41,769 research outputs found
Fabrication process development of SiC/superalloy composite sheet for exhaust system components
A chemical compatibility study was conducted between SiC filament and the following P/M matrix alloys: Waspaloy, Hastelloy-X, NiCrAlY, Ha-188, S-57, FeCrAlY, and Incoloy 800. None of the couples demonstrated sufficient chemical compatibility to withstand the minimum HIP consolidation temperatures (996 C) or intended application temperature of the composite (982 C). However, Waspaloy, Haynes 188, and Hastelloy-X were the least reactive with SiC of the candidate alloys. Chemical vapor deposited tungsten was shown to be an effective diffusion barrier between the superalloy matrix and SiC filament providing a defect-free coating of sufficient thickness. However, the coating breaks down when the tungsten is converted into intermetallic compounds by interdiffusion with matrix constituents. Waspaloy was demonstrated to be the most effective matrix alloy candidate in contact with the CVD tungsten barrier because of its relatively low growth rate constant of the intermediate compound and the lack of formation of Kirkendall voids at the matrix-barrier interface. Fabrication methods were developed for producing panels of uniaxial and angle ply composites utilizing CVD tungsten coated filament
Spin-orbit coupled j=1/2 iridium moments on the geometrically frustrated fcc lattice
Motivated by experiments on the double perovskites La2ZnIrO6 and La2MgIrO6,
we study the magnetism of spin-orbit coupled j=1/2 iridium moments on the
three-dimensional, geometrically frustrated, face-centered cubic lattice. The
symmetry-allowed nearest-neighbor interaction includes Heisenberg, Kitaev, and
symmetric off-diagonal exchange. A Luttinger-Tisza analysis shows a rich
variety of orders, including collinear A-type antiferromagnetism, stripe order
with moments along the [111]-direction, and incommensurate non-coplanar
spirals, and we use Monte Carlo simulations to determine their magnetic
ordering temperatures. We argue that existing thermodynamic data on these
iridates underscores the presence of a dominant Kitaev exchange, and also
suggest a resolution to the puzzle of why La2ZnIrO6 exhibits `weak'
ferromagnetism, but La2MgIrO6 does not.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figs, significantly revised to address referee comments,
to appear in PRB Rapid Com
Numerical investigation of gapped edge states in fractional quantum Hall-superconductor heterostructures
Fractional quantum Hall-superconductor heterostructures may provide a
platform towards non-abelian topological modes beyond Majoranas. However their
quantitative theoretical study remains extremely challenging. We propose and
implement a numerical setup for studying edge states of fractional quantum Hall
droplets with a superconducting instability. The fully gapped edges carry a
topological degree of freedom that can encode quantum information protected
against local perturbations. We simulate such a system numerically using exact
diagonalization by restricting the calculation to the quasihole-subspace of a
(time-reversal symmetric) bilayer fractional quantum Hall system of Laughlin
states. We show that the edge ground states are permuted by
spin-dependent flux insertion and demonstrate their fractional Josephson
effect, evidencing their topological nature and the Cooper pairing of
fractionalized quasiparticles.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Low Frequency Gravitational Waves from Black Hole MACHO Binaries
Nakamura, Sasaki, Tanaka, and Thorne have recently estimated the initial
distribution of binary MACHOs in the galactic halo assuming that the MACHOs are
primordial half solar mass black holes, and considered their coalescence as a
possible source for ground-based interferometer gravitational wave detectors
such as LIGO. Evolving their binary distribution forward in time to the
present, the low-frequency (10^{-5} < f < 10^{-1} Hz) spectrum of gravitational
waves associated with such a population of compact binaries is calculated. The
resulting gravitational waves would form a strong stochastic background in
proposed space interferometers such as LISA and OMEGA. Low frequency
gravitational waves are likely to become a key tool for determining the
properties of binaries within the dark MACHO population.Comment: 8 pages + 2 ps figures; AASTe
Ceramic regenerator systems development program
Ceramic regenerator cores are considered that can be used in passenger car gas turbine engines, Stirling engines, and industrial/truck gas turbine engines. Improved materials and design concepts aimed at reducing or eliminating chemical attack were placed on durability test in Ford 707 industrial gas turbine engines. The results of 19,600 hours of turbine engine durability testing are described. Two materials, aluminum silicate and magnesium aluminum silicate, continue to show promise toward achieving the durability objectives of this program. A regenerator core made from aluminum silicate showed minimal evidence of chemical attack damage after 6935 hours of engine test at 800 C and another showed little distress after 3510 hours at 982 C. Results obtained in ceramic material screening tests, aerothermodynamic performance tests, stress analysis, cost studies, and material specifications are also included
Biased random satisfiability problems: From easy to hard instances
In this paper we study biased random K-SAT problems in which each logical
variable is negated with probability . This generalization provides us a
crossover from easy to hard problems and would help us in a better
understanding of the typical complexity of random K-SAT problems. The exact
solution of 1-SAT case is given. The critical point of K-SAT problems and
results of replica method are derived in the replica symmetry framework. It is
found that in this approximation for .
Solving numerically the survey propagation equations for K=3 we find that for
there is no replica symmetry breaking and still the SAT-UNSAT
transition is discontinuous.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figure
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