2,677 research outputs found
Design and evaluation of fluidized bed heat recovery for diesel engine systems
The potential of utilizing fluidized bed heat exchangers in place of conventional counter-flow heat exchangers for heat recovery from adiabatic diesel engine exhaust gas streams was studied. Fluidized bed heat recovery systems were evaluated in three different heavy duty transport applications: (1) heavy duty diesel truck; (2) diesel locomotives; and (3) diesel marine pushboat. The three applications are characterized by differences in overall power output and annual utilization. For each application, the exhaust gas source is a turbocharged-adiabatic diesel core. Representative subposed exhaust gas heat utilization power cycles were selected for conceptual design efforts including design layouts and performance estimates for the fluidized bed heat recovery heat exchangers. The selected power cycles were: organic rankine with RC-1 working fluid, turbocompound power turbine with steam injection, and stirling engine. Fuel economy improvement predictions are used in conjunction with capital cost estimates and fuel price data to determine payback times for the various cases
Buckling mediated by mobile localized elastic excitations
Experiments reveal that structural transitions in thin sheets are mediated by
the passage of transient and stable mobile localized elastic excitations. These
``crumples'' or ``d-cones'' nucleate, propagate, interact, annihilate, and
escape. Much of the dynamics occurs on millisecond time scales. Nucleation
sites correspond to regions where generators of the ideal unstretched surface
converge. Additional stable intermediate states illustrate two forms of
quasistatic inter-crumple interaction through ridges or valleys. These
interactions create pairs from which extended patterns may be constructed in
larger specimens. The onset of localized transient deformation with increasing
sheet size is correlated with a characteristic stable crumple size, whose
measured scaling with thickness is consistent with prior theory and experiment
for localized elastic features in thin sheets. We offer a new theoretical
justification of this scaling.Comment: contains link to video
The Role of the Business Press as an Information Intermediary
This paper investigates whether the business press serves as an information intermediary. The press potentially shapes firms\u27 information environments by packaging and disseminating information, as well as by creating new information through journalism activities. We find that greater press coverage reduces information asymmetry (i.e., lower spreads and greater depth) around earnings announcements, with broad dissemination of information having a bigger impact than the quantity or quality of press-generated information. These results are robust to controlling for firm-initiated disclosures, market reactions to the announcement, and other information intermediaries. Our findings suggest that the press helps reduce information problems around earnings announcements
Minority-carrier mobility enhancement in p+ InGaAs lattice matched to InP
Minority electron mobilities in pf-In0.ssGac4, As have been measured with the zero field time-of-flight technique. The room-temperature (297 K) minority electron mobilities for p+-In,, 53Gac47A~ doped 0.9 and 3.1 x 10” cmm3 are found to be 2900 and 3300 cm* V-’ s-l, respectively. These are the first measurements to demonstrate enhancement in minority-carrier mobility as doping is increased for heavily doped Ines3Gae.4+s. This enhancement in mobility as doping is increased is similar to that observed in p+-GaAs, which has been attributed to reductions in plasmon and carrier-carrier scattering between minority electrons and majority holes
Polyhedral vesicles
Polyhedral vesicles with a large bending modulus of the membrane such as the
gel phase lipid membrane were studied using a Brownian dynamics simulation. The
vesicles exhibit various polyhedral morphologies such as tetrahedron and cube
shapes. We clarified two types of line defects on the edges of the polyhedrons:
cracks of both monolayers at the spontaneous curvature of monolayer , and a crack of the inner monolayer at . Around the
latter defect, the inner monolayer curves positively. Our results suggested
that the polyhedral morphology is controlled by .Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
2D-IR Study of a Photoswitchable Isotope-Labeled α-Helix
