32,416 research outputs found
Novel method for photovoltaic energy conversion using surface acoustic waves in piezoelectric semiconductors
This paper presents a novel principle for photovoltaic (PV) energy conversion
using surface acoustic waves (SAWs) in piezoelectric semiconductors. A SAW
produces a periodically modulated electric potential, which spatially
segregates photoexcited electrons and holes to the maxima and minima of the SAW
potential. The moving SAW collectively transports the carriers with the speed
of sound to the electrodes made of different materials, which extract electrons
and holes separately and generate dc output. The proposed active design is
expected to have higher efficiency than passive designs of the existing PV
devices and to produce enough energy to sustain the SAW.Comment: v.3 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to proceedings of ECRYS-2011 to be
published in Physica
A generalized Monte Carlo loop algorithm for frustrated Ising models
We introduce a Generalized Loop Move (GLM) update for Monte Carlo simulations
of frustrated Ising models on two-dimensional lattices with bond-sharing
plaquettes. The GLM updates are designed to enhance Monte Carlo sampling
efficiency when the system's low-energy states consist of an extensive number
of degenerate or near-degenerate spin configurations, separated by large energy
barriers to single spin flips. Through implementation on several frustrated
Ising models, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the GLM updates in cases
where both degenerate and near-degenerate sets of configurations are favored at
low temperatures. The GLM update's potential to be straightforwardly extended
to different lattices and spin interactions allow it to be readily adopted on
many other frustrated Ising models of physical relevance.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
Vegetation changes and land surface feedbacks drive shifts in local temperatures over Central Asia
Vegetation changes play a vital role in modifying local temperatures although, until now, the climate feedback effects of vegetation changes are still poorly known and large uncertainties exist, especially over Central Asia. In this study, using remote sensing and re-analysis of existing data, we evaluated the impact of vegetation changes on local temperatures. Our results indicate that vegetation changes have a significant unidirectional causality relationship with regard to local temperature changes. We found that vegetation greening over Central Asia as a whole induced a cooling effect on the local temperatures. We also found that evapotranspiration (ET) exhibits greater sensitivity to the increases of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) as compared to albedo in arid/semi-arid/semi-humid regions, potentially leading to a cooling effect. However, in humid regions, albedo warming completely surpasses ET cooling, causing a pronounced warming. Our findings suggest that using appropriate strategies to protect vulnerable dryland ecosystems from degradation, should lead to future benefits related to greening ecosystems and mitigation for rising temperatures
Numerical simulations of the impacts of mountain on oasis effects in arid Central Asia
The oases in the mountain-basin systems of Central Asia are extremely fragile. Investigating oasis effects and oasis-desert interactions is important for understanding the ecological stability of oases. However, previous studies have been performed only in oasis-desert environments and have not considered the impacts of mountains. In this study, oasis effects were explored in the context of mountain effects in the northern Tianshan Mountains (NTM) using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. Four numerical simulations are performed. The def simulation uses the default terrestrial datasets provided by the WRF model. The mod simulation uses actual terrestrial datasets from satellite products. The non-oasis simulation is a scenario simulation in which oasis areas are replaced by desert conditions, while all other conditions are the same as the mod simulation. Finally, the non-mountain simulation is a scenario simulation in which the elevation values of all grids are set to a constant value of 300 m, while all other conditions are the same as in the mod simulation. The mod simulation agrees well with near-surface measurements of temperature, relative humidity and latent heat flux. The Tianshan Mountains exert a cooling and wetting effects in the NTM region. The oasis breeze circulation (OBC) between oases and the deserts is counteracted by the stronger background circulation. Thus, the self-supporting mechanism of oases originating from the OBC plays a limited role in maintaining the ecological stability of oases in this mountain-basin system. However, the mountain wind causes the cold-wet'' island effects of the oases to extend into the oasis-desert transition zone at night, which is beneficial for plants in the transition region
