47 research outputs found

    Fatigue Behavior of Electrodeposited Nanocrystalline Nickel Films

    Get PDF
    AbstractMaterial characterization of thin film for MEMS/nano structures is a building block for the reliability assessment. One of the most significant barriers for reliable MEMS/nano structure is the long term reliability which is different from those of bulk materials. Nano-indenter has been used widely to get the elastic modulus of materials in a very simple way but other testing machines are required for tensile and endurance properties. For the long term reliability assessment of micro/nano structures, a new micro fatigue testing machine was developed to obtain the high cycles fatigue behavior of thin films. Nanocrystalline nickel thin films exhibited significant rate dependency on tensile and fatigue behavior even in room temperature due to grain size related behavior in contrast to coarse grained wrought nickels

    A Combined Modeling and Experimental Study of Tensile Properties of Additively Manufactured Polymeric Composite Materials

    Get PDF
    In this study, the mechanical properties, in terms of stress–strain curves, of additively manufactured polymeric composite materials, Tango black plus (TB+), vero white plus (VW ), and their intermediate materials with different mixing ratios, are reported. The ultimate tensile strength and elongation at break are experimentally measured using ASTM standard tensile test. As the content of VM+ increases, the strength of the polymeric materials increases and elongation decreases. Additionally, the Shore A hardness of the materials increases with reduced TB+ concentration. In parallel to the experiment, hyperelastic models are employed to fit the experimental stress–strain curves. The shear modulus of the materials is obtained from the Arruda–Boyce model, and it increases with reduced concentration of TB+. Due to the good quality of the fitted data, it is suggested that the Arruda–Boyce model is the best model for modeling the additively manufactured polymeric materials. With the well characterized and modeled mechanical properties of these hyperelastic materials, designers can conduct computational study for application in flexible electronics field

    Observation of B+ -> K+ eta gamma

    Get PDF
    We report measurements of radiative B decays with K eta gamma final states, using a data sample of 253 /fb recorded at the Upsilon(4S) resonance with the Belle detector at the KEKB e+e- storage ring. We observe B+ -> K+ eta gamma for the first time with a branching fraction of (8.4 +- 1.5(stat) +1.2 -0.9(syst)) X 10^{-6} for M(Keta) K0 eta gamma. We also search for B -> K3*(1780) gamma.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Phys. Lett.

    Observation of Double cc bar Production in e+ e- Annihilation at sqrt{s} ~ 10.6 GeV

    Full text link
    We report the observation of prompt J/psi via double ccbar production from the e+e- continuum. In this process one ccbar pair fragments into a J/psi meson while the remaining pair either produces a bound charmonium state or fragments into open charm. Both cases have been observed: the first by studying the mass spectrum of the system recoiling against the J/psi, and the second by reconstructing the J/psi together with a charmed meson. We find cross-sections of \sigma(e+ e- -> J/psi eta_c (gamma)) * BR (eta_c -> >=4 charged) = 0.033 (+0.007 -0.006)(stat) \pm 0.009(syst)pb and \sigma(e+ e- -> J/psi D*+ X) = 0.53 (+0.19 -0.15)(stat) \pm 0.14(syst) pb, and infer \sigma(e+ e- -> J/psi c cbar) / \sigma(e+ e- -> J/psi X) = 0.59 (+0.15 -0.13)(stat) \pm 0.12(syst). These results are obtained from a 46.2/fb data sample collected near the Upsilon(4S) resonance, with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric energy e+ e- collider.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, to be submitted to Physical Review Letter

    Production of Prompt Charmonia in e+ee^+e^- Annihilation at s10.6\sqrt{s}\approx 10.6 GeV

    Full text link
    The production of prompt J/ψJ/\psi, ψ(2S)\psi(2S), χc1\chi_{c1} and χc2\chi_{c2} is studied using a 32.4fb132.4 fb^{-1} data sample collected with the Belle detector at the Υ(4S)\Upsilon(4S) and 60 MeV below the resonance. The yield of prompt J/ψJ/\psi mesons in the Υ(4S)\Upsilon(4S) sample is compatible with that of continuum production; we set an upper limit B(Υ(4S)J/ψX)<1.9×104{\cal B}(\Upsilon(4S) \to J/\psi X) < 1.9 \times 10^{-4} at the 95% confidence level, and find σ(e+eJ/ψX)=1.47±0.10±0.13\sigma(e^{+}e^{-} \to J/\psi X)=1.47\pm 0.10 \pm 0.13 pb. The cross-sections for prompt ψ(2S)\psi(2S) and direct J/ψJ/\psi are measured. The J/ψJ/\psi momentum spectrum, production angle distribution and polarization are studied.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Search for B^0 -> l^+ l^- at Belle

    Full text link
    We report the results of a search for the decay B^0 -> e^+ e^-, mu^+ mu^- and e^{+-} mu^{-+} based on an analysis of 78 fb^{-1} of data collected by the Belle detector at KEKB. No candidate events have been found. Upper limits on the branching fractions are calculated at the 90% confidence level: B(B^0 -> e^+ e^-) mu^+ mu^-) e^{+-} mu^{-+})< 1.7 x 10^{-7}. A limit on the Pati-Salam leptoquark mass M_{LQ}> 46 TeV/c^2 is obtained at the 90% confidence level.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys. Rev. D (RC

    Simultaneous Quantification of Apolipoprotein C‑III <i>O</i>‑Glycoforms by Protein-MRM

    Full text link
    Apolipoprotein C-III (APOC-III) regulates triglyceride levels, associated with a risk of cardiovascular disease. One gene generates several proteoforms, each with a different molecular mass and a unique function. Unlike peptide multiple reaction monitoring (MRM), protein-MRM without digestion is required to analyze clinically relevant individual proteoforms. We developed a protein-MRM method without digestion to individually quantify APOC-III proteoforms in human serum. We optimized the protein-MRM method following 60% acetonitrile extraction with C18 filtration. Bovine serum and myoglobin served as supporting cushions and the internal standard during sample preparation, respectively. Furthermore, we evaluated the LOD, lower limit of quantification, linearity, accuracy, and precision. Good correlation compared with turbidimetric immunoassay (TIA) and peptide-MRM was observed using 30 clinical sera. Individual APOC-III O-glycoforms were identified by top-down proteomics and simultaneously quantified using the protein-MRM method. The sum abundance of APOC-III proteoforms was significantly correlated with TIA and peptide-MRM. Our protein-MRM method provides an affordable and rapid quantification of potential disease-specific proteoforms. Precise quantification of each proteoform allows investigators to identify novel biological roles potentially related to cardiovascular disease or novel biomarkers. We expect our protein-oriented method to be more clinically useful than antibody-based immunoassays and peptide-oriented MRM analysis, especially for quantification of a biomarker proteoform with certain post-translational modifications
    corecore