144 research outputs found

    Novel universality classes of coupled driven diffusive systems

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    Motivated by the phenomenologies of dynamic roughening of strings in random media and magnetohydrodynamics, we examine the universal properties of driven diffusive system with coupled fields. We demonstrate that cross-correlations between the fields lead to amplitude-ratios and scaling exponents varying continuosly with the strength of these cross-correlations. The implications of these results for experimentally relevant systems are discussed.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. E (Rapid Comm.) (2003

    Application of experimental design on determination of aluminum content in saline samples by adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry

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    Adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetric determination of aluminum at ng mL-1 levels in salt samples based on the metal complexation with Calcon (1-(2-hydroxynaphthylazo)-2 naphthol-4-sulfonic acid) and the subsequent adsorptive deposition onto a hanging mercury drop electrode was studied. Central composite design was used as a design method. Several chemical and instrumental parameters (pH, ligand concentration, deposition time, deposition potential, and complexing time) were involved in the experimental design. Analytical parameters such as repeatability, linearity, and accuracy were also investigated and the detection limit was found as 0.32 ng mL-1.Ege University research fund (Project no: 2004 Fen 071

    A Ball in a Groove

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    We study the static equilibrium of an elastic sphere held in a rigid groove by gravity and frictional contacts, as determined by contact mechanics. As a function of the opening angle of the groove and the tilt of the groove with respect to the vertical, we identify two regimes of static equilibrium for the ball. In the first of these, at large opening angle or low tilt, the ball rolls at both contacts as it is loaded. This is an analog of the "elastic" regime in the mechanics of granular media. At smaller opening angles or larger tilts, the ball rolls at one contact and slides at the other as it is loaded, analogously with the "plastic" regime in the mechanics of granular media. In the elastic regime, the stress indeterminacy is resolved by the underlying kinetics of the ball response to loading.Comment: RevTeX 3.0, 4 pages, 2 eps figures included with eps

    Thermal Suppression of Strong Pinning

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    We study vortex pinning in layered type-II superconductors in the presence of uncorrelated disorder for decoupled layers. Introducing the new concept of variable-range thermal smoothing, we describe the interplay between strong pinning and thermal fluctuations. We discuss the appearance and analyze the evolution in temperature of two distinct non-linear features in the current-voltage characteristics. We show how the combination of layering and electromagnetic interactions leads to a sharp jump in the critical current for the onset of glassy response as a function of temperature.Comment: LaTeX 2.09, 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    A Model Ground State of Polyampholytes

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    The ground state of randomly charged polyampholytes is conjectured to have a structure similar to a necklace, made of weakly charged parts of the chain, compacting into globules, connected by highly charged stretched `strings'. We suggest a specific structure, within the necklace model, where all the neutral parts of the chain compact into globules: The longest neutral segment compacts into a globule; in the remaining part of the chain, the longest neutral segment (the 2nd longest neutral segment) compacts into a globule, then the 3rd, and so on. We investigate the size distributions of the longest neutral segments in random charge sequences, using analytical and Monte Carlo methods. We show that the length of the n-th longest neutral segment in a sequence of N monomers is proportional to N/(n^2), while the mean number of neutral segments increases as sqrt(N). The polyampholyte in the ground state within our model is found to have an average linear size proportional to sqrt(N), and an average surface area proportional to N^(2/3).Comment: 8 two-column pages. 5 eps figures. RevTex. Submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Gutenberg Richter and Characteristic Earthquake Behavior in Simple Mean-Field Models of Heterogeneous Faults

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    The statistics of earthquakes in a heterogeneous fault zone is studied analytically and numerically in the mean field version of a model for a segmented fault system in a three-dimensional elastic solid. The studies focus on the interplay between the roles of disorder, dynamical effects, and driving mechanisms. A two-parameter phase diagram is found, spanned by the amplitude of dynamical weakening (or ``overshoot'') effects (epsilon) and the normal distance (L) of the driving forces from the fault. In general, small epsilon and small L are found to produce Gutenberg-Richter type power law statistics with an exponential cutoff, while large epsilon and large L lead to a distribution of small events combined with characteristic system-size events. In a certain parameter regime the behavior is bistable, with transitions back and forth from one phase to the other on time scales determined by the fault size and other model parameters. The implications for realistic earthquake statistics are discussed.Comment: 21 pages, RevTex, 6 figures (ps, eps

    Dynamics and Instabilities of Planar Tensile Cracks in Heterogeneous Media

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    The dynamics of tensile crack fronts restricted to advance in a plane are studied. In an ideal linear elastic medium, a propagating mode along the crack front with a velocity slightly less than the Rayleigh wave velocity, is found to exist. But the dependence of the effective fracture toughness Γ(v)\Gamma(v) on the crack velocity is shown to destabilize the crack front if (dΓ)/(dv)<0(d\Gamma)/(dv)<0. Short wavelength radiation due to weak random heterogeneities leads to this instability at low velocities. The implications of these results for the crack dynamics are discussed.Comment: 12 page

    Geometry of Frictionless and Frictional Sphere Packings

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    We study static packings of frictionless and frictional spheres in three dimensions, obtained via molecular dynamics simulations, in which we vary particle hardness, friction coefficient, and coefficient of restitution. Although frictionless packings of hard-spheres are always isostatic (with six contacts) regardless of construction history and restitution coefficient, frictional packings achieve a multitude of hyperstatic packings that depend on system parameters and construction history. Instead of immediately dropping to four, the coordination number reduces smoothly from z=6z=6 as the friction coefficient μ\mu between two particles is increased.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Lateral Separation of Macromolecules and Polyelectrolytes in Microlithographic Arrays

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    A new approach to separation of a variety of microscopic and mesoscopic objects in dilute solution is presented. The approach takes advantage of unique properties of a specially designed separation device (sieve), which can be readily built using already developed microlithographic techniques. Due to the broken reflection symmetry in its design, the direction of motion of an object in the sieve varies as a function of its self-diffusion constant, causing separation transverse to its direction of motion. This gives the device some significant and unique advantages over existing fractionation methods based on centrifugation and electrophoresis.Comment: 4 pages with 3 eps figures, needs RevTeX 3.0 and epsf, also available in postscript form http://cmtw.harvard.edu/~deniz

    Randomly Charged Polymers, Random Walks, and Their Extremal Properties

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    Motivated by an investigation of ground state properties of randomly charged polymers, we discuss the size distribution of the largest Q-segments (segments with total charge Q) in such N-mers. Upon mapping the charge sequence to one--dimensional random walks (RWs), this corresponds to finding the probability for the largest segment with total displacement Q in an N-step RW to have length L. Using analytical, exact enumeration, and Monte Carlo methods, we reveal the complex structure of the probability distribution in the large N limit. In particular, the size of the longest neutral segment has a distribution with a square-root singularity at l=L/N=1, an essential singularity at l=0, and a discontinuous derivative at l=1/2. The behavior near l=1 is related to a another interesting RW problem which we call the "staircase problem". We also discuss the generalized problem for d-dimensional RWs.Comment: 33 pages, 19 Postscript figures, RevTe
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