43 research outputs found

    DeltaFS: Pursuing Zero Update Overhead via Metadata-Enabled Delta Compression for Log-structured File System on Mobile Devices

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    Data compression has been widely adopted to release mobile devices from intensive write pressure. Delta compression is particularly promising for its high compression efficacy over conventional compression methods. However, this method suffers from non-trivial system overheads incurred by delta maintenance and read penalty, which prevents its applicability on mobile devices. To this end, this paper proposes DeltaFS, a metadata-enabled Delta compression on log-structured File System for mobile devices, to achieve utmost compressing efficiency and zero hardware costs. DeltaFS smartly exploits the out-of-place updating ability of Log-structured File System (LFS) to alleviate the problems of write amplification, which is the key bottleneck for delta compression implementation. Specifically, DeltaFS utilizes the inline area in file inodes for delta maintenance with zero hardware cost, and integrates an inline area manage strategy to improve the utilization of constrained inline area. Moreover, a complimentary delta maintenance strategy is incorporated, which selectively maintains delta chunks in the main data area to break through the limitation of constrained inline area. Experimental results show that DeltaFS substantially reduces write traffics by up to 64.8\%, and improves the I/O performance by up to 37.3\%

    Structural integrity and characteristics at lattice and nanometre levels of ZrN polycrystalline irradiated by 4 MeV Au ions

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    We report an as-hot-pressed zirconium nitride polycrystalline with its primary crystal structure maintained no change but lattice defects and features were introduced at nanometre-scale after being irradiated by 4 MeV Au 2+ with a total fluence of 5 × 10 16 /cm 2 . The variation of grey-level seen in backscattered electron images and electron backscattered diffraction maps directly evidenced the structure integrity of the polycrystalline ZrN is well maintained with no crystal structure change of ZrN. The irradiation depth had no relevance to crystal orientation, and Au deposition peaked at a depth of ∼0.58 μm with a near-Gaussian distribution. Within a depth < 0.58 μm, long dislocation lines were developed with a Burgers vector of [01¯] b /2 and density 3.2 × 10 14 1/m 2 ; beyond this depth, dislocation loops were formed with much higher density. In the ionization zone, cubic ZrO 2 crystallites precipitated in a size of ∼5 nm. The irradiation damage processes are discussed based on the observed features

    Reduced He ion irradiation damage in ZrC-based high-entropy ceramics

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    Excellent irradiation resistance is the basic property of nuclear materials to keep nuclear safety. The high-entropy design has great potential to improve the irradiation resistance of the nuclear materials, which has been proven in alloys. However, whether or not high entropy can also improve the irradiation resistance of ceramics, especially the mechanism therein still needs to be uncovered. In this work, the irradiation and helium (He) behaviors of zirconium carbide (ZrC)-based high-entropy ceramics (HECs), i.e., (Zr0.2Ti0.2Nb0.2Ta0.2W0.2)C, were investigated and compared with those of ZrC under 540 keV He ion irradiation with a dose of 1×1017 cm−2 at room temperature and subsequent annealing. Both ZrC and (Zr0.2Ti0.2Nb0.2Ta0.2W0.2)C maintain lattice integrity after irradiation, while the irradiation-induced lattice expansion is smaller in (Zr0.2Ti0.2Nb0.2Ta0.2W0.2)C (0.78%) with highly thermodynamic stability than that in ZrC (0.91%). After annealing at 800 ℃, ZrC exhibits the residual 0.20% lattice expansion, while (Zr0.2Ti0.2Nb0.2Ta0.2W0.2)C shows only 0.10%. Full recovery of the lattice parameter (a) is achieved for both ceramics after annealing at 1500 ℃. In addition, the high entropy in the meantime brings about the favorable structural evolution phenomena including smaller He bubbles that are evenly distributed without abnormal coarsening or aggregation, segregation, and shorter and sparser dislocation. The excellent irradiation resistance is related to the high-entropy-induced phase stability, sluggish diffusion of defects, and stress dispersion along with the production of vacancies by valence compensation. The present study indicates a high potential of high-entropy carbides in irradiation resistance applications

    Superior energy density through tailored dopant strategies in multilayer ceramic capacitors

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    The Gerson–Marshall (1959) relationship predicts an increase in dielectric breakdown strength (BDS) and therefore, recoverable energy density (Wrec) with decreasing dielectric layer thickness. This relationship only operates however, if the total resistivity of the dielectric is sufficiently high and the electrical microstructure is homogeneous (no short circuit diffusion paths). BiFeO3–SrTiO3 (BF–ST) is a promising base for developing high energy density capacitors but Bi-rich compositions which have the highest polarisability per unit volume are ferroelectric rather than relaxor and are electrically too conductive. Here, we present a systematic strategy to optimise BDS and maximum polarisation via: (i) Nb-doping to increase resistivity by eliminating hole conduction and promoting electrical homogeneity and (ii) alloying with a third perovskite end-member, BiMg2/3Nb1/3O3 (BMN), to reduce long range polar coupling without decreasing the average ionic polarisability. These strategies result in an increase in BDS to give Wrec = 8.2 J cm−3 at 460 kV cm−1 for BF–ST–0.03Nb–0.1BMN ceramics, which when incorporated in a multilayer capacitor with dielectric layers of 8 μm thickness gives BDS > 1000 kV cm−1 and Wrec = 15.8 J cm−3

