38 research outputs found
Preparation of graphene oxide from coal
Nanomaterial synthesis from low-cost precursors is a highly desirable approach for bulk application in material science and technology. Among the various nanomaterials, graphene is a single layer two-dimensional honeycomb carbon nanomaterial. Graphene /or graphene oxide is widely utilized in material science, bio-medicine technology as a sensor, cellular imaging, and many more due to its surface area, nanoscale size, and electrical charge properties, etc. Coal is the most abundant combustible energy source. Although, coal possesses a very complex structure, however, it consists significant amount of polyaromatic structure. Due to the presence of an inherent polyaromatic structure, coal
becomes a promising candidate to replace graphite as a precursor material for the production of graphene / or graphene oxide. Herein, a facile cost-effective approach is reported to synthesize graphene oxide from low-grade coal
A Numerical Experiment in DLCQ: Microcausality, Continuum Limit and all that
Issues related with microcausality violation and continuum limit in the
context of (1+1) dimensional scalar field theory in discretized light-cone
quantization (DLCQ) are addressed in parallel with discretized equal time
quantization (DETQ) and the fact that Lorentz invariance and microcausality are
restored if one can take the continuum limit properly is emphasized. In the
free case, it is shown with numerical evidence that the continuum results can
be reproduced from DLCQ results for the Pauli-Jordan function and the real part
of Feynman propagator. The contributions coming from near zero region in
these cases are found to be very small in contrast to the common belief that
is an accumulation point. In the interacting case, aspects related to
the continuum limit of DLCQ results in perturbation theory are discussed.Comment: Minor changes in the text, accepted for publication in Phys. Letts.
Sum rule for the twist four longitudinal structure function
We investigate the twist four longitudinal structure function
of deep inelastic scattering and show that the integral of
is related to the expectation value of the fermionic
part of the light-front Hamiltonian density at fixed momentum transfer. We show
that the new relation, in addition to providing physical intuition on
, relates the quadratic divergences of to the
quark mass correction in light-front QCD and hence provides a new pathway for
the renormalization of the corresponding twist four operator. The mixing of
quark and gluon operators in QCD naturally leads to a twist four longitudinal
gluon structure function and to a new sum rule , which is the first sum rule obtained for a twist four observable.
The validity of the sum rule in a non-perturbative context is explicitly
verified in two-dimensional QCD.Comment: To appear in Physics Letters
Transverse Spin in QCD and Transverse Polarized Deep Inelastic Scattering
We address the long standing problem of the construction of relativistic spin
operators for a composite system in QCD. Exploiting the kinematical boost
symmetry in light front theory, we show that transverse spin operators for
massless particles can be introduced in an arbitrary reference frame, in
analogy with those for massive particles. In light front QCD, the complete set
of transverse spin operators are identified for the first time, which are
responsible for the helicity flip of the nucleon. We establish the direct
connection between transverse spin in light front QCD and transverse polarized
deep inelastic scattering. We discuss the theoretical and phenomenological
implications of our results.Comment: Title and presentation slightly changed, results unchanged, accepted
for publication in Phys. Lett.
Utility of Galilean Symmetry in Light-Front Perturbation Theory: A Nontrivial Example in QCD
Investigations have revealed a very complex structure for the coefficient
functions accompanying the divergences for individual time () ordered
diagrams in light-front perturbation theory. No guidelines seem to be available
to look for possible mistakes in the structure of these coefficient functions
emerging at the end of a long and tedious calculation, in contrast to covariant
field theory. Since, in light-front field theory, transverse boost generator is
a kinematical operator which acts just as the two-dimensional Galilean boost
generator in non-relativistic dynamics, it may provide some constraint on the
resulting structures. In this work we investigate the utility of Galilean
symmetry beyond tree level in the context of coupling constant renormalization
in light-front QCD using the two-component formalism. We show that for each
ordered diagram separately, underlying transverse boost symmetry fixes
relative signs of terms in the coefficient functions accompanying the diverging
logarithms. We also summarize the results leading to coupling constant
renormalization for the most general kinematics.Comment: RevTeX, five PostScript figure