703 research outputs found
Al2O3/ZrO2/Y3Al5O12 composites. A high-temperature mechanical characterization
An Al2O3/5 vol%·ZrO2/5 vol%·Y3Al5O12 (YAG) tri-phase composite was manufactured by surface modification of an alumina powder with inorganic precursors of the second phases. The bulk materials were produced by die-pressing and pressureless sintering at 1500 °C, obtaining fully dense, homogenous samples, with ultra-fine ZrO2 and YAG grains dispersed in a sub-micronic alumina matrix. The high temperature mechanical properties were investigated by four-point bending tests up to 1500 °C, and the grain size stability was assessed by observing the microstructural evolution of the samples heat treated up to 1700 °C. Dynamic indentation measures were performed on as-sintered and heat-treated Al2O3/ZrO2/YAG samples in order to evaluate the micro-hardness and elastic modulus as a function of re-heating temperature. The high temperature bending tests highlighted a transition from brittle to plastic behavior comprised between 1350 and 1400 °C and a considerable flexural strength reduction at temperatures higher than 1400 °C; moreover, the microstructural investigations carried out on the re-heated samples showed a very limited grain growth up to 1650 °C
Advances in the field of Nanostructured Ceramic Composites
In recent years, the production of ceramic composites having nanosized features is receiving increasing attention, as they demonstrated enhanced mechanical and/or functional performances as respect to conventional micronic materials [...
Separation of particles leading to decay and unlimited growth of energy in a driven stadium-like billiard
A competition between decay and growth of energy in a time-dependent stadium
billiard is discussed giving emphasis in the decay of energy mechanism. A
critical resonance velocity is identified for causing of separation between
ensembles of high and low energy and a statistical investigation is made using
ensembles of initial conditions both above and below the resonance velocity.
For high initial velocity, Fermi acceleration is inherent in the system.
However for low initial velocity, the resonance allies with stickiness hold the
particles in a regular or quasi-regular regime near the fixed points,
preventing them from exhibiting Fermi acceleration. Also, a transport analysis
along the velocity axis is discussed to quantify the competition of growth and
decay of energy and making use distributions of histograms of frequency, and we
set that the causes of the decay of energy are due to the capture of the orbits
by the resonant fixed points
Lower and upper estimates on the excitation threshold for breathers in DNLS lattices
We propose analytical lower and upper estimates on the excitation threshold
for breathers (in the form of spatially localized and time periodic solutions)
in DNLS lattices with power nonlinearity. The estimation depending explicitly
on the lattice parameters, is derived by a combination of a comparison argument
on appropriate lower bounds depending on the frequency of each solution with a
simple and justified heuristic argument. The numerical studies verify that the
analytical estimates can be of particular usefulness, as a simple analytical
detection of the activation energy for breathers in DNLS lattices.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Nonlinear localized modes in two-dimensional electrical lattices
We report the observation of spontaneous localization of energy in two
spatial dimensions in the context of nonlinear electrical lattices. Both
stationary and traveling self-localized modes were generated experimentally and
theoretically in a family of two-dimensional square, as well as hon- eycomb
lattices composed of 6x6 elements. Specifically, we find regions in driver
voltage and frequency where stationary discrete breathers, also known as
intrinsic localized modes (ILM), exist and are stable due to the interplay of
damping and spatially homogeneous driving. By introduc- ing additional
capacitors into the unit cell, these lattices can controllably induce traveling
discrete breathers. When more than one such ILMs are experimentally generated
in the lattice, the interplay of nonlinearity, discreteness and wave
interactions generate a complex dynamics wherein the ILMs attempt to maintain a
minimum distance between one another. Numerical simulations show good agreement
with experimental results, and confirm that these phenomena qualitatively carry
over to larger lattice sizes.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Discrete breathers in a nonlinear electric line: Modeling, Computation and Experiment
We study experimentally and numerically the existence and stability
properties of discrete breathers in a periodic nonlinear electric line. The
electric line is composed of single cell nodes, containing a varactor diode and
an inductor, coupled together in a periodic ring configuration through
inductors and driven uniformly by a harmonic external voltage source. A simple
model for each cell is proposed by using a nonlinear form for the varactor
characteristics through the current and capacitance dependence on the voltage.
For an electrical line composed of 32 elements, we find the regions, in driver
voltage and frequency, where -peaked breather solutions exist and
characterize their stability. The results are compared to experimental
measurements with good quantitative agreement. We also examine the spontaneous
formation of -peaked breathers through modulational instability of the
homogeneous steady state. The competition between different discrete breathers
seeded by the modulational instability eventually leads to stationary
-peaked solutions whose precise locations is seen to sensitively depend on
the initial conditions
Benefits of temporal information for appearance-based gaze estimation
State-of-the-art appearance-based gaze estimation methods, usually based on
deep learning techniques, mainly rely on static features. However, temporal
trace of eye gaze contains useful information for estimating a given gaze
point. For example, approaches leveraging sequential eye gaze information when
applied to remote or low-resolution image scenarios with off-the-shelf cameras
are showing promising results. The magnitude of contribution from temporal gaze
trace is yet unclear for higher resolution/frame rate imaging systems, in which
more detailed information about an eye is captured. In this paper, we
investigate whether temporal sequences of eye images, captured using a
high-resolution, high-frame rate head-mounted virtual reality system, can be
leveraged to enhance the accuracy of an end-to-end appearance-based
deep-learning model for gaze estimation. Performance is compared against a
static-only version of the model. Results demonstrate statistically-significant
benefits of temporal information, particularly for the vertical component of
gaze.Comment: In ACM Symposium on Eye Tracking Research & Applications (ETRA), 202
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