35,375 research outputs found

    Wetting and Capillary Condensation in Symmetric Polymer Blends: A comparison between Monte Carlo Simulations and Self-Consistent Field Calculations

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    We present a quantitative comparison between extensive Monte Carlo simulations and self-consistent field calculations on the phase diagram and wetting behavior of a symmetric, binary (AB) polymer blend confined into a film. The flat walls attract one component via a short range interaction. The critical point of the confined blend is shifted to lower temperatures and higher concentrations of the component with the lower surface free energy. The binodals close the the critical point are flattened compared to the bulk and exhibit a convex curvature at intermediate temperatures -- a signature of the wetting transition in the semi-infinite system. Investigating the spectrum of capillary fluctuation of the interface bound to the wall, we find evidence for a position dependence of the interfacial tension. This goes along with a distortion of the interfacial profile from its bulk shape. Using an extended ensemble in which the monomer-wall interaction is a stochastic variable, we accurately measure the difference between the surface energies of the components, and determine the location of the wetting transition via the Young equation. The Flory-Huggins parameter at which the strong first order wetting transition occurs is independent of chain length and grows quadratically with the integrated wall-monomer interaction strength. We estimate the location of the prewetting line. The prewetting manifests itself in a triple point in the phase diagram of very thick films and causes spinodal dewetting of ultrathin layers slightly above the wetting transition. We investigate the early stage of dewetting via dynamic Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: to appear in Macromolecule

    Research Summary on Fracture of Swollen Rubber

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    Crack propagation and critical strain in swollen rubbe

    On the relaxation modulus of the equivoluminal composition of solithane 113

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    Relaxation moduli of equivoluminal ring and strip samples of Solithan

    The Complexity of Rooted Phylogeny Problems

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    Several computational problems in phylogenetic reconstruction can be formulated as restrictions of the following general problem: given a formula in conjunctive normal form where the literals are rooted triples, is there a rooted binary tree that satisfies the formula? If the formulas do not contain disjunctions, the problem becomes the famous rooted triple consistency problem, which can be solved in polynomial time by an algorithm of Aho, Sagiv, Szymanski, and Ullman. If the clauses in the formulas are restricted to disjunctions of negated triples, Ng, Steel, and Wormald showed that the problem remains NP-complete. We systematically study the computational complexity of the problem for all such restrictions of the clauses in the input formula. For certain restricted disjunctions of triples we present an algorithm that has sub-quadratic running time and is asymptotically as fast as the fastest known algorithm for the rooted triple consistency problem. We also show that any restriction of the general rooted phylogeny problem that does not fall into our tractable class is NP-complete, using known results about the complexity of Boolean constraint satisfaction problems. Finally, we present a pebble game argument that shows that the rooted triple consistency problem (and also all generalizations studied in this paper) cannot be solved by Datalog

    Evaluation of meteorological airborne Doppler radar

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    This paper will discuss the capabilities of airborne Doppler radar for atmospheric sciences research. The evaluation is based on airborne and ground based Doppler radar observations of convective storms. The capability of airborne Doppler radar to measure horizontal and vertical air motions is evaluated. Airborne Doppler radar is shown to be a viable tool for atmospheric sciences research

    Solar array strip and a method for forming the same

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    A flexible solar array strip is formed by providing printed circuitry between flexible layers of a nonconductive material, depositing solder pads on the printed circuitry, and storing the resulting substrate on a drum from which it is then withdrawn and advanced along a linear path. Solderless solar cells are serially transported into engagement with the pads and are infrared radiation to melt the solder and attach the cells to the circuitry. Excess flux is cleaned from the solar cells which are then encapsulated in a protective coating. The resulting array is then wound on a drum

    Non-spherical core collapse supernovae and nucleosynthesis

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    Motivated by observations of supernova SN 1987A, various authors have simulated Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instabilities in the envelopes of core collapse supernovae (for a review, see Mueller 1998). The non-radial motion found in these simulations qualitatively agreed with observations in SN 1987A, but failed to explain the extent of mixing of newly synthesized 56Ni quantitatively. Here we present results of a 2D hydrodynamic simulation which re-addresses this failure and covers the entire evolution of the first 5 hours after core bounce.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX, requires espcrc1.sty. To appear in Nucl. Phys. A., the proceedings of the conference "Nuclei in the Cosmos 2000", held in Aarhus, Denmark, June 27-July 1, 200

    Method for forming a solar array strip

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    A flexible solar array strip is formed by a method which lends itself to automatic production techniques. Solder pads are deposited on printed circuitry deposited on a flexible structure. The resultant substrate is stored on a drum from which it is withdrawn and incrementally advanced along a linear path. Solderless solar cells are serially transported into engagement with the pads which are then heated in order to attach the cells to the circuitry. Excess flux is cleaned from the cells which are encapsulated in a protective coating. The resultant array is then spirally wound on a drum

    The Fracture Energy and Some Mechanical Properties of a Polyurethane Elastomer

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    The energy required to form a unit of new surface in the fracture of a polyurethane elastomer is determined. The rate sensitivity of the material has been reduced by swelling it in toluene. This paper primarily describes the experimental work of measuring the lower limit of the fracture energy. With this value and the creep compliance as a basis, the rate dependence of fracture energy for the unswollen material has been determined. It is thus shown that the dependence of the fracture energy on the rate of crack propagation can be explained by energy dissipation around the tip of the crack. Good agreement between the theoretically and experimentally determined relationships for the rate-sensitive fracture energy is demonstrated
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