17,739 research outputs found

    Lessons from Post-colonial Malaysian Economic Development

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    Malaysian economic development has been shaped by public policy in response to changing national and external conditions. Public investments peaked in the 1970s and early 1980s, until the policy reversals driven by sovereign debt concerns and new policy ideology fads. Foreign investments continued to be favoured after independence for ethnic political reasons. Thus, foreign investments continued to be very significant in financial services as well as manufacturing growth, both for import substitution from the 1960s and for export from the 1970s. Private investments were attracted by government provision of infrastructure, cheap but schooled labour, tax incentives, lax environmental regulations and an undervalued currency. Poverty reduction and ownership redistribution by ethnicity were most successful during the 1970s and early 1980s, although it is unclear how much these improved inter-ethnic relations. Economic liberalization and the growing influence of business interests and political elites have undermined the government’s developmental role, culminating in the 1997–8 financial crisis and lacklustre growth since. Malaysian industrialization could only have been achieved with appropriate incentives for investments and technical progress through key policy interventions.Malaysia, development strategies, liberalization, intervention

    Facile synthesis of Co-N4-doped mesoporous carbon for oxygen reduction reaction

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    The oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is a critical factor in fuel cells that has attracted significant research attention. Non-precious metal catalysts have improved the ORR activity considerably, but they still exhibit poorer ORR performance than commercial Pt-based catalysts. In this study, Co-N-4-doped mesoporous carbon (Co-N-4-MC) was prepared for the ORR using cobalt-azides as the Co-N-4-containing precursor, and ordered mesoporous silica SBA-15 as a template for achieving mesoporous structures. The Co-N-4-MC electrode exhibited remarkable ORR activity in an alkaline medium (a half-wave potential of -0.15 V vs. MMO, only similar to 19 mV deviation from the commercial Pt/C catalyst), high selectivity (electron-transfer number similar to 4) and excellent electrochemical stability (similar to 8 mV negative shift of the half-wave potential after 1000 cycles). The good performance of the Co-N-4- MC electrode was attributed to the synergetic effects of N-4, C and Co. In particular, the existence of graphitic pores in the Co-N-4-MC catalyst facilitated the diffusion of O-2 to the catalytic active sites, which benefited the progression of the ORR on the Co-N-4-MC catalyst. (C) 2017 The Electrochemical Society

    Theory of enhanced performance emerging in a sparsely-connected competitive population

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    We provide an analytic theory to explain Anghel et al.'s recent numerical finding whereby a maximum in the global performance emerges for a sparsely-connected competitive population [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 058701 (2004)]. We show that the effect originates in the highly-correlated dynamics of strategy choice, and can be significantly enhanced using a simple modification to the model.Comment: This revised version will appear in PRE as a Rapid Com

    η-Ricci Soliton on 3-Dimensional f-Kenmotsu Manifolds

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    The object of the present paper is to carry out η-Ricci soliton on 3-dimensional regularf-Kenmotsu manifold and we turn up some geometrical results. Furthermore we bring out the curvature conditions for which η-Ricci soliton on such manifolds are shrinking, steady or expanding. We wind up by considering examples of existence of shrinking and expanding η-Ricci soliton on 3-dimensional regularf-Kenmotsu manifolds

    The Origin of Gamma-Rays from Globular Clusters

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    Fermi has detected gamma-ray emission from eight globular clusters. We suggest that the gamma-ray emission from globular clusters may result from the inverse Compton scattering between relativistic electrons/positrons in the pulsar wind of MSPs in the globular clusters and background soft photons including cosmic microwave/relic photons, background star lights in the clusters, the galactic infrared photons and the galactic star lights. We show that the gamma-ray spectrum from 47 Tuc can be explained equally well by upward scattering of either the relic photons, the galactic infrared photons or the galactic star lights whereas the gamma-ray spectra from other seven globular clusters are best fitted by the upward scattering of either the galactic infrared photons or the galactic star lights. We also find that the observed gamma-ray luminosity is correlated better with the combined factor of the encounter rate and the background soft photon energy density. Therefore the inverse Compton scattering may also contribute to the observed gamma-ray emission from globular clusters detected by Fermi in addition to the standard curvature radiation process. Furthermore, we find that the emission region of high energy photons from globular cluster produced by inverse Compton scattering is substantially larger than the core of globular cluster with a radius >10pc. The diffuse radio and X-rays emitted from globular clusters can also be produced by synchrotron radiation and inverse Compton scattering respectively. We suggest that future observations including radio, X-rays, and gamma-rays with energy higher than 10 GeV and better angular resolution can provide better constraints for the models.Comment: Accepted by ApJ, Comments may send to Prof. K.S. Cheng: [email protected]

