343 research outputs found
Nonlinear compensation techniques for magnetic suspension systems
In aerospace applications, magnetic suspension systems may be required to operate over large variations in air-gap. Thus the nonlinearities inherent in most types of suspensions have a significant effect. Specifically, large variations in operating point may make it difficult to design a linear controller which gives satisfactory stability and performance over a large range of operating points. One way to address this problem is through the use of nonlinear compensation techniques such as feedback linearization. Nonlinear compensators have received limited attention in the magnetic suspension literature. In recent years, progress has been made in the theory of nonlinear control systems, and in the sub-area of feedback linearization. The idea is demonstrated of feedback linearization using a second order suspension system. In the context of the second order suspension, sampling rate issues in the implementation of feedback linearization are examined through simulation
Five degree-of-freedom control of an ultra-precision magnetically-suspended linear bearing
The authors constructed a high precision linear bearing. A 10.7 kg platen measuring 125 mm by 125 mm by 350 mm is suspended and controlled in five degrees of freedom by seven electromagnets. The position of the platen is measured by five capacitive probes which have nanometer resolution. The suspension acts as a linear bearing, allowing linear travel of 50 mm in the sixth degree of freedom. In the laboratory, this bearing system has demonstrated position stability of 5 nm peak-to-peak. This is believed to be the highest position stability yet demonstrated in a magnetic suspension system. Performance at this level confirms that magnetic suspensions can address motion control requirements at the nanometer level. The experimental effort associated with this linear bearing system is described. Major topics are the development of models for the suspension, implementation of control algorithms, and measurement of the actual bearing performance. Suggestions for the future improvement of the bearing system are given
Effects of semiclassical spiral fluctuations on hole dynamics
We investigate the dynamics of a single hole coupled to the spiral
fluctuations related to the magnetic ground states of the antiferromagnetic
J_1-J_2-J_3 Heisenberg model on a square lattice. Using exact diagonalization
on finite size clusters and the self consistent Born approximation in the
thermodynamic limit we find, as a general feature, a strong reduction of the
quasiparticle weight along the spiral phases of the magnetic phase diagram. For
an important region of the Brillouin Zone the hole spectral functions are
completely incoherent, whereas at low energies the spectral weight is
redistributed on several irregular peaks. We find a characteristic value of the
spiral pitch, Q=(0.7,0.7)\pi, for which the available phase space for hole
scattering is maximum. We argue that this behavior is due to the non trivial
interference of the magnon assisted and the free hopping mechanism for hole
motion, characteristic of a hole coupled to semiclassical spiral fluctuations.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Broken discrete and continuous symmetries in two dimensional spiral antiferromagnets
We study the occurrence of symmetry breakings, at zero and finite
temperatures, in the J_1-J_3 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the square
lattice using Schwinger boson mean field theory. For spin-1/2 the ground state
breaks always the SU(2) symmetry with a continuous quasi-critical transition at
J_3/J_1=0.38, from N\'eel to spiral long range order, although local spin
fluctuations considerations suggest an intermediate disordered regime around
0.35 < J_3/J_1 < 0.5, in qualitative agreement with recent numerical results.
At low temperatures we find a Z_2 broken symmetry region with short range
spiral order characterized by an Ising-like nematic order parameter that
compares qualitatively well with classical Monte Carlo results. At intermediate
temperatures the phase diagram shows regions with collinear short range orders:
for J_3/J_11 a novel phase
consisting of four decoupled third neighbour sublattices with N\'eel (\pi,\pi)
correlations in each one. We conclude that the effect of quantum and thermal
fluctuations is to favour collinear correlations even in the strongly
frustrated regime.Comment: 17 pages, accepted for publication in Journal of Physics: condensed
Matte
Low temperature properties of the triangular-lattice antiferromagnet: a bosonic spinon theory
We study the low temperature properties of the triangular-lattice Heisenberg
antiferromagnet with a mean field Schwinger spin-1/2 boson scheme that
reproduces quantitatively the zero temperature energy spectrum derived
previously using series expansions. By analyzing the spin-spin and the boson
density-density dynamical structure factors, we identify the unphysical spin
excitations that come from the relaxation of the local constraint on bosons.
