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Ethanol internal reforming in solid oxide fuel cells: A path toward high performance metal-supported cells for vehicular applications
Internal reforming of ethanol fuel was investigated on high-performance metal-supported solid oxide fuel cells (MS-SOFCs) with infiltrated catalysts. The hydrogen concentration and internal reforming effects were evaluated systematically with different fuels including: hydrogen, simulated reformate, anhydrous ethanol, ethanol water blend, and hydrogen-nitrogen mixtures. A simple infiltration of Ni reforming catalyst into 40 vol% Ni-Sm0.20Ce0.80O2-δ (Ni-SDCN40) and fuel-side metal support leads to complete internal reforming, as confirmed by comparison to simulated reformate. The performance difference between hydrogen and fully-reformed ethanol is attributed entirely to decrease in hydrogen concentration. High peak power density was achieved for a range of conditions, for example 1.0 W cm−2 at 650 °C in ethanol-water blend, and 1.4 W cm−2 at 700 °C in anhydrous ethanol fuel. Initial durability tests with ethanol-water blend show promising stability for 100 h at 700 °C and 0.7 V. Carbon is not deposited in the Ni-SDCN40 anode during operation
Construction of a Versatile Ultra-Low Temperature Scanning Tunneling Microscope
We constructed a dilution-refrigerator (DR) based ultra-low temperature
scanning tunneling microscope (ULT-STM) which works at temperatures down to 30
mK, in magnetic fields up to 6 T and in ultrahigh vacuum (UHV). Besides these
extreme operation conditions, this STM has several unique features not
available in other DR based ULT-STMs. One can load STM tips as well as samples
with clean surfaces prepared in a UHV environment to an STM head keeping low
temperature and UHV conditions. After then, the system can be cooled back to
near the base temperature within 3 hours. Due to these capabilities, it has a
variety of applications not only for cleavable materials but also for almost
all conducting materials. The present ULT-STM has also an exceptionally high
stability in the presence of magnetic field and even during field sweep. We
describe details of its design, performance and applications for low
temperature physics.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures. accepted for publication in Rev. Sci. Instru
Neutrino Magnetic Moments and Minimal Supersymmetric SO(10) Model
We examine supersymmetric contributions to transition magnetic moments of
Majorana neutrinos. We first give the general formula for it. In concrete
evaluations, informations of neutrino mass matrix elements including CP phases
are necessary. Using unambiguously determined neutrino mass matrices in
recently proposed minimal supersymmetric SO(10) model, the transition magnetic
moments are calculated. The resultant neutrino magnetic moments are found to be
roughly an order of magnitude larger than those calculated in the standard
model extended to incorporate the see-saw mechanism.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, the version to be published in International
Journal of Modern Physics
On the Mott glass in the one-dimensional half-filled charge density waves
We study the effect of impurity pinning on a one-dimensional half-filled
electron system, which is expressed in terms of a phase Hamiltonian with the
charge degree of freedom. Within the classical treatment, the pinned state is
examined numerically. The Mott glass, which has been pointed out by Orignac et
al. [Phys. Rev. Lett 83 (1999) 2378], appears in the intermediate region where
the impurity potential competes with the commensurate potential. Such a state
is verified by calculating the soliton formation energy, the local restoring
force around the pinned state and the optical conductivity.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 72 No.11
(2003
One-Particle Excitation of the Two-Dimensional Hubbard Model
The real part of the self-energy of interacting two-dimensional electrons has
been calculated in the t-matrix approximation. It is shown that the forward
scattering results in an anomalous term leading to the vanishing
renormalization factor of the one-particle Green function, which is a
non-perturbative effect of the interaction U. The present result is a
microscopic demonstration of the claim by Anderson based on the conventional
many-body theory. The effect of the damping of the interacting electrons, which
has been ignored in reaching above conclusion, has been briefly discussed.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, 1 figure, uses jpsj.sty, to be published in J. Phys.
Soc. Jpn. 66 No. 3 (1997
Low-Temperature Scaling Regime of Random Ferromagnetic-Antiferromagnetic Spin Chains
Using the Continuous Time Quantum Monte Carlo Loop algorithm, we calculate
the temperature dependence of the uniform susceptibility, and the specific heat
of a spin-1/2 chain with random antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic couplings,
down to very low temperatures. Our data show a consistent scaling behavior in
both quantities and support strongly the conjecture drawn from the
approximative real-space renormalization group treatment. A statistical
analysis scheme is developed which will be useful for the search scaling
behavior in numerical and experimental data of random spin chains.Comment: 4 pages and 3 figure
Ground State Spin Structure of Strongly Interacting Disordered 1D Hubbard Model
We study the influence of on-site disorder on the magnetic properties of the
ground state of the infinite U 1D Hubbard model. We find that the ground state
is not ferromagnetic. This is analyzed in terms of the algebraic structure of
the spin dependence of the Hamiltonian. A simple explanation is derived for the
1/N periodicity in the persistent current for this model.Comment: 3 pages, no figure
Impurity Effects on Quantum Depinning of Commensurate Charge Density Waves
We investigate quantum depinning of the one-dimensional (1D) commensurate
charge-density wave (CDW) in the presence of one impurity theoretically.
Quantum tunneling rate below but close to the threshold field is calculated at
absolute zero temperature by use of the phase Hamiltonian within the WKB
approximation. We show that the impurity can induce localized fluctuation and
enhance the quantum depinning. The electric field dependence of the tunneling
rate in the presence of the impurity is different from that in its absence.Comment: 14 pages with 13 figures. Submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Theoretical Study of Friction: A Case of One-Dimensional Clean Surfaces
A new method has been proposed to evaluate the frictional force in the
stationary state. This method is applied to the 1-dimensional model of clean
surfaces. The kinetic frictional force is seen to depend on velocity in
general, but the dependence becomes weaker as the maximum static frictional
force increases and in the limiting case the kinetic friction gets only weakly
dependent on velocity as described by one of the laws of friction. It is also
shown that there is a phase transition between state with vanishing maximum
static frictional force and that with finite one. The role of randomness at the
interface and the relation to the impurity pinning of the sliding
Charge-Density-Wave are discussed. to appear in Phys.Rev.B. abstract only. Full
text is available upon request. E-mail: [email protected]: 2 pages, Plain TEX, OUCMT-94-
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