A series of photoswitchable, α-helical peptides were studied using two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy (2D-IR). Single-isotope labeling with 13C18O at various positions in the sequence was employed to spectrally isolate particular backbone positions. We show that a single 13C18O label can give rise to two bands along the diagonal of the 2D-IR spectrum, one of which is from an amide group that is hydrogen-bonded internally, or to a solvent molecule, and the other from a non-hydrogen-bonded amide group. The photoswitch enabled examination of both the folded and unfolded state of the helix. For most sites, unfolding of the peptide caused a shift of intensity from the hydrogen-bonded peak to the non-hydrogen-bonded peak. The relative intensity of the two diagonal peaks gives an indication of the fraction of molecules hydrogen-bonded at a certain location along the sequence. As this fraction varies quite substantially along the helix, we conclude that the helix is not uniformly folded. Furthermore, the shift in hydrogen bonding is much smaller than the change of helicity measured by CD spectroscopy, indicating that non-native hydrogen-bonded or mis-folded loops are formed in the unfolded ensemble
Resonance structure in the Li^- photodetachment cross section
We report on the first observation of resonance structure in the total cross
section for the photodetachment of Li^-. The structure arises from the
autodetaching decay of doubly excited ^1P states of Li^- that are bound with
respect to the 3p state of the Li atom. Calculations have been performed for
both Li^- and H^- to assist in the identification of these resonances. The
lowest lying resonance is a symmetrically excited intrashell resonance. Higher
lying asymmetrically excited intershell states are observed which converge on
the Li(3p) limit.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure, 19 references, RevTeX, figures in ep
Antagonists of the Receptor-G Protein Interface Block Gi-coupled Signal Transduction
The carboxyl terminus of heterotrimeric G protein alpha subunits plays an important role in receptor interaction. We demonstrate that peptides corresponding to the last 11 residues of Galphai1/2 or Galphao1 impair agonist binding to A1 adenosine receptors, whereas Galphas or Galphat peptides have no effect. Previously, by using a combinatorial library we identified a series of Galphat peptide analogs that bind rhodopsin with high affinity (Martin, E. L., Rens-Domiano, S., Schatz, P. J., and Hamm, H. E. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 361-366). Native Galphai1/2 peptide as well as several analogs were tested for their ability to modulate agonist binding or antagonist-agonist competition using cells overexpressing human A1 adenosine receptors. Three peptide analogs decreased the Ki, suggesting that they disrupt the high affinity receptor-G protein interaction and stabilize an intermediate affinity state. To study the ability of the peptides to compete with endogenous Galphai proteins and block signal transduction in a native setting, we measured activation of G protein-coupled K+ channels through A1 adenosine or gamma-aminobutyric acid, type B, receptors in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. Native Galphai1/2, peptide, and certain analog peptides inhibited receptor-mediated K+ channel gating, dependent on which receptor was activated. This differential perturbation of receptor-G protein interaction suggests that receptors that act on the same G protein can be selectively disrupted
Precise Measurements of Direct CP Violation, CPT Symmetry, and Other Parameters in the Neutral Kaon System
We present precise tests of CP and CPT symmetry based on the full dataset of
K to pipi decays collected by the KTeV experiment at Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory during 1996, 1997, and 1999. This dataset contains 16 million K to
2pi0 and 69 million K to pi+pi- decays. We measure the direct CP violation
parameter Re(epsilon'/epsilon) = (19.2 pm 2.1)x10-4. We find the KL-KS mass
difference Deltam = (5270 pm 12)x10^6 hbar/s and the KS lifetime tauS = (89.62
pm 0.05)x10-12 s. We also measure several parameters that test CPT invariance.
We find the difference between the phase of the indirect CP violation
parameter, epsilon, and the superweak phase, phi_epsilon - phi_SW = (0.40 pm
0.56) degrees. We measure the difference of the relative phases between the CP
violating and CP conserving decay amplitudes for K to pi+pi- (phi+-) and for K
to 2pi0 (phi00), Delta phi = (0.30 pm 0.35) degrees. From these phase
measurements, we place a limit on the mass difference between K0 and K0bar,
DeltaM < 4.8 x 10-19 GeV/c^2 at 95% C.L. These results are consistent with
those of other experiments, our own earlier measurements, and CPT symmetry.Comment: 28 pages, 30 figures; removed extra figur
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