1,267 research outputs found
Quartz crystal microbalance use in biological studies
Design, development, and applications of quartz crystal microbalance are discussed. Two types of crystals are used. One serves as reference and other senses changes in mass. Specific application to study of bacterial spores is described
Phi meson production in near threshold proton-nucleus collisions
The cross section for production of Phi mesons in proton-nucleus reactions is
calculated as a function of the target mass. The decay width of the Phi meson
is affected by the change of the masses of the Phi, K+ and K- mesons in the
medium. A strong attractive K- potential leads to a measurable change of the
behavior of the cross section as a function of of the target mass. Comparison
between the kaon and electron decay modes are made.Comment: 4 pages, 1figure, new figure, new reference
First Measurement of Antikaon Phase-Space Distributions in Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions at Subthreshold Beam Energies
Differential production cross sections of K and K mesons have been
measured as function of the polar emission angle in Ni+Ni collisions at a beam
energy of 1.93 AGeV. In near-central collisions, the spectral shapes and the
widths of the rapidity distributions of K and K mesons are in agreement
with the assumption of isotropic emission. In non-central collisions, the K
and K rapidity distributions are broader than expected for a single thermal
source. In this case, the polar angle distributions are strongly
forward-backward peaked and the nonisotropic contribution to the total yield is
about one third both for K and K mesons. The K/K ratio is found
to be about 0.03 independent of the centrality of the reaction. This value is
significantly larger than predicted by microscopic transport calculations if
in-medium modifications of K mesons are neglected.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Physics Letters
Unveiling the interaction of reactions and phase transition during thermal abuse of Li-ion batteries
Safety considerations have always accompanied the development of new battery chemistries; this holds especially for the Li-ion battery with its highly reactive components. An overall assessment and decrease of risks of catastrophic failures such as during thermal runaway, requires an in-depth and quantitative understanding of the ongoing processes and their interaction. This can be provided by predictive mathematical models. Thus, we developed a thermal runaway model that focuses on rigorous modelling of thermodynamic properties and reactions of each component within a Li-ion battery. Moreover, the presented model considers vapour–liquid equilibria of a binary solvent mixture for the first time. Simulations show a fragile equilibrium between endothermic and exothermic reactions, such as LiPF and LEDC decomposition, in the early phases of self-heating. Further, an autocatalytic cycle involving the production of HF and the SEI component LiCO could be revealed. Additionally, the unpredictability of the thermal runaway could be directly correlated to availability of LEDC or contaminants such as water. Also, solvent boiling can have a significant influence on the self-heating phase of a Li-ion battery, due to its endothermic nature. Further analysis revealed that the rising pressure, stemming from gassing reactions, can suppress solvent boiling until the thermal runaway occurs
Evidence for a Soft Nuclear Equation-of-State from Kaon Production in Heavy Ion Collisions
The production of pions and kaons has been measured in Au+Au collisions at
beam energies from 0.6 to 1.5 AGeV with the Kaon Spectrometer at SIS/GSI. The
K+ meson multiplicity per nucleon is enhanced in Au+Au collisions by factors up
to 6 relative to C+C reactions whereas the corresponding pion ratio is reduced.
The ratio of the K+ meson excitation functions for Au+Au and C+C collisions
increases with decreasing beam energy. This behavior is expected for a soft
nuclear equation-of-state.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Production of Charged Pions, Kaons and Antikaons in Relativistic C+C and C+Au Collisions
Production cross sections of charged pions, kaons and antikaons have been
measured in C+C and C+Au collisions at beam energies of 1.0 and 1.8 AGeV for
different polar emission angles. The kaon and antikaon energy spectra can be
described by Boltzmann distributions whereas the pion spectra exhibit an
additional enhancement at low energies. The pion multiplicity per participating
nucleon M(pi+)/A_part is a factor of about 3 smaller in C+Au than in C+C
collisions at 1.0 AGeV whereas it differs only little for the C and the Au
target at a beam energy of 1.8 AGeV. The K+ multiplicities per participating
nucleon M(K+)/A_part are independent of the target size at 1 AGeV and at 1.8
AGeV. The K- multiplicity per participating nucleon M(K-)/A_part is reduced by
a factor of about 2 in C+Au as compared to C+C collisions at 1.8 AGeV. This
effect might be caused by the absorption of antikaons in the heavy target
nucleus. Transport model calculations underestimate the K-/K+ ratio for C+C
collisions at 1.8 AGeV by a factor of about 4 if in-medium modifications of K
mesons are neglected.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Eur. Phys. J.
Estimation of non-linear site response in a deep Alpine valley
We simulate non-linear behaviour of soils during strong ground motion in the Rhône valley in southern Switzerland. Previous studies of the site response using weak ground motion, ambient noise and linear 3-D FD simulations suggest that the 2-D structure of the basin will lead to amplification factors of up to 12 in the frequency band between 0.5 and 10 Hz. To estimate the importance of non-linear soil behaviour during strong ground motion in the Rhône valley we simulate the response of a superficial soft layer with a fully non-linear 1-D finite difference code. The non-linear wave propagator is based on an effective stress constitutive soil model capable of predicting pore pressure evolution due to shear. We determine the required dilatancy parameters from laboratory analysis of soil samples using cyclic triaxial tests. In order to include the effect of the strong 2-D structure in our non-linear analysis synthetic seismograms are convolved with the transfer function of the basin and then propagated through a 1-D non-linear layer. We find that reduced amplification due to soil non-linearity can be expected at rock accelerations above 0.5 ms−2, and that de-amplification occurs at ground motion levels of approximately 2 ms−2. Nevertheless, the spectral accelerations simulated for the valley centre are still exceeding the design spectra at about 0.5 Hz for magnitudes above 6.0, which reflects the strong amplification of ground motion by the deep 2-D resonance of the basin. For frequencies above 1 Hz the design spectra are generally in agreement with the strongest simulated accelerations. We evaluate the occurrence of soil failure using the 5 per cent strain criterion as a function of hypocentral distance and magnitude. Results confirm observations of liquefaction reported after the 1855 Mw 6.4 earthquake of Visp, and they suggest that soil liquefaction may occur at distances beyond those predicted by empirical relations in the valley. Near the basin edge, however, the simulated liquefaction occurrence agrees with the empirical relations. These results suggest that the response of the whole structure needs to be simulated in order to estimate the non-linear seismic response of complex basins like the Rhône valle
K*(892)0 Production in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV
Preliminary results on the K*(892)0 -> pi + K production using the
mixed-event technique are presented. The measurements are performed at
mid-rapidity by the STAR detector in sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV Au-Au collisions at
RHIC. The K*0 to negative hadron, kaon and phi ratios are obtained and compared
to the measurements in e+e-, pp and pbarp at various energies.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of Strange Quarks in Matter
(SQM2001), Frankfurt am Main, Germany, to be published in J. Phys.
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