We report an experimental and numerical demonstration of dispersive
rarefaction shocks (DRS) in a 3D-printed soft chain of hollow elliptical
cylinders. We find that, in contrast to conventional nonlinear waves, these DRS
have their lower amplitude components travel faster, while the higher amplitude
ones propagate slower. This results in the backward-tilted shape of the front
of the wave (the rarefaction segment) and the breakage of wave tails into a
modulated waveform (the dispersive shock segment). Examining the DRS under
various impact conditions, we find the counter-intuitive feature that the
higher striker velocity causes the slower propagation of the DRS. These unique
features can be useful for mitigating impact controllably and efficiently
without relying on material damping or plasticity effects
Matrix models on the fuzzy sphere
Field theory on a fuzzy noncommutative sphere can be considered as a
particular matrix approximation of field theory on the standard commutative
sphere. We investigate from this point of view the scalar theory. We
demonstrate that the UV/IR mixing problems of this theory are localized to the
tadpole diagrams and can be removed by an appropiate (fuzzy) normal ordering of
the vertex. The perturbative expansion of this theory reduces in the
commutative limit to that on the commutative sphere.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX2e, Talk given at the NATO Advanced Research Workshop
on Confiment, Topology, and other Non-Perturbative Aspects of QCD, Stara
Lesna, Slovakia, Jan. 21-27, 200
Effects of dietary inclusion of palm kernel cake and palm oil, and enzyme supplementation on performance of laying hens.
A total of 392 twenty eight week-old laying hens was used to study the effects of dietary inclusion of solvent extracted palm kernel cake (PKC) (0%, 12.5% and 25%) and enzyme (mixture of mannanase, α-galactosidase and protease) supplementation (0 kg/t, 1 kg/t and 2 kg/t) on the performance of laying hens. The levels of PKC did not significantly influence nitrogen corrected true metabolizable energy (TMEn) of the diets. Enzyme supplemented PKC had significantly higher AME and TMEn values than PKC diets with no enzyme supplementation. Dietary inclusion of 12.5% and 25% PKC in the diets of laying hens did not adversely affect mean egg production or daily egg mass. However, layers consumed significantly more PKC-based diets and had significantly poorer feed conversion ratios (FCR) than controls. However, the feed intake and FCR of hens provided the 12.5% PKC-based diets with enzyme supplementation at 1 kg/t did not differ from the controls. Dietary inclusion of PKC or enzyme did not affect eggshell quality, but egg yolk colour was significantly paler when layers were fed the 25% PKC diet
Security Attributes Based Digital Rights Management
Most real-life systems delegate responsibilities to different authorities. We apply this model to a digital rights management system, to achieve flexible security. In our model a hierarchy of authorities issues certificates that are linked by cryptographic means. This linkage establishes a chain of control, identity-attribute-rights, and allows flexible rights control over content. Typical security objectives, such as identification, authentication, authorization and access control can be realised. Content keys are personalised to detect illegal super distribution. We describe a working prototype, which we develop using standard techniques, such as standard certificates, XML and Java. We present experimental results to evaluate the scalability of the system. A formal analysis demonstrates that our design is able to detect a form of illegal super distribution
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