31,852 research outputs found
Inverted critical adsorption of polyelectrolytes in confinement
What are the fundamental laws for the adsorption of charged polymers onto
oppositely charged surfaces, for convex, planar, and concave geometries? This
question is at the heart of surface coating applications, various complex
formation phenomena, as well as in the context of cellular and viral
biophysics. It has been a long-standing challenge in theoretical polymer
physics; for realistic systems the quantitative understanding is however often
achievable only by computer simulations. In this study, we present the findings
of such extensive Monte-Carlo in silico experiments for polymer-surface
adsorption in confined domains. We study the inverted critical adsorption of
finite-length polyelectrolytes in three fundamental geometries: planar slit,
cylindrical pore, and spherical cavity. The scaling relations extracted from
simulations for the critical surface charge density -defining the
adsorption-desorption transition-are in excellent agreement with our analytical
calculations based on the ground-state analysis of the Edwards equation. In
particular, we confirm the magnitude and scaling of for the concave
interfaces versus the Debye screening length and the extent of
confinement for these three interfaces for small values. For
large the critical adsorption condition approaches the planar limit.
The transition between the two regimes takes place when the radius of surface
curvature or half of the slit thickness is of the order of . We
also rationalize how gets modified for semi-flexible versus
flexible chains under external confinement. We examine the implications of the
chain length onto critical adsorption-the effect often hard to tackle
theoretically-putting an emphasis on polymers inside attractive spherical
cavities.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, RevTe
Endurant Types in Ontology-Driven Conceptual Modeling: Towards OntoUML 2.0
For over a decade now, a community of researchers has contributed
to the development of the Unified Foundational Ontology (UFO)
- aimed at providing foundations for all major conceptual modeling constructs.
This ontology has led to the development of an Ontology-Driven
Conceptual Modeling language dubbed OntoUML, reflecting the ontological
micro-theories comprising UFO. Over the years, UFO and OntoUML
have been successfully employed in a number of academic, industrial and
governmental settings to create conceptual models in a variety of different
domains. These experiences have pointed out to opportunities of
improvement not only to the language itself but also to its underlying
theory. In this paper, we take the first step in that direction by revising
the theory of types in UFO in response to empirical evidence. The
new version of this theory shows that many of the meta-types present
in OntoUML (differentiating Kinds, Roles, Phases, Mixins, etc.) should
be considered not as restricted to Substantial types but instead should
be applied to model Endurant Types in general, including Relator types,
Quality types and Mode types. We also contribute a formal characterization
of this fragment of the theory, which is then used to advance a
metamodel for OntoUML 2.0. Finally, we propose a computational support
tool implementing this updated metamodel
Critical adsorption of polyelectrolytes onto charged Janus nanospheres
Based on extensive Monte Carlo simulations and analytical considerations we
study the electrostatically driven adsorption of flexible polyelectrolyte
chains onto charged Janus nanospheres. These net-neutral colloids are composed
of two equally but oppositely charged hemispheres. The critical binding
conditions for polyelectrolyte chains are analysed as function of the radius of
the Janus particle and its surface charge density, as well as the salt
concentration in the ambient solution. Specifically for the adsorption of
finite-length polyelectrolyte chains onto Janus nanoparticles, we demonstrate
that the critical adsorption conditions drastically differ when the size of the
Janus particle or the screening length of the electrolyte are varied. We
compare the scaling laws obtained for the adsorption-desorption threshold to
the known results for uniformly charged spherical particles, observing
significant disparities. We also contrast the changes to the polyelectrolyte
chain conformations and the binding energy distributions close to the
adsorption-desorption transition for Janus nanoparticles to those for simple
spherical particles. Finally, we discuss experimentally relevant
physico-chemical systems for which our simulations results may become
important. In particular, we observe similar trends with polyelectrolyte
complexation with oppositely but heterogeneously charged proteins.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, RevTeX
Random Access for Massive MIMO Systems with Intra-Cell Pilot Contamination
Massive MIMO systems, where the base stations are equipped with hundreds of
antenna elements, are an attractive way to attain unprecedented spectral
efficiency in future wireless networks. In the "classical" massive MIMO
setting, the terminals are assumed fully loaded and a main impairment to the
performance comes from the inter-cell pilot contamination, i.e., interference
from terminals in neighboring cells using the same pilots as in the home cell.
However, when the terminals are active intermittently, it is viable to avoid
inter-cell contamination by pre-allocation of pilots, while same-cell terminals
use random access to select the allocated pilot sequences. This leads to the
problem of intra-cell pilot contamination. We propose a framework for random
access in massive MIMO networks and derive new uplink sum rate expressions that
take intra-cell pilot collisions, intermittent terminal activity, and
interference into account. We use these expressions to optimize the terminal
activation probability and pilot length
Random Access Protocol for Massive MIMO: Strongest-User Collision Resolution (SUCR)
Wireless networks with many antennas at the base stations and multiplexing of
many users, known as Massive MIMO systems, are key to handle the rapid growth
of data traffic. As the number of users increases, the random access in
contemporary networks will be flooded by user collisions. In this paper, we
propose a reengineered random access protocol, coined strongest-user collision
resolution (SUCR). It exploits the channel hardening feature of Massive MIMO
channels to enable each user to detect collisions, determine how strong the
contenders' channels are, and only keep transmitting if it has the strongest
channel gain. The proposed SUCR protocol can quickly and distributively resolve
the vast majority of all pilot collisions.Comment: Published at the IEEE International Conference on Communications
(ICC), 2016, 6 pages, 6 figures. (c) 2016 IEEE. Personal use of this material
is permitte
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