817 research outputs found

    Fluidized bed combustor modeling

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    A general mathematical model for the prediction of performance of a fluidized bed coal combustor (FBC) is developed. The basic elements of the model consist of: (1) hydrodynamics of gas and solids in the combustor; (2) description of gas and solids contacting pattern; (3) kinetics of combustion; and (4) absorption of SO2 by limestone in the bed. The model is capable of calculating the combustion efficiency, axial bed temperature profile, carbon hold-up in the bed, oxygen and SO2 concentrations in the bubble and emulsion phases, sulfur retention efficiency and particulate carry over by elutriation. The effects of bed geometry, excess air, location of heat transfer coils in the bed, calcium to sulfur ratio in the feeds, etc. are examined. The calculated results are compared with experimental data. Agreement between the calculated results and the observed data are satisfactory in most cases. Recommendations to enhance the accuracy of prediction of the model are suggested

    The role of microtubules in rapid hyphal tip growth of Aspergillus nidulans

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    This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from "http://www.molbiolcell.org".The filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans grows by polarized extension of hyphal tips. The actin cytoskeleton is essential for polarized growth, but the role of microtubules has been controversial. To define the role of microtubules in tip growth, we used time-lapse microscopy to measure tip growth rates in germlings of A. nidulans and in multinucleate hyphal tip cells, and we used a green fluorescent protein-α-tubulin fusion to observe the effects of the antimicrotubule agent benomyl. Hyphal tip cells grew ≈5 times faster than binucleate germlings. In germlings, cytoplasmic microtubules disassembled completely in mitosis. In hyphal tip cells, however, microtubules disassembled through most of the cytoplasm in mitosis but persisted in a region near the hyphal tip. The growth rate of hyphal tip cells did not change significantly in mitosis. Benomyl caused rapid disassembly of microtubules in tip cells and a 10× reduction in growth rate. When benomyl was washed out, microtubules assembled quickly and rapid tip growth resumed. These results demonstrate that although microtubules are not strictly required for polarized growth, they are rate-limiting for the growth of hyphal tip cells. These data also reveal that A. nidulans exhibits a remarkable spatial regulation of microtubule disassembly within hyphal tip cells

    Recursive self-organizing map as a contractive iterative function system

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    Recently, there has been a considerable research activity in extending topographic maps of vectorial data to more general data structures, such as sequences or trees. However, the representational capabilities and internal representations of the models are not well understood. We rigorously analyze a generalization of the Self-Organizing Map (SOM) for processing sequential data, Recursive SOM (RecSOM [1]), as a non-autonomous dynamical system consisting off a set of fixed input maps. We show that contractive fixed input maps are likely to produce Markovian organizations of receptive fields o the RecSOM map. We derive bounds on parameter β\beta (weighting the importance of importing past information when processing sequences) under which contractiveness of the fixed input maps is guaranteed

    Electrochemical titrations and reaction time courses monitored in situ by magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy

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    Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra, at ultraviolet–visible or near-infrared wavelengths (185–2000 nm), contain the same transitions observed in conventional absorbance spectroscopy, but their bisignate nature and more stringent selection rules provide greatly enhanced resolution. Thus, they have proved to be invaluable in the study of many transition metal-containing proteins. For mainly technical reasons, MCD has been limited almost exclusively to the measurement of static samples. But the ability to employ the resolving power of MCD to follow changes at transition metal sites would be a potentially significant advance. We describe here the development of a cuvette holder that allows reagent injection and sample mixing within the 50-mm-diameter ambient temperature bore of an energized superconducting solenoid. This has allowed us, for the first time, to monitor time-resolved MCD resulting from in situ chemical manipulation of a metalloprotein sample. Furthermore, we report the parallel development of an electrochemical cell using a three-electrode configuration with physically separated working and counter electrodes, allowing true potentiometric titration to be performed within the bore of the MCD solenoid

