15,224 research outputs found
Direct comparison of the performance of CZT detectors contacted with various metals
Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CZT) achieves excellent spatial resolution and good
energy resolution over the broad energy range from several keV into the MeV
energy range. In this paper we present the results of a systematic study of the
performance of CZT detectors manufacturered by Orbotech (before IMARAD)
depending on surface preparation, contact materials and contact deposition. The
standard Orbotech detectors have the dimension of 2.0 x 2.0 x 0.5 cm. They have
a pixellated In anode with 8 x 8 pixels and a monolithic In cathode. Using the
same CZT substrates several times, we have made a direct comparison of the
performance of different contact materials by replacing the cathode and/or the
anode contacts with several high-workfunction metals. We present the
performance of the detectors and conclude with an overview over our ongoing
detector optimization.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference
5922, "Hard X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Detector Physics VII" on the "Optics &
Photonics 2005" SPIE Symposium, July 31- August 4, 2005, San Diego, C
Two-stage fan. 3: Data and performance with rotor tip casing treatment, uniform and distorted inlet flows
A two stage fan with a 1st-stage rotor design tip speed of 1450 ft/sec, a design pressure ratio of 2.8, and corrected flow of 184.2 lbm/sec was tested with axial skewed slots in the casings over the tips of both rotors. The variable stagger stators were set in the nominal positions. Casing treatment improved stall margin by nine percentage points at 70 percent speed but decreased stall margin, efficiency, and flow by small amounts at design speed. Treatment improved first stage performance at low speed only and decreased second stage performance at all operating conditions. Casing treatment did not affect the stall line with tip radially distorted flow but improved stall margin with circumferentially distorted flow. Casing treatment increased the attenuation for both types of inlet flow distortion
Photonic Crystal Nanobeam Cavity Strongly Coupled to the Feeding Waveguide
A deterministic design of an ultrahigh Q, wavelength scale mode volume
photonic crystal nanobeam cavity is proposed and experimentally demonstrated.
Using this approach, cavities with Q>10^6 and on-resonance transmission T>90%
are designed. The devices fabricated in Si and capped with low-index polymer,
have Q=80,000 and T=73%. This is, to the best of our knowledge, the highest
transmission measured in deterministically designed, wavelength scale high Q
cavities
Tapered N-helical metamaterials with three-fold rotational symmetry as improved circular polarizers
Chiral helix-based metamaterials can potentially serve as compact and broadband circular polarizers. We have recently shown that the physics of structures composed of multiple intertwined helices, so called N-helices with N being an integer multiple of 4, is distinct from that of structures made of single circular helices (N = 1). In particular, undesired circular polarization conversion is strictly eliminated for N = 4 helices arranged on a square lattice. However, the fabrication of such structures for infrared/visible operation wavelengths still poses very significant challenges. Thus, we here revisit the possibility of reducing N from 4 to 3, which would ease micro-fabrication considerably. We show analytically that N = 3 helices arranged on a hexagonal lattice exhibit strictly vanishing circular polarization conversion. N = 3 is the smallest option as N = 2 obviously leads to linear birefringence. To additionally improve the circular-polarizer operation bandwidth and the extinction ratio while maintaining high transmission for the wanted polarization and zero conversion, we also investigate by numerical calculations N = 3 helices with tapered diameter along the helix axis. We find operation bandwidths as large as 2.4 octaves
A Structure-free Method for Quantifying Conformational Flexibility in proteins
All proteins sample a range of conformations at physiologic temperatures and this inherent flexibility enables them to carry out their prescribed functions. A comprehensive understanding of protein function therefore entails a characterization of protein flexibility. Here we describe a novel approach for quantifying a protein’s flexibility in solution using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) data. The method calculates an effective entropy that quantifies the diversity of radii of gyration that a protein can adopt in solution and does not require the explicit generation of structural ensembles to garner insights into protein flexibility. Application of this structure-free approach to over 200 experimental datasets demonstrates that the methodology can quantify a protein’s disorder as well as the effects of ligand binding on protein flexibility. Such quantitative descriptions of protein flexibility form the basis of a rigorous taxonomy for the description and classification of protein structure.Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Steve G. and Renee Finn Faculty Innovation Fellowship)Swiss National Science Foundation (Early Postdoc.Mobility Fellowship
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