5,550 research outputs found
Improvement of dielectric loss of doped Ba0.5Sr0.5TiO3 thin films for tunable microwave devices
Al2O3-Ba0.5Sr0.5TiO3 (Al2O3-BST) thin films, with different Al2O3 contents,
were deposited on (100) LaAlO3 substrate by pulsed laser deposition (PLD)
technique. The Al2O3-BST films was demosnstrated to be a suitable systems to
fabricate ferroelectric thin films with low dielectric loss and higher figure
of merit for tunable microwave devices. Pure BST thin films were also
fabricated for comparison purpose. The films' structure and morphology were
analyzed by X-ray diffractiopn and scanning electron microscopy, respectively;
nad showed that the surface roughness for the Al2O3-BST films increased with
the Al2O3 content. Apart from that, the broadening in the intensity peak in XRD
result indicating the grain size of the Al2O3-BST films reduced with the
increasing of Al2O3 dopant. We measured the dielctric properties of Al2O3-BST
films with a home-made non-destructive dual resonator method at frequency ~ 7.7
GHZ. The effect of doped Al2O3 into BST thin films significantly reduced the
dielectric constant, dielectric loss and tunability compare to pure BST thin
film. Our result shows the figure of merit (K), used to compare the films with
varied dielectric properties, increased with the Al2O3 content. Therefore
Al2O3-BST films show the potential to be exploited in tunable microwave
devices.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted & tentatively for Feb 15 2004
issue, Journal of Applied Physic
Investigation of passive flow control techniques to enhance the stall characteristics of a microlight aircraft
This report investigates the enhancement of aerodynamic stall characteristics of a Skyranger microlight aircraft by the use of passive flow control techniques, namely vortex generators and turbulators. Each flow control device is designed and scaled to application conditions. Force balance measurements and surface oil flow visualisation are carried out on a half-model of the microlight to further investigate the nature of the flow on the aircraft with and without the flow control devices. The results indicate a clear advantage to the use of turbulators compared with vortex generators. Turbulators increased the maximum lift coefficient by 2.8%, delayed the onset of stall by increasing the critical angle by 17.6% and reduced the drag penalty at both lower (pre-stall) and higher angles of attack by 8% compared to vortex generators. With vortex generators applied, the results indicated a delayed stall with an increase in the critical angle by 2% and a reduced drag penalty at higher angles of attack
Recommended from our members
Carotenoids but not flavonoids are associated with improvements in spatial working memory in younger adults in a flavonoid-rich v. -poor fruit and vegetable intervention study
Findings from animal studies suggest that components of fruit and vegetables (F&V) may protect against, and even reverse, age-related decline(1,2) in aspects of cognitive functioning such as spatial working memory (SWM). Human subjects in vivo and in vitro studies indicate that anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant and cell-signalling properties of flavonoids and carotenoids, non-nutrient components of F&V, may underpin this protective effect(3–5). The Flavonoid University of Reading Study (FLAVURS), designed to explore the dose-response relationship between dietary F&V flavonoids and CVD, enabled the investigation of such an association with SWM. FLAVURS is an 18-week parallel three-arm randomised controlled dietary intervention trial with four time points, measured at 6-weekly intervals from baseline. Low F&V consumers at risk of CVD aged 26–70 years were randomly assigned to high flavonoid (HF), low flavonoid (LF) or control group. F&V intake increased by two daily 80 g portions every 6 weeks, with either HF or LF F&V, in addition to each participant's habitual diet, while controls maintained their habitual diet. At each visit, participants completed a cognitive test battery with SWM as the primary outcome. The HF group showed significantly higher levels of urinary flavonoids than LF or controls at 12 weeks (P<0.001) as expected, but surprisingly only higher levels than LF at 18 weeks (P<0.01). The LF group showed higher levels of plasma carotenoids than the other groups at 18 weeks (P<0.001). No group differences were found for SWM overall, however, age-group sub-analyses (26–50 and 51–70 years of age) showed differences from 0 to 18 weeks for younger adults, with LF improving significantly more than the other two groups on SWM (P<0.05). As nutritional absorption is known to decrease with age, separate stepwise regressions were performed on the two age groups irrespective of dietary group, with urinary flavonoids and plasma carotenoids as predictors. For younger adults, improved SWM performance from 0 to 18 weeks was associated with higher carotenoid levels, β=0.28, t(55)=2.10, P<0.05, accounting for 7.5% of the variance, R2=0.075, F(1,54)=4.41, P=0.040. For older adults, no between-group SWM differences were found. Findings suggest that F&V-based flavonoids and carotenoids may provide benefits for cognitive function, and that carotenoids in particular may improve cognitive performance in SWM. Given that these benefits were restricted to younger adults, future work is needed to test the reliability of this finding, as well as determine the mechanisms by which age-dependent differences in F&V responsiveness occur
Dynamics in a supercooled molecular liquid: Theory and Simulations
We report extensive simulations of liquid supercooled states for a simple
three-sites molecular model, introduced by Lewis and Wahnstr"om [L. J. Lewis
and G. Wahnstr"om, Phys. Rev. E 50, 3865 (1994)] to mimic the behavior of
ortho-terphenyl. The large system size and the long simulation length allow to
calculate very precisely --- in a large q-vector range --- self and collective
correlation functions, providing a clean and simple reference model for
theoretical descriptions of molecular liquids in supercooled states. The time
and wavevector dependence of the site-site correlation functions are compared
with detailed predictions based on ideal mode-coupling theory, neglecting the
molecular constraints. Except for the wavevector region where the dynamics is
controlled by the center of mass (around 9 nm-1), the theoretical predictions
compare very well with the simulation data.
