9,674 research outputs found
Tunneling magnetoresistance in diluted magnetic semiconductor tunnel junctions
Using the spin-polarized tunneling model and taking into account the basic
physics of ferromagnetic semiconductors, we study the temperature dependence of
the tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) in the diluted magnetic semiconductor
(DMS) trilayer heterostructure system (Ga,Mn)As/AlAs/(Ga,Mn)As. The
experimentally observed TMR ratio is in reasonable agreement with our result
based on the typical material parameters. It is also shown that the TMR ratio
has a strong dependence on both the itinerant-carrier density and the magnetic
ion density in the DMS electrodes. This can provide a potential way to achieve
larger TMR ratio by optimally adjusting the material parameters.Comment: 5 pages (RevTex), 3 figures (eps), submitted to PR
Controlling antiferromagnetic domains in patterned La0.7Sr0.3FeO3 thin films
Transition metal oxide thin films and heterostructures are promising platforms to achieve full control of the antiferromagnetic (AFM) domain structure in patterned features as needed for AFM spintronic devices. In this work, soft x-ray photoemission electron microscopy was utilized to image AFM domains in micromagnets patterned into La0.7Sr0.3FeO3 (LSFO) thin films and La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 (LSMO)/LSFO superlattices. A delicate balance exists between magnetocrystalline anisotropy, shape anisotropy, and exchange interactions such that the AFM domain structure can be controlled using parameters such as LSFO and LSMO layer thickness, micromagnet shape, and temperature. In LSFO thin films, shape anisotropy gains importance only in micromagnets where at least one extended edge is aligned parallel to an AFM easy axis. In contrast, in the limit of ultrathin LSFO layers in the LSMO/LSFO superlattice, shape anisotropy effects dominate such that the AFM spin axes at micromagnet edges can be aligned along any in-plane crystallographic direction
Prediction of noise from serrated trailing edges
A new analytical model is developed for the prediction of noise from serrated trailing edges. The model generalizes Amiet’s trailing-edge noise theory to sawtooth trailing edges, resulting in a complicated partial differential equation. The equation is then solved by means of a Fourier expansion technique combined with an iterative procedure. The solution is validated through comparison with the finite element method for a variety of serrations at different Mach numbers. The results obtained using the new model predict noise reduction of up to 10 dB at 90 above the trailing edge, which is more realistic than predictions based on Howe’s model and also more consistent with experimental observations. A thorough analytical and numerical analysis of the physical mechanism is carried out and suggests that the noise reduction due to serration originates primarily from interference effects near the trailing edge. A closer inspection of the proposed mathematical model has led to the development of two criteria for the effectiveness of the trailing-edge serrations, consistent but more general than those proposed by Howe. While experimental investigations often focus on noise reduction at 90 above the trailing edge, the new analytical model shows that the destructive interference scattering effects due to the serrations cause significant noise reduction at large polar angles, near the leading edge. It has also been observed that serrations can significantly change the directivity characteristics of the aerofoil at high frequencies and even lead to noise increase at high Mach numbers.The first author (BL) wishes to gratefully acknowledge the financial support co-funded by the Cambridge Commonwealth European and International Trust and China Scholarship Council. The second author (MA) would like to acknowledge the financial support of the Royal Academy of Engineering. The third author (SS) wishes to gratefully acknowledge the support of the Royal Commission for the exhibition of 1851.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Press via http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2016.13
Detecting time-fragmented cache attacks against AES using Performance Monitoring Counters
Cache timing attacks use shared caches in multi-core processors as side
channels to extract information from victim processes. These attacks are
particularly dangerous in cloud infrastructures, in which the deployed
countermeasures cause collateral effects in terms of performance loss and
increase in energy consumption. We propose to monitor the victim process using
an independent monitoring (detector) process, that continuously measures
selected Performance Monitoring Counters (PMC) to detect the presence of an
attack. Ad-hoc countermeasures can be applied only when such a risky situation
arises. In our case, the victim process is the AES encryption algorithm and the
attack is performed by means of random encryption requests. We demonstrate that
PMCs are a feasible tool to detect the attack and that sampling PMCs at high
frequencies is worse than sampling at lower frequencies in terms of detection
capabilities, particularly when the attack is fragmented in time to try to be
hidden from detection
Complex polymer topologies in blends: Shear and elongational rheology of linear/pom-pom polystyrene blends
