9,326 research outputs found
Characterization of Si/Si_(1-y)C_y superlattices grown by surfactant assisted molecular beam epitaxy
Si/Si_(0.97)C_(0.03) superlattices grown on Si(001) substrates by Sb surfactant assisted molecular beam epitaxy are characterized by in situ reflection high energy electron diffraction (RHEED), atomic force microscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and high resolution x‐ray diffraction. The RHEED shows that, in the absence of Sb, the growth front roughens during Si_(0.97)C_(0.03) growth and smooths during subsequent Si growth. In contrast, when Sb is present, the growth front remains smooth throughout the growth. This observation is confirmed by cross‐sectional TEM, which reveals that for samples grown without the use of Sb, the Si/Si_(0.97)C_(0.03) interfaces (Si_(0.97)C_(0.03) on Si) are much more abrupt than the Si_(0.97)C_(0.03)/Si interfaces. In the case of Sb assisted growth, there is no observable difference in abruptness between the two types of interfaces. Atomic force microscopy micrographs of the Si_(0.97)C_(0.03) surface reveal features that could be the source of the roughness observed by RHEED and TEM
Sb-surfactant-mediated growth of Si/Si1–yCy superlattices by molecular-beam epitaxy
Si/Si0.97C0.03 superlattices were grown on Si(001) substrates by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) to study the use of Sb as a surfactant during Si1–yCy growth. In situ reflection high energy electron diffraction (RHEED) shows that while carbon easily disrupts the two-dimensional growth of homoepitaxial Si, such disruption is suppressed for layers grown on Sb-terminated Si(001) surfaces. Cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (TEM) reveals that for samples grown without the use of Sb, the Si/Si0.97C0.03 interfaces (Si0.97C0.03 on Si) were much more abrupt than Si0.97C0.03/Si interfaces. In the case of Sb-mediated growth, differences in abruptness between the two types of interfaces were not readily observable
An edge-based framework for enumerating 3-manifold triangulations
A typical census of 3-manifolds contains all manifolds (under various
constraints) that can be triangulated with at most n tetrahedra. Al- though
censuses are useful resources for mathematicians, constructing them is
difficult: the best algorithms to date have not gone beyond n = 12. The
underlying algorithms essentially (i) enumerate all relevant 4-regular
multigraphs on n nodes, and then (ii) for each multigraph G they enumerate
possible 3-manifold triangulations with G as their dual 1-skeleton, of which
there could be exponentially many. In practice, a small number of multigraphs
often dominate the running times of census algorithms: for example, in a
typical census on 10 tetrahedra, almost half of the running time is spent on
just 0.3% of the graphs.
Here we present a new algorithm for stage (ii), which is the computational
bottleneck in this process. The key idea is to build triangulations by
recursively constructing neighbourhoods of edges, in contrast to traditional
algorithms which recursively glue together pairs of tetrahedron faces. We
implement this algorithm, and find experimentally that whilst the overall
performance is mixed, the new algorithm runs significantly faster on those
"pathological" multigraphs for which existing methods are extremely slow. In
this way the old and new algorithms complement one another, and together can
yield significant performance improvements over either method alone.Comment: 29 pages, 19 figure
First ice core records of NO3− stable isotopes from Lomonosovfonna, Svalbard
Samples from two ice cores drilled at Lomonosovfonna, Svalbard, covering the period 1957–2009, and 1650–1995, respectively, were analyzed for NO3− concentrations, and NO3− stable isotopes (δ15N and δ18O). Post-1950 δ15N has an average of (−6.9 ± 1.9) ‰, which is lower than the isotopic signal known for Summit, Greenland, but agrees with values observed in recent Svalbard snow and aerosol. Pre-1900 δ15N has an average of (4.2 ± 1.6) ‰ suggesting that natural sources, enriched in the 15 N-isotope, dominated before industrialization. The post-1950 δ18O average of (75.1 ± 4.1) ‰ agrees with data from low and polar latitudes, suggesting similar atmospheric NOy (NOy = NO + NO2 + HNO3) processing pathways. The combination of anthropogenic source δ15N and transport isotope effect was estimated as −29.1 ‰ for the last 60 years. This value is below the usual range of NOx (NOx = NO + NO2) anthropogenic sources which is likely the result of a transport isotope effect of –32 ‰. We suggest that the δ15N recorded at Lomonosovfonna is influenced mainly by fossil fuel combustion, soil emissions and forest fires; the first and second being responsible for the marked decrease in δ15N observed in the post-1950s record with soil emissions being associated to the decreasing trend in δ15N observed up to present time, and the third being responsible for the sharp increase of δ15N around 2000
Quantitative relations between biomass and organic/inorganic resuspended particulate matter
During a period of two years, organic and inorganic suspended particulate matter and phytoplankton biomass was frequently measured in Lake Erken, a moderately deep, eutrophic lake in south-eastern Sweden. Regression analyses of these data were used to differentiate and quantify newly produced planktonic particulate matter (zooplankton + phytoplankton + bacteria) and different types of resuspended particulate matter (organic, inorganic). Resuspended particulate matter was frequently dominant in the water column (yearly mean 59% of suspended particulate matter), and resuspended particulate organic matter ranged from 11 to 99% of suspended particulate organic matter (yearly mean: 40%). The high amount of resuspended particulate matter originates from erosion/transportation bottoms which are located at water depths above 16 m and which cover 93% of the lake area. Resuspended particulate matter was significantly related to diatom biomass but not to any other type of planktonic biomass. Consequently, the seasonal variations in the amount and distribution of diatoms can be explained by the hydrodynamic processes which affect the amount and distribution of resuspended particulate matter while seasonal variations in the amount and distribution of other planktonic biomass need further explanations, like active swimming, floating and grazing resistance
HOMOGENIZATION OF A NON-PERIODIC OSCILLATING BOUNDARY VIA PERIODIC UNFOLDING
This paper deals with the homogenization of an elliptic model problem in a two-dimensional domain with non-periodic oscillating boundary by the method of periodic unfolding. For the non-periodic oscillations, a modulated unfolding is used. The L-2 convergence of the solutions and their fluxes are shown, under natural hypotheses on the domain
A pore-scale model for permeable biofilm: numerical simulations and laboratory experiments
In this paper we derive a pore-scale model for permeable biofilm formation in
a two-dimensional pore. The pore is divided in two phases: water and biofilm.
The biofilm is assumed to consist of four components: water, extracellular
polymeric substances (EPS), active bacteria, and dead bacteria. The flow of
water is modeled by the Stokes equation whereas a diffusion-convection equation
is involved for the transport of nutrients. At the water/biofilm interface,
nutrient transport and shear forces due to the water flux are considered. In
the biofilm, the Brinkman equation for the water flow, transport of nutrients
due to diffusion and convection, displacement of the biofilm components due to
reproduction/dead of bacteria, and production of EPS are considered. A
segregated finite element algorithm is used to solve the mathematical
equations. Numerical simulations are performed based on experimentally
determined parameters. The stress coefficient is fitted to the experimental
data. To identify the critical model parameters, a sensitivity analysis is
performed. The Sobol sensitivity indices of the input parameters are computed
based on uniform perturbation by of the nominal parameter values.
The sensitivity analysis confirms that the variability or uncertainty in none
of the parameters should be neglected
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