1,135 research outputs found
Giant Electroresistance in Ferroelectric Tunnel Junctions
The interplay between the electron transport in metal/ferroelectric/metal
junctions with ultrathin ferroelectric barriers and the polarization state of a
barrier is investigated. Using a model which takes into account screening of
polarization charges in metallic electrodes and direct quantum tunneling across
a ferroelectric barrier we calculate the change in the tunneling conductance
associated with the polarization switching. We find the conductance change of a
few orders of magnitude for metallic electrodes with significantly different
screening lengths. This giant electroresistance effect is the consequence of a
different potential profile seen by transport electrons for the two opposite
polarization orientations.Comment: 4 page
Improvement of Calculation Methods for Heat Transfer Factor in Iron Ore Pellet Bed
For the sake of improving the calculation procedure for heat transfer in metallurgical unit dense beds a number of experiments has been carried out that allow adjustment of the heat transfer factor between the gas flow and the pellets in the course of heating. In the course of analysis, a permanent channeling flow was detected in thepellet bed at Re = 100 – 1400. The heat transfer factor was calculated and the pellet temperature was determined in the course of heating within ± 11.4∘C.
Keywords: heat transfer in bed, pellet firing, dense bed, heat transfer factor, hydrodynamic resistance, gas flo
Vortex states in 2D superconductor at high magnetic field in a periodic pinning potential
The effect of a periodic pinning array on the vortex state in a 2D
superconductor at low temperatures is studied within the framework of the
Ginzburg-Landau approach. It is shown that attractive interaction of vortex
cores to a commensurate pin lattice stabilizes vortex solid phases with long
range positional order against violent shear fluctuations. Exploiting a simple
analytical method, based on the Landau orbitals description, we derive a rather
detailed picture of the low temperatures vortex state phase diagram. It is
predicted that for sufficiently clean samples application of an artificial
periodic pinning array would enable one to directly detect the intrinsic shear
stiffness anisotropy characterizing the ideal vortex lattice.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Scheduling Task-parallel Applications in Dynamically Asymmetric Environments
Shared resource interference is observed by applications as dynamic
performance asymmetry. Prior art has developed approaches to reduce the impact
of performance asymmetry mainly at the operating system and architectural
levels. In this work, we study how application-level scheduling techniques can
leverage moldability (i.e. flexibility to work as either single-threaded or
multithreaded task) and explicit knowledge on task criticality to handle
scenarios in which system performance is not only unknown but also changing
over time. Our proposed task scheduler dynamically learns the performance
characteristics of the underlying platform and uses this knowledge to devise
better schedules aware of dynamic performance asymmetry, hence reducing the
impact of interference. Our evaluation shows that both criticality-aware
scheduling and parallelism tuning are effective schemes to address interference
in both shared and distributed memory applicationsComment: Published in ICPP Workshops '2
Van der Waals and Graphene-Like Layers of Silicon Nitride and Aluminum Nitride
A systematic study of kinetics and thermodynamics of Si (111) surface nitridation under ammonia exposure is presented. The appeared silicon nitride (8 × 8) structure is found to be a metastable phase. Experimental evidences of graphene-like nature of the silicon nitride (8 × 8) structure are presented. Interlayer spacings in the (SiN)2(AlN)4 structure on the Si (111) surface are found equal to 3.3 Å in SiN and 2.86 Å in AlN. These interlayer spacings correspond to weak van der Waals interaction between layers. In contrast to the widely accepted model of a surface structure (8 × 8) as monolayer of β-Si3N4 on Si (111) surface, we propose a new graphene-like Si3N4 (g-Si3N3 and/or g-Si3N4) model for the (8 × 8) structure. It is revealed that the deposition of Al atoms on top of a highly ordered (8 × 8) structure results in graphene-like AlN (g-AlN) layers formation. The g-AlN lattice constant of 3.08 Å is found in a good agreement with the ab initio calculations. A transformation of the g-AlN to the bulk-like wurtzite AlN is analyzed
Pauli blockade of the electron spin flip in bulk GaAs
By means of time-resolved optical orientation under strong optical pumping,
the k-dependence of the electron spin-flip time (t_sf) in undoped GaAs is
experimentally determined. t_sf monotonically decreases by more than one order
of magnitude when the electron kinetic energy varies from 2 to 30 meV. At the
high excitation densities and low temperatures of the reported experiments the
main spin-flip mechanism of the conduction band electrons is the
Bir-Aronov-Pikus. By means of Monte-Carlo simulations we evidence that
phase-space filling effects result in the blocking of the spin flip, yielding
an increase of t_sf with excitation density. These effects obtain values of
t_sf up to 30 ns at k=0, the longest reported spin-relaxation time in undoped
GaAs in the absence of a magnetic field.Comment: new author added, major changes in section IV (phenomenological
model), minor changes throughout the entire manuscrip
The linearization method and new classes of exact solutions in cosmology
We develop a method for constructing exact cosmological solutions of the
Einstein equations based on representing them as a second-order linear
differential equation. In particular, the method allows using an arbitrary
known solution to construct a more general solution parameterized by a set of
3\textit{N} constants, where \textit{N} is an arbitrary natural number. The
large number of free parameters may prove useful for constructing a theoretical
model that agrees satisfactorily with the results of astronomical observations.
Cosmological solutions on the Randall-Sundrum brane have similar properties. We
show that three-parameter solutions in the general case already exhibit
inflationary regimes. In contrast to previously studied two-parameter
solutions, these three-parameter solutions can describe an exit from inflation
without a fine tuning of the parameters and also several consecutive
inflationary regimes.Comment: 7 page
PSR B0329+54: Statistics of Substructure Discovered within the Scattering Disk on RadioAstron Baselines of up to 235,000 km
We discovered fine-scale structure within the scattering disk of PSR B0329+54
in observations with the RadioAstron ground-space radio interferometer. Here,
we describe this phenomenon, characterize it with averages and correlation
functions, and interpret it as the result of decorrelation of the
impulse-response function of interstellar scattering between the
widely-separated antennas. This instrument included the 10-m Space Radio
Telescope, the 110-m Green Bank Telescope, the 14x25-m Westerbork Synthesis
Radio Telescope, and the 64-m Kalyazin Radio Telescope. The observations were
performed at 324 MHz, on baselines of up to 235,000 km in November 2012 and
January 2014. In the delay domain, on long baselines the interferometric
visibility consists of many discrete spikes within a limited range of delays.
On short baselines it consists of a sharp spike surrounded by lower spikes. The
average envelope of correlations of the visibility function show two
exponential scales, with characteristic delays of and , indicating the presence of two scales of
scattering in the interstellar medium. These two scales are present in the
pulse-broadening function. The longer scale contains 0.38 times the scattered
power of the shorter one. We suggest that the longer tail arises from
highly-scattered paths, possibly from anisotropic scattering or from
substructure at large angles.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables; accepted by Astrophysical journa
Spectroscopic signatures of spin-charge separation in the quasi-one-dimensional organic conductor TTF-TCNQ
The electronic structure of the quasi-one-dimensional organic conductor
TTF-TCNQ is studied by angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES). The
experimental spectra reveal significant discrepancies to band theory. We
demonstrate that the measured dispersions can be consistently mapped onto the
one-dimensional Hubbard model at finite doping. This interpretation is further
supported by a remarkable transfer of spectral weight as function of
temperature. The ARPES data thus show spectroscopic signatures of spin-charge
separation on an energy scale of the conduction band width.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; to appear in PR
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