The shear and elongational rheology of linear and pom-pom shaped polystyrene (PS) blends was investigated experimentally and modeled using constitutive models such as the Doi–Edwards and the molecular stress function (MSF) model. The pom-pom molecule is the simplest topology to combine shear thinning with strain hardening in elongational flow. A PS pom-pom with a self-entangled backbone (M = 280 kg mol) and 22 entangled sidearms (M = 22 kg mol) at each star was blended with two linear PS with weight average molecular weights of M = 43 and 90 kg mol and low polydispersities (Ð < 1.05). A semilogarithmic relationship between the weight content of the pom-pom, ϕ, and the zero-shear viscosity was found. Whereas the pure pom-pom has in uniaxial elongational flow at T = 160 °C strain hardening factors (SHFs) of SHF ≈100, similar values can be found in blends with up to ϕ = 50 wt. % in linear PS43k and PS90k. By blending only 2 wt. % pom-pom with linear PS43k, SHF = 10 can still be observed. Furthermore, above ϕ = 5–10 wt. %, the uniaxial extensional behavior can be well-described with the MSF model with a single parameter set for each linear PS matrix. The results show that the relationship between shear and elongational melt behavior, i.e., zero-shear viscosity and SHF, can be uncoupled and customized tuned by blending linear and pom-pom shaped polymers and very straightforwardly predicted theoretically. This underlines also the possible application of well-designed branched polymers as additives in recycling
Environmental cost and impacts of chemicals used in agriculture: An integration of emergy and Life Cycle Assessment
Modern intensive agriculture worldwide is generating increasing environmental pressure, which prevents its sustainable development. A number of agricultural sustainability assessment approaches and methodological frameworks have been developed by research worldwide to assess the environmental costs and impacts of resources used in agricultural production. A joint use of Life Cycle Assessment (LCA, to assess a process' performance and environmental impacts) and Emergy Accounting (EMA, to estimate environmental support to resource generation and provision) is proposed in this study. The goal is not only to ascertain the environmental ‘cost’ of production of selected chemical resources used in agricultural processes, but also to develop a reliable calculation procedure capable to integrate the two approaches (LCA and EMA), while considering their different allocation algebra and space-time scales of application. Specifically, the UEVs of glyphosate and urea, which are respectively the most used herbicide and nitrogen fertilizer used in worldwide agriculture, are calculated, yielding values of 2.47E+13 sej/kg and 7.07E+12 sej/kg, respectively. In order to do so, UEVs of intermediate process chemicals such as ammonia, acetic anhydride, chlorine gas, formaldehyde, phosphorous chloride, and sodium hydroxide have also been calculated or updated, thus providing at the same time a procedure and a set of values potentially useful for future studies. The LCA impacts of agro-chemicals in China are compared to worldwide averages from the Ecoinvent database, and the UEVs for several chemicals are also compared to previous estimates from published emergy literature
The intensified constructed wetlands are promising for treatment of ammonia stripped effluent: nitrogen transformations and removal pathways
This study investigated the treatment performance and nitrogen removal mechanism of highly alkaline ammonia-stripped digestate effluent in horizontal subsurface flow constructed wetlands (CWs). A promising nitrogen removal performance (up to 91%) was observed in CWs coupled with intensified configurations, i.e., aeration and effluent recirculation. The results clearly supported that the higher aeration ratio and presence of effluent recirculation are important to improve the alkalinity and pollutant removal in CWs. The influent pH (>10) was significantly decreased to 8.2–8.8 under the volumetric hydraulic loading rates of 0.105 and 0.21 d-1 in the CWs. Simultaneously, up to 91% of NH4+-N removal was achieved under the operation of a higher aeration ratio and effluent recirculation. Biological nitrogen transformations accounted for 94% of the consumption of alkalinity in the CWs. The significant enrichment of δ15N-NH4+ in the effluent (47–58‰) strongly supports the occurrence of microbial transformations for NH4+-N removal. However, relatively lower enrichment factors of δ15N-NH4+ (−1.8 ‰ – −11.6‰) compared to the values reported in previous studies reflected the inhibition effect of the high pH alkaline environment on nitrifiers in these CWs
Increasing dimension asymptotics for two-way crossed mixed effect models
This paper presents asymptotic results for the maximum likelihood and
restricted maximum likelihood (REML) estimators within a two-way crossed mixed
effect model as the sizes of the rows, columns, and cells tend to infinity.
Under very mild conditions which do not require the assumption of normality,
the estimators are proven to be asymptotically normal, possessing a structured
covariance matrix. The growth rate for the number of rows, columns, and cells
is unrestricted, whether considered pairwise or collectively.Comment: 24 page
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