3,643 research outputs found
Applications of thermal energy storage in the cement industry
In the manufacture of cement, literally trillions of Btu's are rejected to the environment each year. The purpose of this feasibility study program was to determine whether thermal energy storage could be used to conserve or allow alternative uses of this rejected energy. This study identifies and quantifies the sources of rejected energy in the cement manufacturing process, established use of this energy, investigates various storage system concepts, and selects energy conservation systems for further study. Thermal performance and economic analyses are performed on candidate storage systems for four typical cement plants representing various methods of manufacturing cement. Through the use of thermal energy storage in conjunction with waste heat electric power generation units, an estimated 2.4 x 10 to the 13th power Btu/year, or an equivalent on investment of the proposed systems are an incentive for further development
Spontaneous, collective coherence in driven, dissipative cavity arrays
We study an array of dissipative tunnel-coupled cavities, each interacting
with an incoherently pumped two-level emitter. For cavities in the lasing
regime, we find correlations between the light fields of distant cavities,
despite the dissipation and the incoherent nature of the pumping mechanism.
These correlations decay exponentially with distance for arrays in any
dimension but become increasingly long ranged with increasing photon tunneling
between adjacent cavities. The interaction-dominated and the
tunneling-dominated regimes show markedly different scaling of the correlation
length which always remains finite due to the finite photon trapping time. We
propose a series of observables to characterize the spontaneous build-up of
collective coherence in the system.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, including supplemental material (with 4 pages, 1
figure). This is a shorter version with some modifications in the
supplemental material (a gap in the proof was closed and calculations
significantly generalized and improved
Range Renovation
Mechanical treatments of rangelands are designed to increase water infiltration and increase forage quantity and quality. Storing precipitation where it falls is important to stabilize in annual forage production, especially on sites with water uptake problems due to slope, shortgrass sod cover and/or high salt concentrations in the upper horizons Soil moisture and vegetation data accumulated over five growing seasons following mechanical renovation of Thin Claypan range sites indicate a great potential exists for increasing range carrying capacity. Both soil moisture and forage production can be improved
The two-level atom laser: analytical results and the laser transition
The problem of the two-level atom laser is studied analytically. The
steady-state solution is expressed as a continued fraction, and allows for
accurate approximation by rational functions. Moreover, we show that the abrupt
change observed in the pump dependence of the steady-state population is
directly connected with the transition to the lasing regime. The condition for
a sharp transition to Poissonian statistics is expressed as a scaling limit of
vanishing cavity loss and light-matter coupling, , ,
such that stays finite and , where
is the rate of atomic losses. The same scaling procedure is also shown to
describe a similar change to Poisson distribution in the Scully-Lamb laser
model too, suggesting that the low-, low- asymptotics is of a more
general significance for the laser transition.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures. Extended discussion of the paper aim (in the
Introduction) and of the results (Conclusions and Discussion). Results
unchange
A rolling-horizon quadratic-programming approach to the signal control problem in large-scale congested urban road networks
The paper investigates the efficiency of a recently developed signal control methodology, which offers a computationally feasible technique for real-time network-wide signal control in large-scale urban traffic networks and is applicable also under congested traffic conditions. In this methodology, the traffic flow process is modeled by use of the store-and-forward modeling paradigm, and the problem of network-wide signal control (including all constraints) is formulated as a quadratic-programming problem that aims at minimizing and balancing the link queues so as to minimize the risk of queue spillback. For the application of the proposed methodology in real time, the corresponding optimization algorithm is embedded in a rolling-horizon (model-predictive) control scheme. The control strategy’s efficiency and real-time feasibility is demonstrated and compared with the Linear-Quadratic approach taken by the signal control strategy TUC (Traffic-responsive Urban Control) as well as with optimized fixed-control settings via their simulation-based application to the road network of the city centre of Chania, Greece, under a number of different demand scenarios. The comparative evaluation is based on various criteria and tools including the recently proposed fundamental diagram for urban network traffic
Western Wheatgrass Recovery From Drought
Native grasses are predictably taller in wet years than in dry years and their density also increases with favorable precipitation. These responses of western wheatgrass are more dramatic on mechanically treated rangeland when precipitation is adequate. Measurements taken in July 1991 confirmed that western wheatgrass was slightly taller and density at least two times greater on mechanically treated claypan soils compared with untreated soils 13 and 18 years following treatment. Increases of this magnitude constitute a potentially greater carrying capacity which livestock producers should be prepared to utilize. This report briefly summarizes the effects of mechanical treatment on height and density of western wheatgrass 13 and 18 years following treatment and in a wet year following several dry years
