35,800 research outputs found

    Performance analysis of a metal hydride refrigeration system

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    The varying applications of metal hydride refrigeration systems, such as cold storage and space air conditioning, grant them important advantages over conventional ones. These advantages include being a low-grade heat driven, more environmentally friendly and renewable working fluid with greater compactness and fewer moving parts. However, a metal hydride refrigeration system always operates under unsteady conditions due to the cyclic hydriding and dehydriding processes involved. To analyse and optimise the metal hydride refrigeration system’s design and performance, in this paper, a comprehensive transient system model has been developed with a new and revised intrinsic kinetic correlation inclusive of the essential operating controls and applicable process conditions of regeneration, cooling and transitions in between. In addition, the correlative model on the characterisation process of pressure, concentration and temperature (PCT) profiles for the metal hydride alloys employed in the system has been developed and is introduced briefly in this paper. It is integrated in the system model and ensures the accurate prediction of maximum capacities for the metal hydride isothermal desorption and absorption processes. The developed transient system model has been validated through comparison with experimental results from literature on the medium-temperature cooling process of a metal hydride refrigeration system. The model simulation is conducted for a specially designed low-temperature metal hydride refrigeration system at different operating conditions and controls. In quantity, when the high-grade heat source temperature increases from 90 ◦C to 120 ◦C, the low-grade heat source temperature increases from − 20 ◦C to 10 ◦C, the medium-grade heat sink temperature decreases from 30 ◦C to 15 ◦C, and the time period for regeneration or cooling process decreases from 10 min to 4 min, the cooling COP increases by 112.0%, 136.6%, 19.3% and 31.8% respectively. The optimisation strategies for the system operating conditions and controls are therefore recommended based on the detailed performance analyses of the system simulation results

    Derived Demand for Fresh Cheese Products Imported into Japan

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    The objective of this article is to estimate the derived demand for imported fresh cheese products into Japan when fresh cheese import data are disaggregated by source country of production. We provide empirical measures of the sensitivity of demand to changes in total imports, own-price, and cross-prices among exporting countries for fresh cheese. Japan's derived demand for U.S. fresh cheese products is perfectly inelastic. Thus, the import demand competition among importing countries should be based upon differences in product characteristics.Demand and Price Analysis, International Relations/Trade,

    Discovery of a Perseus-like cloud in the early Universe: HI-to-H2 transition, carbon monoxide and small dust grains at zabs=2.53 towards the quasar J0000+0048

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    We present the discovery of a molecular cloud at zabs=2.5255 along the line of sight to the quasar J0000+0048. We perform a detailed analysis of the absorption lines from ionic, neutral atomic and molecular species in different excitation levels, as well as the broad-band dust extinction. We find that the absorber classifies as a Damped Lyman-alpha system (DLA) with logN(HI)(cm^-2)=20.8+/-0.1. The DLA has super-Solar metallicity with a depletion pattern typical of cold gas and an overall molecular fraction ~50%. This is the highest f-value observed to date in a high-z intervening system. Most of the molecular hydrogen arises from a clearly identified narrow (b~0.7 km/s), cold component in which CO molecules are also found, with logN(CO)~15. We study the chemical and physical conditions in the cold gas. We find that the line of sight probes the gas deep after the HI-to-H2 transition in a ~4-5 pc-size cloud with volumic density nH~80 cm^-3 and temperature of only 50 K. Our model suggests that the presence of small dust grains (down to about 0.001 {\mu}m) and high cosmic ray ionisation rate (zeta_H a few times 10^-15 s^-1) are needed to explain the observed atomic and molecular abundances. The presence of small grains is also in agreement with the observed steep extinction curve that also features a 2175 A bump. The properties of this cloud are very similar to what is seen in diffuse molecular regions of the nearby Perseus complex. The high excitation temperature of CO rotational levels towards J0000+0048 betrays however the higher temperature of the cosmic microwave background. Using the derived physical conditions, we correct for a small contribution (0.3 K) of collisional excitation and obtain TCMB(z = 2.53)~9.6 K, in perfect agreement with the predicted adiabatic cooling of the Universe. [abridged]Comment: 24 pages, 24 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    A Model of Strongly Correlated Electrons with Condensed Resonating-Valence-Bond Ground States

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    We propose a new exactly solvable model of strongly correlated electrons. The model is based on a dd-pp model of the CuO2_2 plane with infinitely large repulsive interactions on Cu-sites, and it contains additional correlated-hopping, pair-hopping and charge-charge interactions of electrons. For even numbers of electrons less than or equal to 2/3-filling, we construct the exact ground states of the model, all of which have the same energy and each of which is the unique ground state for a fixed electron number. It is shown that these ground states are the resonating-valence-bond states which are also regarded as condensed states in which all electrons are in a single two-electron state. We also show that the ground states exhibit off-diagonal long-range order.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, v2: minor changes, v3: minor changes and typos correction

    Scanning tunneling microscopy of MnOx ultrathin films on Au(111)

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    Two structurally distinct phases of manganese oxide ultrathin films were grown on Au(111) substrates and imaged at atomic resolution by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). The so-called MnOx fishbone phase is only a few monolayers thick and nucleates epitaxially on the bare Au(111) substrate. The surface of this phase exhibits two parallelogram unit cells with sizes and included angles of (14.6 ± 0.2) × (5.6 ± 0.2) Å2, 88 ± 1° and (13.6 ± 0.1) × (5.6 ± 0.2) Å2, 80 ± 1°. The other thicker phase is called the square phase. It is only observed growing on top of the fishbone phase and has a surface unit cell of edge dimension 5.8 ± 0.1 Å. The square phase is thought to be a (001) termination of hausmannite Mn3O4. In addition, less common intermediary surface structures are also observed. This study demonstrates the transition of the crystal structure of an oxide film from a unique ultrathin film structure that is epitaxially constrained by the interaction with the Au(111) substrate to that of a thicker film with the structure of a bulk crystal

    Effect of collision dephasing on atomic evolutions in a high-Q cavity

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    The decoherence mechanism of a single atom inside a high-Q cavity is studied, and the results are compared with experimental observations performed by M. Brune et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 76, 1800 (1996)]. Collision dephasing and cavity leakage are considered as the major sources giving rise to decoherence effect. In particular, we show that the experimental data can be fitted very well by assuming suitable values of collision Stark shifts and dark count rate in the detector
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