11 research outputs found
Magnetic ground state and perturbations of the distorted kagome Ising metal TmAgGe
We present the magnetic orders and excitations of the distorted kagome intermetallic magnet TmAgGe. Using neutron single crystal diffraction we identify the propagation vectors k = (1/2 0 0) and k = (0 0 0) and determine the magnetic structures of the zero-field and magnetic field-induced phases for H along the a and [-1 1 0] crystal directions. We determine the experimental magnetic field-temperature (H, T)-phase diagram and reproduce it by Monte-Carlo simulations of an effective spin exchange Hamiltonian for one distorted kagome layer. Our model includes a strong axial single-ion anisotropy and significantly smaller exchange couplings which span up to the third-nearest neighbours within the layer. Single crystal inelastic neutron scattering (INS) measurements reveal an almost flat, only weakly dispersive mode around 7 meV that we use alongside bulk magnetization data to deduce the crystal-electric field (CEF) scheme for the Tm3+ ions. Random phase approximation (RPA) calculations based on the determined CEF wave functions of the two lowest quasi-doublets enable an estimation of the interlayer coupling that is compatible with the experimental INS spectra. No evidence for low-energy spin waves associated to the magnetic order was found, which is consistent with the strongly Ising nature of the ground state.This is a preprint from Larsen, C. B., D. G. Mazzone, N. Gauthier, H. D. Rosales, F. A. Albarracín, J. Lass, X. Boraley, S. L. Bud'ko, P. C. Canfield, and O. Zaharko. "Magnetic ground state and perturbations of the distorted kagome Ising metal TmAgGe." arXiv preprint arXiv:2306.09867 (2023). doi: https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2306.09867. Published as Larsen, C. B., D. G. Mazzone, N. Gauthier, Héctor Diego Rosales, Flavia Alejandra Gómez Albarracín, J. Lass, X. Boraley, S. L. Bud'ko, P. C. Canfield, and O. Zaharko. "Magnetic ground state and perturbations of the distorted kagome Ising metal TmAgGe." Physical Review B 107, no. 22 (2023): 224419. doi: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.107.224419
Menopause as a predictor of new-onset asthma: A longitudinal Northern European population study
Tar yield and composition from poultry litter gasification in a fluidised bed reactor: effects of equivalence ratio, temperature and limestone addition
Air gasification of poultry litter was experimentally investigated in a laboratory scale bubbling fluidised bed
gasifier. Gasification tests were conducted at atmospheric pressure using silica sand as the bed material. This
paper examines the effect of the equivalence ratio (ER) in the range of 0.18–0.41, temperature between 700
and 800 C, and the addition of limestone blended with the poultry litter on the yield and composition of
tar. An off-line solid phase adsorption method was employed in order to quantify tar compounds heavier
than styrene, whereas lighter species such as benzene and toluene were measured by means of on-line
micro gas chromatography. Total tar yields were in the range from 15.7 to 30.7 gtotal tar kgpoultry litter (dry and ash
free basis) 1. These values are considered low with respect to the feedstocks with a higher organic fraction. It
also needs to be noted that the yields of benzene and toluene were measured by on-line micro gas
chromatography, a technique which inherently delivers higher tar values compared to commonly employed
off-line techniques. By varying the ER, poultry litter blended with limestone showed a reduction in total tar
yield whereas poultry litter on its own showed an increasing tar yield over the ER range tested. In the
presence of limestone, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), heterocyclic compounds, toluene and
benzene showed a tendency to reduce over the ER range tested. Since the ER also plays a crucial role in tar
reduction, the reduction in tar cannot be unambiguously attributed to calcined limestone/lime (CaCO3/
CaO). Increasing the temperature was shown to be effective for reducing the total tar yield but the amounts
of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons increased. However, no definitive correlation could be established
between limestone/lime catalytic activity for tar reduction and elevated gasification temperature, because
there was no possibility to study their effects separately. The chemical composition of the tar arising from
poultry litter is distinctive compared with conventional lignocellulosic fuels linked to the fact that poultry
litter has a higher nitrogen content (z6.5% w/w (dry and ash free basis)). Nitrogen-containing hydrocarbons
such as pyridine, 2-methylpyridine, 2-methyl-1H-pyrrole and benzonitrile were identified in significant
amounts. This study has demonstrated that poultry litter gasified in a bubbling fluidised bed yielded
a product gas with relatively low tar content while its composition reflects the chemical nature of the feedstoc
Distributional chaos for strongly continuous semigroups of operators
Distributional chaos for strongly continuous semigroups is studied and characterized. It is shown to be equivalent to the existence of a distributionally irregular vector. Finally, a sufficient condition for distributional chaos on the point spectrum of the generator of the semigroup is presented. An application to the semigroup generated in L-2 (R) by a translation of the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck operator is also given.This work is supported in part by MEC and FEDER, Project MTM2010-14909, by Generalitat Valenciana, Projects PROMETEO/2008/101 and GV/2010/091, and by Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Project PAID-06-0-92932. The second author also wants to acknowledge the support of the Project PAID-00-10 and of the grant FPI-UPV2009-04 from Programa de Ayudas de Investigacion y Desarrollo de la Universitat Politecnica de Valencia.Albanese, AA.; Barrachina Civera, X.; Mangino, EM.; Peris Manguillot, A. (2013). Distributional chaos for strongly continuous semigroups of operators. Communications on Pure and Applied Analysis. 12(5):2069-2082. https://doi.org/10.3934/cpaa.2013.12.2069S2069208212
Health Shocks and Risk Aversion
Risk preferences are typically assumed to be constant for an individual across the life cycle. In this paper we empirically assess if they are time varying. Specifically, we analyse whether health shocks influence individual risk aversion. We follow an innovative approach and use grip strength data to obtain an objective health shock indicator. In order to account for the non-random nature of our data we employ regression-adjusted matching. Health shocks are found to increase individual risk aversion. The finding is robust to a series of sensitivity analyses
