25,578 research outputs found

    Positive and negative electrocaloric effect in BaTiO3_3 in the presence of defect dipoles

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    The influence of defect dipoles on the electrocaloric effect (ECE) in acceptor doped BaTiO3_3 is studied by means of lattice-based Monte-Carlo simulations. A Ginzburg-Landau type effective Hamiltonian is used. Oxygen vacancy-acceptor associates are described by fixed defect dipoles with orientation parallel or anti-parallel to the external field. By a combination of canonical and microcanoncial simulations the ECE is directly evaluated. Our results show that in the case of anti-parallel defect dipoles the ECE can be positive or negative depending on the density of defect dipoles. Moreover, a transition from a negative to positive ECE can be observed from a certain density of anti-parallel dipoles on when the external field increases. These transitions are due to the delicate interplay of internal and external fields, and are explained by the domain structure evolution and related field-induced entropy changes. The results are compared to those obtained by MD simulations employing an {\it{ab initio}} based effective Hamiltonian, and a good qualitative agreement is found. In addition, a novel electrocaloric cycle, which makes use of the negative ECE and defect dipoles, is proposed to enhance the cooling effect

    The Bulk Channel in Thermal Gauge Theories

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    We investigate the thermal correlator of the trace of the energy-momentum tensor in the SU(3) Yang-Mills theory. Our goal is to constrain the spectral function in that channel, whose low-frequency part determines the bulk viscosity. We focus on the thermal modification of the spectral function, ρ(ω,T)ρ(ω,0)\rho(\omega,T)-\rho(\omega,0). Using the operator-product expansion we give the high-frequency behavior of this difference in terms of thermodynamic potentials. We take into account the presence of an exact delta function located at the origin, which had been missed in previous analyses. We then combine the bulk sum rule and a Monte-Carlo evaluation of the Euclidean correlator to determine the intervals of frequency where the spectral density is enhanced or depleted by thermal effects. We find evidence that the thermal spectral density is non-zero for frequencies below the scalar glueball mass mm and is significantly depleted for mω3mm\lesssim\omega\lesssim 3m.Comment: (1+25) pages, 6 figure

    Diversification and hybridization in firm knowledge bases in nanotechnologies

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    The paper investigates the linkages between the characteristics of technologies and the structure of a firms' knowledge base. Nanotechnologies have been defined as converging technologies that operate at the nanoscale, and which require integration to fulfill their economic promises. Based on a worldwide database of nanofirms, the paper analyses the degree of convergence and the convergence mechanisms within firms. It argues that the degree of convergence in a firm's nano-knowledge base is relatively independent from the size of the firm's nano-knowledge base. However, while firms with small nano-knowledge bases tend to exploit convergence in each of their patents/publications, firms with large nano-knowledge bases tend to separate their nano-R&D activities in the different established fields and achieve diversity through the juxtaposition of the output of these independent activitie

    Equivalent of a Thouless energy in lattice QCD Dirac spectra

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    Random matrix theory (RMT) is a powerful statistical tool to model spectral fluctuations. In addition, RMT provides efficient means to separate different scales in spectra. Recently RMT has found application in quantum chromodynamics (QCD). In mesoscopic physics, the Thouless energy sets the universal scale for which RMT applies. We try to identify the equivalent of a Thouless energy in complete spectra of the QCD Dirac operator with staggered fermions and SUc(2)SU_c(2) lattice gauge fields. Comparing lattice data with RMT predictions we find deviations which allow us to give an estimate for this scale.Comment: LATTICE99 (theor. devel.), 3 pages, 4 figure

    Two-Phase Flow Visualization of Evaporating Liquid Fuels at Atmospheric Pressure

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    Two-phase flow visualization of fuel sprays is important for the design of better engines because it determines the efficiency and emissions of the combustion process. Simultaneous two-phase flow imaging using techniques such as planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) has been a challenge due to the large variation in LIF signals from the gas and liquid phases. After laser excitation, the liquid signal initially overwhelms the gas phase signal due to its higher number density. However, the liquid signal quenches dramatically due to quenching effects that dominate the liquid LIF signal. By applying the novel concept of temporal filtering, separation of liquid and vapor signal can be achieved using different time delayed camera systems. The optical measurement provides a non-intrusive means of obtaining the liquid and vapor distributions in a spray. The experiment is performed using an ultraviolet beam from a burst-mode Nd:YAG laser in combination with two intensified cameras that are timed to maximize either the liquid or vapor phase signal. The setup is complemented by a drop generator and vaporizer flow system to allow studies of aviation fuels such as Jet-A or JP10, as well as reciprocating engine fuels such as diesel or toluene (as a surrogate for gasoline)

    Proposal for optically realizing quantum game

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    We present a proposal for optically implementing the quantum game of the two-player quantum prisoner's dilemma involving nonmaximally entangled states by using beam splitters, phase shifters, cross-Kerr medium, photon detector and the single-photon representation of quantum bits.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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