201 research outputs found

    Influence of fibers on the dust dislodgement efficiency of bag filters

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    In recent years non-woven bag filters have been used in waste incinerators for the efficient collection of dust and removal of detrimental gas. However, dust collection efficiency decreases with time until the bag filters are no longer effective. Dust adhering to the fabric is a major determinant of bag filter life. In the present study a flat filter was used to study the relationship between various parameters of a bag filter structure and its dust dislodgement efficiency. The results confirm that fiber linear density, modulus of elasticity, and the form of the fiber cross-section of the felt can each affect the dust collection efficiency of a bag filter. Higher fiber linear density in a bag filter prevents dust from penetrating the filter, and this allows the dust to be more easily dislodged from the filter. Examination of various forms of fiber cross-section indicates that for the same fiber linear density the triangular form is better than the circular form. A lower Young's modulus allows the fiber to bend more easily and prevents the dust from penetrating the filter. Fiber linear density, fiber modulus of elasticity and form of the fiber cross-section are the variables affecting bag filter efficiency.ArticleTEXTILE RESEARCH JOURNAL. 84(7):764-771 (2014)journal articl

    Weak formulation for singular diffusion equation with dynamic boundary condition

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    In this paper, we propose a weak formulation of the singular diffusion equation subject to the dynamic boundary condition. The weak formulation is based on a reformulation method by an evolution equation including the subdifferential of a governing convex energy. Under suitable assumptions, the principal results of this study are stated in forms of Main Theorems A and B, which are respectively to verify: the adequacy of the weak formulation; the common property between the weak solutions and those in regular problems of standard PDEs.Comment: 23 page

    Exchange Interaction and TcT_c in Alkaline-earth-metal-oxide-based DMS without Magnetic Impurities: First Principle Pseudo-SIC and Monte Carlo Calculation

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    The prospects of half-metallic ferromagnetism being induced by the incorporation of C atoms into alkaline-earth-metal-oxides are investigated by the first principle calculation. The origin of the ferromagnetism is discussed through the calculation of the electronic structure and exchange coupling constant by using the pseudo-potential-like self-interaction-corrected local spin density method. The Curie temperature (TcT_c) is also predicted by employing the Monte Carlo simulation. It is shown that by taking the electron self-interaction into account, the half-metallic ferromagnetism induced by C in the host materials is more stabilized in comparison with the standard LDA case, and the C's 2p2p electron states in the bandgap become more localized resulting in the predominance of the short-ranged exchange interaction. While the ferromagnetism in MgO1x_{1-x}Cx_x is stabilized due to the exchange interaction of the 1st1st-nearest neighbor pairs and might be suppressed by the anti-ferromagnetic super-exchange interaction at higher xx, the ferromagnetism in CaO1x_{1-x}Cx_x, SrO1x_{1-x}Cx_x, and BaO1x_{1-x}Cx_x is stabilized by both the 1st1st- and 2nd2nd-nearest neighbor pairs, and TcT_c monotonously increases with the C concentration.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    New Maximum Likelihood Estimators for Eukaryotic Intron Evolution

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    The evolution of spliceosomal introns remains poorly understood. Although many approaches have been used to infer intron evolution from the patterns of intron position conservation, the results to date have been contradictory. In this paper, we address the problem using a novel maximum likelihood method, which allows estimation of the frequency of intron insertion target sites, together with the rates of intron gain and loss. We analyzed the pattern of 10,044 introns (7,221 intron positions) in the conserved regions of 684 sets of orthologs from seven eukaryotes. We determined that there is an average of one target site per 11.86 base pairs (bp) (95% confidence interval, 9.27 to 14.39 bp). In addition, our results showed that: (i) overall intron gains are ~25% greater than intron losses, although specific patterns vary with time and lineage; (ii) parallel gains account for ~18.5% of shared intron positions; and (iii) reacquisition following loss accounts for ~0.5% of all intron positions. Our results should assist in resolving the long-standing problem of inferring the evolution of spliceosomal introns

