11,623 research outputs found
Substrate-tuning of correlated spin-orbit oxides revealed by optical conductivity calculations
We have systematically investigated substrate-strain effects on the electronic structures of two representative Sr-iridates, a correlated-insulator Sr2IrO4 and a metal SrIrO3. Optical conductivities obtained by the ab initio electronic structure calculations reveal that the tensile strain shifts the optical peak positions to higher energy side with altered intensities, suggesting the enhancement of the electronic correlation and spin-orbit coupling (SOC) strength in Sr-iridates. The response of the electronic structure upon tensile strain is found to be highly correlated with the direction of magnetic moment, the octahedral connectivity, and the SOC strength, which cooperatively determine the robustness of J(eff) = 1/2 ground states. Optical responses are analyzed also with microscopic model calculation and compared with corresponding experiments. In the case of SrIrO3, the evolution of the electronic structure near the Fermi level shows high tunability of hole bands, as suggested by previous experiments.117Ysciescopu
MPPI-IPDDP: Hybrid Method of Collision-Free Smooth Trajectory Generation for Autonomous Robots
This study presents a hybrid trajectory optimization method that generates a
collision-free smooth trajectory for autonomous mobile robots. The hybrid
method combines sampling-based model predictive path integral (MPPI) control
and gradient-based interior-point differential dynamic programming (IPDDP)
exploiting their advantages of exploration and smoothing. The proposed method,
called MPPI-IPDDP, consists of three steps. The first step generates a coarse
trajectory by MPPI control, the second step constructs a collision-free convex
corridor, and the third step smooths the coarse trajectory by IPDDP using the
collision-free convex corridor computed in the second step. For demonstration,
the proposed algorithm was applied to trajectory optimization for
differential-driving wheeled mobile robots and point-mass quadrotors. A
supplementary video of the simulations can be found at
https://youtu.be/-oUAt5sd9Bk
The mechanism of charge density wave in Pt-based layered superconductors: SrPt2As2 and LaPt2Si2
The intriguing coexistence of the charge density wave (CDW) and superconductivity in SrPt2As2 and LaPt2Si2 has been investigated based on the ab initio density functional theory band structure and phonon calculations. We have found that the CDW instabilities for both cases arise from the q-dependent electron-phonon coupling with quasi-nesting feature of the Fermi surface. The band structure obtained by the band-unfolding technique reveals the sizable q-dependent electron-phonon coupling responsible for the CDW instability. The local split distortions of Pt atoms in the [As-Pt-As] layers play an essential role in driving the five-fold supercell CDW instability as well as the phonon softening instability in SrPt2As2. By contrast, the CDW and phonon softening instabilities in LaPt2Si2 occur without split distortions of Pt atoms. The phonon calculations suggest that the CDW and the superconductivity coexist in [X-Pt-X] layers (X = As or Si) for both cases.1175Ysciescopu
Resistive evolution of the magnetized Kelvin-Helmholtz instability
It is found from the resistive MHD simulation that the most effective momentum transport due to Kelvin-Helmholtz instability is obtained in the small range of
magnetic-field intensity when the highly sheared field lines undergo magnetic reconnection in the late stage of the evolution
Kinetic stabilization of Fe film on (4 by 2)-GaAs(100)
We grow Fe film on (4 by 2)-GaAs(100) at low temperature, (~ 130 K) and study
their chemical structure by photoelectron spectroscopy using synchrotron
radiation. We observe the effective suppression of As segregation and
remarkable reduction of alloy formation near the interface between Fe and
substrate. Hence, this should be a way to grow virtually pristine Fe film on
GaAs(100). Further, the Fe film is found stable against As segregation even
after warmed up to room temperature. There only forms very thin, ~ 8 angstrom
thick interface alloy. It is speculated that the interface alloy forms via
surface diffusion mediated by interface defects formed during the low
temperature growth of the Fe film. Further out-diffusion of both Ga and As are
suppressed because it should then proceed via inefficient bulk diffusion.Comment: 4 figure
Impacted third molar transplantation on the malpracticed extraction socket
Autotransplantation with or without endodontic therapy is regarded as an alternative treatment option for the replacement of missing teeth. A primary responsibility of a maxillofacial surgeon is to reverse any malpractice to promote successful outcomes and improve the patient’s quality of life. This paper presents a malpractice case of incorrect extraction of the lower second molar instead of the impacted third molar. A simple technique of transplanting the impacted third molar to the site of the extracted second molar is introduced by a maxillofacial specialist in Ghana. By making an intentional root socket and fixation without using additional appliances, a novel second molar was achieved with complete recovery. This patient was followed after transplant for a four-year period with the best satisfaction.Funding: A grant of the Korean Health Technology R&D Project, Ministry of Health & Welfare, Republic of Korea. (HI15C0689)Keywords: Autotransplantation, Endodontic treatment, Impacted third molar, Malpracticed extraction, Maxillofacial specialt
A Tractable Model of the LTE Access Reservation Procedure for Machine-Type Communications
A canonical scenario in Machine-Type Communications (MTC) is the one
featuring a large number of devices, each of them with sporadic traffic. Hence,
the number of served devices in a single LTE cell is not determined by the
available aggregate rate, but rather by the limitations of the LTE access
reservation protocol. Specifically, the limited number of contention preambles
and the limited amount of uplink grants per random access response are crucial
to consider when dimensioning LTE networks for MTC. We propose a low-complexity
model of LTE's access reservation protocol that encompasses these two
limitations and allows us to evaluate the outage probability at click-speed.
The model is based chiefly on closed-form expressions, except for the part with
the feedback impact of retransmissions, which is determined by solving a fixed
point equation. Our model overcomes the incompleteness of the existing models
that are focusing solely on the preamble collisions. A comparison with the
simulated LTE access reservation procedure that follows the 3GPP
specifications, confirms that our model provides an accurate estimation of the
system outage event and the number of supported MTC devices.Comment: Submitted, Revised, to be presented in IEEE Globecom 2015; v3: fixed
error in eq. (4
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