1,020 research outputs found
A design method of broadband metalens using time-domain topology optimization
Flat metalenses have attracted attention due to an increasing demand for compact electromagnetic devices. For such applications, broadband metalenses are highly desirable; however, conventional metalenses show relatively narrow band operation. Here, we propose a design method of free-form metalenses using topology optimization to operate with enhanced bandwidths. In contrast with preceding reports of topology optimization methods for metalenses, we developed a topology optimization method based on the time domain formulation to deal with broadband frequencies simultaneously. For this purpose, a group delay of optical pulses in the time domain, which is equivalent to the broadband phase matching condition in the frequency domain, is employed in the objective function. A level set based topology optimization method is applied to obtain a clear optimal configuration. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method, we provide design examples of metalens unit cells at millimeter frequency. We confirm that optimized unit cells of metalenses show superior performance compared to the conventional unit cells for both transmittance efficiency and phase error in broadband wavelength
Polarized Neutron Inelastic Scattering Study of the Anisotropic Magnetic Fluctuations in the Quasi-1D Ising-like Antiferromagnet TlCoCl
Polarized neutron inelastic scattering experiments have been carried out in
the quasi-1D Ising-like antiferromagnet TlCoCl. We observed the
longitudinal magnetic fluctuation for the spin-wave
excitation continuum, which has not been observed in the unpolarized neutron
inelastic scattering experiments of the quasi-1D Ising-like antiferromagnets
CsCoCl and TlCoCl so far, together with the transverse magnetic
fluctuation . We compared both obtained intensities of
and with the perturbation theory from
the pure Ising limit by Ishimura and Shiba, and a semi-quantitative agreement
was found.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, jpsj2.cls, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
Vol. 75 (2006) No.
Influence of an Sb doping layer in CIGS thin-film solar cells: a photoluminescence study
Sb doping of Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (CIGS) solar cells has been reported to exhibit a positive effect on the morphology of the absorber layer, offering a possibility to lower manufacturing cost by lowering the annealing temperatures during the CIGS deposition. In this work electron microscopy, energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy and photoluminescence experiments have been performed on cells deposited on soda-lime glass substrates, adding a thin Sb layer onto the Mo back contact prior to the CIGS absorber deposition. The defect structure of CIGS solar cells doped with Sb in this way has been investigated and is compared with that of undoped reference cells. The influence of substrate temperature during absorber growth has also been evaluated. For all samples the photoluminescence results can be explained by considering three donor–acceptor pair recombination processes involving the same defect pairs
A topology optimization method in rarefied gas flow problems using the Boltzmann equation
This paper presents a topology optimization method in rarefied gas flow problems to obtain the optimal structure of a flow channel as a configuration of gas and solid domains. In this paper, the kinetic equation, the governing equation of rarefied gas flows, is extended over the entire design domain including solid domains assuming the solid as an imaginary gas for implicitly handling the gas-solid interfaces in the optimization process. Based on the extended equation, a 2D flow channel design problem is formulated, and the design sensitivity is obtained based on the Lagrange multiplier method and adjoint variable method. Both the rarefied gas flow and the adjoint flow are computed by a deterministic method based on a finite discretization of the molecular velocity space, rather than the DSMC method. The validity and effectiveness of our proposed method are confirmed through several numerical examples
Heavy Higgs at Tevatron and LHC in Universal Extra Dimension Models
Universal Extra Dimension (UED) models tend to favor a distinctively heavier
Higgs mass than in the Standard Model (SM) and its supersymmetric extensions
when the Kaluza-Klein (KK) scale is not much higher than the electroweak one,
which we call the weak scale UED, in order to cancel the KK top contributions
to the T-parameter. Such a heavy Higgs, whose production through the gluon
fusion process is enhanced by the KK top loops, is fairly model independent
prediction of the weak scale UED models regardless of the brane-localized mass
structure at the ultraviolet cutoff scale. We study its cleanest possible
signature, the Higgs decay into a Z boson pair and subsequently into four
electrons and/or muons, in which all the four-momenta of the final states can
be measured and both the Z boson masses can be checked. We show that the weak
scale UED model may account for the 2sigma excess of this event at ATLAS at the
ZZ pair invariant mass around 250GeV, at which scale SM background is
sufficiently small and the SM Higgs predicts too few events. We have also
studied the Higgs mass 500GeV (and also 700GeV with \sqrt{s}=14TeV) and have
found that we can observe significant resonance with the integrated luminosity
10fb^{-1} for six dimensional UED models.Comment: (v1) 36 pages, 9 figures, 6 tables; (v2) Accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev. D, factor 2 error in (93) corrected, comments and references
added, figures redrawn; (v3) Minor changes including typo corrections in
eq.(15), final version appearing in PR
Magnetic Excitations in the Quasi-1D Ising-like Antiferromagnet TlCoCl
Neutron inelastic scattering measurements have been performed in order to
investigate the magnetic excitations in the quasi-1D Ising-like antiferromagnet
TlCoCl. We observed the magnetic excitation, which corresponds to the
spin-wave excitation continuum corresponding to the domain-wall pair excitation
in the 1D Ising-like antiferromagnet. According to the Ishimura-Shiba theory,
we analyzed the observed spin-wave excitation, and the exchange constant
and the anistropy were estimated as 14.7 meV and 0.14 in TlCoCl,
respectively.Comment: 2 pages, 3 figures, jpsj2.cls, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
Vol.75 (2006) No.
Self-healing capability of concrete with crystalline admixtures in different environments
The aim of this study is analyzing the self-healing effect of a crystalline admixture in four types of environmental exposure comparing with a reference concrete. Healing was studied by means of permeability tests on cracked specimens and physical closing of the crack was observed by optic microscope and quantified through crack geometrical parameters. The studied crack openings were under 300 pm and the time set for healing was 42 days. The results show a different healing behavior depending on the exposure and the presence of the crystalline admixture, demonstrating that the presence of water is necessary for the healing reactions. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Roig Flores, M.; Moscato, S.; Serna Ros, P.; Ferrara, L. (2015). Self-healing capability of concrete with crystalline admixtures in different environments. Construction and Building Materials. 86:1-11. doi:10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2015.03.091S1118
Evaluation of a computational model to predict elbow range of motion
© 2014 The Author(s). Computer models capable of predicting elbow flexion and extension range of motion (ROM) limits would be useful for assisting surgeons in improving the outcomes of surgical treatment of patients with elbow contractures. A simple and robust computer-based model was developed that predicts elbow joint ROM using bone geometries calculated from computed tomography image data. The model assumes a hinge-like flexion-extension axis, and that elbow passive ROM limits can be based on terminal bony impingement. The model was validated against experimental results with a cadaveric specimen, and was able to predict the flexion and extension limits of the intact joint to 0° and 3°, respectively. The model was also able to predict the flexion and extension limits to 1° and 2°, respectively, when simulated osteophytes were inserted into the joint. Future studies based on this approach will be used for the prediction of elbow flexion-extension ROM in patients with primary osteoarthritis to help identify motion-limiting hypertrophic osteophytes, and will eventually permit real-time computer-assisted navigated excisions
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