1,666 research outputs found

    Strength Assessment of a Precession Driven Dynamo

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    A pressure vessel, which shall be filled with eight tons of liquid sodium, has to be designed for a large-scale experimental setup to investigate flow-induced magnetic fields. In addition to the centrifugal forces and gyroscopic loads induced by the rotation about two non-parallel axes, the complex internal pressure distribution, the imbalance of the container, as well as the thermal loads resulting from the elevated temperatures, which are required for the experiments, must be taken into account. This leads to several millions of load cases. That is why a calculation procedure is developed using the finite element method, which strongly reduces the computational complexity by utilizing sector symmetry, load case decomposition and superposition. Here, the focus is to determine the most critical load cases, which will be used for the strength assessment, regarding both the static and the fatigue strength.Besides the structural strength, the welded joints and the bolted joints are analyzed. Therefore, nonlinear effects are considered, for example the contact status of the bolted joints. The submodelling technique is used to investigate structural details

    Electronic compressibility and charge imbalance relaxation in cuprate superconductors

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    In the material SmLa1−x_{1-x}Srx_xCuO4−δ_{4-\delta} with alternating intrinsic Josephson junctions we explain theoretically the relative amplitude of the two plasma peaks in transmission by taking into account the spatial dispersion of the Josephson Plasma Resonance in cc direction due to charge coupling. From this and the magnetic field dependence of the plasma peaks in the vortex solid and liquid states it is shown that the electronic compressibility of the CuO2_2 layers is consistent with a free electron value. Also the London penetration depth λab≈1100A˚\lambda_{ab} \approx 1100 {\rm \AA} near TcT_c can be determined. The voltage response in the IVIV-curve of a Bi2_2Sr2_2CaCu2_2O8_8 mesa due to microwave irradiation or current injection in a second mesa is related to the nonequilibrium charge imbalance of quasiparticles and Cooper pairs and from our experimental data the relaxation time ∼100ps\sim 100 {\rm ps} is obtained.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, phc-proc4-auth.cls, to be published in Physica C as a proceeding of M2S-HTSC Rio 200

    Child’s play: Exposure to household pesticide use among children in rural, urban and informal areas of South Africa

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    Background. As part of a larger dermatological investigation undertaken in 1999 - 2001 involving the Department of Dermatology, Groote Schuur Hospital (Cape Town, South Africa) and Nottingham University (UK), household pesticide use was investigated among Xhosa-speaking families living in three areas in South Africa (a rural area, an urban township and an informal settlement).Objectives. The aim was to characterise pesticide use patternsand potential exposures through skin absorption, ingestion and inhalation for this group of South African children.Methods. A standardised questionnaire, which included a section investigating household pesticide use, was administered by four trained fieldworkers to the parents/guardians of the 740 children (25%) aged between 3 and 11 years identified as having atopic dermatitis either by clinical examination or according to the UK criteria (rural N=387,urban N=292, informal N=61).Results. Of the children with atopic dermatitis, 539 (73%) had been exposed to household pesticides. Most childhood exposure (89%) occurred in the informal settlements, followed by 78% in the urban area and 63% in the rural area.Conclusions. This research highlighted considerable home environment pesticide exposure of South African children in lower socio-economic groups in rural, urban and informal areas. As children are particularly vulnerable to the short- and long-term health effects of pesticide exposure, further indepth investigation is needed to ascertain and document the health effects associated with such exposure in the home

    Charge-imbalance effects in intrinsic Josephson systems

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    We report on two types of experiments with intrinsic Josephson systems made from layered superconductors which show clear evidence of nonequilibrium effects: 1. In 2-point measurements of IV-curves in the presence of high- frequency radiation a shift of the voltage of Shapiro steps from the canonical value hf/(2e) has been observed. 2. In the IV-curves of double-mesa structures an influence of the current through one mesa on the voltage measured on the other mesa is detected. Both effects can be explained by charge-imbalance on the superconducting layers produced by the quasi-particle current, and can be described successfully by a recently developed theory of nonequilibrium effects in intrinsic Josephson systems.Comment: 8pages, 9figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Intrinsic Tunneling in Cuprates and Manganites

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    The most anisotropic high temperature superconductors like Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8, as well as the recently discovered layered manganite La1.4Sr1.6Mn2O7 are layered metallic systems where the interlayer current transport occurs via sequential tunneling of charge carriers. As a consequence, in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 adjacent CuO2 double layers form an intrinsic Josephson tunnel junction while in in La1.4Sr1.6Mn2O7 tunneling of spin polarized charge carriers between adjacent MnO2 layers leads to an intrinsic spin valve effect. We present and discuss interlayer transport experiments for both systems. To perform the experiments small sized mesa structures were patterned on top of single crystals of the above materials defining stacks of a small number of intrinsic Josephson junctions and intrinsic spin valves, respectively.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure

    Dynamical mean-field theory of indirect magnetic exchange

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    To analyze the physical properties arising from indirect magnetic exchange between several magnetic adatoms and between complex magnetic nanostructures on metallic surfaces, the real-space extension of dynamical mean-field theory (R-DMFT) appears attractive as it can be applied to systems of almost arbitrary geometry and complexity. While R-DMFT describes the Kondo effect of a single adatom exactly, indirect magnetic (RKKY) exchange is taken into account on an approximate level only. Here, we consider a simplified model system consisting of two magnetic Hubbard sites ("adatoms") hybridizing with a non-interacting tight-binding chain ("substrate surface"). This two-impurity Anderson model incorporates the competition between the Kondo effect and indirect exchange but is amenable to an exact numerical solution via the density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG). The particle-hole symmetric model at half-filling and zero temperature is used to benchmark R-DMFT results for the magnetic coupling between the two adatoms and for the magnetic properties induced in the substrate. In particular, the dependence of the local adatom and the nonlocal adatom-adatom static susceptibilities as well as the magnetic response of the substrate on the distance between the adatoms and on the strength of their coupling with the substrate is studied. We find both, excellent agreement with the DMRG data even on subtle details of the competition between RKKY exchange and the Kondo effect but also complete failure of the R-DMFT, depending on the parameter regime considered. R-DMFT calculations are performed using the Lanczos method as impurity solver. With the real-space extension of the two-site DMFT, we also benchmark a simplified R-DMFT variant.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
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