1,081 research outputs found

    Design, simulation and experiment of a cusp electron beam for millimeter wave gyro-devices

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    The design, simulation and experiment of a thermionic cusp electron gun that is to be used for millimeter wave generation will be presented. A cusp gun uses a non-adiabatic magnetic field reversal to obtain azimuthal motion on an electron beam resulting in an annular shaped, axis-encircling beam. The cusp gun was designed to generate a beam of 1.5A at 40kV with an adjustable velocity ratio of up to 3.0. The beam had a simulated axial velocity spread of 7.4% and alpha spread of 10.1%. The beam had an averaged radius of 0.35mm and beam thickness of 0.05mm which is ideal to drive sub-mm wave gyro-devices under investigation

    Design and operation of a harmonic gyrotron based on a cusp electron gun

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    Strathclyde theses - ask staff. Thesis no. : T13121This thesis presents the results of successful operation of a 2nd harmonic gyrotron based on a cusp electron gun. The numerical and experimental results agreed well with the gyrotron design parameters. Two gyrotrons based on a cusp electron gun were designed: the first gyrotron operated at the 2nd harmonic and the second gyrotron was studied to look at the scaling of this concept for operation at the 7th harmonic at a frequency of 390 GHz. The cusp electron gun was used to produce the electron beam in the gyrotron which was annular in shape. The electron beam had a voltage of 40 kV, a current of 1.5A and a velocity ratio (perpendicular component to horizontal component) of 1.5. The experimental results from the first cusp electron gun and measurements of the high quality electron beam with ~8% velocity spread and ~10% alpha spread are presented. Analytical, numerical and experimental results of a DC harmonic gyrotron are presented. The 3D PIC code MAGIC was used to simulate the interaction of the harmonic gyrotron such as the TE71 mode at the 7th cyclotron harmonic with the large orbit electron beam with the beam thickness and beam spread introduced into the simulation. The interaction cavity of both gyrotrons was in the form of a smooth cylindrical waveguide. The relationship between the cavity dimensions and cavity Q values has been studied for optimized output at the design mode with the aim of suppressing other competing modes. A linear output taper was designed with low mode conversion at the gyrotron output. A Vector Network Analyzer with high frequency millmetre wave heads was used to measure the millimeter wave properties of the gyrotron cavity. Experiments were conducted using the electron gun for the harmonic gyrotron. The gyrotron and electron gun were built as well as the interlock and safety system, pulsed power supply and magnet, the cooling and vacuum system. Millimetre wave radiation was measured for the 2.6 mm diameter cavity gyrotron operating at the 2nd harmonic at a magnetic field of 2.08 T. Experiments demonstrated that the harmonic gyrotron was sensitive to the magnetic field and electron beam parameters. Millimetre wave radiation from 108GHz to 110GHz was measured with the use of a W-band rectifying crystal detector and high pass cut off filters. The frequency of the measured millimeter wave radiation agreed very well with the design and predictions of theory.This thesis presents the results of successful operation of a 2nd harmonic gyrotron based on a cusp electron gun. The numerical and experimental results agreed well with the gyrotron design parameters. Two gyrotrons based on a cusp electron gun were designed: the first gyrotron operated at the 2nd harmonic and the second gyrotron was studied to look at the scaling of this concept for operation at the 7th harmonic at a frequency of 390 GHz. The cusp electron gun was used to produce the electron beam in the gyrotron which was annular in shape. The electron beam had a voltage of 40 kV, a current of 1.5A and a velocity ratio (perpendicular component to horizontal component) of 1.5. The experimental results from the first cusp electron gun and measurements of the high quality electron beam with ~8% velocity spread and ~10% alpha spread are presented. Analytical, numerical and experimental results of a DC harmonic gyrotron are presented. The 3D PIC code MAGIC was used to simulate the interaction of the harmonic gyrotron such as the TE71 mode at the 7th cyclotron harmonic with the large orbit electron beam with the beam thickness and beam spread introduced into the simulation. The interaction cavity of both gyrotrons was in the form of a smooth cylindrical waveguide. The relationship between the cavity dimensions and cavity Q values has been studied for optimized output at the design mode with the aim of suppressing other competing modes. A linear output taper was designed with low mode conversion at the gyrotron output. A Vector Network Analyzer with high frequency millmetre wave heads was used to measure the millimeter wave properties of the gyrotron cavity. Experiments were conducted using the electron gun for the harmonic gyrotron. The gyrotron and electron gun were built as well as the interlock and safety system, pulsed power supply and magnet, the cooling and vacuum system. Millimetre wave radiation was measured for the 2.6 mm diameter cavity gyrotron operating at the 2nd harmonic at a magnetic field of 2.08 T. Experiments demonstrated that the harmonic gyrotron was sensitive to the magnetic field and electron beam parameters. Millimetre wave radiation from 108GHz to 110GHz was measured with the use of a W-band rectifying crystal detector and high pass cut off filters. The frequency of the measured millimeter wave radiation agreed very well with the design and predictions of theory

