1,020 research outputs found
Crossover Time in Relative Fluctuations Characterizes the Longest Relaxation Time of Entangled Polymers
In entangled polymer systems, there are several characteristic time scales,
such as the entanglement time and the disengagement time. In molecular
simulations, the longest relaxation time (the disengagement time) can be
determined by the mean square displacement (MSD) of a segment or by the shear
relaxation modulus. Here, we propose the relative fluctuation analysis method,
which is originally developed for characterizing large fluctuations, to
determine the longest relaxation time from the center of mass trajectories of
polymer chains (the time-averaged MSDs). Applying the method to simulation data
of entangled polymers (by the slip-spring model and the simple reptation
model), we provide a clear evidence that the longest relaxation time is
estimated as the crossover time in the relative fluctuations.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, to appear in J. Chem. Phy
Atomistic Simulation of Crystal Change and Carbon Diffusion during Drawing of Pearlitic Steel Nano-sizedWire
Wire drawing is an efficient material processing technique for metals. Pearlitic steel is recognized as one of the most reliable and strong wire materials for industrial use. The microstructure of the pearlite phase, however, is quite complicated, with a lamellar structure containing alternating nanometer-thick layers of ferrite and cementite. In the present study, three-dimensional wire drawing models for pearlitic steel, in which a cementite layer occupies one half or one third of the wire cross section, are used in molecular dynamics simulations of the Fe-C system based on a pairwise potential. The results indicate that a body-centered cubic to face-centered cubic phase transition occurs in the ferrite layer during drawing. It is found that compressive hydrostatic stress is required to drive this phase transformation. The phase transition is followed by the formation of dislocations and grain boundaries. Cementite has an orthorhombic crystal structure and is more difficult to plastically deform than pure ferrite. During drawing of a pearlite wire, the large deformation of the ferrite layer compensates for the poor deformability of the cementite layer. The carbon content is important in pearlitic steel because carbon atoms can diffuse through all phases. As a indicator of the amount of carbon diffusion, the mean square displacement of carbon atoms is used. It is found that diffusion perpendicular to the ferrite/cementite interface tends to take place suddenly, but the total amount of diffusion is still less than that in the parallel direction
Self-Consistent MHD Modeling of a Coronal Mass Ejection, Coronal Dimming, and a Giant Cusp-Shaped Arcade Formation
We performed magnetohydrodynamic simulation of coronal mass ejections (CMEs)
and associated giant arcade formations, and the results suggested new
interpretations of observations of CMEs. We performed two cases of the
simulation: with and without heat conduction. Comparing between the results of
the two cases, we found that reconnection rate in the conductive case is a
little higher than that in the adiabatic case and the temperature of the loop
top is consistent with the theoretical value predicted by the Yokoyama-Shibata
scaling law. The dynamical properties such as velocity and magnetic fields are
similar in the two cases, whereas thermal properties such as temperature and
density are very different.In both cases, slow shocks associated with magnetic
reconnectionpropagate from the reconnection region along the magnetic field
lines around the flux rope, and the shock fronts form spiral patterns. Just
outside the slow shocks, the plasma density decreased a great deal. The soft
X-ray images synthesized from the numerical results are compared with the soft
X-ray images of a giant arcade observed with the Soft X-ray Telescope aboard
{\it Yohkoh}, it is confirmed that the effect of heat conduction is significant
for the detailed comparison between simulation and observation. The comparison
between synthesized and observed soft X-ray images provides new interpretations
of various features associated with CMEs and giant arcades.Comment: 39 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal. The PDF file with high resplution figures can be downloaded from
http://www.kwasan.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~shiota/study/ApJ62426.preprint.pdf
Flexible Integration of Gigahertz Nanomechanical Resonators with a Superconducting Microwave Resonator using a Bonded Flip-Chip Method
We demonstrate strong coupling of gigahertz-frequency nanomechanical
resonators to a frequency-tunable superconducting microwave resonator via a
galvanically bonded flip-chip method. By tuning the microwave resonator with an
external magnetic field, we observe a series of hybridized microwave-mechanical
modes and report coupling strengths of at cryogenic
temperatures. The demonstrated multi-chip approach provides flexible rapid
characterization and simplified fabrication, and could potentially enable
coupling between a variety of quantum systems. Our work represents a step
towards a plug-and-play architecture for building more complex hybrid quantum
systems.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. First three authors contributed equally to this
wor
Generalized Arcsine Law and Stable Law in an Infinite Measure Dynamical System
Limit theorems for the time average of some observation functions in an
infinite measure dynamical system are studied. It is known that intermittent
phenomena, such as the Rayleigh-Benard convection and Belousov-Zhabotinsky
reaction, are described by infinite measure dynamical systems.We show that the
time average of the observation function which is not the function,
whose average with respect to the invariant measure is finite, converges to
the generalized arcsine distribution. This result leads to the novel view that
the correlation function is intrinsically random and does not decay. Moreover,
it is also numerically shown that the time average of the observation function
converges to the stable distribution when the observation function has the
infinite mean.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Influence of microstructural variations on morphology and separation properties of polybutadiene-based polyurethanes
Polybutadiene-based polyurethanes with different cis/trans/1, 2-vinyl microstructure contents are synthesized. The phase morphology and physical properties of the polymers are investigated using spectroscopic analysis (FTIR and Raman), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), X-ray scattering (WAXD and SAXS) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). In addition, their gas transport properties are determined for different gases at 4 bar and 25 °C. Thermodynamic incompatibility and steric hindrance of pendant groups are the dominant factors affecting the morphology and properties of the PUs. FTIR spectra, DSC, and SAXS analysis reveal a higher extent of phase mixing in high vinyl-content PUs. Moreover, the SAXS analysis and AFM phase images indicate smaller microdomains by increasing the vinyl content. Smaller permeable soft domains as well as the lower phase separation of the PUs with higher vinyl content create more tortuous pathways for gas molecules and deteriorate the gas permeability of the membranes
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