    η\eta photoproduction on the quasi-free nucleons in the chiral quark model

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    A chiral quark-model approach is adopted to study the η\eta photoproduction off the quasi-free neutron and proton from a deuteron target. Good descriptions of the differential cross sections, total cross sections and beam asymmetries for these two processes are obtained in the low energy region. For γp→ηp\gamma p\rightarrow \eta p, the dominant resonances are S11(1535)S_{11}(1535), S11(1650)S_{11}(1650), D13(1520)D_{13}(1520), D13(1700)D_{13}(1700) and P13(1720)P_{13}(1720). While for the γn→ηn\gamma n\rightarrow \eta n process, the dominant resonances are S11(1535)S_{11}(1535), S11(1650)S_{11}(1650), D13(1520)D_{13}(1520), D15(1675)D_{15}(1675) and P13(1720)P_{13}(1720). Furthermore, the uu channel backgrounds have significant contributions to the η\eta photoproduction processes. The configuration mixings in the S11(1535,1650)S_{11}(1535,1650) and D13(1520,1700)D_{13}(1520,1700) can be extracted, i.e. θS≃26∘\theta_S\simeq 26^\circ and θD≃21∘\theta_D\simeq 21^\circ. It shows that the narrow bump-like structure around W=1.68W= 1.68 GeV observed in γn→ηn\gamma n\rightarrow \eta n can be naturally explained by the constructive interferences between S11(1535)S_{11}(1535) and S11(1650)S_{11}(1650). In contrast, the destructive interference between S11(1535)S_{11}(1535) and S11(1650)S_{11}(1650) produces the shallow dip around W=1.67W= 1.67 GeV in γp→ηp\gamma p\rightarrow \eta p. The SS wave interfering behaviors in the proton and neutron reactions are correlated with each other in the quark model framework, and no new exotic nucleon resonances are needed in these two reactions.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, helicity amplitudes are added, to be published in PR

    Pretreatment of lignocellulosic wheat straw in ethanolwater co-solvents

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    Pretreatment is the key process for lignocellulosic biomass conversion, which is necessary to alter the structure of biomass to make cellulose and hemicellulose more accessible to the enzymes that convert the carbohydrate polymers into fermentable sugars. The present study reports the use of 15 ml ethanol-water co-solvents (1:1, v/v) for the pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass (1.5 g) to produce cellulosic residual solid under varying conditions of temperature (220-310 °C) and time (20-100 min). Kinetic analysis was performed to examine the decomposition behavior of biomass in the co-solvents. The results showed that the optimal conditions for the pretreatment were 250 °C and 40 min. The maximum yield of residual solid under the optimized pretreatment conditions was 49.6% (0.744 g), which consisted of 91.4% holocellulose (cellulose and hemicellulose). Microstructure analysis showed that the compact monolithic structure of biomass had decomposed into a loose filamentous structure

    Investigation of the Electrochemical Properties of CoAl-Layered Double Hydroxide/Ni(OH)2

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    Layered double hydroxides (LDH) as active electrode materials have become the focus of research in energy storage applications. The manufacturing of excellent electrochemical performance of the LDH electrode is still a challenge. In this paper, the production of CoAl-LDH@Ni(OH)2 is carried out in two steps, including hydrothermal and electrodeposition techniques. The prominent features of this electrode material are shown in the structural and morphological aspects, and the electrochemical properties are investigated by improving the conductivity and cycle stability. The core of this experimental study is to investigate the properties of the materials by depositing different amounts of nickel hydroxide and changing the loading of the active materials. The experimental results show that the specific capacity is 1810.5F·g−1 at 2 A/g current density and the cycle stability remained at 76% at 30 A g−1 for 3000 cycles. Moreover, a solid-state asymmetric supercapacitor with CoAl-LDH@Ni(OH)2 as the positive electrode and multi-walled carbon nanotube coated on the nickel foam as the negative electrode delivers high energy density (16.72 Wh kg−1 at the power density of 350.01 W kg−1). This study indicates the advantages of the design and synthesis of layered double hydroxides, a composite with excellent electrochemical properties that has potential applications in energy storage
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