    Competition between spin ordering and superconductivity near the pseudogap boundary in La2−xSrxCuO4: Insights from NMR

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    When superconductivity is suppressed by high magnetic fields in La2−xSrxCuO4, striped antiferromagnetic (AFM) order becomes the magnetic ground state of the entire pseudogap regime, up to its end at the doping p∗ [Frachet, Vinograd et al., Nat. Phys. 16, 1064 (2020)]. Glass-like freezing of this state is detected in 139La NMR measurements of the spin-lattice relaxation rate T−11. Here, we present a quantitative analysis of T−11 data in the hole-doping range p=x=0.12−0.171, based on the Bloembergen-Purcell-Pound (BPP) theory, modified to include statistical distribution of parameters arising from strong spatial inhomogeneity. We observe spin fluctuations to slow down at temperatures T near the onset of static charge order and, overall, the effect of the field B may be seen as equivalent to strengthening stripe order by approaching p=0.12 doping. In details, however, our analysis reveals significant departure from usual field-induced magnetic transitions. The continuous growth of the amplitude of the fluctuating moment with increasing B suggests a nearly-critical state in the B→0 limit, with very weak quasistatic moments possibly confined in small areas like vortex cores. Further, the nucleation of spin order in the vortex cores is shown to account quantitatively for both the value and the p dependence of a field scale characterizing bulk spin freezing. The correlation time of the fluctuating moment appears to depend exponentially on B/T (over the investigated range). This explains the timescale dependence of various experimental manifestations, including why, for transport measurements, the AFM moments may be considered static over a considerable range of B and T. These results make the high-field magnetic ground state up to p∗ an integral part of the discussion on putative quantum criticality

    Electronic reconstruction forming a C2C_2-symmetric Dirac semimetal in Ca3_3Ru2_2O7_7

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    Electronic band structures in solids stem from a periodic potential reflecting the structure of either the crystal lattice or an electronic order. In the stoichiometric ruthenate Ca3_3Ru2_2O7_7, numerous Fermi surface sensitive probes indicate a low-temperature electronic reconstruction. Yet, the causality and the reconstructed band structure remain unsolved. Here, we show by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, how in Ca3_3Ru2_2O7_7 a C2C_2-symmetric massive Dirac semimetal is realized through a Brillouin-zone preserving electronic reconstruction. This Dirac semimetal emerges in a two-stage transition upon cooling. The Dirac point and band velocities are consistent with constraints set by quantum oscillation, thermodynamic, and transport experiments, suggesting that the complete Fermi surface is resolved. The reconstructed structure -- incompatible with translational-symmetry-breaking density waves -- serves as an important test for band structure calculations of correlated electron systems

    Strain-Engineering Mott-Insulating La2_2CuO4_4

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    The transition temperature TcT_\textrm{c} of unconventional superconductivity is often tunable. For a monolayer of FeSe, for example, the sweet spot is uniquely bound to titanium-oxide substrates. By contrast for La2−x_{2-\mathrm{x}}Srx_\mathrm{x}CuO4_4 thin films, such substrates are sub-optimal and the highest TcT_\textrm{c} is instead obtained using LaSrAlO4_4. An outstanding challenge is thus to understand the optimal conditions for superconductivity in thin films: which microscopic parameters drive the change in TcT_\mathrm{c} and how can we tune them? Here we demonstrate, by a combination of x-ray absorption and resonant inelastic x-ray scattering spectroscopy, how the Coulomb and magnetic-exchange interaction of La2_2CuO4_4 thin films can be enhanced by compressive strain. Our experiments and theoretical calculations establish that the substrate producing the largest TcT_\textrm{c} under doping also generates the largest nearest neighbour hopping integral, Coulomb and magnetic-exchange interaction. We hence suggest optimising the parent Mott state as a strategy for enhancing the superconducting transition temperature in cuprates.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures and 2 tables (including Supplementary Information
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