390 research outputs found
The pyrolytic mechanism of the main components in woody biomass and their interactions
The global demand of the volume of woody biomass (such as wood, logging residue, sawdust and so on) is huge and increased annually, due to its new application for theenergy/fuel production during recent years. Pyrolysis is termed as a promising thermo-chemical technology to convert woody biomass to liquid, gas and solid fuels/chemicals. The better understanding of the pyrolysis mechanism of woody biomass is demanding considering the thermal performance of individual components (hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin) and their interactions. In order to develop the current understanding of the pyrolysis of the individual components (hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin) in woody biomass and fill the knowledge gap on their interactions under pyrolytic conditions, the on-line pyrolysis and off-line pyrolysis study of the model compounds of the components and their “synthesized biomass” samples has been extensively investigated employing TGA-FTIR and fast pyrolysis unit, in terms of the mass loss variation against temperature together with the on-line identification of the evolved volatiles by FTIR, yield of pyrolyzed products (gas, bio-oil and char) from the fast pyrolysis unit, variation of the compositions in bio-oil and gas products against the fluidized-bed-reactor temperature, the chemical pathways for the chemical structure change of the macromolecules and the cracking of the primary fragments, and the interactions among the chemical components. The proposed chemical pathways, indicating the possible competitive and/or consecutive relationship among the prominent compounds in bio-oil and gaseous product, give hints to improve the current kinetic scheme of the individual components. Notably, the vapor-phase interaction among the components in the fluidized-bed reactor is investigated in terms of the product yield and variation of the prominent compounds in bio-oil and gaseous product, but their interactions in solid/liquid phase are not involved
Rigorous results on superconducting ground states for attractive extended Hubbard models
We show that the exact ground state for a class of extended Hubbard models
including bond-charge, exchange, and pair-hopping terms, is the Yang
"eta-paired" state for any non-vanishing value of the pair-hopping amplitude,
at least when the on-site Coulomb interaction is attractive enough and the
remaining physical parameters satisfy a single constraint. The ground state is
thus rigorously superconducting. Our result holds on a bipartite lattice in any
dimension, at any band filling, and for arbitrary electron hopping.Comment: 12 page
Ferromagnetic GaMnAs/GaAs superlattices - MBE growth and magnetic properties
We have studied the magnetic properties of (GaMnAs)m/(GaAs)n superlattices
with magnetic GaMnAs layers of thickness between 8 and 16 molecular layers (ML)
(23-45 \AA), and with nonmagnetic GaAs spacers from 4 ML to 10 ML (11-28 \AA).
While previous reports state that GaMnAs layers thinner than 50 \AA are
paramagnetic in the whole Mn composition range achievable using MBE growth (up
to 8% Mn), we have found that short period superlattices exhibit a
paramagnetic-to-ferromagnetic phase transition with a transition temperature
which depends on both the thickness of the magnetic GaMnAs layer and the
nonmagnetic GaAs spacer. The neutron scattering experiments have shown that the
magnetic layers in superlattices are ferromagnetically coupled for both thin
(below 50 \AA) and thick (above 50 \AA) GaMnAs layers.Comment: Proceedings of 4th International Workshop on Molecular Beam Epitaxy
and Vapour Phase Epitaxy Growth Physics and Technology, September 23 - 28
(2001), Warszawa, Poland, to appear in Thin Solid Films. 24 pages, 8 figure
Strong Gravitational Lensing in a Charged Squashed Kaluza- Klein Black hole
In this paper we investigate the strong gravitational lensing in a charged
squashed Kaluza-Klein black hole. We suppose that the supermassive black hole
in the galaxy center can be considered by a charged squashed Kaluza-Klein black
hole and then we study the strong gravitational lensing theory and estimate the
numerical values for parameters and observables of it. We explore the effects
of the scale of extra dimension and the charge of black hole
on these parameters and observables.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure
Low temperature electronic properties of Sr_2RuO_4 I: Microscopic model and normal state properties
Starting from the quasi one-dimensional kinetic energy of the d_{yz} and
d_{zx} bands we derive a bosonized description of the correlated electron
system in Sr_2RuO_4. At intermediate coupling the magnetic correlations have a
quasi one-dimensional component along the diagonals of the basal plane of the
tetragonal unit cell that accounts for the observed neutron scattering results.