    Experimental analysis of self-organized structure and transport on the magnetospheric plasma device RT-1

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    Dipole plasma exhibits strong heterogeneities in field strength, density, temperature and other parameters, while maintaining a holistic balance. Our study of the internal structures reveals the fundamental self-organizing mechanisms operating in their simplest realization (as commonly observed in astronomical systems). Three new findings are reported from the RT-1 experiment. The creation of a high-energy electron core (similar to the radiation belts in planetary magnetospheres) is observed for the first time in a laboratory system. High-energy electrons (3–15 keV), produced by electron cyclotron heating, accumulate in a \u27belt\u27 located in the low-density region (high-beta value ~1 is obtained by increasing the high-energy component up to 70% of the total electrons). The dynamical process of the \u27up-hill diffusion\u27 (a spontaneous mechanism of creating density gradient) has been analyzed by perturbing the density by gas injection. The spontaneous density formation in the laboratory magnetosphere elucidates the self-organized plasma transport relevant to a planetary magnetosphere. The coherence-imaging spectroscopy visualized the two-dimensional profiles of ion temperature and flow velocity in the ion cyclotron resonance frequency heating. The ion temperature and flow were enhanced globally, and particularly along the magnetic field lines near the levitation magnet. These results advance our understanding of transport and self-organization not only in dipole plasmas, but in general magnetic confinement systems relevant to fusion plasmas

    Nd:YAG laser Thomson scattering diagnostics for a laboratory magnetosphere

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    A new Nd:YAG laser Thomson scattering (TS) system has been developed to explore the mechanism of high-beta plasma formation in the RT-1 device. The TS system is designed to measure electron temperatures (Te) from 10 eV to 50 keV and electron densities (ne) of more than 1.0 × 1017 m−3. To measure at the low-density limit, the receiving optics views the long scattering length (60 mm) using a bright optical system with both a large collection window (260-mm diameter) and large collection lenses (300-mm diameter, a solid angle of ∼68 × 10−3 str). The scattered light of the 1.2-J Nd:YAG laser (repetition frequency: 10 Hz) is detected with a scattering angle of 90° and is transferred via a set of lenses and an optical fiber bundle to a polychromator. After Raman scattering measurement for the optical alignment and an absolute calibration, we successfully measured Te = 72.2 eV and ne = 0.43 × 1016 m−3 for the coil-supported case and Te = 79.2 eV and ne = 1.28 × 1016 m−3 for the coil-levitated case near the inner edge in the magnetospheric plasmas

    Characteristics of electron internal transport barrier in Heliotron J

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    The formation of an electron internal transport barrier (eITB) has been observed for the first time with centrally focused electron cyclotron heating (ECH) microwaves injected into plasma in Heliotron J. When the heating power per electron density (PECH/nˉe{P}_{\mathrm{ECH}}/{\bar{n}}_{{\rm{e}}}) exceeds a threshold of 250×1019kWm3250\times {10}^{-19}\,\mathrm{kW}\,{{\rm{m}}}^{3}, transient increases of both the central Te and the core Te gradients are observed. A neoclassical (NC) calculation using the Sugama–Nishimura moment method predicts that the large positive radial electric field (Er) is formed in the core region. Heat transport analysis shows a significant reduction of the effective electron thermal diffusivity in the plasma with the eITB related to that without the eITB. The large gap between the experimentally obtained effective thermal diffusivity and the NC thermal diffusivity suggests that the suppression of anomalous transport contributes to the core improved confinement of the eITB plasma. The electron cyclotron emission measurement shows both the transient increase and the hysteresis phenomena during the eITB formation

    Calibrations of the LHD Thomson scattering system

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    The Thomson scattering diagnostic systems are widely used for the measurements of absolute local electron temperatures and densities of fusion plasmas. In order to obtain accurate and reliable temperature and density data, careful calibrations of the system are required. We have tried several calibration methods since the second LHD experiment campaign in 1998. We summarize the current status of the calibration methods for the electron temperature and density measurements by the LHD Thomson scattering diagnostic system. Future plans are briefly discussed
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