4,702 research outputs found
Development of the dry tape battery concept Quarterly report no. 4, 9 Mar. - 9 Jun. 1966
Aqueous and nonqueous electrolytic actions, and energy density measurements for dry tape batter
Development of the dry tape battery concept Quarterly report no. 3, 9 Dec. 1965 - 8 Mar. 1966
Material electrical and chemical properties tested for use in dry tape batterie
Measurement of the Tip-Induced Potential in Scanning Gate Experiments
We present a detailed experimental study on the electrostatic interaction
between a quantum dot and the metallic tip of a scanning force microscope. Our
method allowed us to quantitatively map the tip-induced potential and to
determine the spatial dependence of the tip's lever arm with high resolution.
We find that two parts of the tip-induced potential can be distinguished, one
that depends on the voltage applied to the tip and one that is independent of
this voltage. The first part is due to the metallic tip while we interpret the
second part as the effect of a charged dielectric particle on the tip. In the
measurements of the lever arm we find fine structure that depends on which
quantum state we study. The results are discussed in view of scanning gate
experiments where the tip is used as a movable gate to study nanostructures.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, minor changes to fit published versio
Thin-Film Trilayer Manganate Junctions
Spin-dependent conductance across a manganate-barrier-manganate junction has
recently been demonstrated. The junction is a LaSrMnO%
-SrTiO-La SrMnO trilayer device supporting
current-perpendicular transport. Large magnetoresistance of up to a factor of
five change was observed in these junctions at 4.2K in a relatively low field
of the order of 100 Oe. Temperature and bias dependent studies revealed a
complex junction interface structure whose materials physics has yet to be
understood.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures. To appear in Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. A
vol.356 (1998
An evaluation of tight-pitch PWR cores
Originally presented as the author's thesis, Ph.D. in the M.I.T. Dept. of Nuclear Engineering, 1979.The impact of tight pitch cores on the consumption of natural uranium
ore has been evaluated for two systems of coupled PWR's namely one particular
type of thorium system-U-235/U02: Pu/Th02: U-233/ThO2--and the conventional
recycle-mode uranium system- U-235/U02: Pu/UO . The basic parameter varied
was the fuel-to-moderator volume ratio (F/M) o the (uniform) lattice for the
last core in each sequence.
Although methods and data verification in the range of present interest,
0.5 (current lattices)< F/M < 4.0 are limited by the scarcity of experiments
with F/M > l.0,the EPRI-LEOPARD and LASER programs used for the thorium and
uranium calculations, respectively, were successfully benchmarked against
several of the more pertinent experiments.
It was found that by increasing F/M to "3 the uranium ore usage for the
uranium system can be decreased by as much as 60% compared to the same
system with conventional recycle (at F/M 0.5). Equivalent savings for
the thorium system of the type examined here are much smaller (10%) because
of the poor performance of the intermediate Pu/ThO2 core--which is not
substantially improved by increasing F/M. Although fuel cycle costs
(calculated at the indifference value of bred fissile species) are rather
insensitive to the characteristics of the tight pitch cores, system energy
production costs do not favor the low discharge burnups which might other-
wise allow even greater ore savings (80%).
Temperature and void coefficients of reactivity for the tight pitch
cores were calculated to be negative. Means for implementing tight lattice
use were investigated, such as the use of stainless steel clad in place
of zircaloy; and alternatives achieving the same objective were briefly
examined, such as the use of D20/H20 mixtures as coolant. Major items
identified requiring further work are system redesign to accommodate higher
core pressure drop, and transient and accident thermal-hydraulics.DOE Contract no. EN-77-S O2-4570
Pilot Study investigating the Impact of Serial ingestion or Co-ingestion of Creatine and Sodium bicarbonate on Performance Following Completion of a Hypertrophy Type Resistance Exercise Workout.
Purpose: To examine the ergogenic potential of creatine (Cr), sodium bicarbonate (SB),and Cr+SBafter completion of a resistance exercise bout (REB).Methods: Following recruitment,27trained males (26.8±5.7 years old) completed a one repetition maximum strength (1RM) test in the parallel squat (120.9±28.2kg). Participants then followed a standardised meal plan for 4 days whilst ingesting one of 4 supplements, and on day 5 they undertook the REB. This was a double blind randomised placebo-controlled study where participants ingested one of the following: Placebo (PLA, n=7), Cr (20g/d-1& PLA, n=8), SB (0.5 g/kg-1/d-1&PLA, n=6), andCr+SB (5 g/d-1 of Cr & 0.5 g/kg-1/d-1 SB, n=6) divided in 4 doses. The REB consisted of 4x10 repetitions (70% of 1RM, 1½ min recovery). The primary performance outcome was a 5th set (70% of 1RM) performed to volitional exhaustion.Blood glucose and lactate, heart rate, ratings of perceived exertion, sickness and stomachache scales, and time to complete each set were also recorded.Results:Participants in Cr, SB, and Cr+SB completed the required number of repetitions at 70% of 1RM however in PLA they completed the same repetitions at lower intensity (68+3.4%). Participants in PLA, Cr, SB, and Cr+SB completed 8(±1.6), 11(±5.5), 9(±3.7), and 11(±3.3) repetitions respectively during the 5th set. Despite the fact that no significant differences were observed in performance, small (SB: 0.4) and moderate effect (Cr: 0.7; Cr+SB: 1.0) sizes were observed in relation to PLA. Body mass increasedsignificantly after Cr (78.1±8.9 kg pre vs 79.1±8.9 kg post, p<0.05). No other significant differences existed in recorded variables.Conclusions: Performance gains were of higher magnitude in the Cr+SB and Cr groups. Co-ingestion of a small amount of Cr (5 g/d-1) with a standard dose ofSB (0.5 g/kg-1/d-1)appears to be equally beneficial asingestion of a standard dose of Cr (20 g/d-1). The Cr+SB was not associated with significant gains in body mass which may be beneficial in sports where size gains may negate performance. Further research is required, with larger sample size, and specific athletic populations in order to confirm the findings of the current study
Quantum Hall conductance of two-terminal graphene devices
Measurement and theory of the two-terminal conductance of monolayer and
bilayer graphene in the quantum Hall regime are compared. We examine features
of conductance as a function of gate voltage that allow monolayer, bilayer, and
gapped samples to be distinguished, including N-shaped distortions of quantum
Hall plateaus and conductance peaks and dips at the charge neutrality point.
Generally good agreement is found between measurement and theory. Possible
origins of discrepancies are discussed
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