105,313 research outputs found
Simultaneous Spin-Charge Relaxation in Double Quantum Dots
We investigate phonon-induced spin and charge relaxation mediated by
spin-orbit and hyperfine interactions for a single electron confined within a
double quantum dot. A simple toy model incorporating both direct decay to the
ground state of the double dot and indirect decay via an intermediate excited
state yields an electron spin relaxation rate that varies non-monotonically
with the detuning between the dots. We confirm this model with experiments
performed on a GaAs double dot, demonstrating that the relaxation rate exhibits
the expected detuning dependence and can be electrically tuned over several
orders of magnitude. Our analysis suggests that spin-orbit mediated relaxation
via phonons serves as the dominant mechanism through which the double-dot
electron spin-flip rate varies with detuning.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Supplemental Material (2 pages, 2 figures
Developing flow in S-shaped ducts. 1: Square cross-section duct
Laser-Doppler velocimetry was used to measure the laminar and turbulent flow in an S-duct formed with two 22.5 deg sectors of a bend with ratio of mean radius of curvature to hydraulic diameter of 7.0. The boundary layers at the inlet to the bend were about 25% and 15% of the hydraulic diameter for the laminar and turbulent flows, respectively. Pressure-driven secondary flows develop in the first half of the S-duct and persist into the second half but are largely reversed by the exit plane as a consequence of the change in the sense of curvature. There is, however, a region near the outer wall of the second bend where the redistribution of the streamwise isotachs results in a reinforcement of the secondary flow which was established in the first half of the S-duct. The net redistribution of the streamwise isotachs is comparable to that occurring in unidirectional bends of stronger curvature. The wall pressure distribution was also measured for the turbulent flow and quantifies the expected large variations in the longitudinal pressure gradient distributions which occur at different radial locations
Rayleigh scattering temperature measurements in a swirl stabilized burner
Rayleigh scattering temperature measurements were obtained in a turbulent reactive swirling coaxial jet discharged from a swirl-stabilized burner along the jet-flame centerline. They are reported up to 10 fuel nozzle diameters downstream of the burner exit at a Reynolds number of 29000. The effect of swirl numbers (S=0.3, 0.58, 1.07) on the temperature fields, the power spectral density of temperature fluctuations and on the probability density functions of the temperature fluctuations was determined
Experimental Assessment of ‘subgrid’ scale Probability Density Function Models for Large Eddy Simulation
Filtered density functions (FDFs) of mixture fraction are quantified by analyzing
experimental data obtained from two-dimensional planar laser-induced fluorescence scalar
measurements in the isothermal swirling flow of a combustor operating at a Reynolds number of
28,662 for three different swirl numbers (0.3, 0.58 and 1.07). Two-dimensional filtering using a
box filter was performed on the measured scalar to obtain the filtered variables used for
presumed FDF for Large Eddy Simulations (LES). A dependant variable
from the measured scalar, which was a pre-computed temperature, was integrated over the
experimentally obtained FDF as well as over the presumed beta or top-hat FDFs and a relative
error in temperature prediction was calculated. The experimentally measured FDFs depended on
swirl numbers and axial and radial positions in the flow. The FDFs were unimodal in the regions
of low variance and bimodal in the regions of high variance. The influence of the filter spatial dimension on the measured FDF was evaluated and consequences for subgrid modeling for LES discussed
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