Molecular mode-coupling theory for supercooled liquids: Application to water
We present mode-coupling equations for the description of the slow dynamics
observed in supercooled molecular liquids close to the glass transition. The
mode-coupling theory (MCT) originally formulated to study the slow relaxation
in simple atomic liquids, and then extended to the analysis of liquids composed
by linear molecules, is here generalized to systems of arbitrarily shaped,
rigid molecules. We compare the predictions of the theory for the -vector
dependence of the molecular nonergodicity parameters, calculated by solving
numerically the molecular MCT equations in two different approximation schemes,
with ``exact'' results calculated from a molecular dynamics simulation of
supercooled water. The agreement between theory and simulation data supports
the view that MCT succeeds in describing the dynamics of supercooled molecular
liquids, even for network forming ones.Comment: 22 pages 4 figures Late
Design and Aerodynamic Investigation of Dynamic Architecture
The effect of the spacing between adjacent building floors on the wind distribution and turbulence intensity was analysed using computational fluid dynamics in this study. Five computational models were created with floor spacing ranging from 0.8 m (benchmark) to 1.6 m. The three-dimensional Reynolds-Averaged Navier–Stokes equations along with the momentum and continuity equations were solved using the FLUENT code for obtaining the velocity and pressure field. Simulating a reference wind speed of 5.5 m/s, the findings from the study quantified that at a floor spacing of 1.6 m, the overall wind speed augmentation was 39 % which was much higher than the benchmark model (floor spacing = 0.8 m) indicating an amplification in wind speed of approximately 27 %. In addition, the results indicated a gradual reduction in turbulence kinetic energy by up to 53 % when the floor spacing was increased from 0.8 to 1.6 m. Although the concept was to integrate wind turbines into the building fabric, this study is limited to the assessment of the airflow inside the spaces of building floors which can be potentially harnessed by a vertical axis wind turbine. The findings of this work have indicated that there is a potential for integration which will lead on to future research in this area
PT-Symmetric Electronics
We show both theoretically and experimentally that a pair of inductively
coupled active LRC circuits (dimer), one with amplification and another with an
equivalent amount of attenuation, display all the features which characterize a
wide class of non-Hermitian systems which commute with the joint parity-time PT
operator: typical normal modes, temporal evolution, and scattering processes.
Utilizing a Liouvilian formulation, we can define an underlying PT-symmetric
Hamiltonian, which provides important insight for understanding the behavior of
the system. When the PT-dimer is coupled to transmission lines, the resulting
scattering signal reveals novel features which reflect the PT-symmetry of the
scattering target. Specifically we show that the device can show two different
behaviors simultaneously, an amplifier or an absorber, depending on the
direction and phase relation of the interrogating waves. Having an exact
theory, and due to its relative experimental simplicity, PT-symmetric
electronics offers new insights into the properties of PT-symmetric systems
which are at the forefront of the research in mathematical physics and related
fields.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
Effects of the littlest Higgs model with T-parity on Higgs boson production at high energy colliders
The Higgs boson production processes , , and
are very important for studying Higgs boson
properties and further testing new physics beyond the standard model() in
the high energy linear
collider(). We estimate the contributions of the littlest
Higgs model with T-parity( model) to these processes and find that the
model can generate significantly corrections to the production cross
sections of these processes.
We expect the possible signals of the model can be detected via these
processes in the future experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, references adde
ISRM-Suggested Method for Determining the Mode I Static Fracture Toughness Using Semi-Circular Bend Specimen
The International Society for Rock Mechanics has so far developed two standard methods for the determination of static fracture toughness of rock. They used three different core based specimens and tests were to be performed on a typical laboratory compression or tension load frame. Another method to determine the mode I fracture toughness of rock using semicircular bend specimen is herein presented. The specimen is semicircular in shape and made from typical cores taken from the rock with any relative material directions noted. The specimens are tested in three-point bending using a laboratory compression test instrument. The failure load along with its dimensions is used to determine the fracture toughness. Most sedimentary rocks which are layered in structure may exhibit fracture properties that depend on the orientation and therefore measurements in more than one material direction may be necessary. The fracture toughness measurements are expected to yield a size-independent material property if certain minimum specimen size requirements are satisfied
- …