435 research outputs found
Stability of Soft Quasicrystals in a Coupled-Mode Swift-Hohenberg Model for Three-Component Systems
In this article, we discuss the stability of soft quasicrystalline phases in
a coupled-mode Swift-Hohenberg model for three-component systems, where the
characteristic length scales are governed by the positive-definite gradient
terms. Classic two-mode approximation method and direct numerical minimization
are applied to the model. In the latter approach, we apply the projection
method to deal with the potentially quasiperiodic ground states. A variable
cell method of optimizing the shape and size of higher-dimensional periodic
cell is developed to minimize the free energy with respect to the order
parameters. Based on the developed numerical methods, we rediscover decagonal
and dodecagonal quasicrystalline phases, and find diverse periodic phases and
complex modulated phases. Furthermore, phase diagrams are obtained in various
phase spaces by comparing the free energies of different candidate structures.
It does show not only the important roles of system parameters, but also the
effect of optimizing computational domain. In particular, the optimization of
computational cell allows us to capture the ground states and phase behavior
with higher fidelity. We also make some discussions on our results and show the
potential of applying our numerical methods to a larger class of mean-field
free energy functionals.Comment: 26 pages, 13 figures; accepted by Communications in Computational
Physic
Stability of Two-Dimensional Soft Quasicrystals
The relative stability of two-dimensional soft quasicrystals is examined
using a recently developed projection method which provides a unified numerical
framework to compute the free energy of periodic crystal and quasicrystals.
Accurate free energies of numerous ordered phases, including dodecagonal,
decagonal and octagonal quasicrystals, are obtained for a simple model, i.e.
the Lifshitz-Petrich free energy functional, of soft quasicrystals with two
length-scales. The availability of the free energy allows us to construct phase
diagrams of the system, demonstrating that, for the Lifshitz-Petrich model, the
dodecagonal and decagonal quasicrystals can become stable phases, whereas the
octagonal quasicrystal stays as a metastable phase.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Intensification of liquid mixing and local turbulence using a fractal injector with staggered conformation
Two self-similar, tree-like injectors of the same fractal dimension are compared, demonstrating that other geometric parameters besides dimension play a crucial role in determining mixing performance. In one injector, when viewed from the top, the conformation of branches is eclipsed; in the other one, it is staggered. The flow field and the fractal injector induced mixing performance are investigated through computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations. The finite rate/eddy dissipation model (FR/EDM) is modified for fast liquid-phase reactions involving local micromixing. Under the same operating conditions, flow field uniformity and micromixing are improved when a staggered fractal injector is used. This is because of enhanced jet entrainment and local turbulence around the spatially distributed nozzles. Compared with a traditional double-ring sparger, a larger reaction region volume and lower micromixing time are obtained with fractal injectors. Local turbulence around the spatially distributed nozzles in fractal injectors improves reaction efficiency
Variable-Based Fault Localization via Enhanced Decision Tree
Fault localization, aiming at localizing the root cause of the bug under
repair, has been a longstanding research topic. Although many approaches have
been proposed in the last decades, most of the existing studies work at
coarse-grained statement or method levels with very limited insights about how
to repair the bug (granularity problem), but few studies target the
finer-grained fault localization. In this paper, we target the granularity
problem and propose a novel finer-grained variable-level fault localization
technique. Specifically, we design a program-dependency-enhanced decision tree
model to boost the identification of fault-relevant variables via
discriminating failed and passed test cases based on the variable values. To
evaluate the effectiveness of our approach, we have implemented it in a tool
called VARDT and conducted an extensive study over the Defects4J benchmark. The
results show that VARDT outperforms the state-of-the-art fault localization
approaches with at least 247.8% improvements in terms of bugs located at Top-1,
and the average improvements are 330.5%.
Besides, to investigate whether our finer-grained fault localization result
can further improve the effectiveness of downstream APR techniques, we have
adapted VARDT to the application of patch filtering, where VARDT outperforms
the state-of-the-art PATCH-SIM by filtering 26.0% more incorrect patches. The
results demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach and it also provides a
new way of thinking for improving automatic program repair techniques
Biomass derived oligosaccharides for potential leather tanning
The global demand for renewable and affordable feedstocks, combined with the worldwide targets for reducing carbon emissions, is the driving force behind a breakthrough in resource revolution and GreenTech innovations..
- …