1,172 research outputs found
Electronic Raman scattering of Tl-2223 and the symmetry of the supercon- ducting gap
Single crystalline Tl2Ba2Ca2Cu3O10 was studied using electronic Raman
scattering. The renormalization of the scattering continuum was investigated as
a function of the scattering geometry to determine the superconducting energy
gap 2Delta(k). The A1g- and B2g-symmetry component show a linear frequency
behaviour of the scattering intensity with a peak related to the energy gap,
while the B1g-symmetry component shows a characteristic behaviour at higher
frequencies. The observed frequency dependencies are consistent with a
dx^2-y^2-wave symmetry of the gap and yield a ratio of 2Delta/k_BT_c=7.4. With
the polarization of the scattered and incident light either parallel or
perpendicular to the CuO2-planes a strong anisotropy due to the layered
structure was detected, which indicates an almost 2 dimensional behaviour of
this system.Comment: 2 pages, Postscript-file including 2 figures. Accepted for
publication in the Proceedings of the M^2SHTSC IV Conference, Grenoble
(France), 5-9 July 1994. Proceedings to be published in Physica C. Contact
address: [email protected]
Secretion and assembly of functional mini-cellulosomes from synthetic chromosomal operons in Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824.
Background: Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) is reliant on the simultaneous enzyme production, saccharification of biomass, and fermentation of released sugars into valuable products such as butanol. Clostridial species that produce butanol are, however, unable to grow on crystalline cellulose. In contrast, those saccharolytic species that produce predominantly ethanol, such as Clostridium thermocellum and Clostridium cellulolyticum, degrade crystalline cellulose with high efficiency due to their possession of a multienzyme complex termed the cellulosome. This has led to studies directed at endowing butanol-producing species with the genetic potential to produce a cellulosome, albeit by localising the necessary transgenes to unstable autonomous plasmids. Here we have explored the potential of our previously described Allele-Coupled Exchange (ACE) technology for creating strains of the butanol producing species Clostridium acetobutylicum in which the genes encoding the various cellulosome components are stably integrated into the genome. Results: We used BioBrick2 (BB2) standardised parts to assemble a range of synthetic genes encoding C. thermocellum cellulosomal scaffoldin proteins (CipA variants) and glycoside hydrolases (GHs, Cel8A, Cel9B, Cel48S and Cel9K) as well as synthetic cellulosomal operons that direct the synthesis of Cel8A, Cel9B and a truncated form of CipA. All synthetic genes and operons were integrated into the C. acetobutylicum genome using the recently developed ACE technology. Heterologous protein expression levels and mini-cellulosome self-assembly were assayed by western blot and native PAGE analysis. Conclusions: We demonstrate the successful expression, secretion and self-assembly of cellulosomal subunits by the recombinant C. acetobutylicum strains, providing a platform for the construction of novel cellulosomes. © 2013 Kovács et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd
Experimental demonstration of gridless spectrum and time optical switching
An experimental demonstration of gridless spectrum and time switching is presented. We propose and demonstrate a bit-rate and modulation-format independent optical cross-connect architecture, based on gridless spectrum selective switch, 20-ms 3D-MEMS and 10-ns PLZT optical switches, that supports arbitrary spectrum allocation and transparent time multiplexing. The architecture is implemented in a four-node field-fiber-linked testbed to transport continuous RZ and NRZ data channels at 12.5, 42.7 and 170.8 Gb/s, and selectively groom sub-wavelength RZ channels at 42.7 Gb/s. We also showed that the architecture is dynamic and can be reconfigured to meet the routing requirements of the network traffic. Results show error-free operation with an end-to-end power penalty between 0.8 dB and 5 dB for all continuous and sub-wavelength channels
Anisotropic thermal expansion and magnetostriction of YNiBC single crystals
We present results of anisotropic thermal expansion and low temperature
magnetostriction measurements on YNiBC single crystals grown by high
temperature flux and floating zone techniques. Quantum oscillations of
magnetostriction were observed at low temperatures for starting at
fields significantly below (). Large irreversible,
longitudinal magnetostriction was seen in both, in-plane and along the c-axis,
directions of the applied magnetic field in the intermediate superconducting
state. Anisotropic uniaxial pressure dependencies of were evaluated using
results of zero field, thermal expansion measurements
Numerical Investigation of a Mesoscopic Vehicular Traffic Flow Model Based on a Stochastic Acceleration Process
In this paper a spatial homogeneous vehicular traffic flow model based on a
stochastic master equation of Boltzmann type in the acceleration variable is
solved numerically for a special driver interaction model. The solution is done
by a modified direct simulation Monte Carlo method (DSMC) well known in non
equilibrium gas kinetic. The velocity and acceleration distribution functions
in stochastic equilibrium, mean velocity, traffic density, ACN, velocity
scattering and correlations between some of these variables and their car
density dependences are discussed.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure
A Vehicular Traffic Flow Model Based on a Stochastic Acceleration Process
A new vehicular traffic flow model based on a stochastic jump process in
vehicle acceleration and braking is introduced. It is based on a master
equation for the single car probability density in space, velocity and
acceleration with an additional vehicular chaos assumption and is derived via a
Markovian ansatz for car pairs. This equation is analyzed using simple driver
interaction models in the spatial homogeneous case. Velocity distributions in
stochastic equilibrium, together with the car density dependence of their
moments, i.e. mean velocity and scattering and the fundamental diagram are
presented.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figure
Slow Noncollinear Coulomb Scattering in the Vicinity of the Dirac Point in Graphene
The Coulomb scattering dynamics in graphene in energetic proximity to the Dirac point is investigated by polarization resolved pump-probe spectroscopy and microscopic theory. Collinear Coulomb scattering rapidly thermalizes the carrier distribution in k directions pointing radially away from the Dirac point. Our study reveals, however, that, in almost intrinsic graphene, full thermalization in all directions relying on noncollinear scattering is much slower. For low photon energies, carrier-optical-phonon processes are strongly suppressed and Coulomb mediated noncollinear scattering is remarkably slow, namely on a ps time scale. This effect is very promising for infrared and THz devices based on hot carrier effects
Calculated phase diagrams, iron tolerance limits, and corrosion of Mg-Al alloys
The factors determining corrosion are reviewed in this paper, with an emphasis on iron tolerance limit and the production of high-purity castings. To understand the iron impurity tolerance limit, magnesium phase diagrams were calculated using the Pandat software package. Calculated phase diagrams can explain the iron tolerance limit and the production of high-purity castings by means of control of melt conditions; this is significant for the production of quality castings from recycled magnesium. Based on the new insight, the influence of the microstructure on corrosion of magnesium alloys is reviewed
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