5,439 research outputs found
Unusual persistence of superconductivity against high magnetic fields in the strongly-correlated iron-chalcogenide film FeTe:O
We report an unusual persistence of superconductivity against high magnetic
fields in the iron chalcogenide film FeTe:O below ~ 2.5 K. Instead of
saturating like a mean-field behavior with a single order parameter, the
measured low-temperature upper critical field increases progressively,
suggesting a large supply of superconducting states accessible via magnetic
field or low-energy thermal fluctuations. We demonstrate that superconducting
states of finite momenta can be realized within the conventional theory,
despite its questionable applicability. Our findings reveal a fundamental
characteristic of superconductivity and electronic structure in the
strongly-correlated iron-based superconductors.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Forced Imbibition - a Tool for Determining Laplace Pressure, Drag Force and Slip Length in Capillary Filling Experiments
When a very thin capillary is inserted into a liquid, the liquid is sucked
into it: this imbibition process is controlled by a balance of capillary and
drag forces, which are hard to quantify experimentally, in particularly
considering flow on the nanoscale. By computer experiments using a generic
coarse-grained model, it is shown that an analysis of imbibition forced by a
controllable external pressure quantifies relevant physical parameter such as
the Laplace pressure, Darcy's permeability, effective pore radius, effective
viscosity, dynamic contact angle and slip length of the fluid flowing into the
pore. In determining all these parameters independently, the consistency of our
analysis of such forced imbibition processes is demonstrated.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Headache in Children with Epilepsy
Headache is a common comorbidity in pediatric epileptic patients. The relationship between headache and epilepsy is considered complex and though there is evidence of association, its mechanisms are not yet completely clear. Numerous studies of comorbidity focus on primary headaches, such as migraine and tension-type headache, describing them as the most prevalent in patients with epilepsy. Some authors, though, report similar prevalence of headache and specifically migraine in epilepsy patients as compared to that of the general population. When describing this comorbidity, it should be noted that secondary headaches can also be frequent in patients with structural epilepsy, e.g. in brain tumors or other space-occupying lesions.In this paper we summarize literature data on the problem of epilepsy and headache comorbidity, and also present two clinical cases of patients with tension-type and with secondary headache, respectively
Magnetocaloric Studies of the Peak Effect in Nb
We report a magnetocaloric study of the peak effect and Bragg glass
transition in a Nb single crystal. The thermomagnetic effects due to vortex
flow into and out of the sample are measured. The magnetocaloric signature of
the peak effect anomaly is identified. It is found that the peak effect
disappears in magnetocaloric measurements at fields significantly higher than
those reported in previous ac-susceptometry measurements. Investigation of the
superconducting to normal transition reveals that the disappearance of the bulk
peak effect is related to inhomogeneity broadening of the superconducting
transition. The emerging picture also explains the concurrent disappearance of
the peak effect and surface superconductivity, which was reported previously in
the sample under investigation. Based on our findings we discuss the
possibilities of multicriticality associated with the disappearance of the peak
effect.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figure
Polymer Brushes in Cylindrical Pores: Simulation versus Scaling Theory
The structure of flexible polymers endgrafted in cylindrical pores of
diameter D is studied as a function of chain length N and grafting density
\sigma, assuming good solvent conditions. A phenomenological scaling theory,
describing the variation of the linear dimensions of the chains with \sigma, is
developed and tested by Molecular Dynamics simulations of a bead-spring model.Comment: 35 pages, 38 figure
Capillary Rise in Nanopores: Molecular Dynamics Evidence for the Lucas-Washburn Equation
When a capillary is inserted into a liquid, the liquid will rapidly flow into
it. This phenomenon, well studied and understood on the macroscale, is
investigated by Molecular Dynamics simulations for coarse-grained models of
nanotubes. Both a simple Lennard-Jones fluid and a model for a polymer melt are
considered. In both cases after a transient period (of a few nanoseconds) the
meniscus rises according to a -law. For the polymer melt,
however, we find that the capillary flow exhibits a slip length ,
comparable in size with the nanotube radius . We show that a consistent
description of the imbibition process in nanotubes is only possible upon
modification of the Lucas-Washburn law which takes explicitly into account the
slip length .Comment: 4 pages 4 figure
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