4,319 research outputs found
Design of bi-tortuous, anisotropic graphite anodes for fast ion-transport in Li-ion batteries
Thick Li-ion battery electrodes with high ion transport rates could enable
batteries that cost less and that have higher gravimetric and volumetric energy
density, because they require fewer inactive cell-components. Finding ways to
increase ion transport rates in thick electrodes would be especially valuable
for electrodes made with graphite platelets, which have been shown to have
tortuosities in the thru-plane direction about 3 times higher than in the
in-plane direction. Here, we predict that bi-tortuous electrode structures
(containing electrolyte-filled macro-pores embedded in micro-porous graphite)
can enhance ion transport and can achieve double the discharge capacity
compared to an unstructured electrode at the same average porosity. We
introduce a new two-dimensional version of porous-electrode theory with
anisotropic ion transport to investigate these effects and to interpret the
mechanisms by which performance enhancements arise. From this analysis we
determine criteria for the design of bi-tortuous graphite anodes, including the
particular volume fraction of macro-pores that maximizes discharge capacity
(approximately 20 vol.%) and a threshold spacing interval (half the electrode's
thickness) below which only marginal enhancement in discharge capacity is
obtained. We also report the sensitivity of performance with respect to cycling
rate, electrode thickness, and average porosity/electroactive-material loading.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
A New Model of Array Grammar for generating Connected Patterns on an Image Neighborhood
Study of patterns on images is recognized as an important step in
characterization and classification of image. The ability to efficiently
analyze and describe image patterns is thus of fundamental importance. The
study of syntactic methods of describing pictures has been of interest for
researchers. Array Grammars can be used to represent and recognize connected
patterns. In any image the patterns are recognized using connected patterns. It
is very difficult to represent all connected patterns (CP) even on a small 3 x
3 neighborhood in a pictorial way. The present paper proposes the model of
array grammar capable of generating any kind of simple or complex pattern and
derivation of connected pattern in an image neighborhood using the proposed
grammar is discussed
Larkin-Ovchinnikov state of superconducting Weyl metals: Fundamental differences between pairings restricted and extended in the -space
Two common approaches of studying theoretically the property of a
superconductor are shown to have significant differences, when they are applied
to the Larkin-Ovchinnikov state of Weyl metals. In the first approach the
pairing term is restricted by a cutoff energy to the neighborhood of the Fermi
surface, whereas in the second approach the pairing term is extended to the
whole Brillouin zone. We explore their difference by considering two minimal
models for the Weyl metal. For a model giving a single pair of Weyl pockets,
both two approaches give a partly-gapped (fully-gapped) bulk spectrum for small
(large) pairing amplitude. However, for very small cutoff energy, a portion of
the Fermi surface can be completely unaffected by the pairing term in the first
approach. For the other model giving two pairs of Weyl pockets, while the bulk
spectrum for the first approach can be fully gapped, the one from the second
approach has a robust line node, and the surface states are also changed
qualitatively by the pairing. We elucidate the above differences by topological
arguments and analytical analyses. A factor common to both of the two models is
the tilting of the Weyl cones which leads to asymmetric normal state band
structure with respect to the Weyl nodes. For the Weyl metal with two pairs of
Weyl pockets, the band folding leads to a double degeneracy in the effective
model, which distinguishes the pairing of the second approach from all others.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figure
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Resolving single cone inputs to visual receptive fields.
With the current techniques available for mapping receptive fields, it is impossible to resolve the contribution of single cone photoreceptors to the response of central visual neurons. Using adaptive optics to correct for ocular aberrations, we delivered micron-scale spots of light to the receptive field centers of neurons in the macaque lateral geniculate nucleus. Parvocellular LGN neurons mapped in this manner responded with high reliability to stimulation of single cones
Analysis of the new INTEGRAL Earth observations to measure the cosmic X-ray background
A new series of Earth occultation observations has been started in 2012 to
refine the determination of the cosmic X-ray background by the INTEGRAL
mission. We show here that the new detector lightcurves in the 3 to 160 keV
range differ from the ones obtained in 2006. Instead of the expected modulation
induced by the passage of the Earth through the field of view of the JEM-X,
IBIS/ISGRI and SPI instruments, we record unrelated variability on shorter
timescales. We discuss the differences obtained with the datasets of 2006 and
2012 in view of the changes in pointing direction, spacecraft orbit and solar
cycle phase. We conclude that the Earth occultation signal in 2012 is likely
blended by radioactive decay resulting from the activation of the spacecraft
when crossing the proton radiation belt at perigee passage. The observed
variability, on the other hand, results most likely from the current solar
maximum. In addition to a variable particle environment from inhomogeneities of
the solar wind, we also find evidence for hard X-ray auroral emission. While
the former can be traced by SPI/ACS counts, the latter - by enhancing
unpredictably the Earth emission - is a major disturbance for measuring the
diffuse X-ray background through occultation by the Earth.Comment: Proceedings of "An INTEGRAL view of the high-energy sky (the first 10
years)" the 9th INTEGRAL Workshop, October 15-19, 2012, Paris, France, in
Proceedings of Science (INTEGRAL 2012), Eds. A. Goldwurm, F. Lebrun and C.
