22,469 research outputs found
Silicon solar cell process development, fabrication, and analysis
Two large cast ingots were evaluated. Solar cell performance versus substrate position within the ingots was obtained and the results are presented. Dendritic web samples were analyzed in terms of structural defects, and efforts were made to correlate the data with the performance of solar cells made from the webs
Silicon solar cell process development, fabrication and analysis
Solar cells were fabricated from EFG ribbons dendritic webs, cast ingots by heat exchanger method, and cast ingots by ubiquitous crystallization process. Baseline and other process variations were applied to fabricate solar cells. EFG ribbons grown in a carbon-containing gas atmosphere showed significant improvement in silicon quality. Baseline solar cells from dendritic webs of various runs indicated that the quality of the webs under investigation was not as good as the conventional CZ silicon, showing an average minority carrier diffusion length of about 60 um versus 120 um of CZ wafers. Detail evaluation of large cast ingots by HEM showed ingot reproducibility problems from run to run and uniformity problems of sheet quality within an ingot. Initial evaluation of the wafers prepared from the cast polycrystalline ingots by UCP suggested that the quality of the wafers from this process is considerably lower than the conventional CZ wafers. Overall performance was relatively uniform, except for a few cells which showed shunting problems caused by inclusions
Studying Diquark Structure of Heavy Baryons in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
We propose the enhancement of yield in heavy ion collisions at
RHIC and LHC as a novel signal for the existence of diquarks in the strongly
coupled quark-gluon plasma produced in these collisions as well as in the
. Assuming that stable bound diquarks can exist in the quark-gluon
plasma, we argue that the yield of would be increased by two-body
collisions between diquarks and quarks, in addition to normal
three-body collisions among , and quarks. A quantitative study of
this effect based on the coalescence model shows that including the
contribution of diquarks to production indeed leads to a
substantial enhancement of the ratio in heavy ion collisions.Comment: Prepared for Chiral Symmetry in Hadron and Nuclear Physics
(Chiral07), Nov. 13-16, 2007, Osaka, Japa
Superconductivity and Lattice Instability in Compressed Lithium from Fermi Surface Hot Spots
The highest superconducting temperature T observed in any elemental metal
(Li with T ~ 20 K at pressure P ~ 40 GPa) is shown to arise from critical
(formally divergent) electron-phonon coupling to the transverse T phonon
branch along intersections of Kohn anomaly surfaces with the Fermi surface.
First principles linear response calculations of the phonon spectrum and
spectral function reveal (harmonic) instability already at
25 GPa. Our results imply that the fcc phase is anharmonically stabilized in
the 25-38 GPa range.Comment: 4 pages, 3 embedded figure
Can infrastructure, built environment, and geographic factor negate weather impact on Strava cyclists?
Cycling participation is context-sensitive and weather condition is reportedly a significant factor. How weather affects cyclists with different demographics, trip purposes, and in the context of cycling infrastructure, built environment and geographic factors is less well understood by existing literature. This paper applies autoregressive models to explain difference in Strava cycling volume from the same hour of the previous day as a function of change in weather conditions, and day of the week; the contextual effect of cycling infrastructure, built environment and geographic factors is accounted for using interaction terms. We use Strava crowdsourced cycling data in Sydney, Australia, as a case study; commute and leisure cyclists, male and female, young and older cyclists are modeled separately. We find weather conditions have a statistically significant effect on cycling participation; rain, rainfall in the last 2 hours and wind are general deterrents to cycling. Physically separated cycling lanes reduce the adverse effect of precipitation on leisure cyclists and male cyclists but have little effect in retaining commute cyclists and female cyclists. The adverse effect of precipitation and wind on commute cycling is amplified in areas with good access to jobs, possibly due to the availability of better alternative modes of transport. Inland locations generally attenuate effects of windy conditions, except for young adults. This paper sheds light on factors attenuating adverse weather effects on cycling participation and provides useful guidance for future cycling infrastructure
Control of carbon nanotube morphology by change of applied bias field during growth
Carbon nanotube morphology has been engineered via simple control of applied voltage during dc plasma chemical vapor deposition growth. Below a critical applied voltage, a nanotube configuration of vertically aligned tubes with a constant diameter is obtained. Above the critical voltage, a nanocone-type configuration is obtained. The strongly field-dependent transition in morphology is attributed primarily to the plasma etching and decrease in the size of nanotube-nucleating catalyst particles. A two-step control of applied voltage allows a creation of dual-structured nanotube morphology consisting of a broad base nanocone (~200 nm dia.) with a small diameter nanotube (~7 nm) vertically emanating from the apex of the nanocone, which may be useful for atomic force microscopy
Magnetic levitation force between a superconducting bulk magnet and a permanent magnet
The current density in a disk-shaped superconducting bulk magnet and the
magnetic levitation force exerted on the superconducting bulk magnet by a
cylindrical permanent magnet are calculated from first principles. The effect
of the superconducting parameters of the superconducting bulk is taken into
account by assuming the voltage-current law and the material law. The magnetic
levitation force is dominated by the remnant current density, which is induced
by switching off the applied magnetizing field. High critical current density
and flux creep exponent may increase the magnetic levitation force. Large
volume and high aspect ratio of the superconducting bulk can enhance the
magnetic levitation force further.Comment: 18 pages and 8 figure
The Most Massive Black Holes in the Universe: Effects of Mergers in Massive Galaxy Clusters
Recent observations support the idea that nuclear black holes grew by gas
accretion while shining as luminous quasars at high redshift, and they
establish a relation of the black hole mass with the host galaxy's spheroidal
stellar system. We develop an analytic model to calculate the expected impact
of mergers on the masses of black holes in massive clusters of galaxies. We use
the extended Press-Schechter formalism to generate Monte Carlo merger histories
of halos with a mass 10^{15} h^{-1} Msun. We assume that the black hole mass
function at z=2 is similar to that inferred from observations at z=0 (since
quasar activity declines markedly at z<2), and we assign black holes to the
progenitor halos assuming a monotonic relation between halo mass and black hole
mass. We follow the dynamical evolution of subhalos within larger halos,
allowing for tidal stripping, the loss of orbital energy by dynamical friction,
and random orbital perturbations in gravitational encounters with subhalos, and
we assume that mergers of subhalos are followed by mergers of their central
black holes. Our analytic model reproduces numerical estimates of the subhalo
mass function. We find that the most massive black holes in massive clusters
typically grow by a factor ~ 2 by mergers after gas accretion has stopped. In
our ten realizations of 10^{15} h^{-1} Msun clusters, the highest initial (z=2)
black hole masses are 5-7 x 10^9 Msun, but four of the clusters contain black
holes in the range 1-1.5 x 10^{10} Msun at z=0. Satellite galaxies may host
black holes whose mass is comparable to, or even greater than, that of the
central galaxy. Thus, black hole mergers can significantly extend the very high
end of the black hole mass function.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
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