286 research outputs found
Crossed Andreev reflection-induced magnetoresistance
We show that very large negative magnetoresistance can be obtained in
magnetic trilayers in a current-in-plane geometry owing to the existence of
crossed Andreev reflection. This spin-valve consists of a thin superconducting
film sandwiched between two ferromagnetic layers whose magnetization is allowed
to be either parallelly or antiparallelly aligned. For a suitable choice of
structure parameters and nearly fully spin-polarized ferromagnets the
magnetoresistance can exceed -80%. Our results are relevant for the design and
implementation of spintronic devices exploiting ferromagnet-superconductor
structures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, final published versio
Building Simulation Applications BSA 2019 - Proceedings of 4th IBPSA-Italy conference
Unlike the previous editions,the fourth Building Simulation Applications BSA 2019 Conference took place in June, from 19th to 21st, instead of during the winter period. For the biennial conference hosted by the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, IBPSA Italy had to double its efforts, considering its concurrent commitment to the organization of Building Simulation 2019 in Rome. Even so, BSA 2019 featured more than 60 participants and around 130 different authors, with a significant presence of delegates from abroad and, in particular, from Austria. A different review process was introduced, with the full paper submission and review following the conference. Based on this, only 40 out of the 54 works presented during the conference in two parallel sessions were accepted for inclusion in this proceedings book
Towards a microscopic description of the free-energy landscape of water
Free-energy landscape theory is often used to describe complex molecular
systems. Here, a microscopic description of water structure and dynamics based
on configuration-space-networks and molecular dynamics simulations of the
TIP4P/2005 model is applied to investigate the free-energy landscape of water.
The latter is built on top of a large set of water microstates describing the
kinetic stability of local hydrogen-bond arrangements up to the second
solvation shell. In temperature space, the landscape displays three regions
with an overall different organization. At ambient conditions, the free-energy
surface is characterized by structural inhomogeneities with multiple,
structurally well defined, short-lived basins of attraction. Below around
ambient temperature, the liquid rapidly becomes homogeneous. In this regime,
the landscape is funneled-like, with fully-coordinated water arrangements at
the bottom of the funnel. Finally, a third region develops below the
temperature of maximal compressibility (Widom line) where the funnel becomes
steeper with few interconversions between microstates other than the fully
coordinated ones. Our results present a viable a way to manage the complexity
of water structure and dynamics, connecting microscopic properties to its
ensemble behavior
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