47,999 research outputs found
Leakage-current properties of encapsulants
A theoretical modeling of leakage current in ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) and polyvinyl butyral (PVB) modules is being developed and is described. The modeling effort derives mathematical relationships for the bulk and surface conductivites of EVA and PVB, the surface conductivities of glass and polymeric films, and the EVA and PVB pottants, all as functions of environmental parameters. Results from the modeling indicate that for glass/EVA, the glass surface controls the interfacial conductivity, although EVA bulk conductivity controls total leakage current. For PVB/glass, the interface conductivity controls leakage currents for relative humidity (RH) less than 40 to 50%, but PVB bulk conductivity controls leakage current above 50% RH
General theory of feedback control of a nuclear spin ensemble in quantum dots
We present a microscopic theory of the nonequilibrium nuclear spin dynamics
driven by the electron and/or hole under continuous wave pumping in a quantum
dot. We show the correlated dynamics of the nuclear spin ensemble and the
electron and/or hole under optical excitation as a quantum feedback loop and
investigate the dynamics of the many nuclear spins as a nonlinear collective
motion. This gives rise to three observable effects: (i) hysteresis, (ii)
locking (avoidance) of the pump absorption strength to (from) the natural
resonance, and (iii) suppression (amplification) of the fluctuation of weakly
polarized nuclear spins, leading to prolonged (shortened) electron spin
coherence time. A single nonlinear feedback function as a "measurement" of the
nuclear field operator in the quantum feedback loop is constructed which
determines the different outcomes of the three effects listed above depending
on the feedback being negative or positive. The general theory also helps to
put in perspective the wide range of existing theories on the problem of a
single electron spin in a nuclear spin bath.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figure
Translation-symmetry protected topological orders on lattice
In this paper we systematically study a simple class of translation-symmetry
protected topological orders in quantum spin systems using slave-particle
approach. The spin systems on square lattice are translation invariant, but may
break any other symmetries. We consider topologically ordered ground states
that do not spontaneously break any symmetry. Those states can be described by
Z2A or Z2B projective symmetry group. We find that the Z2A translation
symmetric topological orders can still be divided into 16 sub-classes
corresponding to 16 new translation-symmetry protected topological orders. We
introduced four topological indices at , , , to characterize those 16 new
topological orders. We calculated the topological degeneracies and crystal
momenta for those 16 topological phases on even-by-even, even-by-odd,
odd-by-even, and odd-by-odd lattices, which allows us to physically measure
such topological orders. We predict the appearance of gapless fermionic
excitations at the quantum phase transitions between those symmetry protected
topological orders. Our result can be generalized to any dimensions. We find
256 translation-symmetry protected Z2A topological orders for a system on 3D
lattice
Quantum orders in an exact soluble model
We find all the exact eigenstates and eigenvalues of a spin-1/2 model on
square lattice: . We show
that the ground states for have different quantum orders
described by Z2A and Z2B projective symmetry groups. The phase transition at
represents a new kind of phase transitions that changes quantum orders
but not symmetry. Both the Z2A and Z2B states are described by lattice
gauge theories at low energies. They have robust topologically degenerate
ground states and gapless edge excitations.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX4, More materials on topological/quantum orders and
quantum computing can be found in http://dao.mit.edu/~we
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