250,223 research outputs found
Inverter-Based Low-Voltage CCII- Design and Its Filter Application
This paper presents a negative type second-generation current conveyor (CCII-). It is based on an inverter-based low-voltage error amplifier, and a negative current mirror. The CCII- could be operated in a very low supply voltage such as ±0.5V. The proposed CCII- has wide input voltage range (±0.24V), wide output voltage (±0.24V) and wide output current range (±24mA). The proposed CCII- has no on-chip capacitors, so it can be designed with standard CMOS digital processes. Moreover, the architecture of the proposed circuit without cascoded MOSFET transistors is easily designed and suitable for low-voltage operation. The proposed CCII- has been fabricated in TSMC 0.18μm CMOS processes and it occupies 1189.91 x 1178.43μm2 (include PADs). It can also be validated by low voltage CCII filters
Minimal Permutations and 2-Regular Skew Tableaux
Bouvel and Pergola introduced the notion of minimal permutations in the study
of the whole genome duplication-random loss model for genome rearrangements.
Let denote the set of minimal permutations of length
with descents, and let . They derived that
and , where is the -th
Catalan number. Mansour and Yan proved that . In
this paper, we consider the problem of counting minimal permutations in
with a prescribed set of ascents. We show that such
structures are in one-to-one correspondence with a class of skew Young
tableaux, which we call -regular skew tableaux. Using the determinantal
formula for the number of skew Young tableaux of a given shape, we find an
explicit formula for . Furthermore, by using the Knuth equivalence,
we give a combinatorial interpretation of a formula for a refinement of the
number .Comment: 19 page
Pair Interaction Potentials of Colloids by Extrapolation of Confocal Microscopy Measurements of Collective Structure
A method for measuring the pair interaction potential between colloidal
particles by extrapolation measurement of collective structure to infinite
dilution is presented and explored using simulation and experiment. The method
is particularly well suited to systems in which the colloid is fluorescent and
refractive index matched with the solvent. The method involves characterizing
the potential of mean force between colloidal particles in suspension by
measurement of the radial distribution function using 3D direct visualization.
The potentials of mean force are extrapolated to infinite dilution to yield an
estimate of the pair interaction potential, . We use Monte Carlo (MC)
simulation to test and establish our methodology as well as to explore the
effects of polydispersity on the accuracy. We use poly-12-hydroxystearic
acid-stabilized poly(methyl methacrylate) (PHSA-PMMA) particles dispersed in
the solvent dioctyl phthalate (DOP) to test the method and assess its accuracy
for three different repulsive systems for which the range has been manipulated
by addition of electrolyte.Comment: 35 pages, 14 figure
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