11,197 research outputs found

    Effect of polymer concentration and length of hydrophobic end block on the unimer-micelle transition broadness in amphiphilic ABA symmetric triblock copolymer solutions

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    The effects of the length of each hydrophobic end block N_{st} and polymer concentration \bar{\phi}_{P} on the transition broadness in amphiphilic ABA symmetric triblock copolymer solutions are studied using the self-consistent field lattice model. When the system is cooled, micelles are observed, i.e.,the homogenous solution (unimer)-micelle transition occurs. When N_{st} is increased, at fixed \bar{\phi}_{P}, micelles occur at higher temperature, and the temperature-dependent range of micellar aggregation and half-width of specific heat peak for unimer-micelle transition increase monotonously. Compared with associative polymers, it is found that the magnitude of the transition broadness is determined by the ratio of hydrophobic to hydrophilic blocks, instead of chain length. When \bar{\phi}_{P} is decreased, given a large N_{st}, the temperature-dependent range of micellar aggregation and half-width of specific heat peak initially decease, and then remain nearly constant. It is shown that the transition broadness is concerned with the changes of the relative magnitudes of the eductions of nonstickers and solvents from micellar cores.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Perturbative analysis of generally nonlocal spatial optical solitons

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    In analogy to a perturbed harmonic oscillator, we calculate the fundamental and some other higher order soliton solutions of the nonlocal nonlinear Schroedinger equation (NNLSE) in the second approximation in the generally nonlocal case. Comparing with numerical simulations we show that soliton solutions in the 2nd approximation can describe the generally nonlocal soliton states of the NNLSE more exactly than that in the zeroth approximation. We show that for the nonlocal case of an exponential-decay type nonlocal response the Gaussian-function-like soliton solutions can't describe the nonlocal soliton states exactly even in the strongly nonlocal case. The properties of such nonlocal solitons are investigated. In the strongly nonlocal limit, the soliton's power and phase constant are both in inverse proportion to the 4th power of its beam width for the nonlocal case of a Gaussian function type nonlocal response, and are both in inverse proportion to the 3th power of its beam width for the nonlocal case of an exponential-decay type nonlocal response.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.

    The effect of asymmetry of the coil block on self-assembly in ABC coil-rod-coil triblock copolymers

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    Using the self-consistent field approach, the effect of asymmetry of the coil block on the microphase separation is focused in ABC coil-rod-coil triblock copolymers. For different fractions of the rod block fBf_{\text B}, some stable structures are observed, i.e., lamellae, cylinders, gyroid, and core-shell hexagonal lattice, and the phase diagrams are constructed. The calculated results show that the effect of the coil block fraction fAf_{\text A} is dependent on fBf_{\text B}. When fB=0.2f_{\text B}=0.2, the effect of asymmetry of the coil block is similar to that of the ABC flexible triblock copolymers; When fB=0.4f_{\text B}=0.4, the self-assembly of ABC coil-rod-coil triblock copolymers behaves like rod-coil diblock copolymers under some condition. When fBf_{\text B} continues to increase, the effect of asymmetry of the coil block reduces. For fB=0.4f_{\text B}=0.4, under the symmetrical and rather asymmetrical conditions, an increase in the interaction parameter between different components leads to different transitions between cylinders and lamellae. The results indicate some remarkable effect of the chain architecture on self-assembly, and can provide the guidance for the design and synthesis of copolymer materials.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure

    Study on the Effect of Track Curve Radius on Friction-Induced Oscillation of a Wheelset–Track System

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    © 2019, © 2019 Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers. The purpose of this article is to investigate the correlation between the friction-induced oscillation of a wheelset–track system and curve radius and to explain a general phenomenon of rail corrugation based on the viewpoint of friction-induced oscillation. The typical phenomenon of rail corrugation in metros is that corrugation generally arises when the curve radius is quite small, whereas it rarely occurs when the curve radius is larger or on a straight track. Different multibody models of the vehicle–track system and finite-element models of the multiple-wheelset–track system with different curve radii are established, respectively. According to the creep force analyses and unstable vibration analyses, the correlation between the creep force and friction-induced oscillation can be identified. Then the effect of the track curve radius on the friction-induced oscillation of the wheelset–track system can be summarized, which provides an explanation of the typical phenomenon of corrugation

    A surface defect detection method of steel plate based on YOLOV3

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    At present, the steel plate surface defect detection technology based on machine vision and convolutional neural network (CNN) has achieved good results. However, these models are mostly two-stage methods, extracting features first and then classifying them, which is slow and inaccurate. Therefore, this paper proposes a single-stage surface defect detection method of steel plate based on yolov3, which can classify defects, determine the location of defects, and greatly improve the detection speed. It is of great significance to realize the automation of cold rolling production line. The experiment shows that the detection speed of this model reaches 62 fps and the accuracy reaches 73 %, which has a good prospect in industry

    ER-Mitochondria Crosstalk during Cerebral Ischemia: Molecular Chaperones and ER-Mitochondrial Calcium Transfer

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    It is commonly believed that sustained elevations in the mitochondrial matrix Ca2+ concentration are a major feature of the intracellular cascade of lethal events during cerebral ischemia. The physical association between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria, known as the mitochondria-associated ER membrane (MAM), enables highly efficient transmission of Ca2+ from the ER to mitochondria under both physiological and pathological conditions. Molecular chaperones are well known for their protective effects during cerebral ischemia. It has been demonstrated recently that many molecular chaperones coexist with MAM and regulate the MAM and thus Ca2+ concentration inside mitochondria. Here, we review recent research on cerebral ischemia and MAM, with a focus on molecular chaperones and ER-mitochondrial calcium transfer

    A surface defect detection method of steel plate based on YOLOV3

    Get PDF
    At present, the steel plate surface defect detection technology based on machine vision and convolutional neural network (CNN) has achieved good results. However, these models are mostly two-stage methods, extracting features first and then classifying them, which is slow and inaccurate. Therefore, this paper proposes a single-stage surface defect detection method of steel plate based on yolov3, which can classify defects, determine the location of defects, and greatly improve the detection speed. It is of great significance to realize the automation of cold rolling production line. The experiment shows that the detection speed of this model reaches 62 fps and the accuracy reaches 73 %, which has a good prospect in industry

    Turing Instability in a Boundary-fed System

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    The formation of localized structures in the chlorine dioxide-idodine-malonic acid (CDIMA) reaction-diffusion system is investigated numerically using a realistic model of this system. We analyze the one-dimensional patterns formed along the gradients imposed by boundary feeds, and study their linear stability to symmetry-breaking perturbations (Turing instability) in the plane transverse to these gradients. We establish that an often-invoked simple local linear analysis which neglects longitudinal diffusion is inappropriate for predicting the linear stability of these patterns. Using a fully nonuniform analysis, we investigate the structure of the patterns formed along the gradients and their stability to transverse Turing pattern formation as a function of the values of two control parameters: the malonic acid feed concentration and the size of the reactor in the dimension along the gradients. The results from this investigation are compared with existing experiments.Comment: 41 pages, 18 figures, to be published in Physical Review
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