6,994 research outputs found
Performance of Electropun Polyacrylonitrile Nanofibrous Phases, Shown for the Separation of Water-Soluble Food Dyes via UTLC-Vis-ESI-MS
Research in the miniaturization of planar chromatography led to various approaches in manufacturing ultrathin-layer chromatography (UTLC) layers of reduced thickness (<50 µm) along with smaller instrumentation, as targeted in Office Chromatography. This novel concept merges 3D print & media technologies with miniaturized planar chromatography to realize an all-in-one instrument, in which all steps of UTLC are automated and integrated in the same tiny device. In this context, the development of electrospun polyacrylonitrile (PAN) nanofiber phases was investigated as well as its performance. A nanofibrous stationary phase with fiber diameters of 150225 nm and a thickness of ca. 25 µm was manufactured. Mixtures of water-soluble food dyes were printed on it using a modified office printer, and successfully separated to illustrate the capabilities of such UTLC media. The separation took 8 min for 30 mm and was faster (up to a factor of 2) than on particulate layers. The mean hRF values ranging from 25 to 90 for the five food dyes were well spread over the migration distance, with an overall reproducibility of 7% (mean %RSD over 5 different plates for 5 dyes). The individual mean plate numbers over 5 plates ranged between 8286 and 22,885 (mean of 11,722 over all 5 dyes). The single mean resolutions RS were between 1.7 and 6.5 (for the 5 food dyes over 5 plates), with highly satisfying reproducibilities (0.3 as mean deviation of RS). Using videodensitometry, different amounts separated in parallel led to reliable linear calibrations for each dye (sdv of 3.19.1% for peak heights and 2.49.3% for peak areas). Coupling to mass spectrometry via an elution head-based interface was successfully demonstrated for such ultrathin layers, showing several advantages such as a reduced cleaning process and a minimum zone distance. All these results underline the potential of electrospun nanofibrous phases to succeed as affordable stationary phase for quantitative UTLC
Collective Modes in the Loop Current Ordered Phase of Cuprates
Recently two branches of weakly dispersive collective modes have been
discovered in under-doped cuprates by inelastic neutron scattering.
Polarization analysis reveals that the modes are magnetic excitations. They are
only visible for temperatures below the transition temperature to a broken
symmetry phase which was discovered earlier and their intensity increases as
temperature is further decreased. The broken symmetry phase itself has
symmetries consistent with ordering of orbital current loops within a unit-cell
without breaking translational symmetry. In order to calculate the collective
modes of such a state we add quantum terms to the Ashkin-Teller (AT) model with
which the classical loop current order has been described. We derive that the
mean field ground state of the quantum model is a product over all unit-cells
of linear combination of the four possible classical configurations of the loop
current order in each unit-cell. The collective modes are calculated by using a
generalized Holstein-Primakoff boson representation of orbital moment operators
and lead to three branches of gapped weakly dispersive collective modes. The
experimental results are consistent with the two lower energy branches; the
third mode is at a higher energy than looked for by present neutron scattering
experiments and might also be over-damped. Implications of the discovery of the
collective modes are discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Spontaneous time reversal symmetry breaking in the pseudogap state of high-Tc superconductors
When matter undergoes a phase transition from one state to another, usually a
change in symmetry is observed, as some of the symmetries exhibited are said to
be spontaneously broken. The superconducting phase transition in the underdoped
high-Tc superconductors is rather unusual, in that it is not a mean-field
transition as other superconducting transitions are. Instead, it is observed
that a pseudo-gap in the electronic excitation spectrum appears at temperatures
T* higher than Tc, while phase coherence, and superconductivity, are
established at Tc (Refs. 1, 2). One would then wish to understand if T* is just
a crossover, controlled by fluctuations in order which will set in at the lower
Tc (Refs. 3, 4), or whether some symmetry is spontaneously broken at T* (Refs.
