462 research outputs found

    Phonon transport in large scale carbon-based disordered materials: Implementation of an efficient order-N and real-space Kubo methodology

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    We have developed an efficient order-N real-space Kubo approach for the calculation of the phonon conductivity which outperforms state-of-the-art alternative implementations based on the Green's function formalism. The method treats efficiently the time-dependent propagation of phonon wave packets in real space, and this dynamics is related to the calculation of the thermal conductance. Without loss of generality, we validate the accuracy of the method by comparing the calculated phonon mean free paths in disordered carbon nanotubes (isotope impurities) with other approaches, and further illustrate its upscalability by exploring the thermal conductance features in large width edge-disordered graphene nanoribbons (up to ~20 nm), which is out of the reach of more conventional techniques. We show that edge-disorder is the most important scattering mechanism for phonons in graphene nanoribbons with realistic sizes and thermal conductance can be reduced by a factor of ~10.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review B - Rapid Communication

    In situ characterization of mixing and sedimentation dynamics in an impinging jet ballast tank via acoustic backscatter

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    Impinging jets are utilized in numerous applications, including nuclear waste treatment, for both the erosion of sediment beds and maintaining particulates in suspension. Pulse-echo ultrasonic methods offer great potential for the in situ monitoring of critical mixing and settling dynamics, in concentrated dispersions. A non-active scaled version of a Highly Active Storage Tank at Sellafield, UK, was profiled with an acoustic backscatter system under various jet firing conditions. An advanced analysis technique enabled the direct quantification of dispersion concentration changes from the converted backscatter attenuation. Hence, the erosion and mixing capability of the jets, and settling kinetics were characterized. It was found that jet operation alone provided inadequate localized mixing of eroded sediment. An additional air-lift process operation was required to hinder the rapid re-settling of dispersed particulates

    Observation of a Cooperative Radiation Force in the Presence of Disorder

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    Cooperative scattering of light by an extended object such as an atomic ensemble or a dielectric sphere is fundamentally different from scattering from many point-like scatterers such as single atoms. Homogeneous distributions tend to scatter cooperatively, whereas fluctuations of the density distribution increase the disorder and suppress cooperativity. In an atomic cloud, the amount of disorder can be tuned via the optical thickness, and its role can be studied via the radiation force exerted by the light on the atomic cloud. Monitoring cold 87Rb^{87}\text{Rb} atoms released from a magneto-optical trap, we present the first experimental signatures of radiation force reduction due to cooperative scattering. The results are in agreement with an analytical expression interpolating between the disorder and the cooperativity-dominated regimes

    Surface Houghton groups

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    For every n2n\ge 2, the {\em surface Houghton group} Bn\mathcal B_n is defined as the asymptotically rigid mapping class group of a surface with exactly nn ends, all of them non-planar. The groups Bn\mathcal B_n are analogous to, and in fact contain, the braided Houghton groups. These groups also arise naturally in topology: every monodromy homeomorphisms of a fibered component of a depth-1 foliation of closed 3-manifold is conjugate into some Bn\mathcal B_n. As countable mapping class groups of infinite type surfaces, the groups Bn\mathcal B_n lie somewhere between classical mapping class groups and big mapping class groups. We initiate the study of surface Houghton groups proving, among other things, that Bn\mathcal B_n is of type Fn1F_{n-1}, but not of type FPnFP_n, analogous to the braided Houghton groups.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figur

    Automorphisms of Partially Commutative Groups II: Combinatorial Subgroups

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    We define several "standard" subgroups of the automorphism group Aut(G) of a partially commutative (right-angled Artin) group and use these standard subgroups to describe decompositions of Aut(G). If C is the commutation graph of G, we show how Aut(G) decomposes in terms of the connected components of C: obtaining a particularly clear decomposition theorem in the special case where C has no isolated vertices. If C has no vertices of a type we call dominated then we give a semi-direct decompostion of Aut(G) into a subgroup of locally conjugating automorphisms by the subgroup stabilising a certain lattice of "admissible subsets" of the vertices of C. We then characterise those graphs for which Aut(G) is a product (not necessarily semi-direct) of two such subgroups.Comment: 7 figures, 63 pages. Notation and definitions clarified and typos corrected. 2 new figures added. Appendix containing details of presentation and proof of a theorem adde

    Dimension of the Torelli group for Out(F_n)

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    Let T_n be the kernel of the natural map from Out(F_n) to GL(n,Z). We use combinatorial Morse theory to prove that T_n has an Eilenberg-MacLane space which is (2n-4)-dimensional and that H_{2n-4}(T_n,Z) is not finitely generated (n at least 3). In particular, this recovers the result of Krstic-McCool that T_3 is not finitely presented. We also give a new proof of the fact, due to Magnus, that T_n is finitely generated.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figure

    Inter-Subunit Dynamics Controls Tunnel Formation During the Oxygenation Process in Hemocyanin Hexamers

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    Hemocyanin from horseshoe crab in its active form is a homo-hexameric protein. It exists in open and closed conformations when transitioning between deoxygenated and oxygenated states. Here, we present a detailed dynamic atomistic investigation of the oxygenated and deoxygenated states of the hexameric hemocyanin using explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations. We focus on the variation in solvent cavities and the formation of tunnels in the two conformational states. By employing principal component analysis and CVAE-based deep learning, we are able to differentiate between the dynamics of the deoxy- and oxygenated states of hemocyanin. Finally, our results identify the deoxygenated open conformation, which adopts a stable, closed conformation after the oxygenation process

    Measurement and density normalisation of acoustic attenuation and backscattering constants of arbitrary suspensions within the Rayleigh scattering regime

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    The scattering and attenuation of megahertz frequency acoustic backscatter in liquid suspensions, is examined for a range of fine organic and inorganic particles in the Rayleigh regime, 10−⁴ < ka < 10⁰ (where k is the wavenumber and a the particle radius) which are widely industrially relevant, but with limited existing data. In particular, colloidal latex, mineral titania and barytes sediments, as well as larger glass powders were investigated. A manipulation of the backscatter voltage equation was used to directly measure the sediment attenuation constants, ξ. Decoupling of the combined backscattering-transducer constant, allowing explicit measurement of the backscattering constant, ks, was achieved through calibration of the transducer constant, kt. Additionally, the methodology was streamlined via averaging between a number of intermediate concentrations to reduce data variability. This approach enabled the form function, f, and the corresponding total normalized scattering cross-sections, χ, to be determined for all species. While f and χ are available in the literature for large glass and sand, this methodology allowed extension for the colloidal organic and inorganic particles. Specific gravity normalisation of f collapsed all data onto a single distribution, with the exception of titania, due to scattering complexities associated with agglomeration. There was some additional variation in χ, with measured values of the fine particles up to of magnitude greater than the density-normalised prediction at low ka. Mechanisms accounting for these variations from theory are however analysed, and include viscous attenuation effects, the polydispersity of the particle type and increasing influence of the solvent attenuation. Additionally, thermoacoustic losses appeared to dominate the attenuation behaviour of the organic latex particles. This study demonstrates that particles close to the colloidal regime can be measured successfully with acoustic backscatter, and highlights the great potential of this technique to be applied for in situ or online monitoring purposes in such systems
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