6,874 research outputs found
Microstructured superhydrorepellent surfaces: Effect of drop pressure on fakir-state stability and apparent contact angles
In this paper we present a generalized Cassi-Baxter equation to take into
account the effect of drop pressure on the apparent contact angle theta_{app}.
Also we determine the limiting pressure p_{W} which causes the impalement
transition to the Wenzel state and the pull-off pressure p_{out} at which the
drop detaches from the substrate. The calculations have been carried out for
axial-symmetric pillars of three different shapes: conical, hemispherical
topped and flat topped cylindrical pillars. Calculations show that, assuming
the same pillar spacing, conical pillars may be more incline to undergo an
impalement transition to the Wenzel state, but, on the other hand, they are
characterized by a vanishing pull-off pressure which causes the drop not to
adhere to the substrate and therefore to detach very easily. We infer that this
property should strongly reduce the contact angle hysteresis as experimentally
osberved in Ref. \cite{Martines-Conical-Shape}. It is possible to combine large
resistance to impalement transition (i.e. large value of p_{W}) and small (or
even vanishing) detaching pressure p_{out} by employing cylindrical pillars
with conical tips. We also show that depending on the particular pillar
geometry, the effect of drop pressure on the apparent contact angle theta_{app}
may be more or less significant. In particular we show that in case of conical
pillars increasing the drop pressure causes a significant decrease of
theta_{app} in agreement with some experimental investigations
\cite{LafunaTransitio}, whereas theta_{app} slightly increases for
hemispherical or flat topped cylindrical pillars.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
Advances in infrared and imaging fibres for astronomical instrumentation
Optical fibres have already played a huge part in ground based astronomical
instrumentation, however, with the revolution in photonics currently taking
place new fibre technologies and integrated optical devices are likely to have
a profound impact on the way we manipulate light in the future. The
Anglo-Australian Observatory, along with partners at the Optical Fibre
Technology Centre of the University of Sydney, is investigating some of the
developing technologies as part of our Astrophotonics programme. In this paper
we discuss the advances that have been made with infrared transmitting fibre,
both conventional and microstructured, in particular those based on flouride
glasses. Flouride glasses have a particularly wide transparent region from the
UV through to around 7um, whereas silica fibres, commonly used in astronomy,
only transmit out to about 2um. We discuss the impact of advances in fibre
manufacture that have greatly improved the optical, chemical resistance and
physical properties of the flouride fibres. We also present some encouraging
initial test results for a modern imaging fibre bundle and imaging fibre taper.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Proc. SPIE 6273
Optomechanical Technologies for Astronom
3D lithium ion batteries—from fundamentals to fabrication
3D microbatteries are proposed as a step change in the energy and power per footprint of surface mountable rechargeable batteries for microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and other small electronic devices. Within a battery electrode, a 3D nanoarchitecture gives mesoporosity, increasing power by reducing the length of the diffusion path; in the separator region it can form the basis of a robust but porous solid, isolating the electrodes and immobilising an otherwise fluid electrolyte. 3D microarchitecture of the whole cell allows fabrication of interdigitated or interpenetrating networks that minimise the ionic path length between the electrodes in a thick cell. This article outlines the design principles for 3D microbatteries and estimates the geometrical and physical requirements of the materials. It then gives selected examples of recent progress in the techniques available for fabrication of 3D battery structures by successive deposition of electrodes, electrolytes and current collectors onto microstructured substrates by self-assembly methods
Hyperelastic antiplane ground cloaking
Hyperelastic materials possess the appealing property that they may be
employed as elastic wave manipulation devices and cloaks by imposing
pre-deformation. They provide an alternative to microstructured metamaterials
and can be used in a reconfigurable manner. Previous studies indicate that
exact elastodynamic invariance to pre-deformation holds only for neo-Hookean
solids in the antiplane wave scenario and the semi-linear material in the
in-plane compressional/shear wave context. Furthermore, although ground cloaks
have been considered in the acoustic context they have not yet been discussed
for elastodynamics, either by employing microstructured cloaks or hyperelastic
cloaks. This work therefore aims at exploring the possibility of employing a
range of hyperelastic materials for use as antiplane ground cloaks (AGCs). The
use of the popular incompressible Arruda-Boyce and Mooney-Rivlin nonlinear
materials is explored. The scattering problem associated with the AGC is
simulated via finite element analysis where the cloaked region is formed by an
indentation of the surface. Results demonstrate that the neo-Hookean medium can
be used to generate a perfect hyperelastic AGC as should be expected.
Furthermore, although the AGC performance of the Mooney-Rivlin material is not
particularly satisfactory, it is shown that the Arruda-Boyce medium is an
excellent candidate material for this purpose
Metal-Coated Defect-Core Photonic Crystal Fiber for THz Propagation
Modal solutions for metal-coated defect-core photonic crystal fiber (PCF) with a central air-hole have been obtained by using a full-vectorial finite element method to model the guidance of THz waves. It has been shown that the surface plasmon modes can couple with the defect-core PCF mode to form supermodes, with potential for sensing applications
Phase diagram of selectively cross-linked block copolymers shows chemically microstructured gel
We study analytically the intricate phase behavior of cross-linked
diblock copolymer melts, which can undergo two main phase transitions due to
quenched random constraints: Gelation, i.e., spatially random localization of
polymers forming a system-spanning cluster, is driven by increasing the number
parameter of irreversible, type-selective cross-links between random
pairs of blocks. Self-assembly into a periodic pattern of /-rich
microdomains (microphase separation) is controlled by the incompatibility
inversely proportional to temperature. Our model aims to capture the
system's essential microscopic features, including an ensemble of random
networks that reflects spatial correlations at the instant of cross-linking. We
identify suitable order parameters and derive a free-energy functional in the
spirit of Landau theory that allows us to trace a phase diagram in the plane of
and . Selective cross-links promote microphase separation at higher
critical temperatures than in uncross-linked diblock copolymer melts.
Microphase separation in the liquid state facilitates gelation, giving rise to
a novel gel state whose chemical composition density mirrors the periodic
pattern.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Design and optimization of electrochemical microreactors for continuous electrosynthesis
The study focuses on the design and construction, as well as the theoretical and experimental optimization of electrochemical filter press microreactors for the electrosynthesis of molecules with a high added value. The main characteristics of these devices are firstly a high-specific electrochemical area to increase conversion and selectivity, and secondly the shape and size of themicrochannels designed for a uniform residence time distribution of the fluid. A heat exchanger is integrated into the microstructured electrode to rapidly remove (or supply) the heat required in exo- or endothermic reactions. The microreactors designed are used to perform-specific electrosynthesis reactions such as thermodynamically unfavorable reactions (continuous NADH regeneration), or reactions with high enthalpy changes
Rigorous sufficient conditions for index-guided mode in microstructured dielectric waveguides
We derive a sufficient condition for the existence of index-guided modes in a
very general class of dielectric waveguides, including photonic-crystal fibers
(arbitrary periodic claddings, such as ``holey fibers''), anisotropic
materials, and waveguides with periodicity along the propagation direction.
This condition provides a rigorous guarantee of cutoff-free index-guided modes
in any such structure where the core is formed by increasing the index of
refraction (e.g. removing a hole). It also provides a weaker guarantee of
guidance in cases where the refractive index is increased ``on average''
(precisely defined). The proof is based on a simple variational method,
inspired by analogous proofs of localization for two-dimensional attractive
potentials in quantum mechanics.Comment: 15 page
- …
