867 research outputs found

    Energy performance of water strip modules for industrial heating in real operation conditions: Steady-state and CFD analyses

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    The objective of this study is the theoretical evaluation of the energy performance of a radiant strips heating system fed with hot water by varying the operating conditions. First, the convective coefficients and the heating power (both convective and radiant parts) of the heating system are evaluated in steady-state conditions by simulating heat exchange similar to real operating conditions (such as the presence of a ventilation system, the opening of doors, windows, or skylights, etc.), in comparison with the nominal data. To carry out this preliminary assessment, different references in the scientific literature are considered with respect to experimental measurements and numerical simulations for similar applications. The steady-state analysis revealed that the increase in the overall yield of the heating strips, compared to the data measured according to the EN 14,037 standard, is in the order of 30%. Afterward, a CFD analysis is reported to dynamically study the effect of the above-mentioned typical situations of real operation of the system in industrial sheds. The CFD analysis confirms that the presence of constant air exchange leads to an improvement of more than 30% in the performance of the water strip system. The main conclusion is that designing the water strip system following the EN 14,037 standard probably will oversize the industrial heating plant

    Neutron Scattering and magnetization studies of Ba2_2Cu2.95_{2.95}Co0.05_{0.05}O4_4Cl2_2: A decorated two-dimensional antiferromagnet

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    Ba2_2Cu3_3O4_4Cl2_2 has two inter-penetrating square Cu sublattices, one with square root 2 times the in-plane spacing of the other. Isotropic magnetic interactions between the two sublattices are completely frustrated. Quantum fluctuations resolve the intrinsic degeneracy in the ordering direction of the more weakly coupled sublattice in favor of collinear ordering. We present neutron scattering and magnetization studies of the magnetic structure when the Cu ions are substituted with Co. The Co spins create new magnetic interactions between the two sublattices. The ordering behavior of both Cu sublattices is retained largely unmodified. Between the phase transitions of the two sublattices spin-glass behavior is observed. Magnetization results show a strong enhancement to the ferromagnetic aspect of the magnetic structure. The combination of glassy behavior and large moments strongly suggest that the Co moments induce the formation of local canted states.Comment: 4 figure

    Predicting Rising Follower Counts on Twitter Using Profile Information

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    When evaluating the cause of one's popularity on Twitter, one thing is considered to be the main driver: Many tweets. There is debate about the kind of tweet one should publish, but little beyond tweets. Of particular interest is the information provided by each Twitter user's profile page. One of the features are the given names on those profiles. Studies on psychology and economics identified correlations of the first name to, e.g., one's school marks or chances of getting a job interview in the US. Therefore, we are interested in the influence of those profile information on the follower count. We addressed this question by analyzing the profiles of about 6 Million Twitter users. All profiles are separated into three groups: Users that have a first name, English words, or neither of both in their name field. The assumption is that names and words influence the discoverability of a user and subsequently his/her follower count. We propose a classifier that labels users who will increase their follower count within a month by applying different models based on the user's group. The classifiers are evaluated with the area under the receiver operator curve score and achieves a score above 0.800.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 8 tables, WebSci '17, June 25--28, 2017, Troy, NY, US

    Tight-binding parameters and exchange integrals of Ba_2Cu_3O_4Cl_2

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    Band structure calculations for Ba_2Cu_3O_4Cl_2 within the local density approximation (LDA) are presented. The investigated compound is similar to the antiferromagnetic parent compounds of cuprate superconductors but contains additional Cu_B atoms in the planes. Within the LDA, metallic behavior is found with two bands crossing the Fermi surface (FS). These bands are built mainly from Cu 3d_{x^2-y^2} and O 2p_{x,y} orbitals, and a corresponding tight-binding (TB) model has been parameterized. All orbitals can be subdivided in two sets corresponding to the A- and B-subsystems, respectively, the coupling between which is found to be small. To describe the experimentally observed antiferromagnetic insulating state, we propose an extended Hubbard model with the derived TB parameters and local correlation terms characteristic for cuprates. Using the derived parameter set we calculate the exchange integrals for the Cu_3O_4 plane. The results are in quite reasonable agreement with the experimental values for the isostructural compound Sr_2Cu_3O_4Cl_2.Comment: 5 pages (2 tables included), 4 ps-figure

    Study of nuclear correlation effects via 12C(p,n)12N(g.s.,1+) at 296 MeV

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    We report measurements of the cross section and a complete set of polarization observables for the Gamow--Teller 12C(p⃗,n⃗)12N(g.s.,1+){}^{12}{\rm C}(\vec{p},\vec{n}){}^{12}{\rm N}({\rm g.s.},1^+) reaction at a bombarding energy of 296 MeV. The data are compared with distorted wave impulse approximation calculations employing transition form factors normalized to reproduce the observed beta-decay ftft value. The cross section is significantly under-predicted by the calculations at momentum transfers q≳q \gtrsim 0.5 fm−1{\rm fm^{-1}}. The discrepancy is partly resolved by considering the non-locality of the nuclear mean field. However, the calculations still under-predict the cross section at large momentum transfers of qq ≃\simeq 1.6 fm−1{\rm fm^{-1}}. We also performed calculations employing random phase approximation response functions and found that the observed enhancement can be attributed in part to pionic correlations in nuclei.Comment: 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Lett.

    Complete set of polarization transfer coefficients for the 3He(p,n){}^{3}{\rm He}(p,n) reaction at 346 MeV and 0 degrees

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    We report measurements of the cross-section and a complete set of polarization transfer coefficients for the 3He(p,n){}^{3}{\rm He}(p,n) reaction at a bombarding energy TpT_p = 346 MeV and a reaction angle θlab\theta_{\rm lab} = 0∘0^{\circ}. The data are compared with the corresponding free nucleon-nucleon values on the basis of the predominance of quasi-elastic scattering processes. Significant discrepancies have been observed in the polarization transfer DLL(0∘)D_{LL}(0^{\circ}), which are presumably the result of the three-proton TT = 3/2 resonance. The spin--parity of the resonance is estimated to be 1/2−1/2^-, and the distribution is consistent with previous results obtained for the same reaction at TpT_p = 48.8 MeV.Comment: 4 figures, Accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Anomalous Spin Dynamics observed by High Frequency ESR in Honeycomb Lattice Antiferromagnet InCu2/3V1/3O3

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    High-frequency ESR results on the S=1/2 Heisenberg hexagonal antiferromagnet InCu2/3V1/3O3 are reported. This compound appears to be a rare model substance for the honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet with very weak interlayer couplings. The high-temperature magnetic susceptibility can be interpreted by the S=1/2 honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet, and it shows a magnetic-order-like anomaly at TN=38 K. Although, the resonance field of our high-frequency ESR shows the typical behavior of the antiferromagnetic resonance, the linewidth of our high-frequency ESR continues to increase below TN, while it tends to decrease as the temperature in a conventional three-dimensional antiferromagnet decreases. In general, a honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet is expected to show a simple antiferromagnetic order similar to that of a square lattice antiferromagnet theoretically because both antiferromagnets are bipartite lattices. However, we suggest that the observed anomalous spin dynamics below TN is the peculiar feature of the honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet that is not observed in the square lattice antiferromagnet.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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