Trace initial interaction from final state observable in relativistic heavy ion collisions
In order to trace the initial interaction in ultra-relativistic heavy ion
collision in all azimuthal directions, two azimuthal multiplicity-correlation
patterns -- neighboring and fixed-to-arbitrary angular-bin correlation patterns
-- are suggested. From the simulation of Au + Au collisions at 200 GeV by using
the Monte Carlo models RQMD with hadron re-scattering and AMPT with and without
string melting, we observe that the correlation patterns change gradually from
out-of-plane preferential one to in-plane preferential one when the centrality
of collision shifts from central to peripheral, meanwhile the anisotropic
collective flow v_2 keeps positive in all cases. This regularity is found to be
model and collision energy independent. The physics behind the two opposite
trends of correlation patterns, in particular, the presence of out-of-plane
correlation patterns at RHIC energy, are discussed.Comment: 5pages, 4figure
Treatment of Linear and Nonlinear Dielectric Property of Molecular Monolayer and Submonolayer with Microscopic Dipole Lattice Model: I. Second Harmonic Generation and Sum-Frequency Generation
In the currently accepted models of the nonlinear optics, the nonlinear
radiation was treated as the result of an infinitesimally thin polarization
sheet layer, and a three layer model was generally employed. The direct
consequence of this approach is that an apriori dielectric constant, which
still does not have a clear definition, has to be assigned to this polarization
layer. Because the Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) and the Sum-Frequency
Generation vibrational Spectroscopy (SFG-VS) have been proven as the sensitive
probes for interfaces with the submonolayer coverage, the treatment based on
the more realistic discrete induced dipole model needs to be developed. Here we
show that following the molecular optics theory approach the SHG, as well as
the SFG-VS, radiation from the monolayer or submonolayer at an interface can be
rigorously treated as the radiation from an induced dipole lattice at the
interface. In this approach, the introduction of the polarization sheet is no
longer necessary. Therefore, the ambiguity of the unaccounted dielectric
constant of the polarization layer is no longer an issue. Moreover, the
anisotropic two dimensional microscopic local field factors can be explicitly
expressed with the linear polarizability tensors of the interfacial molecules.
Based on the planewise dipole sum rule in the molecular monolayer, crucial
experimental tests of this microscopic treatment with SHG and SFG-VS are
discussed. Many puzzles in the literature of surface SHG and SFG spectroscopy
studies can also be understood or resolved in this framework. This new
treatment may provide a solid basis for the quantitative analysis in the
surface SHG and SFG studies.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figure
Nanocarbon-Based Flame Retardant Polymer Nanocomposites.
In recent years, nanocarbon materials have attracted the interest of researchers due to their excellent properties. Nanocarbon-based flame retardant polymer composites have enhanced thermal stability and mechanical properties compared with traditional flame retardant composites. In this article, the unique structural features of nanocarbon-based materials and their use in flame retardant polymeric materials are initially introduced. Afterwards, the flame retardant mechanism of nanocarbon materials is described. The main discussions include material components such as graphene, carbon nanotubes, fullerene (in preparing resins), elastomers, plastics, foams, fabrics, and film–matrix materials. Furthermore, the flame retardant properties of carbon nanomaterials and their modified products are summarized. Carbon nanomaterials not only play the role of a flame retardant in composites, but also play an important role in many aspects such as mechanical reinforcement. Finally, the opportunities and challenges for future development of carbon nanomaterials in flame-retardant polymeric materials are briefly discussed.post-print8100 K
5-Methylisoxazole-4-carboxylic acid
In the title compound, C5H5NO3, the molecule lies on a crystallographic mirror plane with one half-molecule in the asymmetric unit. An intramolecular C—H⋯O interaction is present. In the crystal, strong intermolecular O—H⋯N hydrogen bonds result in the formation of a linear chain structure along [100], and there are also weak C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds between the chains which help to stabilize the crystal packing
- …