21,394 research outputs found
Subject-specific finite element modelling of the human hand complex : muscle-driven simulations and experimental validation
This paper aims to develop and validate a subject-specific framework for modelling the human hand. This was achieved by combining medical image-based finite element modelling, individualized muscle force and kinematic measurements. Firstly, a subject-specific human hand finite element (FE) model was developed. The geometries of the phalanges, carpal bones, wrist bones, ligaments, tendons, subcutaneous tissue and skin were all included. The material properties were derived from in-vivo and in-vitro experiment results available in the literature. The boundary and loading conditions were defined based on the kinematic data and muscle forces of a specific subject captured from the in-vivo grasping tests. The predicted contact pressure and contact area were in good agreement with the in-vivo test results of the same subject, with the relative errors for the contact pressures all being below 20%. Finally, sensitivity analysis was performed to investigate the effects of important modelling parameters on the predictions. The results showed that contact pressure and area were sensitive to the material properties and muscle forces. This FE human hand model can be used to make a detailed and quantitative evaluation into biomechanical and neurophysiological aspects of human hand contact during daily perception and manipulation. The findings can be applied to the design of the bionic hands or neuro-prosthetics in the future
Possibility of Unconventional Pairing Due to Coulomb Interaction in Fe-Based Pnictide Superconductors: Perturbative Analysis of Multi-Band Hubbard Models
Possibility of unconventional pairing due to Coulomb interaction in
iron-pnictide superconductors is studied by applying a perturbative approach to
realistic 2- and 5-band Hubbard models. The linearized Eliashberg equation is
solved by expanding the effective pairing interaction perturbatively up to
third order in the on-site Coulomb integrals. The numerical results for the
5-band model suggest that the eigenvalues of the Eliashberg equation are
sufficiently large to explain the actual high Tc for realistic values of
Coulomb interaction and the most probable pairing state is spin-singlet s-wave
without any nodes just on the Fermi surfaces, although the superconducting
order parameter changes its sign between the small Fermi pockets. On the other
hand the 2-band model is quite insufficient to explain the actual high Tc.Comment: 2 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings of the Intl. Symposium on
Fe-Oxypnictide Superconductors (Tokyo, 28-29th June 2008
Fast extraction of somatosensory evoked potential using RLS adaptive filter algorithms
This paper evaluates the efficacy of the recursive least squares (RLS) in adaptive noise canceller (RLS-ANC) for fast extraction of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs). The RLSANC method was verified by simulation of electroencephalography (EEG) and Gaussian noise contaminated SEP signals at different signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs). RLS was found to converge faster than the least mean squares (LMS) algorithm in ANC, i.e. SEP extraction by RLS-ANC required fewer trials than LMS-ANC. Experimental results showed that RLS-ANC with less than 50 trials could provide similar performance in SEP extraction to those extracted by the conventional ensemble averaging with 500 trials even at SNR of - 20dB. ©2009 IEEE.published_or_final_versionThe 2nd International Congress on Image and Signal Processing (CISP 2009), Tianjin, China, 17-19 October 2009. In Proceedings of the 2nd CISP, 2009, p. 1-
Refinement and growth enhancement of Al2Cu phase during magnetic field assisting directional solidification of hypereutectic Al-Cu alloy.
International audienceUnderstanding how the magnetic fields affect the formation of reinforced phase during solidification is crucial to tailor the structure and therefor the performance of metal matrix in situ composites. In this study, a hypereutectic Al-40 wt.% Cu alloy has been directionally solidified under various axial magnetic fields and the morphology of Al2Cu phase was quantified in 3D by means of high resolution synchrotron X-ray tomography. With rising magnetic fields, both increase of Al2Cu phase's total volume and decrease of each column's transverse section area were found. These results respectively indicate the growth enhancement and refinement of the primary Al2Cu phase in the magnetic field assisting directional solidification. The thermoelectric magnetic forces (TEMF) causing torque and dislocation multiplication in the faceted primary phases were thought dedicate to respectively the refinement and growth enhancement. To verify this, a real structure based 3D simulation of TEMF in Al2Cu column was carried out, and the dislocations in the Al2Cu phase obtained without and with a 10T high magnetic field were analysed by the transmission electron microscope
Surface phase separation in nanosized charge-ordered manganites
Recent experiments showed that the robust charge-ordering in manganites can
be weakened by reducing the grain size down to nanoscale. Weak ferromagnetism
was evidenced in both nanoparticles and nanowires of charge-ordered manganites.
To explain these observations, a phenomenological model based on surface phase
separation is proposed. The relaxation of superexchange interaction on the
surface layer allows formation of a ferromagnetic shell, whose thickness
increases with decreasing grain size. Possible exchange bias and softening of
the ferromagnetic transition in nanosized charge-ordered manganites are
predicted.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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