1,006 research outputs found
Unified modelling of the thermoelectric properties in SrTiO3
Thermoelectric materials are opening a promising pathway to address energy
conversion issues governed by a competition between thermal and electronic
transport. Improving the efficiency is a difficult task, a challenge that
requires new strategies to unearth optimized compounds. We present a theory of
thermoelectric transport in electron doped SrTiO3, based on a realistic tight
binding model that includes relevant scattering processes. We compare our
calculations against a wide panel of experimental data, both bulk and thin
films. We find a qualitative and quantitative agreement over both a wide range
of temperatures and carrier concentrations, from light to heavily doped.
Moreover, the results appear insensitive to the nature of the dopant La, B, Gd
and Nb. Thus, the quantitative success found in the case of SrTiO3, reveals an
efficient procedure to explore new routes to improve the thermoelectric
properties in oxides.Comment: 5 figures, manuscript submitte
Enhancing the superconducting transition temperature of BaSi2 by structural tuning
We present a joint experimental and theoretical study of the superconducting
phase of the layered binary silicide BaSi2. Compared with the layered AlB2
structure of graphite or diboride-like superconductors, in the hexagonal
structure of binary silicides the sp3 arrangement of silicon atoms leads to
corrugated sheets. Through a high-pressure synthesis procedure we are able to
modify the buckling of these sheets, obtaining the enhancement of the
superconducting transition temperature from 4 K to 8.7 K when the silicon
planes flatten out. By performing ab-initio calculations based on density
functional theory we explain how the electronic and phononic properties of the
system are strongly affected by changes in the buckling. This mechanism is
likely present in other intercalated layered superconductors, opening the way
to the tuning of superconductivity through the control of internal structural
parameters.Comment: Submitte
Groupoids and an index theorem for conical pseudo-manifolds
We define an analytical index map and a topological index map for conical
pseudomanifolds. These constructions generalize the analogous constructions
used by Atiyah and Singer in the proof of their topological index theorem for a
smooth, compact manifold . A main ingredient is a non-commutative algebra
that plays in our setting the role of . We prove a Thom isomorphism
between non-commutative algebras which gives a new example of wrong way
functoriality in -theory. We then give a new proof of the Atiyah-Singer
index theorem using deformation groupoids and show how it generalizes to
conical pseudomanifolds. We thus prove a topological index theorem for conical
pseudomanifolds
Impossible protest: noborders in Calais
Since the closure of the Red Cross refugee reception centre in Sangatte, undocumented migrants in Calais hoping to cross the border to Britain have been forced to take refuge in a number of squatted migrant camps, locally known by all as ‘the jungles.’ Unauthorised shanty-like residences built by the migrants themselves, living conditions in the camps are very poor. In June 2009, European ‘noborder’ activists set up a week-long protest camp in the area with the intention of confronting the authorities over their treatment of undocumented migrants. In this article, we analyse the June 2009 noborder camp as an instance of ‘immigrant protest.’ Drawing on ethnographic materials and Jacques Rancière's work on politics and aesthetics, we construct a typology of forms of border control through which to analyse the different ways in which the politics of the noborder camp were staged, performed and policed. Developing a critique of policing practices which threatened to make immigrant protest ‘impossible’, we highlight moments of protest which, through the affirmation of an ‘axiomatic’ equality, disrupted and disarticulated the borders between citizens and non-citizens, the political and non-political
The New Spectacle : How effective is mobile Augmented Reality as tool for the manifestation of dissent?
Hordes of Networked AR Creatives deploy Viral Virtual Media to overlay, then overwhelm closed Social Systems lodged in Physical Hierarchies (Manifest.AR 2011). The above quote taken from the Manifest.AR’s (2011) collective manifesto demonstrates the power its founders attributed to augmented reality technology (AR); in particular, its ability to disrupt closed physical hierarchies through a form of technologically induced ‘détournement’. Détournement is a stratagem devised, or at least, coined, by Debord (1967) as a method to resist and undermine the pervading spectacle of capitalist society “by challenging the meaning of something taken for granted”
Events in the affective city: Affect, attention and alignment in two ordinary urban events
In a representational regime, planned urban events are used by urban planners to render urban projects visible and acceptable. As a corollary of the focus of urban studies on their representational dimension and in spite of a burgeoning literature on the notion of affective urbanism, the experiential character of events remains surprisingly unexplored. This paper argues that an ordinary regime of events is mobilised by city-makers to act on the embodied, affective experience of the city and on the ways urban dwellers know and act upon the city. By analysing planned urban events in their embodied, experiential dimension, we focus on the ways in which, through the design of ephemeral material dispositives, urbanists attempt to encourage citizens to incorporate ways of knowing and acting on space and on the modalities of knowing and acting that are at play. We stage an encounter between critical event studies and Ingoldian approaches to affect and attention, examining two urban events in a Swiss canton. We show how intense encounters with urban matter are staged in an attempt to modulate affects, guide attention, and produce alignment with a specific political project, asking urban dwellers either to embody a project still in the making or to cultivate expectations regarding an already-written future
Hypocycloid-shaped hollow-core photonic crystal fiber Part I: Arc curvature effect on confinement loss
We report on numerical and experimental studies showing the influence of arc curvature on the confinement loss in hypocycloid-core Kagome hollow-core photonic crystal fiber. The results prove that with such a design the optical performances are strongly driven by the contour negative curvature of the core-cladding interface. They show that the increase in arc curvature results in a strong decrease in both the confinement loss and the optical power overlap between the core mode and the silica core-surround, including a modal content approaching true single-mode guidance. Fibers with enhanced negative curvature were then fabricated with a record loss-level of 17 dB/km at 1064 nm
Popular music, psychogeography, place identity and tourism: The case of Sheffield
Tourism and cultural agencies in some English provincial cities are promoting their popular music ‘heritage’ and, in some cases, contemporary musicians through the packaging of trails, sites, ‘iconic’ venues and festivals. This article focuses on Sheffield, a ‘post-industrial’ northern English city which is drawing on its associations with musicians past and present in seeking to attract tourists. This article is based on interviews with, among others, recording artists, promoters, producers and venue managers, along with reflective observational and documentary data. Theoretical remarks are made on the representations of popular musicians through cultural tourism strategies, programmes and products and also on the ways in which musicians convey a ‘psychogeographical’ sense of place in the ‘soundscape’ of the city
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