5-10). Here, using angle-resolved photoemission with circularly polarized
light, we find that, in the pseudogap state, left-circularly polarized photons
give a different photocurrent than right-circularly polarized photons, and
therefore the state below T* is rather unusual, in that it breaks time reversal
symmetry11. This observation of a phase transition at T* provides the answer to
a major mystery of the phase diagram of the cuprates. The appearance of the
anomalies below T* must be related to the order parameter that sets in at this
characteristic temperature .Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Narasimham Committee Report - Some Further Ramifications and Suggestions
This paper while agreeing with the general thrust of the Narasimham Committee Report. Calls attention to some logical corollaries of the Report and analyses some possible fallout from implementing the Report. We agree with the view that control of banking system should be under an autonomous body supervised by the RBI. However at the level of individual banks, closer scrutiny of lending procedures may be called for than is envisaged in the Report. In a freely functioning capital market the potential of government bonds is enormous, but this necessitates restructuring of the government bond market. The government bonds may then also be used as suitable hedging mechanisms by introducing options and futures trading. We recommend freeing up the operation of pension and provident fund to enable at least partial investment of such funds in risky securities. In the corporate sector, we believe that the current 2:1 debt equity norm is too high and not sustainable in the long term. We envisage that high debt levels and higher interest rates, combined with higher business risk may result in greater incidence of corporate sickness. This may call for various schemes for retrenched workers and amendment to land laws for easy exit of companies. On account of interdependencies across different policies, any sequencing of their implementation may be highly problematic. We therefore suggest a near simultaneity in the implementation of various reforms in order to build up a momentum which would be irreversible if people are to have confidence that the reforms will endure, and if we are to retain our credibility with international financial institutions.
Heavy-Fermions in a Transition-Metal Compound:
The recent discovery of heavy-Fermion properties in Lithium Vanadate and the
enormous difference in its properties from the properties of Lithium Titanate
as well as of the manganite compounds raise some puzzling questions about
strongly correlated Fermions. These are disscussed as well as a solution to the
puzzles provided.Comment: late
The glass transition and crystallization kinetic studies on BaNaB9O15 glasses
Transparent glasses of BaNaB9O15 (BNBO) were fabricated via the conventional
melt-quenching technique. The amorphous and the glassy nature of the
as-quenched samples were respectively, confirmed by X-ray powder diffraction
(XRD) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The glass transition and
crystallization parameters were evaluated under non-isothermal conditions using
DSC. The correlation between the heating rate dependent glass transition and
the crystallization temperatures was discussed and deduced the Kauzmann
temperature for BNBO glass-plates and powdered samples. The values of the
Kauzmann temperature for the plates and powdered samples were 776 K and 768 K,
respectively. Approximation-free method was used to evaluate the
crystallization kinetic parameters for the BNBO glass samples. The effect of
the sample thickness on the crystallization kinetics of BNBO glasses was also
investigated.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figure
Building a CHS Bathymetric Data Warehouse
The CHS is designing and implementing a Source Database for bathymetric data. To store and manage terabytes of bathymetric information for producing CHS products and providing services to clients requires a fresh approach. The implementation of HHCode (Helical Hyperspatial Code) for storing, analyzing and accessing dense spatial data sets in an Oracle Relational Database Management System (RDBMS) is a key technology used to build the data warehouse. The paper addresses the concepts and applications necessary to manage this data within the data repository. Specific areas addressed are aggregation, attribution, and partitioning of the spatial data. The implementation of an on-line, near-line and off-line model to minimize storage costs is described. The approach used to perform horizontal and vertical datum transformations is discussed
Kondo Insulators Modeled by the One Dimensional Anderson Lattice: A Numerical Renormalization Group Study
In order to better understand Kondo insulators, we have studied both the
symmetric and asymmetric Anderson lattices at half-filling in one dimension
using the density matrix formulation of the numerical renormalization group. We
have calculated the charge gap, spin gap and quasiparticle gap as a function of
the repulsive interaction U using open boundary conditions for lattices as
large as 24 sites. We find that the charge gap is larger than the spin gap for
all U for both the symmetric and asymmetric cases. RKKY interactions are
evident in the f-spin-f-spin correlation functions at large U in the symmetric
case, but are suppressed in the asymmetric case as the f-level approaches the
Fermi energy. This suppression can also be seen in the staggered susceptibility
and it is consistent with neutron scattering measurements in CeNiSn.Comment: 32 pages, Latex file with Postcript figures
New excitations in bcc He - an inelastic neutron scattering study
We report neutron scattering measurements on bcc solid % He. We studied
the phonon branches and the recently discovered ''optic-like'' branch along the
main crystalline directions. In addition, we discovered another, dispersionless
"optic-like'' branch at an energy around 1 meV (~11K). The properties of
the two "optic-like" branches seem different. Since one expects only 3 acoustic
phonon branches in a monoatomic cubic crystal, these new branches must
represent different type of excitations. One possible interpretation involves
localized excitations unique to a quantum solid.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted by PRB, Rapid Communication
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