6,443 research outputs found
Modelling dependence structures of soil shear strength data with bivariate copulas and applications to geotechnical reliability analysis
AbstractAccurate estimates of the dependence of soil shear strength parameters (including cohesion and friction angle) play a crucial role in decision making by civil engineers in terms of geotechnical engineering safety. With increased site-specific information comes the need for joint soil strength models to account for the correlation characteristics between shear strength properties. In this study, using 16 sets of soil shear strength observations (consisting of 391 samples) as examples, the suitability of the dependence structure for these experimental observations is firstly identified by a goodness-of-fit test based on the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) with the normal, Student's t, Clayton, Frank, Gumbel, and Plackett copulas. The dependence structure between shear strength components is found to be asymmetric in most cases. Secondly, a set of paired samples of shear strength simulated from the different bivariate copulas, which contributed to various dependencies, is implemented as input for two typical geotechnical probabilistic analyses, e.g., infinite slope stability against a single sliding plane and the bearing capacity of a shallow foundation. The impact of the different choices for these dependence structures on the resulting reliability index is discussed. In both illustrative examples, the normal copula leads to an overestimation of the reliability index, whereas the Gumbel copula yields the lowest reliability index. Conservative reliability indices are obtained when the joint behaviour of the soil shear strength follows a bivariate normal distribution
Vanillin and Its Detection in Air
Vanillin (4âhydroxyâ3âmethoxybenzaldehyde) is an important flavor and aroma molecule, which has been widely used in not only foods and beverages such as chocolate and dairy products, but also masking unpleasant tastes in medicines or livestock fodder. Its chemical properties, manufacturing methods, novel applications, and developments in fast detections in air are discussed in detail
Stable nontrivial Z2 topology in ultrathin Bi (111) films: a first-principles study
Recently, there have been intense efforts in searching for new topological
insulator (TI) materials. Based on first-principles calculations, we find that
all the ultrathin Bi (111) films are characterized by a nontrivial Z2 number
independent of the film thickness, without the odd-even oscillation of
topological triviality as commonly perceived. The stable nontrivial Z2 topology
is retained by the concurrent band gap inversions at multiple
time-reversal-invariant k-points and associated with the intermediate
inter-bilayer coupling of the multi-bilayer Bi film. Our calculations further
indicate that the presence of metallic surface states in thick Bi(111) films
can be effectively removed by surface adsorption.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Controlling the Intrinsic Josephson Junction Number in a Mesa
In fabricating intrinsic Josephson
junctions in 4-terminal mesa structures, we modify the conventional fabrication
process by markedly reducing the etching rates of argon ion milling. As a
result, the junction number in a stack can be controlled quite satisfactorily
as long as we carefully adjust those factors such as the etching time and the
thickness of the evaporated layers. The error in the junction number is within
. By additional ion etching if necessary, we can controllably decrease
the junction number to a rather small value, and even a single intrinsic
Josephson junction can be produced.Comment: to bu published in Jpn. J. Appl. Phys., 43(7A) 200
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