172 research outputs found

    International Environmental Law: 2005 Annual Report

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    International Environmental Law: 2004 Annual Report

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    Aging in the glass phase of a 2D random periodic elastic system

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    Using RG we investigate the non-equilibrium relaxation of the (Cardy-Ostlund) 2D random Sine-Gordon model, which describes pinned arrays of lines. Its statics exhibits a marginal (θ=0\theta=0) glass phase for T<TgT<T_g described by a line of fixed points. We obtain the universal scaling functions for two-time dynamical response and correlations near TgT_g for various initial conditions, as well as the autocorrelation exponent. The fluctuation dissipation ratio is found to be non-trivial and continuously dependent on TT.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex, Modified Versio

    High-resolution Compton spectroscopy using X-ray microcalorimeters

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    X-ray Compton spectroscopy is one of the few direct probes of the electron momentum distribution of bulk materials in ambient and operando environments. We report high-resolution inelastic X-ray scattering experiments with high momentum and energy transfer performed at a storage-ring-based high-energy X-ray light source facility using an X-ray microcalorimeter detector. Compton profiles were measured for lithium and cobalt oxide powders relevant to lithium-ion battery research. Spectroscopic analysis of the measured Compton profiles shows high-sensitivity to the low-Z elements and oxidation states. The lineshape analysis of the measured Compton profiles in comparison with computed Hartree-Fock profiles is limited by the resolution of the energy-resolving semiconductor detector. We have characterized an X-ray transition-edge sensor microcalorimeter detector for high-resolution Compton scattering experiments using a bending magnet source at the Advanced Photon Source (APS) with a double crystal monochromator providing monochromatic photon energies near 27.5 keV. The momentum resolution below 0.16 atomic units was measured yielding an improvement of more than a factor of 7 over a state-of-the-art silicon drift detector for the same scattering geometry. Furthermore, the lineshapes of narrow valence and broad core electron profiles of sealed lithium metal were clearly resolved using an X-ray microcalorimeter detector compared to smeared and broadened lineshapes observed when using a silicon drift detector. High-resolution Compton scattering using the energy-resolving detector shown here presents new opportunities for spatial imaging of electron momentum distributions for a wide class of materials with applications ranging from electrochemistry to condensed matter physics.Comment: The following article has been submitted to Applied Physics Letter

    Nanoparticle assembly: a perspective and some unanswered questions

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    In early 2016, the Royal Society of Chemistry arranged a meeting on the topic &apos;Nanoparticle Assemblies: from Fundamentals to Applications&apos; which was hosted at IIT-Bombay, Mumbai. The meeting brought several leading nanoscience and nanotechnology researchers to India and is only the second Faraday Discussions meeting to have been held in the country. The papers presented at the meeting and the resulting active discussions have been summarized in a Faraday Discussion issue(1). The broad range of topics discussed at the meeting led to an understanding on where we stand in the field of nanoparticle assembly, and also enunciated some of the outstanding fundamental and practical issues that remain to be resolved before these ideas can be applied to practical situations. Driven by these ideas, here we focus on four topics/questions: (i) Can we achieve function-driven design of nanoparticle assemblies? (ii) What is the minimal information needed to build a desired assembly? (iii) How complex a structure can one build? How can one make it responsive? What are the relative roles of equilibrium versus dynamics in the assembly process, and are we at a point where we can now pursue active assembly as a viable mode for creating complex assemblies? (iv) What are the applications that are being targeted and what are the barriers to implementation? In this perspective, we do not present an exhaustive survey of the vast literature in this area, but indicate overarching themes/questions that require immediate attention, largely based on the discussions at the Mumbai meeting.open

    Singular Density of States of Disordered Dirac Fermions in the Chiral Models

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    The Dirac fermion in the random chiral models is studied which includes the random gauge field model and the random hopping model. We focus on a connection between continuum and lattice models to give a clear perspective for the random chiral models. Two distinct structures of density of states (DoS) around zero energy, one is a power-law dependence on energy in the intermediate energy range and the other is a diverging one at zero energy, are revealed by an extensive numerical study for large systems up to 250×250250\times 250. For the random hopping model, our finding of the diverging DoS within very narrow energy range reconciles previous inconsistencies between the lattice and the continuum models.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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