2,450 research outputs found
Some properties of the LCM sequence
The main purpose of this paper is using the elementary method to study the
properties of the Smarandache LCM sequence, and give some interesting identities
Non-Hermitian dynamics of slowly-varying Hamiltonians
We develop a theoretical description of non-Hermitian time evolution that
accounts for the break- down of the adiabatic theorem. We obtain closed-form
expressions for the time-dependent state amplitudes, involving the complex
eigen-energies as well as inter-band Berry connections calculated using basis
sets from appropriately-chosen Schur decompositions. Using a two-level system
as an example, we show that our theory accurately captures the phenomenon of
"sudden transitions", where the system state abruptly jumps from one eigenstate
to another.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Transport or Store? Synthesizing Flow-based Microfluidic Biochips using Distributed Channel Storage
Flow-based microfluidic biochips have attracted much atten- tion in the EDA
community due to their miniaturized size and execution efficiency. Previous
research, however, still follows the traditional computing model with a
dedicated storage unit, which actually becomes a bottleneck of the performance
of bio- chips. In this paper, we propose the first architectural synthe- sis
framework considering distributed storage constructed tem- porarily from
transportation channels to cache fluid samples. Since distributed storage can
be accessed more efficiently than a dedicated storage unit and channels can
switch between the roles of transportation and storage easily, biochips with
this dis- tributed computing architecture can achieve a higher execution
efficiency even with fewer resources. Experimental results con- firm that the
execution efficiency of a bioassay can be improved by up to 28% while the
number of valves in the biochip can be reduced effectively.Comment: ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference (DAC), June 201
The performance of a heat pump using nanofluid (R22+TiO2) as the working fluid – an experimental study
It has been well known that the nano-particles, including metals, oxides, carbides, or carbon nanotubes, can increase the conduction and convection coefficients and consequently, enhance the heat transfer. Using nanofluids as working fluids in the refrigeration, air-conditioning and heat pump systems has attracted much attention. This work set-up a test rig to experimentally study the system performance of a heat pump with nanofluid as refrigerant, which was prepared by mixing 5wt% TiO2 with R22. Results show that adding the nano particle TiO2 didn’t changed the heat absorbed in the evaporator clearly but increase the heat released in the condenser. As a results, compared to using pure R22, when using R22 + TiO2, the COP of the cooling cycle was decreased slightly, however, the COP of the heating cycle was increased significantly increased power consumption of compression.publishedVersio
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