91 research outputs found

    First order wetting of rough substrates and quantum unbinding

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    Replica and functional renormalization group methods show that, with short range substrate forces or in strong fluctuation regimes, wetting of a self-affine rough wall in 2D turns first-order as soon as the wall roughness exponent exceeds the anisotropy index of bulk interface fluctuations. Different thresholds apply with long range forces in mean field regimes. For bond-disordered bulk, fixed point stability suggests similar results, which ultimately rely on basic properties of quantum bound states with asymptotically power-law repulsive potentials.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur

    The Unusual Universality of Branching Interfaces in Random Media

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    We study the criticality of a Potts interface by introducing a {\it froth} model which, unlike its SOS Ising counterpart, incorporates bubbles of different phases. The interface is fractal at the phase transition of a pure system. However, a position space approximation suggests that the probability of loop formation vanishes marginally at a transition dominated by {\it strong random bond disorder}. This implies a linear critical interface, and provides a mechanism for the conjectured equivalence of critical random Potts and Ising models.Comment: REVTEX, 13 pages, 3 Postscript figures appended using uufile

    Branching Transition of a Directed Polymer in Random Medium

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    A directed polymer is allowed to branch, with configurations determined by global energy optimization and disorder. A finite size scaling analysis in 2D shows that, if disorder makes branching more and more favorable, a critical transition occurs from the linear scaling regime first studied by Huse and Henley [Phys. Rev. Lett. 54, 2708 (1985)] to a fully branched, compact one. At criticality clear evidence is obtained that the polymer branches at all scales with dimension dˉc{\bar d}_c and roughness exponent ζc\zeta_c satisfying (dˉc1)/ζc=0.13±0.01({\bar d}_c-1)/\zeta_c = 0.13\pm 0.01, and energy fluctuation exponent ωc=0.26±0.02\omega_c=0.26 \pm0.02, in terms of longitudinal distanceComment: REVTEX, 4 pages, 3 encapsulated eps figure

    Interfacial Structural Changes and Singularities in Non-Planar Geometries

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    We consider phase coexistence and criticality in a thin-film Ising magnet with opposing surface fields and non-planar (corrugated) walls. We show that the loss of translational invariance has a strong and unexpected non-linear influence on the interface structure and phase diagram. We identify 4 non-thermodynamic singularities where there is a qualitative change in the interface shape. In addition, we establish that at the finite-size critical point, the singularity in the interface shape is characterized by two distint critical exponents in contrast to the planar case (which is characterised by one). Similar effects should be observed for prewetting at a corrugated substrate. Analogy is made with the behaviour of a non-linear forced oscillator showing chaotic dynamics.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure

    Recent Trends and Perspectives on Defect-Oriented Testing

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    Electronics employed in modern safety-critical systems require severe qualification during the manufacturing process and in the field, to prevent fault effects from manifesting themselves as critical failures during mission operations. Traditional fault models are not sufficient anymore to guarantee the required quality levels for chips utilized in mission-critical applications. The research community and industry have been investigating new test approaches such as device-aware test, cell-aware test, path-delay test, and even test methodologies based on the analysis of manufacturing data to move the scope from OPPM to OPPB. This special session presents four contributions, from academic researchers and industry professionals, to enable better chip quality. We present results on various activities towards this objective, including device-aware test, software-based self-test, and memory test

    Singular Dynamical Renormalization-group and Biased Diffusion On Fractals

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    An exact renormalization group describes extremely slow, logarithmic diffusion in the presence of a biasing field on ramified fractal structures. Recursion equations are singular at the fixed point and the standard analysis to extract asymptotic behaviors has to be reconsidered. The model reproduces mechanisms working for biased diffusion on percolation clusters. For 1 - d structures, logarithmic diffusions generalizing that discussed by Sinai [Theory Probab. Its Appl. 27, 256 (1982)] are obtained by the same methods

    Misfire and Partial Burn Detection based on Ion Current Measurement

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    The paper presents the implementation of a combustion diagnosis system that integrates crankshaft speed oscillations analysis with ion current signal processing, for V8 and V12 high performance engines. Ion current sensing has been introduced in the last V8 and V12 Ferrari models in order to improve combustion control by implementing ion current based closed-loop sparkadvance control systems, both under knocking and nonknocking conditions (respectively based on measured knocking level, and on ion current peak position control). Another area where ion current sensing can improve the engine controller performance is related to the ability of detecting and isolating missing and partial burn combustions. The typical approach to misfire detection (based on engine speed oscillation measurement) is in fact particularly critical for engines with a large number of cylinders, and ion current sensing provides additional information not only about presence (or absence) of combustion, but also about the causes that generated the fault. Moreover, the paper shows that real-time analysis of specific ion current signal features allows isolating incomplete and inefficient combustion events, thus providing extremely useful information to the engine control system, which can for example be used to activate multi-spark discharge ignition mode. The first part of the paper shows the main critical aspects of speed-measurement based misfire detection, and introduces the ion current signal main features during regular engine operation. Then, ion current signal is analyzed during abnormal combustion events: absence of combustion (both due to missing injections and missing ignitions) and partial burn cycles. It is shown how it is possible to isolate missing and incomplete combustions in a relatively straightforward way, and also how the causes that induced the fault may be isolated by integrating standard diagnostic functions with specific ion current signal processing algorithms. Finally, the performance of the diagnostic system that integrates engine speed oscillation analysis and information extracted from the ion signal has been evaluated during on-board tests, and the main results are presented at the end of the paper
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