    SPA-SVC: Self-supervised Pitch Augmentation for Singing Voice Conversion

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    Diffusion-based singing voice conversion (SVC) models have shown better synthesis quality compared to traditional methods. However, in cross-domain SVC scenarios, where there is a significant disparity in pitch between the source and target voice domains, the models tend to generate audios with hoarseness, posing challenges in achieving high-quality vocal outputs. Therefore, in this paper, we propose a Self-supervised Pitch Augmentation method for Singing Voice Conversion (SPA-SVC), which can enhance the voice quality in SVC tasks without requiring additional data or increasing model parameters. We innovatively introduce a cycle pitch shifting training strategy and Structural Similarity Index (SSIM) loss into our SVC model, effectively enhancing its performance. Experimental results on the public singing datasets M4Singer indicate that our proposed method significantly improves model performance in both general SVC scenarios and particularly in cross-domain SVC scenarios.Comment: Accepted by Interspeech 202

    Plume-ridge interactions: ridgeward versus plate-drag plume flow

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    The analysis of mid-ocean ridges and hotspots that are sourced by deep-rooted mantle plumes allows us to get a glimpse of mantle structure and dynamics. Dynamical interaction between ridge and plume processes have been widely proposed and studied, particularly in terms of ridgeward plume flow. However, the effects of plate drag on plume-lithosphere and plume-ridge interaction remain poorly understood. In particular, the mechanisms that control plume flow towards vs. away from the ridge have not yet been systematically studied. Here, we use 2D thermomechanical numerical models of plume-ridge interaction to systematically explore the effects of (i) ridge-spreading rate, (ii) initial plume head radius and (iii) plume-ridge distance. Our numerical experiments suggest two different geodynamic regimes: (1) plume flow towards the ridge is favored by strong buoyant mantle plumes, slow spreading rates and small plume-ridge distances; (2) plume drag away from the ridge is in turn promoted by fast ridge spreading for small-To-intermediate plumes and large plume-ridge distances. We find that the pressure gradient between the buoyant plume and spreading ridge at first drives ridgeward flow, but eventually the competition between plate drag and the gravitational force of plume flow along the base of the sloping lithosphere controls the fate of plume (spreading towards vs. away from the ridge). Our results highlight that fast-spreading ridges exert strong plate-dragging force, which sheds new light on natural observations of largely absent plume-lithosphere interaction along fast-spreading ridges, such as the East Pacific Rise

    Rapamycin/DiR Loaded Lipid-Polyaniline Nanoparticles for Dual-Modal Imaging Guided Enhanced Photothermal and Antiangiogenic Combination Therapy

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    AbstractImaging-guided photothermal therapy (PTT) has promising application for treating tumors. Nevertheless, so far imaging-guided photothermal drug-delivery systems have been developed with limited success for tumor chemo-photothermal therapy. In this study, as the proof-of-concept, a stimuli-responsive tumor-targeting rapamycin/DiR loaded lipid-polyaniline nanoparticle (RDLPNP) for dual-modal imaging-guided enhanced PTT efficacy is reported for the first time. In this system, polyaniline (PANI) with π-π electronic conjugated system and effective photothermal efficiency is choosed as the appropriate model receptor of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), and loaded cyanine probe (e.g., 1,1-dioctadecyl-3,3,3,3-tetramethylindotri-carbocyanine iodide, DiR) acts as the donor of near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF). In addition, rapamycin (RAPA), which is used as the antiangiogenesis chemotherapeutic drug, can cutdown the tumor vessels and delay tumor growth obviously. After intravenous treatment of RDLPNPs into Hela tumor bearing mice, fluorescent (from DiR) and enhanced photoacoustic (from DLPNPs) signals were found in tumor site over time, which reached to peak at the 6 h time point. After irradiating with an NIR laser, a good anti-tumor effect was observed owing to the enhanced photothermal and antiangiogenic effect of RDLPNPs. These results show that the multifunctional nanoparticle can be used as a promising imaging-guided photothermal drug delivery nanoplatform for cancer therapy
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