Together with two-dimensional correlations the model consistently accounts for
the normal phase specific heat, cyclotron mass enhancement, static
susceptibility, and Wilson ratio and implies an anomalous high temperature
resistivity.Comment: 12 pages REVTEX, 6 figure
Pinned Balseiro-Falicov Model of Tunneling and Photoemission in the Cuprates
The smooth evolution of the tunneling gap of Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_8 with doping
from a pseudogap state in the underdoped cuprates to a superconducting state at
optimal and overdoping, has been interpreted as evidence that the pseudogap
must be due to precursor pairing. We suggest an alternative explanation, that
the smoothness reflects a hidden SO(N) symmetry near the (pi,0) points of the
Brillouin zone (with N = 3, 4, 5, or 6). Because of this symmetry, the
pseudogap could actually be due to any of a number of nesting instabilities,
including charge or spin density waves or more exotic phases. We present a
detailed analysis of this competition for one particular model: the pinned
Balseiro-Falicov model of competing charge density wave and (s-wave)
superconductivity. We show that most of the anomalous features of both
tunneling and photoemission follow naturally from the model, including the
smooth crossover, the general shape of the pseudogap phase diagram, the
shrinking Fermi surface of the pseudogap phase, and the asymmetry of the
tunneling gap away from optimal doping. Below T_c, the sharp peak at Delta_1
and the dip seen in the tunneling and photoemission near 2Delta_1 cannot be
described in detail by this model, but we suggest a simple generalization to
account for inhomogeneity, which does provide an adequate description. We show
that it should be possible, with a combination of photoemission and tunneling,
to demonstrate the extent of pinning of the Fermi level to the Van Hove
singularity. A preliminary analysis of the data suggests pinning in the
underdoped, but not in the overdoped regime.Comment: 18 pages LaTeX, 26 ps. figure
Magnetic relaxation and dipole-coupling-induced magnetization in nanostructured thin films during growth: A cluster Monte Carlo study
For growing inhomogeneous thin films with an island nanostructure similar as
observed in experiment, we determine the nonequilibrium and equilibrium
remanent magnetization. The single-island magnetic anisotropy, the dipole
coupling, and the exchange interaction between magnetic islands are taken into
account within a micromagnetic model. A cluster Monte Carlo method is developed
which includes coherent magnetization changes of connected islands. This causes
a fast relaxation towards equilibrium for irregularly connected systems. We
analyse the transition from dipole coupled islands at low coverages to a
strongly connected ferromagnetic film at high coverages during film growth. For
coverages below the percolation threshold, the dipole interaction induces a
collective magnetic order with ordering temperatures of 1 - 10 K for the
assumed model parameters. Anisotropy causes blocking temperatures of 10 - 100 K
and thus pronounced nonequilibrium effects. The dipole coupling leads to a
somewhat slower magnetic relaxation.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, revised manuscrip
The energy dependence of angular correlations inferred from mean- fluctuation scale dependence in heavy ion collisions at the SPS and RHIC
We present the first study of the energy dependence of angular
correlations inferred from event-wise mean transverse momentum
fluctuations in heavy ion collisions. We compare our large-acceptance
measurements at CM energies $\sqrt{s_{NN}} =$ 19.6, 62.4, 130 and 200 GeV to
SPS measurements at 12.3 and 17.3 GeV. $p_t$ angular correlation structure
suggests that the principal source of $p_t$ correlations and fluctuations is
minijets (minimum-bias parton fragments). We observe a dramatic increase in
correlations and fluctuations from SPS to RHIC energies, increasing linearly
with $\ln \sqrt{s_{NN}}$ from the onset of observable jet-related
fluctuations near 10 GeV.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Pion, kaon, proton and anti-proton transverse momentum distributions from p+p and d+Au collisions at GeV
Identified mid-rapidity particle spectra of , , and
from 200 GeV p+p and d+Au collisions are reported. A
time-of-flight detector based on multi-gap resistive plate chamber technology
is used for particle identification. The particle-species dependence of the
Cronin effect is observed to be significantly smaller than that at lower
energies. The ratio of the nuclear modification factor () between
protons and charged hadrons () in the transverse momentum
range GeV/c is measured to be
(stat)(syst) in minimum-bias collisions and shows little
centrality dependence. The yield ratio of in minimum-bias d+Au
collisions is found to be a factor of 2 lower than that in Au+Au collisions,
indicating that the Cronin effect alone is not enough to account for the
relative baryon enhancement observed in heavy ion collisions at RHIC.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. We extended the pion spectra from
transverse momentum 1.8 GeV/c to 3. GeV/
Experimental and Theoretical Challenges in the Search for the Quark Gluon Plasma: The STAR Collaboration's Critical Assessment of the Evidence from RHIC Collisions
We review the most important experimental results from the first three years
of nucleus-nucleus collision studies at RHIC, with emphasis on results from the
STAR experiment, and we assess their interpretation and comparison to theory.
The theory-experiment comparison suggests that central Au+Au collisions at RHIC
produce dense, rapidly thermalizing matter characterized by: (1) initial energy
densities above the critical values predicted by lattice QCD for establishment
of a Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP); (2) nearly ideal fluid flow, marked by
constituent interactions of very short mean free path, established most
probably at a stage preceding hadron formation; and (3) opacity to jets. Many
of the observations are consistent with models incorporating QGP formation in
the early collision stages, and have not found ready explanation in a hadronic
framework. However, the measurements themselves do not yet establish
unequivocal evidence for a transition to this new form of matter. The
theoretical treatment of the collision evolution, despite impressive successes,
invokes a suite of distinct models, degrees of freedom and assumptions of as
yet unknown quantitative consequence. We pose a set of important open
questions, and suggest additional measurements, at least some of which should
be addressed in order to establish a compelling basis to conclude definitively
that thermalized, deconfined quark-gluon matter has been produced at RHIC.Comment: 101 pages, 37 figures; revised version to Nucl. Phys.
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