    Mechanism of enhanced energy storage density in AgNbO3-based lead-free antiferroelectrics

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    The mechanisms underpinning high energy storage density in lead-free Ag1–3xNdxTayNb1-yO3 antiferroelectric (AFE) ceramics have been investigated. Rietveld refinements of in-situ synchrotron X-ray data reveal that the structure remains quadrupled and orthorhombic under electric field (E) but adopts a non-centrosymmetric space group, Pmc21, in which the cations exhibit a ferrielectric configuration. Nd and Ta doping both stabilize the AFE structure, thereby increasing the AFE-ferrielectric switching field from 150 to 350 kV cm−1. Domain size and correlation length of AFE/ferrielectric coupling reduce with Nd doping, leading to slimmer hysteresis loops. The maximum polarization (Pmax) is optimized through A-site aliovalent doping which also decreases electrical conductivity, permitting the application of a larger E. These effects combine to enhance energy storage density to give Wrec = 6.5 J cm−3 for Ag0.97Nd0.01Ta0.20Nb0.80O3

    Synthesis of zirconolite-2M ceramics for immobilisation of neptunium

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    Praseodymium-doped zirconolite ceramics targeting nominal composition Ca1-xPrxZrTi2-5x/3Al5x/3O7 (x ≤ 0.20, Δx = 0.05) were fabricated by a mixed oxide solid state reaction, at 1350 °C in air for 20 h. Praseodymium (Pr) was employed as a surrogate for neptunium (Np), with Al3+ co-accommodated to provide charge balance. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy and electron diffraction analyses confirmed that zirconolite crystallised as the 2 M monoclinic polytype throughout the phase evolution, with no evidence of transformation to other polytype structures. Phase assemblage and microstructural data were consistent with zirconolite occupying a high fraction of the phase assemblage (>ca. 93 wt %), alongside a minor secondary perovskite phase at all levels of targeted Pr incorporation. Despite this, it was demonstrated near theoretical density formed through a solid-state fabrication route, and we therefore propose that, through analogy with the corresponding Pr solid solution, zirconolite may be a suitable candidate for the immobilisation of Np-bearing wastes

    Transfer of Human Microbiome to Drosophila Gut Model

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    Laboratory animals with human microbiome have increasingly been used to study the role of bacteria and host interaction. Drosophila melanogaster, as a model of microbiota-host interaction with high reproductive efficiency and high availability, has always been lacking studies of interaction with human gut microbiome. In this study, we attempted to use antibiotic therapy and human fecal exposure strategy to transfer the human microbiome to the drosophila. The method includes depleting the original intestinal bacteria using a broad-spectrum antibiotic and then introducing human microorganisms by a diet supplemented with donor’s fecal samples. The sequencing results showed that 80–87.5% of the OTUs (Operational Taxonomic Units) from donor feces were adopted by the recipient drosophila following 30 days of observation. In comparison to females, the male recipient drosophila inherited more microbiota from the donor feces and had significantly increased lifespan as well as improved vertical climbing ability. Furthermore, distinctly differential expression patterns for age and insulin-like signaling-related genes were obtained for the male vs. female recipients. Only the male drosophila offspring acquired the characteristics of the donor fecal microbiota

    On wormhole attacks in underwater sensor networks: A two-tier localization approach

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    Under-Water Sensor Network (UWSN) is a novel networking paradigm to explore the uninhabited oceans. However, the characteristics of this new network, such as huge propagation delay, floating node mobility, and limited acoustic link capacity, are significantly different from land-based sensor networks. In this paper we show that underwater denial-of-service attack imposes great threats to any UWSN. Without proper countermeasures, underwater sensor networking is a mission impossible. We propose a localization based approach to answer the challenge. In our design, DUB and DDB, a pair of efficient single-round distance measuring schemes, are critical building blocks to realize our approach inspite of constrained node capability and floating node mobility. In addition, to cope with low/medium node mobiltiy, we propose a two-tier localization scheme to identify short-range wormholes instantly, and long-haul wormholes within a limited latency. Our simulation and implementation confirm the effectiveness of our design. I

    and protection

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    Under-Water Sensor Networking (UWSN) is a novel network paradigm that is being proposed to explore, monitor and protect the oceans. The unique characteristics of the aquatic environment, namely huge propagation delay, absence of GPS signaling, floating node mobility, and limited (acoustic) link capacity, are very different from those of ground sensor networks. Since underwater networks are mostly autonomous and very difficult to directly monitor by humans, a very important requirement is the built-in protection from automated malicious attacks. In this paper we show that the aquatic environment is particularly vulnerable to attacks and security must be integrated into the UWSN architecture to protect its localization, synchronization and packet delivery services
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