4,011 research outputs found
High sensitivity refractive index sensor based on simple diffraction from phase grating
We present a technique for refractive index sensing using a phase grating structure. A grating under normal incidence can be designed such that the 1st order diffracted light travels at a diffraction angle of 90o with respect to the 0th order. The diffracted light which is along the direction of periodicity can further get diffracted from the grating and interfere with the 0th order light. Under this condition, the π phase difference that arises between the two interfering beams results in a transmission dip. We can tune this dip wavelength for senor applications, based on the grating equation. Both simulation and experimental data are presented in the paper which shows good agreement with each other
Leaching of metals and metalloids from highway marking glass beads and the potential environmental impact
Glass beads are embedded in pavement markings to obtain retroreflectivity which plays a crucial role in the lighting-up effect needed for safe driving. Elevated metal and metalloid concentrations of As, Sb, and Pb have recently been observed in imported glass beads. The main objective of this research was to assess the environmental impact associated with applying these imported glass beads in highway markings. To achieve this objective, total metal concentrations were measured using two techniques: hydrofluoric acid digestion followed by inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (HF/ICP-MS), and field portable x-ray fluorescence (FP-XRF) spectroscopy. A number of leaching studies were conducted and included two standard United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) methods: the toxicity characteristic leaching procedure (TCLP) and the synthetic precipitation leaching procedure (SPLP). In addition, a factorial study was conducted to determine the impact of environmentally relevant factors such as pH, chemicals applied on roadways, particle size, and time on metal and metalloid leaching. To compare results among the three types of studies (TCLP, SPLP, and factorial study), a select batch of glass beads with elevated concentrations was used. FP-XRF was observed to be as reliable a tool for measuring total metal and metalloid concentrations and is recommended over the use of HF/ICP-MS. Results demonstrated that the most important factors affecting leaching were pH and time. For anions such as HAsO42- and SbO3-, leaching increased with increasing pH, while for cations including Pb2+, it increased as pH decreased. Sequential extraction was conducted as well to better understand the form of metals and metalloids associated with the glass beads. While 3% were extracted in the exchangeable (As, Mn, and Ba) and the oxidizable forms (Pb), greater than 97% of metals and metalloids were associated with the glass matrix. Further studies to assess leaching as a function of total concentration in the imported batch were conducted for 30 days. Non-parametric statistics were applied to test concentrations that resulted in excess of the groundwater quality criteria. Results demonstrated that the New Jersey Default Leachate Groundwater limits for As were exceeded for 98% of the samples tested. In case of Pb, these limits were exceeded for 58% of the samples and with Sb 15%. These results suggest a potential environmental impact to groundwater used as a drinking water source when either storing glass beads in bulk or disposing of the roadway marking material in bulk
Making and Breaking Settler Space: Five Centuries of Colonization in North America by Adam J. Barker
MAKING AND BREAKING SETTLER SPACE: Five Centuries of Colonization (“Making and Breaking Settler Space”) is a powerful piece published in the area of Indigenous studies and embodies a spatially focussed synthesis of settler colonial literature. The book offers an innovative account of the ways space, power, and identity are produced in settler colonial societies and identifies the cracks, flows, and failures that expose the fragility of the settler colonial assemblage. Adam J. Barker’s work provides theoretical and practical ideas on how to confront and dismantle the settler colonial project through these cracks, which ultimately becomes the text’s raison d’être
Exploring the Influence of Functional Status on Older Adults\u27 Social Relationships in Assisted Living Communities
Social relationships can have considerable influence on physical and mental well-being. AL research suggests that other residents are among the most available social contacts and that co-resident relationships can affect life satisfaction, quality of life, and well-being. Although functional status influences social relationships, research has yet to provide an in-depth understanding of how cognitive and physical function affects co-resident relationships in AL. In this thesis, I present an analysis of qualitative data collected over a one-year period in two diverse settings. The thesis addressed: 1) How does functional status influence co-resident relationships? ; and 2) What factors shape its influence? Analysis was guided by principles of Grounded Theory Method. Coming together and pulling apart signifies the key finding that functional status is multi-directional, fluid, and operates in different ways in various situations and across time. Facility and resident –level factors further affect the influence of functional status on co-resident relationships
Complexes of Organic Arsonic Acids: Part VIII - Complexes of VO2+ & Cu2+ with Arylarsonic Acids
988-99
Pairing correlations in N~Z pf-shell nuclei
We perform Shell Model Monte Carlo calculations to study pair correlations in
the ground states of nuclei with masses A=48-60. We find that ,
proton-neutron correlations play an important, and even dominant
role, in the ground states of odd-odd nuclei, in agreement with
experiment. By studying pairing in the ground states of Fe, we
observe that the isovector proton-neutron correlations decrease rapidly with
increasing neutron excess. In contrast, both the proton, and trivially the
neutron correlations increase as neutrons are added.
We also study the thermal properties and the temperature dependence of pair
correlations for Mn and Fe as exemplars of odd-odd and even-even
nuclei. While for Fe results are similar to those obtained for
other even-even nuclei in this mass range, the properties of Mn at low
temperatures are strongly influenced by isovector neutron-proton pairing. In
coexistence with these isovector pair correlations, our calculations also
indicate an excess of isoscalar proton-neutron pairing over the mean-field
values. The isovector neutron-proton correlations rapidly decrease with
temperatures and vanish for temperatures above keV, while the isovector
correlations among like nucleons persist to higher temperatures. Related to the
quenching of the isovector proton-neutron correlations, the average isospin
decreases from 1, appropriate for the ground state, to 0 as the temperature
increases
Subgap Two-Photon States in Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons: Evidence for Strong Electron Correlations
Strong electron correlation effects in the photophysics of
quasi-one-dimensional -conjugated organic systems such as polyenes,
polyacetylenes, polydiacetylenes, etc., have been extensively studied. Far less
is known on correlation effects in two-dimensional -conjugated systems.
Here we present theoretical and experimental evidence for moderate repulsive
electron-electron interactions in a number of finite polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbon molecules with symmetry. We show that the excited state
orderings in these molecules are reversed relative to that expected within
one-electron and mean-field theories. Our results reflect similarities as well
as differences in the role and magnitude of electron correlation effects in
these two-dimensional molecules compared to those in polyenes.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
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