5,797 research outputs found
Topography driven spreading
Roughening a hydrophobic surface enhances its nonwetting properties into superhydrophobicity. For liquids other than water, roughness can induce a complete rollup of a droplet. However, topographic effects can also enhance partial wetting by a given liquid into complete wetting to create superwetting. In this work, a model system of spreading droplets of a nonvolatile liquid on surfaces having lithographically produced pillars is used to show that superwetting also modifies the dynamics of spreading. The edge speed-dynamic contact angle relation is shown to obey a simple power law, and such power laws are shown to apply to naturally occurring surfaces
Qualidade de silagens de bagaço úmido de laranja e cama de frango e desempenho de novilhos Canchim.
A qualidade de silagens de bagaço de laranja e cama-de-frango com diferentes proporções (80:20; 60:40; 40:60 e 20:80) e de silagem pura de cama-de-frango com diferentes teores de matéria seca, obtidos pela utilização de diferentes proporções de água e cama-de-frango (0:100; 15:85; 30:70 e 45:55) foram avaliadas em silos de laboratório. Uma silagem com 45:55 de cama-de-frango e bagaço de laranja foi utilizada para teste de ganho de peso com animais Canchim. Houve incremento (P<0,05) na porcentagem de MS, PB, pH, FDN, , cinzas, amônia, Ca e P com o aumento da proporções de cama-de-frango em relação ao bagaço de laranja. A silagem com 15:85 apresentou maior teor de PB e menor teor de amônia que as silagens com 30:70 e 45:55. A dieta com silagem de bagaço de laranja e cama-de-frango, cana-de-açúcar e concentrado (44:36:20), na base seca, permitiu consumo adequado para ganho de peso de 1,39 kg por dia
The use of high aspect ratio photoresist (SU-8) for super-hydrophobic pattern prototyping
In this work we present a reliable technique for the production of large areas of high aspect-ratio patterns and describe their use as model super-hydrophobic systems. The high thickness and straight sidewalls possible with SU-8 were used to generate dense patterns of small pillars. These photoresist patterns could be used directly, without the need for micromoulding. A method is given allowing resist thickness to be varied over a wide range and a bottom antireflective layer was used to simplify patterning on reflective substrates. This patterning technique allows rapid testing of wetting theories, as pattern size and depth can be varied simply and samples can be produced in sufficient numbers for laboratory use. We show how the static contact angle of water varies with pattern height for one sample-pattern and how static and dynamic contact angles vary with dimension using high aspect-ratio patterns
Frustration induced Raman scattering in CuGeO_3
We present experimental data for the Raman intensity in the spin-Peierls
compound CuGeO_3 and theoretical calculations from a one-dimensional frustrated
spin model. The theory is based on (a) exact diagonalization and (b) a recently
developed solitonic mean field theory. We find good agreement between the
1D-theory in the homogeneous phase and evidence for a novel dimerization of the
Raman operator in the spin-Peierls state. Finally we present evidence for a
coupling between the interchain exchange, the spin-Peierls order parameter and
the magnetic excitations along the chains.Comment: Phys. Rev. B, Rapid Comm, in Pres
Variational Hilbert space truncation approach to quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnets on frustrated clusters
We study the spin- Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a series of
finite-size clusters with features inspired by the fullerenes. Frustration due
to the presence of pentagonal rings makes such structures challenging in the
context of quantum Monte-Carlo methods. We use an exact diagonalization
approach combined with a truncation method in which only the most important
basis states of the Hilbert space are retained. We describe an efficient
variational method for finding an optimal truncation of a given size which
minimizes the error in the ground state energy. Ground state energies and
spin-spin correlations are obtained for clusters with up to thirty-two sites
without the need to restrict the symmetry of the structures. The results are
compared to full-space calculations and to unfrustrated structures based on the
honeycomb lattice.Comment: 22 pages and 12 Postscript figure
Nano-scale superhydrophobicity: suppression of protein adsorption and promotion of flow-induced detachment
