3,419 research outputs found
Barrier Softening near the onset of Non-Activated Transport in Supercooled Liquids: Implications for Establishing Detailed Connection between Thermodynamic and Kinetic Anomalies in Supercooled Liquids
According to the Random First Order Transition (RFOT) theory of glasses, the
barriers for activated dynamics in supercooled liquids vanish as the
temperature of a viscous liquid approaches the dynamical transition temperature
from below. This occurs due to a decrease of the surface tension between local
meta-stable molecular arrangements much like at a spinodal. The dynamical
transition thus represents a crossover from the low activated bevavior to a
collisional transport regime at high . This barrier softening explains the
deviation of the relaxation times, as a function of temperature, from the
simple dependence at the high viscosity to a
mode-mode coupling dominated result at lower viscosity. By calculating the
barrier softening effects, the RFOT theory provides a {\em unified} microscopic
way to interpret structural relaxation data for many distinct classes of
structural glass formers over the measured temperature range. The theory also
provides an unambiguous procedure to determine the size of dynamically
cooperative regions in the presence of barrier renormalization effects using
the experimental temperature dependence of the relaxation times and the
configurational entropy data. We use the RFOT theory framework to discuss data
for tri-naphthyl benzene, salol, propanol and silica as representative systems.Comment: Submitted to J. Chem. Phy
Scaling Approach to the Phase Diagram of Quantum Hall Systems
We present a simple classification of the different liquid and solid phases
of quantum Hall systems in the limit where the Coulomb interaction between the
electrons is significant, i.e. away from integral filling factors. This
classification, and a criterion for the validity of the mean-field
approximation in the charge-density-wave phase, is based on scaling arguments
concerning the effective interaction potential of electrons restricted to an
arbitrary Landau level. Finite-temperature effects are investigated within the
same formalism, and a good agreement with recent experiments is obtained.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; to be published in Europhys. Lett.; new version
contains more detailed description of finite-temperature effect
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Development of an Economic Decision Support for the Application of Additive Manufacture in Aerospace
Additive Manufacturing offers a high potential in aerospace industry due to its freedom of
design and the ability to manufacture complex and lightweight parts. The low number of
units, high quality standards and fast response time are special challenges that have to be met
especially in the Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul sector. Thus, companies have to decide at
which point it is economic to apply Additive Manufacturing. However, companies lack
experience on this new technology. This is why a tool is required that takes into account the
above mentioned crucial points and supports the decision process. The paper analyzes
aviation’s characteristics with regard to Additive Manufacturing. The structure of current
MRO repair workflows is investigated to identify a feasible application for Additive
Manufacturing. Additionally the supply chain will be examined to indicate the benefit which
the technology can generate in this highly demanding field. The findings are integrated into a
methodology that supports the decision whether to apply Additive Manufacturing on the basis
of costs, time and quality.Mechanical Engineerin
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Alignability and Attribute Importance in Choice
When people choose between two alternatives, like between two colleges, some of the available information is comparable across the alternatives (alignable) and some is noncomparable (nonalignable). For example, when comparing colleges, the academic reputation of both schools may be known (alignable), while the quality of teaching may only be known for one school (nonalignable). Recent research has shown that people use more alignable than nonalignable information in decision making. In this experiment, we consider whether alignable information is preferred even when nonalignable information is important. In the study, some participants rated the importance and valence of a series of statements about colleges that differed in alignability. Other participants made choices between pairs of colleges whose descriptions incorporated these statements. The results indicate that alignable information is preferred to nonalignable information even when the nonalignable information is important. Results also showed that the interpretation of attribute valence depends on alignability. These observations suggest that alignability is more influential than attribute importance in the processing of choice information and that the use of alignable information may facilitate the interpretation of attribute information
Density functional theory of vortex lattice melting in layered superconductors: a mean-field--substrate approach
We study the melting of the pancake vortex lattice in a layered
superconductor in the limit of vanishing Josephson coupling. Our approach
combines the methodology of a recently proposed mean-field substrate model for
such systems with the classical density functional theory of freezing. We
derive a free-energy functional in terms of a scalar order-parameter profile
and use it to derive a simple formula describing the temperature dependence of
the melting field. Our theoretical predictions are in good agreement with
simulation data. The theoretical framework proposed is thermodynamically
consistent and thus capable of describing the negative magnetization jump
obtained in experiments. Such consistency is demonstrated by showing the
equivalence of our expression for the density discontinuity at the transition
with the corresponding Clausius-Clapeyron relation.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Theory of Structural Glasses and Supercooled Liquids
We review the Random First Order Transition Theory of the glass transition,
emphasizing the experimental tests of the theory. Many distinct phenomena are
quantitatively predicted or explained by the theory, both above and below the
glass transition temperature . These include: the viscosity catastrophe
and heat capacity jump at , and their connection; the non-exponentiality
of relaxations and their correlation with the fragility; dynamic heterogeneity
in supercooled liquids owing to the mosaic structure; deviations from the
Vogel-Fulcher law, connected with strings or fractral cooperative
rearrangements; deviations from the Stokes-Einstein relation close to ;
aging, and its correlation with fragility; the excess density of states at
cryogenic temperatures due to two level tunneling systems and the Boson Peak.Comment: submitted to Ann. Rev. Phys. Che
Plasticization and antiplasticization of polymer melts diluted by low molar mass species
An analysis of glass formation for polymer melts that are diluted by
structured molecular additives is derived by using the generalized entropy
theory, which involves a combination of the Adam-Gibbs model and the direct
computation of the configurational entropy based on a lattice model of polymer
melts that includes monomer structural effects. Antiplasticization is
accompanied by a "toughening" of the glass mixture relative to the pure
polymer, and this effect is found to occur when the diluents are small species
with strongly attractive interactions with the polymer matrix. Plasticization
leads to a decreased glass transition temperature T_g and a "softening" of the
fragile host polymer in the glass state. Plasticization is prompted by small
additives with weakly attractive interactions with the polymer matrix. The
shifts in T_g of polystyrene diluted by fully flexible short oligomers are
evaluated from the computations, along with the relative changes in the
isothermal compressibility at T_g to characterize the extent to which the
additives act as antiplasticizers or plasticizers. The theory predicts that a
decreased fragility can accompany both antiplasticization and plasticization of
the glass by molecular additives. The general reduction in the T_g and
fragility of polymers by these molecular additives is rationalized by analyzing
the influence of the diluent's properties (cohesive energy, chain length, and
stiffness) on glass formation in diluted polymer melts. The description of
glass formation at fixed temperature that is induced upon change the fluid
composition directly implies the Angell equation for the structural relaxation
time as function of the polymer concentration, and the computed "zero mobility
concentration" scales linearly with the inverse polymerization index N.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figure
Many-body interactions and melting of colloidal crystals
We study the melting behavior of charged colloidal crystals, using a
simulation technique that combines a continuous mean-field Poisson-Boltzmann
description for the microscopic electrolyte ions with a Brownian-dynamics
simulation for the mesoscopic colloids. This technique ensures that many-body
interactions between the colloids are fully taken into account, and thus allows
us to investigate how many-body interactions affect the solid-liquid phase
behavior of charged colloids. Using the Lindemann criterion, we determine the
melting line in a phase-diagram spanned by the colloidal charge and the salt
concentration. We compare our results to predictions based on the established
description of colloidal suspensions in terms of pairwise additive Yukawa
potentials, and find good agreement at high-salt, but not at low-salt
concentration. Analyzing the effective pair-interaction between two colloids in
a crystalline environment, we demonstrate that the difference in the melting
behavior observed at low salt is due to many-body interactions
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