3,015 research outputs found
Design of fibre reinforced PV concepts for building integrated applications
Fibre reinforced polymers present an interesting encapsulation medium for PV-modules. Glass fibres can provide increased strength and stiffness to thin polymer layers overcoming the brittleness and limited deformability of glass-panes. Glass fibre reinforced polymers allows for transparency over a broad range of the solar spectrum while the material properties and integral production processes create possibilities for novel product concepts with embedded PV technology. To explore such possibilities, innovative design methods were used to design novel PV product concepts for applications in the build environment.\ud
In our paper three conceptual designs are presented; (1) a thin film module with an adjoining interconnection system functioning as structural element for geodetic roofing structures, (2) a PV lamella with single-axis tracking utilizing a linear concentration effect caused by the geometry of the product and the materials applied, and (3) a prepreg PV-material which allows for easy shaping during the production of PV modules with complex geometries. Each concept employs a specific PV technology and demonstrates a possible application aimed at a specific market. In this way we show the potential of integration of PV technology in fibre reinforced composites. The paper will be illustrated by concept renderings
Predicative Ability of QCD Sum Rules for Decuplet Baryons
QCD sum rules for decuplet baryon two-point functions are investigated using
a comprehensive Monte-Carlo based procedure. In this procedure, all
uncertainties in the QCD input parameters are incorporated simultaneously,
resulting in realistic estimates of the uncertainties in the extracted
phenomenological parameters. Correlations between the QCD input parameters and
the phenomenological parameters are studied by way of scatter plots. The
predicted couplings are useful in evaluating matrix elements of decuplet
baryons in the QCD sum rule approach. They are also used to check a cubic
scaling law between baryon couplings and masses, as recently found by Dey and
coworkers. The results show a significant reduction in the scaling constant and
some possible deviations from the cubic law.Comment: 13 pages, RevTeX, 5 PS figures embedded with psfig.st
Positive and negative-parity flavor-octet baryons in coupled QCD sum rules
We apply the method of the QCD sum rule, in which positive- and
negative-parity baryons couple with each other, to the flavor-octet hyperons
and investigate the parity splittings. We also reexamine the nucleon in the
method, which was studied in our previous paper, by carefully choosing the
Borel weight. Both in the nucleon and hyperon channels the obtained sum rules
turn out to have a very good Borel stability and also have a Borel window, an
energy region in which the OPE converges and the pole contribution dominates
over the continuum contribution. The predicted masses of the positive- and
negative-parity baryons reproduce the experimental ones fairly well in the
and channels, if we assign the and the
to the parity partners of the and the ,
respectively. This implies that the is not the party partner of
the and may be a flavor-singlet or exotic state. In the
channel, the sum rule predicts the mass of the negative-parity state to be
about 1.8 GeV, which leads to two possibilities; one is that the observed state
with the closest mass, , is the parity partner and the other is that
the parity partner is not yet found but exists around 1.8 GeV.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Calculation of coupling constant g_phi-pi-gamma in QCD sum rules
The coupling constant of g_phi-pi-gamma decay is calculated in the method of
QCD sum rules. A comparison of our prediction on the coupling constant with the
result obtained from analysis of the experimental data is performed.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Negative Parity Baryons in the QCD Sum Rule
Masses and couplings of the negative parity excited baryons are studied in
the QCD sum rule. Separation of the negative-parity spectrum is proposed and is
applied to the flavor octet and singlet baryons. We find that the quark
condensate is responsible for the mass splitting of the ground and the
negative-parity excited states. This is expected from the chiral symmetry and
supports the idea that the negative-parity baryon forms a parity doublet with
the ground state. The meson-baryon coupling constants are also computed for the
excited states in the QCD sum rule. It is found that the \pi NN^* coupling
vanishes in the chiral limit.Comment: 13pp, LaTeX, 1 EPS figure, uses epsf.sty, Talk given by M.O. at
CEBAF/INT workshop "N* physics", Seattle, September (1996), to appear in the
proceeding
The catalytic oxidation of organic contaminants in a packed bed reactor
The catalytic oxidation of several hydrocarbons was studied over noble metal and metal oxide catalysts. A fast empirical method was developed to determine the minimum operating temperature required to guarantee complete conversion of the hydrocarbon.\ud
\ud
The influence of the operating parameters such as the inlet concentration and residence time, as well as the chemical character of the component to be oxidized, have been investigated. The results can be described satisfactorily by a simple isothermal, plug flow reactor model and first-order reaction kinetics. In the case of simultaneous oxidation of different components a significant mixture effect was not observed. The presence of water in the feed did significantly inhibit the oxidation of alkanes.\ud
\ud
Of the applied catalysts, Pt was the most effective for the combustion of the alkenes, whereas Pd showed a higher activity for the oxidation of alkanes
The Cheshire Cat Bag Model: Color Anomaly and Properties
We show that color can leak from a QCD bag if we allow for pseudoscalar
isoscalar singlet () coupling at the surface. To enforce total
confinement of color an additional boundary term is suggested. New relations
between the mass and decay constant and the QCD gluon condensates are
derived and compared with the empirical parameters.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, Nordita - 92/68
QCD sum rules for the pseudoscalar decay constants - To constrain the strange quark mass
We study the higher order corrections of quark masses to the
Gell-MannOakesRenner (GOR) relation by constructing QCD sum rules
exclusively for pseudoscalar mesons from the axial-vector correlation function,
. To project out
the pseudoscalar meson contributions, we apply to this
correlation function and construct sum rules for the decay constants of
pseudoscalar mesons, and . The OPE is proportional to
quark masses due to PCAC. To leading order in quark mass, each sum rule
reproduces the corresponding GOR relation. For kaon and , the deviation
from the GOR relation due to higher orders in quark mass is found to be
substantial. But the deviation gives better agreements with the phenomenology.
Our sum rule provides a sensitive relation between and , which
stringently constrain the value for . To reproduce the experimental value
for , is found to be 186 MeV at 1 GeV scale. The sum
rule also supports this finding.Comment: 14 pages including 3 figures. slightly revised. Accepted for
publication in Physical Review
QCD sum rules with finite masses
The concept of QCD sum rules is extended to bound states composed of
particles with finite mass such as scalar quarks or strange quarks. It turns
out that mass corrections become important in this context. The number of
relevant corrections is analyzed in a systematic discussion of the IR- and
UV-divergencies, leading in general to a finite number of corrections. The
results are demonstrated for a system of two massless quarks and two heavy
scalar quarks.Comment: 15 pages, including two pictures to be found in an extra file. Latex
neads epsf.st
More Money, More Trust? Target and Observer Differences in the Effectiveness of Financial Overcompensation to Restore Trust.
Recent research revealed that despite its financial costs, overcompensation
is not more effective to restore trust in the perpetrator than equal
compensation. In a lab experiment (N = 115), we compared the effects of
these compensation sizes for both targets of the compensation and noninvolved
observers. It was revealed that overcompensation did not yield
superior outcomes than equal compensation. Specifically, for targets
overcompensation resulted in lower levels of trust than equal compensation,
while for observers equal compensation and overcompensation resulted in
similar levels of trust. This finding suggests that overcompensation is not a
cost-effective trust repair strategy, neither for the targets nor for third party
observers. Other implications are discussed as well
- …
