2,236 research outputs found
A nondiagrammatic calculation of the Rho parameter from heavy fermions
A simple nondiagrammatic evaluation of the nondecoupling effect of heavy
fermions on the Veltman's Rho parameter is presented in detail. This
calculation is based on the path integral approach, the electroweak chiral
Lagrangian formalism, and the Schwinger proper time method.Comment: 11 page
A new method for characterizing the interphase regions of carbon nanotube composites
AbstractThe elastic properties of a carbon nanotube (CNT) reinforced composite are affected by many factors such as the CNT–matrix interphase. As such, mechanical analysis without sufficient consideration of these factors can give rise to incorrect predictions. Using single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) reinforced Polyvinylchloride (PVC) as an example, this paper presents a new technique to characterize interphase regions. The representative volume element (RVE) of the SWCNT–PVC system is modeled as an assemblage of three phases, the equivalent solid fiber (ESF) mimicking the SWCNT under the van der Waals (vdW) forces, the dense interphase PVC of appropriate thickness and density, and the bulk PVC matrix. Two methods are proposed to extract the elastic properties of the ESF from the atomistic RVE and the CNT-cluster. Using atomistic simulations, the thickness and the average density of interphase matrix are determined and the elastic properties of amorphous interphase matrix are characterized as a function of density. The method is examined in a continuum-based three-phase model developed with the aid of molecular mechanics (MM) and the finite element (FE) method. The predictions of the continuum-based model show a good agreement with the atomistic results verifies that the interphase properties of amorphous matrix in CNT-composites could be approximated as a function of density. The results show that ignoring either the vdW interaction region or the interphase matrix layer can bring about misleading results, and that the effect of internal walls of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) on the density and thickness of the dense interphase is negligible
Comment on "Conjectures on exact solution of three-dimensional (3D) simple orthorhombic Ising lattices" [arXiv:0705.1045]
It is shown that a recent article by Z.-D. Zhang [arXiv:0705.1045] is in
error and violates well-known theorems.Comment: LaTeX, 3 pages, no figures, submitted to Philosophical Magazine.
Expanded versio
Rejoinder on "Conjectures on exact solution of three-dimensional (3D) simple orthorhombic Ising lattices"
It is shown that the arguments in the reply of Z.-D. Zhang (arXiv:0812.0194)
to the comment arXiv:0811.1802 defending his conjectures in arXiv:0705.1045 are
invalid. His conjectures have been thoroughly disproved.Comment: LaTeX2e, 2 pages, added responses to arXiv:0812.0194v3 and
arXiv:0812.0194v
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Scale Dependence of Effective Matrix Diffusion Coefficient Evidence and Preliminary Interpertation
The exchange of solute mass (through molecular diffusion) between fluid in fractures and fluid in the rock matrix is called matrix diffusion. Owing to the orders-of-magnitude slower flow velocity in the matrix compared to fractures, matrix diffusion can significantly retard solute transport in fractured rock, and therefore is an important process for a variety of problems, including remediation of subsurface contamination and geological disposal of nuclear waste. The effective matrix diffusion coefficient (molecular diffusion coefficient in free water multiplied by matrix tortuosity) is an important parameter for describing matrix diffusion, and in many cases largely determines overall solute transport behavior. While matrix diffusion coefficient values measured from small rock samples in the laboratory are generally used for modeling field-scale solute transport in fractured rock (Boving and Grathwohl, 2001), several research groups recently have independently found that effective matrix diffusion coefficients much larger than laboratory measurements are needed to match field-scale tracer-test data (Neretnieks, 2002; Becker and Shapiro, 2000; Shapiro, 2001; Liu et al., 2003,2004a). In addition to the observed enhancement, Liu et al. (2004b), based on a relatively small number of field-test results, reported that the effective matrix diffusion coefficient might be scale dependent, and, like permeability and dispersivity, it seems to increases with test scale. This scale-dependence has important implications for large-scale solute transport in fractured rock. Although a number of mechanisms have been proposed to explain the enhancement of the effective matrix diffusion coefficient, the potential scale dependence and its mechanisms are not fully investigated at this stage. The major objective of this study is to again demonstrate (based on more data published in the literature than those used in Liu et al. [2004b]) the potential scale dependence of the effective matrix-diffusion coefficient, and to -develop a preliminary explanation for this scale-dependent behavior
A pearl on SAT solving in Prolog
A succinct SAT solver is presented that exploits the control provided by delay declarations to implement watched literals and unit propagation. Despite its brevity the solver is surprisingly powerful and its elegant use of Prolog constructs is presented as a programming pearl
Two dimensional scaling of resistance in flux flow region in thin films
The resistance of thin films has been measured when the
angle between the applied fields and -plane of the film is changed
continuously at various temperatures. Under various magnetic fields, the
resistance can be well scaled in terms of the c-axis component of the applied
fields at the same temperature in the whole angle range. Meanwhile, we show
that the measurement of resistance in this way is a complementary method to
determine the growth orientation of the anisotropic high- superconductors.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. Have been published in Physica
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