1,856 research outputs found

    Niobium based intermetallics as a source of high-current/high-magnetic field superconductors

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    The article is focused on low temperature intermetallic A15 superconducting wires development for Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, NMR, and Nuclear Magnetic Imaging, MRI, magnets and also on cryogen-free magnets. There are many other applications which would benefit from new development such as future Large Hadron Collider to be built from A15 intermetallic conductors. This paper highlights the current status of development of the niobium based intermetallics with special attention to Nb 3 (Al 1-x, Ge x). Discussion is focused on the materials science aspects of conductor manufacture, such as b-phase (A15) formation, with particular emphasis on the maximisation of the superconducting parameters, such as critical current density, Jc, critical temperature, Tc, and upper critical field, Hc2 . Many successful manufacturing techniques of the potential niobium-aluminide intermetallic superconducting conductors, such as solid-state processing, liquid-solid processing, rapid heating/cooling processes, are described, compared and assessed. Special emphasis has been laid on conditions under which the Jc (B) peak effect occurs in some of the Nb3(Al,Ge) wires. A novel electrodeoxidizing method developed in Cambridge whereby the alloys and intermetallics are produced cheaply making all superconducting electromagnetic devices, using low cost LTCs, more cost effective is presented.This new technique has potential to revolutionise the existing superconducting industry enabling reduction of cost orders of magnitude.Comment: Paper presented at EUCAS'01 conference, Copenhagen, 26-30 August 200

    Subtle Sensing:Detecting Differences in the Flexibility of Virtually Simulated Molecular Objects

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    During VR demos we have performed over last few years, many participants (in the absence of any haptic feedback) have commented on their perceived ability to 'feel' differences between simulated molecular objects. The mechanisms for such 'feeling' are not entirely clear: observing from outside VR, one can see that there is nothing physical for participants to 'feel'. Here we outline exploratory user studies designed to evaluate the extent to which participants can distinguish quantitative differences in the flexibility of VR-simulated molecular objects. The results suggest that an individual's capacity to detect differences in molecular flexibility is enhanced when they can interact with and manipulate the molecules, as opposed to merely observing the same interaction. Building on these results, we intend to carry out further studies investigating humans' ability to sense quantitative properties of VR simulations without haptic technology

    Anharmonic molecular mechanics: Ab initio based Morse parameterisations for the popular MM3 force field

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    Methodologies for creating reactive potential energy surfaces from molecular mechanics force-fields are becoming increasingly popular. To date, molecular mechanics force-fields use harmonic expressions to treat bonding stretches, which is a poor approximation in reactive molecular dynamics simulations since bonds are displaced significantly from their equilibrium positions. For such applications there is need for a better treatment of anharmonicity. In this contribution Morse bonding potentials have been extensively parameterised for the atom types in the MM3 force field of Allinger and co-workers using high level CCSD(T)(F12*) energies. To our knowledge this is the first instance of a large-scale paramerization of Morse potentials in a popular force field

    Major essential oil constituents of Agastache spp.

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    The essential oils from the USDA germplasm collection of anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculwn), catnip giant hyssop (A. nepetoides) and Korean mint (A. rugosa) and putative hybrids were field-grown and harvested during full bloom. The leaves were dried and the essential oils extracted via hydrodistillation to identify the major chemical constituents. Methyl chavicol was found to be the major compound in most accessions, and accounted for \u3e92% of the total essential oil in six lines and one putative hybrid. Results indicated a wide range in the relative concentrations of other compounds ( cx-limonene, menthone, methyl eu,geno!, bornyl acetate, spathulenol, cadinol and !3-caryophyllene) and in essential oil content

    High transport currents in mechanically reinforced MgB2 wires

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    We prepared and characterized monofilamentary MgB2 wires with a mechanically reinforced composite sheath of Ta(Nb)/Cu/steel, which leads to dense filaments and correspondingly high transport currents up to Jc = 10^5 A/cm^2 at 4.2 K, self field. The reproducibility of the measured transport currents was excellent and not depending on the wire diameter. Using different precursors, commercial reacted powder or an unreacted Mg/B powder mixture, a strong influence on the pinning behaviour and the irreversibility field was observed. The critical transport current density showed a nearly linear temperature dependency for all wires being still 52 kA/cm^2 at 20 K and 23 kA/cm^2 at 30 K. Detailed data for Jc(B,T) and Tc(B) were measured.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, revised version, to be published in Supercond. Sci. Techno

    Octupole strength in the neutron-rich calcium isotopes

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    Low-lying excited states of the neutron-rich calcium isotopes 48−52^{48-52}Ca have been studied via γ\gamma-ray spectroscopy following inverse-kinematics proton scattering on a liquid hydrogen target using the GRETINA γ\gamma-ray tracking array. The energies and strengths of the octupole states in these isotopes are remarkably constant, indicating that these states are dominated by proton excitations.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure

    Fabrication and transport critical currents of multifilamentary MgB2/Fe wires and tapes

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    Multifilamentary MgB2/Fe wires and tapes with high transport critical current densities have been fabricated using a straightforward powder-in-tube (PIT) process. After annealing, we measured transport jc values up to 1.1 * 105 A/cm2 at 4.2 K and in a field of 2 T in a MgB2/Fe square wire with 7 filaments fabricated by two-axial rolling, and up to 5 * 104 A/cm2 at 4.2 K in 1 T in a MgB2/Fe tape with 7 filaments. For higher currents these multifilamentary wires and tapes quenched due to insufficient thermal stability of filaments. Both the processing routes and deformation methods were found to be important factors for fabricating multifilamentary MgB2 wires and tapes with high transport jc values.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
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