5,087 research outputs found

    Capture of liquid hydrogen boiloff with metal hydride absorbers

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    A procedure which uses metal hydrides to capture some of this low pressure (,1 psig) hydrogen for subsequent reliquefaction is described. Of the five normally occurring sources of boil-off vapor the stream associated with the off-loading of liquid tankers during dewar refill was identified as the most cost effective and readily recoverable. The design, fabrication and testing of a proof-of-concept capture device, operating at a rate that is commensurate with the evolution of vapor by the target stream, is described. Liberation of the captured hydrogen gas at pressure .15 psig at normal temperatures (typical liquefier compressor suction pressure) are also demonstrated. A payback time of less than three years is projected

    Maximum of N Independent Brownian Walkers till the First Exit From the Half Space

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    We consider the one-dimensional target search process that involves an immobile target located at the origin and NN searchers performing independent Brownian motions starting at the initial positions x=(x1,x2,...,xN)\vec x = (x_1,x_2,..., x_N) all on the positive half space. The process stops when the target is first found by one of the searchers. We compute the probability distribution of the maximum distance mm visited by the searchers till the stopping time and show that it has a power law tail: PN(mx)BN(x1x2...xN)/mN+1P_N(m|\vec x)\sim B_N (x_1x_2... x_N)/m^{N+1} for large mm. Thus all moments of mm up to the order (N1)(N-1) are finite, while the higher moments diverge. The prefactor BNB_N increases with NN faster than exponentially. Our solution gives the exit probability of a set of NN particles from a box [0,L][0,L] through the left boundary. Incidentally, it also provides an exact solution of the Laplace's equation in an NN-dimensional hypercube with some prescribed boundary conditions. The analytical results are in excellent agreement with Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure

    Frictional dynamics of viscoelastic solids driven on a rough surface

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    We study the effect of viscoelastic dynamics on the frictional properties of a (mean field) spring-block system pulled on a rough surface by an external drive. When the drive moves at constant velocity V, two dynamical regimes are observed: at fast driving, above a critical threshold Vc, the system slides at the drive velocity and displays a friction force with velocity weakening. Below Vc the steady sliding becomes unstable and a stick-slip regime sets in. In the slide-hold-slide driving protocol, a peak of the friction force appears after the hold time and its amplitude increases with the hold duration. These observations are consistent with the frictional force encoded phenomenologically in the rate-and-state equations. Our model gives a microscopical basis for such macroscopic description.Comment: 10 figures, 7 pages, +4 pages of appendi

    Universal interface width distributions at the depinning threshold

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    We compute the probability distribution of the interface width at the depinning threshold, using recent powerful algorithms. It confirms the universality classes found previously. In all cases, the distribution is surprisingly well approximated by a generalized Gaussian theory of independant modes which decay with a characteristic propagator G(q)=1/q^(d+2 zeta); zeta, the roughness exponent, is computed independently. A functional renormalization analysis explains this result and allows to compute the small deviations, i.e. a universal kurtosis ratio, in agreement with numerics. We stress the importance of the Gaussian theory to interpret numerical data and experiments.Comment: 4 pages revtex4. See also the following article cond-mat/030146

    Free-energy distribution of the directed polymer at high temperature

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    We study the directed polymer of length tt in a random potential with fixed endpoints in dimension 1+1 in the continuum and on the square lattice, by analytical and numerical methods. The universal regime of high temperature TT is described, upon scaling 'time' tT5/κt \sim T^5/\kappa and space x=T3/κx = T^3/\kappa (with κ=T\kappa=T for the discrete model) by a continuum model with δ\delta-function disorder correlation. Using the Bethe Ansatz solution for the attractive boson problem, we obtain all positive integer moments of the partition function. The lowest cumulants of the free energy are predicted at small time and found in agreement with numerics. We then obtain the exact expression at any time for the generating function of the free energy distribution, in terms of a Fredholm determinant. At large time we find that it crosses over to the Tracy Widom distribution (TW) which describes the fixed TT infinite tt limit. The exact free energy distribution is obtained for any time and compared with very recent results on growth and exclusion models.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures large time limit corrected and convergence to Tracy Widom established, 1 figure changed

    Higher correlations, universal distributions and finite size scaling in the field theory of depinning

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    Recently we constructed a renormalizable field theory up to two loops for the quasi-static depinning of elastic manifolds in a disordered environment. Here we explore further properties of the theory. We show how higher correlation functions of the displacement field can be computed. Drastic simplifications occur, unveiling much simpler diagrammatic rules than anticipated. This is applied to the universal scaled width-distribution. The expansion in d=4-epsilon predicts that the scaled distribution coincides to the lowest orders with the one for a Gaussian theory with propagator G(q)=1/q^(d+2 \zeta), zeta being the roughness exponent. The deviations from this Gaussian result are small and involve higher correlation functions, which are computed here for different boundary conditions. Other universal quantities are defined and evaluated: We perform a general analysis of the stability of the fixed point. We find that the correction-to-scaling exponent is omega=-epsilon and not -epsilon/3 as used in the analysis of some simulations. A more detailed study of the upper critical dimension is given, where the roughness of interfaces grows as a power of a logarithm instead of a pure power.Comment: 15 pages revtex4. See also preceding article cond-mat/030146
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