474 research outputs found
B2B digital platform adoption by SMEs and large firms: Pathways and pitfalls
The ongoing paradigm shift towards two-sided and multi-sided platforms is reshaping business transactions and collaborations worldwide. Such digital platforms have found widespread acceptance in business-to-business markets, serving as catalysts for strategic networking, transparency, and traceability, especially in sourcing activities that demand strategic solutions for supplier selection and collaboration. Nonetheless, the variables influencing platform adoption in small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and large firms remain somewhat opaque. In this study, the social network theory (SNT), diffusion of innovation (DOI) theory, and technology–organisation–environment (TOE) framework were used as analytical lenses. Drawing from a sample of 318 responses from supply chain managers, this study employs a fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) to identify 15 configurations related to the adoption of two-sided platforms in both SMEs and large manufacturing firms. The results underscore that SMEs' drive for platform adoption is primarily anchored in their need for flexible, fluid networks, thus reinforcing the value of two-sided platforms in cultivating robust supplier relationships. In contrast, large firms are driven by potential advantages in efficiency and transactional security. However, the low adoption intention in both SMEs and large firms can be attributed to perceived barriers and a lack of perceived benefits, respectively
Light-induced rotation of dye-doped liquid crystal droplets
We investigate both theoretically and experimentally the rotational dynamics
of micrometric droplets of dye-doped and pure liquid crystal induced by
circularly and elliptically polarized laser light. The droplets are dispersed
in water and trapped in the focus of the laser beam. Since the optical torque
acting on the molecular director is known to be strongly enhanced in
light-absorbing dye-doped materials, the question arises whether a similar
enhancement takes place also for the overall optical torque acting on the whole
droplets. We searched for such enhancement by measuring and comparing the
rotation speed of dye-doped droplets induced by a laser beam having a
wavelength either inside or outside the dye absorption band, and also comparing
it with the rotation of pure liquid crystal droplets. No enhancement was found,
confirming that photoinduced dye effects are only associated with an internal
exchange of angular momentum between orientational and translational degrees of
freedom of matter. Our result provides also the first direct experimental proof
of the existence of a photoinduced stress tensor in the illuminated dye-doped
liquid crystal. Finally, peculiar photoinduced dynamical effects are predicted
to occur in droplets in which the molecular director is not rigidly locked to
the flow, but so far they could not be observed
Polydomain growth at isotropic-nematic transitions in liquid crystalline polymers
We studied the dynamics of isotropic-nematic transitions in liquid
crystalline polymers by integrating time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equations.
In a concentrated solution of rodlike polymers, the rotational diffusion
constant Dr of the polymer is severely suppressed by the geometrical
constraints of the surrounding polymers, so that the rodlike molecules diffuse
only along their rod directions. In the early stage of phase transition, the
rodlike polymers with nearly parallel orientations assemble to form a nematic
polydomain. This polydomain pattern with characteristic length l, grows with
self-similarity in three dimensions (3D) over time with a l~1/4 scaling law. In
the late stage, the rotational diffusion becomes significant, leading a
crossover of the growth exponent from 1/4 to 1/2. This crossover time is
estimated to be of the order t~1/Dr. We also examined time evolution of a pair
of disclinations placed in a confined system, by solving the same
time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equations in two dimensions (2D). If the initial
distance between the disclinations is shorter than some critical length, they
approach and annihilate each other; however, at larger initial separations they
are stabilized.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figure
Vortex and half-vortex dynamics in a spinor quantum fluid of interacting polaritons
Spinorial or multi-component Bose-Einstein condensates may sustain fractional
quanta of circulation, vorticant topological excitations with half integer
windings of phase and polarization. Matter-light quantum fluids, such as
microcavity polaritons, represent a unique test bed for realising strongly
interacting and out-of-equilibrium condensates. The direct access to the phase
of their wavefunction enables us to pursue the quest of whether half vortices
---rather than full integer vortices--- are the fundamental topological
excitations of a spinor polariton fluid. Here, we are able to directly generate
by resonant pulsed excitations, a polariton fluid carrying either the half or
full vortex states as initial condition, and to follow their coherent evolution
using ultrafast holography. Surprisingly we observe a rich phenomenology that
shows a stable evolution of a phase singularity in a single component as well
as in the full vortex state, spiraling, splitting and branching of the initial
cores under different regimes and the proliferation of many vortex anti-vortex
pairs in self generated circular ripples. This allows us to devise the
interplay of nonlinearity and sample disorder in shaping the fluid and driving
the phase singularities dynamicsComment: New version complete with revised modelization, discussion and added
material. 8 pages, 7 figures. Supplementary videos:
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B0QCllnLqdyBfmc2ai0yVF9fa2g2VnZodGUwemVkLThBb3BoOVRKRDJMS2dUdjlZdkRTQk
Detection of Zak phases and topological invariants in a chiral quantum walk of twisted photons
Topological insulators are fascinating states of matter exhibiting protected
edge states and robust quantized features in their bulk. Here, we propose and
validate experimentally a method to detect topological properties in the bulk
of one-dimensional chiral systems. We first introduce the mean chiral
displacement, and we show that it rapidly approaches a multiple of the Zak
phase in the long time limit. Then we measure the Zak phase in a photonic
quantum walk, by direct observation of the mean chiral displacement in its
bulk. Next, we measure the Zak phase in an alternative, inequivalent timeframe,
and combine the two windings to characterize the full phase diagram of this
Floquet system. Finally, we prove the robustness of the measure by introducing
dynamical disorder in the system. This detection method is extremely general,
as it can be applied to all one-dimensional platforms simulating static or
Floquet chiral systems.Comment: 10 pages, 7 color figures (incl. appendices) Close to the published
versio
Pattern forming instability induced by light in pure and dye-doped nematic liquid crystals
We study theoretically the instabilities induced by a linearly polarized
ordinary light wave incident at a small oblique angle on a thin layer of
homeotropically oriented nematic liquid crystal with special emphasis on the
dye-doped case. The spatially periodic Hopf bifurcation that occurs as the
secondary instability after the stationary Freedericksz transition is analyzed.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, LaTeX, accepted to Phys. Rev.
Mechanical Properties of End-crosslinked Entangled Polymer Networks using Sliplink Brownian Dynamics Simulations
The mechanical properties of a polymeric network containing both crosslinks
and sliplinks (entanglements) are studied using a multi-chain Brownian dynamics
simulation. We coarse-grain at the level of chain segments connecting
consecutive nodes (cross- or sliplinks), with particular attention to the
Gaussian statistics of the network. Affine displacement of nodes is not
imposed: their displacement as well as sliding of monomers through sliplinks is
governed by force balances. The simulation results of stress in uniaxial
extension and the full stress tensor in simple shear including the (non-zero)
second normal stress difference are presented for monodisperse chains with up
to 18 entanglements between two crosslinks. The cases of two different force
laws of the subchains (Gaussian chains and chains with finite extensibility)
for two different numbers of monomers in a subchain (no = 50 and no = 100) are
examined. It is shown that the additivity assumption of slip- and crosslink
contribution holds for sufficiently long chains with two or more entanglements,
and that it can be used to construct the strain response of a network of
infinitely long chains. An important consequence is that the contribution of
sliplinks to the small-strain shear modulus is about ⅔ of the
contribution of a crosslink
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