368 research outputs found
A rural agricultural-sustainable energy community model and its application to Felton Valley, Australia
Energy and food security require a delicate balance which should not threaten or undermine community prosperity. Where it is proposed to derive energy from conventional fossil fuel resources (such as coal, shale oil, natural gas, coal seam gas) located in established rural areas, and particularly where these areas are used for productive agricultural purposes, there are often both intense community concern as well as broader questions regarding the relative social, economic and environmental costs and benefits of different land uses and, increasingly, different energy sources. The advent of mainstream renewable energy technologies means that alternative energy options may provide a viable alternative, allowing energy demand to be met without compromising existing land uses. We demonstrate how such a Sustainable Energy Rural Model can be designed to achieve a balance between the competing social goals of energy supply, agricultural production, environmental integrity and social well-being, and apply it to the Felton Valley, a highly productive and resilient farming community in eastern Australia.
Research into available wind and solar resources found that Felton Valley has a number of attributes that indicate its suitability for the development of an integrated renewable energy precinct which would complement, rather than displace, existing agricultural enterprises. Modelling results suggest a potential combined annual renewable energy output from integrated wind and solar resources of 1,287 GWh/yr from peak installed capacity of 713 MW, sufficient to supply the electrical energy needs of about 160,000 homes, in combination with total biomass food production of 31,000 tonnes per annum or 146 GWh/yr of human food energy. The portfolio of renewable energy options will not only provide energy source diversity but also ensures long-term food security and regional stability.
The Felton Valley model provides an example of community-led energy transformation and has potential as a pilot project for the development of smart distributed grids that would negate the need for further expansion of coal mining and coal fired power stations
Quasiparticle density of states in dirty high-T_c superconductors
We study the density of quasiparticle states of dirty d-wave superconductors.
We show the existence of singular corrections to the density of states due to
quantum interference effects. We then argue that the density of states actually
vanishes in the localized phase as or depending on whether time
reversal is a good symmetry or not. We verify this result for systems without
time reversal symmetry in one dimension using supersymmetry techniques. This
simple, instructive calculation also provides the exact universal scaling
function for the density of states for the crossover from ballistic to
localized behaviour in one dimension. Above two dimensions, we argue that in
contrast to the conventional Anderson localization transition, the density of
states has critical singularities which we calculate in a
expansion. We discuss consequences of our results for various experiments on
dirty high- materials
Superconducting ``metals'' and ``insulators''
We propose a characterization of zero temperature phases in disordered
superconductors on the basis of the nature of quasiparticle transport. In three
dimensional systems, there are two distinct phases in close analogy to the
distinction between normal metals and insulators: the superconducting "metal"
with delocalized quasiparticle excitations and the superconducting "insulator"
with localized quasiparticles. We describe experimental realizations of either
phase, and study their general properties theoretically. We suggest experiments
where it should be possible to tune from one superconducting phase to the
other, thereby probing a novel "metal-insulator" transition inside a
superconductor. We point out various implications of our results for the phase
transitions where the superconductor is destroyed at zero temperature to form
either a normal metal or a normal insulator.Comment: 18 page
Localization-delocalization transition of disordered d-wave superconductors in class CI
A lattice model for disordered d-wave superconductors in class CI is
reconsidered. Near the band-center, the lattice model can be described by Dirac
fermions with several species, each of which yields WZW term for an effective
action of the Goldstone mode. The WZW terms cancel out each other because of
the four-fold symmetry of the model, which suggests that the quasiparticle
states are localized. If the lattice model has, however, symmetry breaking
terms which generate mass for any species of the Dirac fermions, remaining WZW
term which avoids the cancellation can derive the system to a delocalized
strong-coupling fixed point.Comment: 4 pages, revte
Quasiparticle localization in superconductors with spin-orbit scattering
We develop a theory of quasiparticle localization in superconductors in
situations without spin rotation invariance. We discuss the existence, and
properties of superconducting phases with localized/delocalized quasiparticle
excitations in such systems in various dimensionalities. Implications for a
variety of experimental systems, and to the properties of random Ising models
in two dimensions, are briefly discussed.Comment: 10 page
Quantum and classical localisation, the spin quantum Hall effect and generalisations
We consider network models for localisation problems belonging to symmetry
class C. This symmetry class arises in a description of the dynamics of
quasiparticles for disordered spin-singlet superconductors which have a
Bogoliubov - de Gennes Hamiltonian that is invariant under spin rotations but
not under time-reversal. Our models include but also generalise the one studied
previously in the context of the spin quantum Hall effect. For these systems we
express the disorder-averaged conductance and density of states in terms of
sums over certain classical random walks, which are self-avoiding and have
attractive interactions. A transition between localised and extended phases of
the quantum system maps in this way to a similar transition for the classical
walks. In the case of the spin quantum Hall effect, the classical walks are the
hulls of percolation clusters, and our approach provides an alternative
derivation of a mapping first established by Gruzberg, Read and Ludwig, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 82, 4254 (1999).Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
RNA Folding and Large N Matrix Theory
We formulate the RNA folding problem as an matrix field theory.
This matrix formalism allows us to give a systematic classification of the
terms in the partition function according to their topological character. The
theory is set up in such a way that the limit yields the
so-called secondary structure (Hartree theory). Tertiary structure and
pseudo-knots are obtained by calculating the corrections to the
partition function. We propose a generalization of the Hartree recursion
relation to generate the tertiary structure.Comment: 29 pages (LaTex), 13 figures (eps). Missing paragraph and figure
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