Wall adsorption is a common problem in microfluidic devices, particularly when proteins are used. Here we show how superhydrophobic surfaces can be used to reduce protein adsorption and to promote desorption. Hydrophobic surfaces, both smooth and having high surface roughness of varying length scales (to generate superhydrophobicity), were incubated in protein solution. The samples were then exposed to flow shear in a device designed to simulate a microfluidic environment. Results show that a similar amount of protein adsorbed onto smooth and nanometer-scale rough surfaces, although a greater amount was found to adsorb onto superhydrophobic surfaces with micrometer scale roughness. Exposure to flow shear removed a considerably larger proportion of adsorbed protein from the superhydrophobic surfaces than from the smooth ones, with almost all of the protein being removed from some nanoscale surfaces. This type of surface may therefore be useful in environments, such as microfluidics, where protein sticking is a problem and fluid flow is present. Possible mechanisms that explain the behaviour are discussed, including decreased contact between protein and surface and greater shear stress due to interfacial slip between the superhydrophobic surface and the liquid
Fluctuations and differential contraction during regeneration of Hydra vulgaris tissue toroids
We studied regenerating bilayered tissue toroids dissected from Hydra
vulgaris polyps and relate our macroscopic observations to the dynamics of
force-generating mesoscopic cytoskeletal structures. Tissue fragments undergo a
specific toroid-spheroid folding process leading to complete regeneration
towards a new organism. The time scale of folding is too fast for biochemical
signalling or morphogenetic gradients which forced us to assume purely
mechanical self-organization. The initial pattern selection dynamics was
studied by embedding toroids into hydro-gels allowing us to observe the
deformation modes over longer periods of time. We found increasing mechanical
fluctuations which break the toroidal symmetry and discuss the evolution of
their power spectra for various gel stiffnesses. Our observations are related
to single cell studies which explain the mechanical feasibility of the folding
process. In addition, we observed switching of cells from a tissue bound to a
migrating state after folding failure as well as in tissue injury.
We found a supra-cellular actin ring assembled along the toroid's inner edge.
Its contraction can lead to the observed folding dynamics as we could confirm
by finite element simulations. This actin ring in the inner cell layer is
assembled by myosin- driven length fluctuations of supra-cellular
{\alpha}-actin structures (myonemes) in the outer cell-layer.Comment: 19 pages and 8 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
Can a frustrated spin-cluster model describe the low-temperature physics of NaV_2O_5 ?
Recent experimental evidence suggest the existence of three distinct
V-valence states (V^{+4}, V^{+4.5} and V^{+5}) in the low-temperature phase of
NaV_2O_5 in apparent discrepancy with the observed spin-gap. We investigate a
novel spin cluster model, consisting of weakly coupled, frustrated four-spin
clusters aligned along the crystallographic b-axis that was recently proposed
to reconcile these experimental observations. We have studied the phase diagram
and the magnon dispersion relation of this model using DMRG, exact
diagonalization and a novel cluster-operator theory. We find a spin-gap for all
parameter values and two distinct phases, a cluster phase and a Haldane phase.
We evaluate the size of the gap and the magnon dispersion and find no parameter
regime which would reproduce the experimental results. We conclude that this
model is inappropriate for the low-temperature regime of NaV_2O_5
Multiple time scales in cataclysmic binaries. The low-field magnetic dwarf nova DO Draconis
We study the variability of the cataclysmic variable DO Dra, on time-scales
of between minutes and decades.
The characteristic decay time dt/dm=0.902(3) days/mag was estimated from our
3 nights of CCD R observations. The quiescent data show a photometric wave with
a cycle about 303(15)d. We analyzed the profile of the composite (or mean)
outburst. We discovered however, that a variety of different outburst heights
and durations had occurred, contrary to theoretical predictions. With
increasing maximum brightness, we find that the decay time also increases; this
is in contrast to the model predictions, which indicate that outbursts should
have a constant shape. This is interpreted as representing the presence of
outburst-to-outburst variability of the magnetospheric radius. A presence of a
number of missed weak narrow outbursts is predicted from this statistical
relationship. A new type of variability is detected, during 3 subsequent nights
in 2007: periodic (during one nightly run) oscillations with rapidly-decreasing
frequency from 86 to 47 cycles/day and a semi-amplitude increasing from 0.06 to
0. 10, during a monotonic brightness increase from 14. 27 to 14. 13. This
phenomenon was observed only during an unusually prolonged event of about 1 mag
brightening in 2007 (lasting till autumn), during which no (expected) outburst
was detected. We refer to this behaviour as to the transient periodic
oscillations (TPO). To study this new and interesting phenomenon, new regular
photometric and spectral (in a target of opportunity mode) observations are
required.Comment: 12pages, 8figures, accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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