120 research outputs found
Pemodelan Daya Pengadukan Selama Proses Dehidrasi Osmotik Irisan Mangga dalam Larutan Gula
This study discusses mathematical model of agitation power due to the change of sugar solution concentration during the process of mango slices osmotic dehydration. The sugar solution agitation was performed in several levels of rotational speed to correlate the power number with the Reynolds number. Then, the obtained model was used to calculate the power consumption for various temperature and initial rotational speed of shaft. The results showed that the correlation can be used for various conditions of shaft rotational speed and solution concentration. Osmotic dehydration for 8 hours at conditions of 30-50OC with rotational speed of 143-525 rpm results in solution dilution from 61OBx to 50.5-52.5OBx. Temperature of 30OC with initial shaft rotational speed of 500 rpm results in power consumption ten times higher than that of 50OC and 148 rpm. Moreover, power consumption reduction up to 80% of initial energy consumption due to the dilution of the sugar solution during the osmotic dehydration process was obtained
The Effect of Palm Biodiesel Fuel on the Performance and Emission of the Automotive Diesel Engine
This study is devoted to the performance and emission evaluation of automotive diesel engine as affected by palm biodiesel fuel utilization. The concentration of palm biodiesel used in the test was ranged from B0 (pure petro-diesel), B10, B20, B30, B50 and B100 (pure biodiesel).The engine performance was evaluated through torque, power, and specific fuel consumption, while the emission was evaluated through carbon monoxide (CO), hydrocarbon (HC), particulate matter (PM), carbon dioxide (CO2), and NOx pollutants. The result shows that higher content of palm biodiesel can reduce the emission of CO, HC, PM, and CO2. It was found that the addition of biodiesel could increase the power and torque. Further more, NOx also decreased when the content of palm biodiesel increases, which is in contrast with those generally found in the previous non palm biodiesel studies
Spin observables in the reaction
The T matrix of the LambdaN-> NN reaction, which is a strangeness changing
weak process, is derived. The explicit formulas of the spin observables are
given for s-wave p-Lambda final states which kinematically corresponds to
inverse reaction of the weak nonmesonic decay of Lambda hypernuclei. One can
study interferences between amplitudes of parity- conserving and violating,
spin- singlet and triplet and isospin- singlet and triplet. Most of them are
not available in the study of the nonmesonic decay. They clarify structure of
the reaction and constrain strongly theoretical models for weak hyperon nucleon
interaction.Comment: 7pages,ReVTeX,no figure
Final State Interactions in Hypernuclear Decay
We present an update of the One-Meson-Exchange (OME) results for the weak
decay of s- and p-shell hypernuclei (Ref. Phys. Rev. C {\bf 56}, 339 (1997)),
paying special attention to the role played by final state interactions between
the emitted nucleons. The present study also corrects for a mistake in the
inclusion of the and exchange mechanisms, which substantially
increases the ratio of neutron-induced to proton-induced transitions,
. With the most up-to-date model ingredients, we find that
the OME approach is able to describe very satisfactorily most of the measured
observables, including the ratio .Comment: 20 pages, 2 eps figure
Polarization-Correlated Photon Pairs from a Single Quantum Dot
Polarization correlation in a linear basis, but not entanglement, is observed
between the biexciton and single-exciton photons emitted by a single InAs
quantum dot in a two-photon cascade. The results are well described
quantitatively by a probabilistic model that includes two decay paths for a
biexciton through a non-degenerate pair of one-exciton states, with the
polarization of the emitted photons depending on the decay path. The results
show that spin non-degeneracy due to quantum-dot asymmetry is a significant
obstacle to the realization of an entangled-photon generation device.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, revised discussio
Tight-binding study of the influence of the strain on the electronic properties of InAs/GaAs quantum dots
We present an atomistic investigation of the influence of strain on the
electronic properties of quantum dots (QD's) within the empirical tight-binding (ETB) model with interactions up to 2nd nearest neighbors
and spin-orbit coupling. Results for the model system of capped pyramid-shaped
InAs QD's in GaAs, with supercells containing atoms are presented and
compared with previous empirical pseudopotential results. The good agreement
shows that ETB is a reliable alternative for an atomistic treatment. The strain
is incorporated through the atomistic valence force field model. The ETB
treatment allows for the effects of bond length and bond angle deviations from
the ideal InAs and GaAs zincblende structure to be selectively removed from the
electronic-structure calculation, giving quantitative information on the
importance of strain effects on the bound state energies and on the physical
origin of the spatial elongation of the wave functions. Effects of dot-dot
coupling have also been examined to determine the relative weight of both
strain field and wave function overlap.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B (in press) In the
latest version, added Figs. 3 and 4, modified Fig. 5, Tables I and II,.and
added new reference
Transmission electron microscopy study of InxGa1-xAs quantum dots on a GaAs(001) substrate
A transmission electron microscopy (TEM) investigation of the morphology of InxGa1-xAs quantum dots grown on a GaAs(001) substrate has been carried out. The size and the shape of the quantum dots have been determined using bright-field images of cross-section TEM specimens and [001] on-zone bright-field images with imaging simulation from plan-view TEM specimens. The results suggest that the coherent quantum dots are lens shaped with base diameters of 25-40 nm and aspect ratios of height to diameter of 1:6-1:4. [S0163-1829(99)00920-0]
Optical anisotropy in vertically coupled quantum dots
We have studied the polarization of surface and edge-emitted photoluminescence (PL) from structures with vertically coupled In0.5Ga0.5As/GaAs quantum dots (QD’s) grown by molecular beam epitaxy. The PL polarization is found to be strongly dependent on the number of stacked layers. While single-layer and 3-layer structures show only a weak TE polarization, it is enhanced for 10-layer stacks. The 20-layer stacks additionally show a low-energy side-band of high TE polarization, which is attributed to laterally coupled QD’s forming after the growth of many layers by lateral coalescence of QD’s in the upper layers. While in the single, 3- and 10-layer stacks, both TE polarized PL components are stronger than the TM component, the [110] TE component is weaker than the TM component in the 20-layer stack. This polarization reversal is attributed to an increasing vertical coupling with increasing layer number due to increasing dot size
Synthesis and optical properties of II-O-VI highly mismatched alloys
We have synthesized ternary and quaternary diluted II-VI oxides using the combination of O ion implantation and pulsed laser melting. CdO{sub x}Te{sub 1-x} thin films with x up to 0.015, and the energy gap reduced by 150 meV were formed by O{sup +}-implantation in CdTe followed by pulsed laser melting. Quaternary Cd{sub 0.6}Mn{sub 0.4}O{sub x}Te{sub 1-x} and Zn{sub 0.88}Mn{sub 0.12}O{sub x}Te{sub 1-x} with mole fraction of incorporated O as high as 0.03 were also formed. The enhanced O incorporation in Mn-containing alloys is believed to be due to the formation of relatively strong Mn-O bonds. Optical transitions associated with the lower (E{sub -}) and upper (E{sub +}) conduction subbands resulting from the anticrossing interaction between the localized O states and the extended conduction states of the host are clearly observed in these quaternary diluted II-VI oxides. These alloys fulfill the criteria for a multiband semiconductor that has been proposed as a material for making high efficiency, single-junction solar cells
Fission Yeast Cells Undergo Nuclear Division in the Absence of Spindle Microtubules
Through a previously undescribed mechanism, fission yeast cells can undergo nuclear division and enter the next cell cycle, even in the absence of spindle microtubules
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