116,273 research outputs found
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Nexus of thermal resilience and energy efficiency in buildings: A case study of a nursing home
Extreme weather events become more frequent and severe due to climate change. Although energy efficiency technologies can influence thermal resilience of buildings, they are traditionally studied separately, and their interconnections are rarely quantified. This study developed a methodology of modeling and analysis to provide insights into the nexus of thermal resilience and energy efficiency of buildings. We conducted a case study of a real nursing home in Florida, where 12 patients died during Hurricane Irma in 2017 due to HVAC system power loss, to understand and quantify how passive and active energy efficiency measures (EEMs) can improve thermal resilience to reduce heat-exposure risk of patients. Results show that passive measures of opening windows and doors for natural ventilation, as well as miscellaneous load reduction, are very effective in eliminating the extreme dangerous occasions. However, to maintain safe conditions, active measures such as on-site power generators and thermal storage are also needed. The nursing home was further studied by changing its location to two other cities: San Francisco (mild climate) and Chicago (cold winter and hot summer). Results revealed that the EEMs' impacts on thermal resilience vary significantly by climate and building characteristics. The study also estimated the costs of EEMs to help stakeholders prioritize the measures. Passive measures that may not save energy may greatly improve thermal resilience, and thus should be considered in building design or retrofit. Findings from this study indicate energy efficiency technologies should be evaluated not only by their energy savings performance but also by their influence on a building's resilience to extreme weather events
Bit Error Rates for Ultrafast APD Based Optical Receivers: Exact and Large Deviation Based Asymptotic Approaches
Exact analysis as well as asymptotic analysis, based on large-deviation theory (LDT), are developed to compute the bit-error rate (BER) for ultrafast avalanche-photodiode (APD) based optical receivers assuming on-off keying and direct detection. The effects of intersymbol interference (ISI), resulting from the APD\u27s stochastic avalanche buildup time, as well as the APD\u27s dead space are both included in the analysis. ISI becomes a limiting factor as the transmission rate approaches the detector\u27s bandwidth, in which case the bit duration becomes comparable to APD\u27s avalanche buildup time. Further, the effect of dead space becomes significant in high-speed APDs that employ thin avalanche multiplication regions. While the exact BER analysis at the generality considered here has not been reported heretofore, the asymptotic analysis is a major generalization of that developed by Letaief and Sadowsky [IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, vol. 38, 1992], in which the LDT was used to estimate the BER assuming APDs with an instantaneous response (negligible avalanche buildup time) and no dead space. These results are compared with those obtained using the common Gaussian approximation approach showing the inadequacy of the Guassian approximation when ISI noise has strong presence
Disentanglement in a quantum critical environment
We study the dynamical process of disentanglement of two qubits and two
qutrits coupled to an Ising spin chain in a transverse field, which exhibits a
quantum phase transition. We use the concurrence and negativity to quantify
entanglement of two qubits and two qutrits, respectively. Explicit connections
between the concurrence (negativity) and the decoherence factors are given for
two initial states, the pure maximally entangled state and the mixed Werner
state. We find that the concurrence and negativity decay exponentially with
fourth power of time in the vicinity of critical point of the environmental
system.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
The origins of electromechanical indentation size effect in ferroelectrics
Metals exhibit a size-dependent hardening when subject to indentation.
Mechanisms for this phenomenon have been intensely researched in recent times.
Does such a size-effect also exist in the electromechanical behavior of
ferroelectrics?--if yes, what are the operative mechanisms? Our experiments on
BaTiO3 indeed suggest an electromechanical size-effect. We argue, through
theoretical calculations and differential experiments on another
non-ferroelectric piezoelectric (Quartz), that the phenomenon of
flexoelectricity(as opposed to dislocation activity) is responsible for our
observations. Flexoelectricity is the coupling of strain gradients to
polarization and exists in both ordinary and piezoelectric dielectrics. In
particular, ferroelectrics exhibit an unusually large flexoelectric response.Comment: in revie
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Fast response time fiber optical pH and oxygen sensors
While fluorescence-based fiber optic sensors for measuring both pH and oxygen concentration (O2) are well known, current sensors are often limited by their response time and drift, which limits the use of existing fiber optic sensors of this type in wider applications, for example in physiology and other fields. Several new fiber optical sensors have been developed and optimized, with respect to key features such as tip shape and coating layer thickness. In this work, preliminary results on the performance of a suite of pH sensors with fast response times, < 3 second and oxygen sensors (O2) with response times < 0.2 second. The sensors have been calibrated and their performance analyzed using the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation (pH) and classic Lehrer-model (O2)
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