UK Research Information Shared Service (UKRISS) Final Report, July 2014
The reporting of research information is a complex and expensive activity for research organisations (ROs). There is little alignment between funders of the reporting requests made to institutions and requests made to individual researchers about their research outputs and outcomes. This inevitably results in duplication and increased costs across the sector, whilst limiting the potential sharing and reuse of the information. The UK Research Information Shared Service (UKRISS) project conducted a feasibility and scoping study for the reporting of research information at a national level based on CERIF (Common European Research Information Format), with the objective of increasing efficiency, productivity and quality across the sector. The aim was to define and prototype solutions which are compelling, easy to use, have a low entry barrier, and support innovative information sharing and benchmarking. CERIF has emerged as the preferred format for expressing research information across Europe. To date, CERIF has been piloted for specific applications, but not as a format for reporting requirements across all UK ROs. The final report presents the work carried out by the UKRISS project, including requirements gathering, modelling and prototyping, as well as recommendation for sustainability. UKRISS was divided into two phases. Phase 1, mapping the reporting landscape, ran from March 2012 to December 2012. Phase 2, exploring delivery of potential solutions, began in February 2013 and ended in December 2013
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Paradoxes and Innovation in Family Firms: The Role of Paradoxical Thinking
Scholars stress that family firms are inherently paradoxical, and that tensions, such as tradition versus change, family liquidity versus business growth, and founder control versus successor autonomy, can both inhibit and foster innovation. Further, theorists propose that firms led by paradoxical thinkers are more likely to manage these tensions and fuel innovative behavior. Leveraging family business and organizational paradox literatures, this multi-stage exploratory study develops measures of paradoxical tensions and paradoxical thinking in family firms, and tests these propositions. Findings indicate that paradoxical tensions may stymie innovative behavior, but that leaders' paradoxical thinking is positively related to innovative behavior
Store-and-forward based methods for the signal control problem in large-scale congested urban road networks
The problem of designing network-wide traffic signal control strategies for large-scale congested urban road networks is considered. One known and two novel methodologies, all based on the store-and-forward modeling paradigm, are presented and compared. The known methodology is a linear multivariable feedback regulator derived through the formulation of a linear-quadratic optimal control problem. An alternative, novel methodology consists of an open-loop constrained quadratic optimal control problem, whose numerical solution is achieved via quadratic programming. Yet a different formulation leads to an open-loop constrained nonlinear optimal control problem, whose numerical solution is achieved by use of a feasible-direction algorithm. A preliminary simulation-based investigation of the signal control problem for a large-scale urban road network using these methodologies demonstrates the comparative efficiency and real-time feasibility of the developed signal control methods
Melting curves of ice polymorphs in the vicinity of the liquid-liquid critical point
The possible existence of a liquid-liquid critical point in deeply
supercooled water has been a subject of debate in part due to the challenges
associated with providing definitive experimental evidence. Pioneering work by
Mishima and Stanley [Nature 392, 164 (1998) and Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 334
(2000)] sought to shed light on this problem by studying the melting curves of
different ice polymorphs and their metastable continuation in the vicinity of
the expected location of the liquid-liquid transition and its associated
critical point. Based on the continuous or discontinuous changes in slope of
the melting curves, Mishima suggested that the liquid-liquid critical point
lies between the melting curves of ice III and ice V. Here, we explore this
conjecture using molecular dynamics simulations with a purely-predictive
machine learning model based on ab initio quantum-mechanical calculations. We
study the melting curves of ices III, IV, V, VI, and XIII using this model and
find that the melting lines of all the studied ice polymorphs are supercritical
and do not intersect the liquid-liquid transition locus. We also find a
pronounced, yet continuous, change in slope of the melting lines upon crossing
of the locus of maximum compressibility of the liquid. Finally, we analyze
critically the literature in light of our findings, and conclude that the
scenario in which melting curves are supercritical is favored by the most
recent computational and experimental evidence. Thus, although the
preponderance of experimental and computational evidence is consistent with the
existence of a second critical point in water, the behavior of the melting
lines of ice polymorphs does not provide strong evidence in support of this
viewpoint, according to our calculations.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, supplementary informatio
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