This allows us to reconstruct a free energy based on the physical excitations
only, whose predictions for entropy and uniform susceptibility seem to be
reliable within the temperature range $0< T <0.3J, which is difficult to access
by other methods. The high values of entropy, also found in high temperature
expansions studies, can be attributed to the roton-like narrowed dispersion at
finite temperatures.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
RVB signatures in the spin dynamics of the square-lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet
We investigate the spin dynamics of the square-lattice spin-1/2 Heisenberg
antiferromagnet by means of an improved mean field Schwinger boson calculation.
By identifying both, the long range N\'eel and the RVB-like components of the
ground state, we propose an educated guess for the mean field triplet
excitation consisting on a linear combination of local and bond spin flips to
compute the dynamical structure factor. Our main result is that when this
triplet excitation is optimized in such a way that the corresponding sum rule
is fulfilled, we recover the low and high energy spectral weight features of
the experimental spectrum. In particular, the anomalous spectral weight
depletion at found in recent inelastic neutron scattering experiments
can be attributed to the interference of the triplet bond excitations of the
RVB component of the ground state. We conclude that the Schwinger boson theory
seems to be a good candidate to adequately interpret the dynamic properties of
the square-lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet.Comment: 6 pages with 3 figure
Classical Antiferromagnetism in Kinetically Frustrated Electronic Models
We study the infinite U Hubbard model with one hole doped away half-filling,
in triangular and square lattices with frustrated hoppings that invalidate
Nagaoka's theorem, by means of the density matrix renormalization group. We
find that these kinetically frustrated models have antiferromagnetic ground
states with classical local magnetization in the thermodynamic limit. We
identify the mechanism of this kinetic antiferromagnetism with the release of
the kinetic energy frustration as the hole moves in the established
antiferromagnetic background. This release can occurs in two different ways: by
a non-trivial spin-Berry phase acquired by the hole or by the effective
vanishing of the hopping amplitude along the frustrating loops.Comment: 12 pages and 4 figures, with Supplementary Material. To be published
in Phys. Rev. Let
Hysteresis Bearingless Slice Motors with Homopolar Flux-biasing
We present a new concept of bearingless slice motor that levitates and rotates a ring-shaped solid rotor. The rotor is made of a semi-hard magnetic material exhibiting magnetic hysteresis, such as D2 steel. The rotor is radially biased with a homopolar permanent-magnetic flux, on which the stator can superimpose two-pole flux to generate suspension forces. By regulating the suspension forces based on position feedback, the two radial rotor degrees of freedom are actively stabilized. The two tilting degrees of freedom and the axial translation are passively stable due to the reluctance forces from the bias flux. In addition, the stator can generate a torque by superimposing six-pole rotating flux, which drags the rotor via hysteresis coupling. This six-pole flux does not generate radial forces in conjunction with the homopolar flux or two-pole flux, and therefore the suspension force generation is in principle decoupled from the driving torque generation. We have developed a prototype system as a proof of concept. The stator has 12 teeth, each of which has a single-phase winding that is individually driven by a linear transconductance power amplifier. The system has four reflectivetype optical sensors to differentially measure the two radial degrees of freedom of the rotor. The suspension control loop is implemented such that the phase margin is 25° at the cross-over frequency of 110 Hz. The prototype system can levitate the rotor and drive it up to about 1730 r/min. The maximum driving torque is about 2.7 mNm
A test of the bosonic spinon theory for the triangular antiferromagnet spectrum
We compute the dynamical structure factor of the spin-1/2 triangular
Heisenberg model using the mean field Schwinger boson theory. We find that a
reconstructed dispersion, resulting from a non trivial redistribution of the
spectral weight, agrees quite well with the spin excitation spectrum recently
found with series expansions. In particular, we recover the strong
renormalization with respect to linear spin wave theory along with the
appearance of roton-like minima. Furthermore, near the roton-like minima the
contribution of the two spinon continuum to the static structure factor is
about 40 % of the total weight. By computing the density-density dynamical
structure factor, we identify an unphysical weak signal of the spin excitation
spectrum with the relaxation of the local constraint of the Schwinger bosons at
the mean field level. Based on the accurate description obtained for the static
and dynamic ground state properties, we argue that the bosonic spinon theory
should be considered seriously as a valid alternative to interpret the physics
of the triangular Heisenberg model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, extended version including: a table with ground
state energy and magnetization; and the density-density dynamical structure
factor. Accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
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