54,439 research outputs found

    Rain water transport and storage in a model sandy soil with hydrogel particle additives

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    We study rain water infiltration and drainage in a dry model sandy soil with superabsorbent hydrogel particle additives by measuring the mass of retained water for non-ponding rainfall using a self-built 3D laboratory set-up. In the pure model sandy soil, the retained water curve measurements indicate that instead of a stable horizontal wetting front that grows downward uniformly, a narrow fingered flow forms under the top layer of water-saturated soil. This rain water channelization phenomenon not only further reduces the available rain water in the plant root zone, but also affects the efficiency of soil additives, such as superabsorbent hydrogel particles. Our studies show that the shape of the retained water curve for a soil packing with hydrogel particle additives strongly depends on the location and the concentration of the hydrogel particles in the model sandy soil. By carefully choosing the particle size and distribution methods, we may use the swollen hydrogel particles to modify the soil pore structure, to clog or extend the water channels in sandy soils, or to build water reservoirs in the plant root zone

    Effect of hydrogel particle additives on water-accessible pore structure of sandy soils: A custom pressure plate apparatus and capillary bundle model

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    To probe the effects of hydrogel particle additives on the water-accessible pore structure of sandy soils, we introduce a custom pressure plate method in which the volume of water expelled from a wet granular packing is measured as a function of applied pressure. Using a capillary bundle model, we show that the differential change in retained water per pressure increment is directly related to the cumulative cross-sectional area distribution f(r)f(r) of the water-accessible pores with radii less than rr. This is validated by measurements of water expelled from a model sandy soil composed of 2 mm diameter glass beads. In particular, the expelled water is found to depend dramatically on sample height and that analysis using the capillary bundle model gives the same pore size distribution for all samples. The distribution is found to be approximately log-normal, and the total cross-sectional area fraction of the accessible pore space is found to be f0=0.34f_0=0.34. We then report on how the pore distribution and total water-accessible area fraction are affected by superabsorbent hydrogel particle additives, uniformly mixed into a fixed-height sample at varying concentrations. Under both fixed volume and free swelling conditions, the total area fraction of water-accessible pore space in a packing decreases exponentially as the gel concentration increases. The size distribution of the pores is significantly modified by the swollen hydrogel particles, such that large pores are clogged while small pores are formed

    The Ultraviolet flash accompanying GRBs from neutron-rich internal shocks

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    In the neutron-rich internal shocks model for Gamma-ray Burts (GRBs), the Lorentz factors (LFs) of ions shells are variable, so are the LFs of accompanying neutron shells. For slow neutron shells with a typical LF tens, the typical beta-decay radius reads R_{\beta,s} several 10^{14} cm, which is much larger than the typical internal shocks radius 10^{13} cm, so their impact on the internal shocks may be unimportant. However, as GRBs last long enough (T_{90}>20(1+z) s), one earlier but slower ejected neutron shell will be swept successively by later ejected ion shells in the range 10^{13}-10^{15} cm, where slow neutrons have decayed significantly. We show in this work that ion shells interacting with the beta-decay products of slow neutron shells can power a ultraviolet (UV) flash bright to 12th magnitude during the prompt gamma-ray emission phase or slightly delayed, which can be detected by the upcoming Satellite SWIFT in the near future.Comment: 6 pages (2 eps figures), accepted for publication in ApJ

    The structural, mechanical, electronic, optical and thermodynamic properties of t-X3_{3}As4_{4} (X == Si, Ge and Sn) by first-principles calculations

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    The structural, mechanical, electronic, optical and thermodynamic properties of the t-X3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} (X == Si, Ge and Sn) with tetragonal structure have been investigated by first principles calculations. Our calculated results show that these compounds are mechanically and dynamically stable. By the study of elastic anisotropy, it is found that the anisotropic of the t-Sn3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} is stronger than that of t-Si3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} and t-Ge3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}}. The band structures and density of states show that the t-X3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} (Si, Ge and Sn) are semiconductors with narrow band gaps. Based on the analyses of electron density difference, in t-X3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} As atoms get electrons, X atoms lose electrons. The calculated static dielectric constants, ε1(0)\varepsilon_{1} (0), are 15.5, 20.0 and 15.1 eV for t-X3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} (X == Si, Ge and Sn), respectively. The Dulong-Petit limit of t-X3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} is about 10 J mol1^{\mathrm{-1}}K1^{\mathrm{-1}}. The thermodynamic stability successively decreases from t-Si3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} to t-Ge3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}} to t-Sn3_{\mathrm{3}}As4_{\mathrm{4}}.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, 6 table

    Probing spin entanglement by gate-voltage-controlled interference of current correlation in quantum spin Hall insulators

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    We propose an entanglement detector composed of two quantum spin Hall insulators and a side gate deposited on one of the edge channels. For an ac gate voltage, the differential noise contributed from the entangled electron pairs exhibits the nontrivial step structures, from which the spin entanglement concurrence can be easily obtained. The possible spin dephasing effects in the quantum spin Hall insulators are also included.Comment: Physics Letters A in pres
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