Winkler, (http://pos.sissa.it/cgi-bin/reader/conf.cgi?confid=176), id 06
Holographic phase transition and conductivity in three dimensional Lifshitz black hole
In this work we aim at the question of holographic phase transitions and
conductivity in two dimensional systems with Lifshitz scaling. We take the
gravity side candidate for a dual description as the black hole solution of New
Massive Gravity. We aim at the effects due to the Lifshitz scaling in
comparison with the relativistic case. The order parameters indicate a second
order phase transition. We find as an interesting result a series of peaks in
the conductivity for certain values of the frequency. The relevance of such
frequencies for real systems is discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 36 figure
Study of the X-ray/gamma source AX J1910.7+0917 and three newly discovered INTEGRAL sources
AX J1910.7+0917 is a still unidentified source discovered with ASCA and
observed more recently with IBIS/ISGRI, mainly noticeable for its rather hard
spectrum. We analyzed all the public available data on this source, and we took
advantage of the recent improvements performed in the INTEGRAL data analysis
software to fully exploit the IBIS/ISGRI data. In the data collected from
INTEGRAL, XMM-Newton, Chandra and ASCA the source is clearly variable. The
spectrum can be modelled as an absorbed powerlaw (NH~6x10^22 cm^-2, Gamma=1.5)
with an iron line at 6.4 keV. The present data still do not allow for a unique
classification of the source. In the IBIS/ISGRI field of view around AX
J1910.7+0917, we discovered three new sources: IGR J19173+0747, IGR J19294+1327
and IGR J19149+1036, where the latter is positionally coincident with the
Einstein source 2E 1912.5+1031. For the first two sources we report results
obtained from follow-up observations carried out with Swift/XRT.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in PoS (contribution
PoS(INTEGRAL 2010)131), proceedings of the 8th INTEGRAL Workshop "The
Restless Gamma-ray Universe" (September 2010, Dublin, Ireland
The Common Difference Between MIMO With Other Antennas
In past 802.11 systems there is a single Radio Frequency (RF) chain on the
Wi-Fi device. Multiple antennas use the same hardware to process the radio
signal. So only one antenna can transmit or receive at a time as all radio
signals need to go through the single RF chain. In MIMO there can be a separate
RF chain for each antenna allowing multiple RF chains to coexist. MIMO
technology has attracted attention in wireless communications, because it
offers significant increases in data throughput and link range without
additional bandwidth or increased transmit power. It achieves this goal by
spreading the same total transmit power over the antennas to achieve an array
gain that improves the spectral efficiency (more bits per second per hertz of
bandwidth) or to achieve a diversity gain that improves the link reliability.
Multiple Input/Multiple Output (MIMO) is an area of intense development in the
wireless industry because it delivers profound gains in range, throughput and
reliability. As a result, manufacturers of wireless local area network (WLAN),
wireless metropolitan area network (WMAN), and mobile phone equipment are
embracing MIMO technology. In this paper we are interested to compare the MIMO
Antenna functions with traditional Antenna functions. And we take an example of
IRT for illustration.Comment: Published in Computer Science Chronicl
Type-II Dirac cone and Dirac cone protected by nonsymmorphic symmetry in carbon-lithium compound (C4Li)
In this work, we predict a novel band structure for Carbon-Lithium(C4Li)
compound using the first-principles method. We show that it exhibits two Dirac
points near the Fermi level; one located at W point originating from the
nonsymmophic symmetry of the compound, and the other one behaves like a type-II
Dirac cone with higher anisotropy along the {\Gamma} to X line. The obtained
Fermi surface sheets of the hole-pocket and the electron-pocket near the
type-II Dirac cone are separated from each other, and they would touch each
other when the Fermi level is doped to cross the type-II Dirac cone. The
evolution of Fermi surface with doping is also discussed. The bands crossing
from T to W make a line-node at the intersection of kx={\pi} and ky={\pi}
mirror planes. The C4Li is a novel material with both nonsymmorphic protected
Dirac cone and type-II Dirac cone near the Fermi level which may exhibit
exceptional topological property for electronic applications
Vectorial and spinorial perturbations in Galileon Black Holes: Quasinormal modes, quasiresonant modes and stability
In this work we have considered a model that includes the interaction of
gravity and matter fields with Galilean invariance (the so-called derivative
coupling) as well as some corresponding black hole type solutions. Quasinormal
perturbations of two kinds of matter fields have been computed by different
methods. The effect of the derivative coupling in the quasinormal spectrum has
been analyzed and evaluated.Comment: 25 pages, 5 tables, 11 figures. Version published in Phys. Rev. D 99,
044023 (2019
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