5,710 research outputs found
An FBAR Circulator
This letter presents the experimental demonstration of a film bulk acoustic
resonator (FBAR) circulator at 2.5 GHz. The circulator is based on
spatio-temporal modulation of the series resonant frequency of FBARs using
varactors and exhibits a large isolation of 76 dB at 2.5 GHz. The FBAR chip
(0.25 mm2) consists of three identical FBARs connected in wye configuration.
The FBAR0s quality factor (Q) of 1250 and piezoelectric coupling coefficient kt
2 of 3% relaxes the modulation requirements, achieving non-reciprocity with
small modulationto- RF frequency ratio bettter than 1:800 (3 MHz:2.5 GHz)
Reflexion M\"ossbauer analysis of the in situ oxidation products hydroxycarbonate green rust
The purpose of this study is to determine the nature of the oxidation
products of FeII-III hydroxycarbonate FeII4FeIII2(OH)12CO3~3H2O (green rust
GR(CO32-)) by using the miniaturised M\"ossbauer spectrometer MIMOS II. Two
M\"ossbauer measurements methods are used: method (i) with green rust pastes
coated with glycerol and spread into Plexiglas sample holders, and method (ii)
with green rust pastes in the same sample holders but introduced into a
gas-tight cell with a beryllium window under a continuous nitrogen flow. Method
(ii) allows us to follow the continuous deprotonation of GR(CO32-) into the
fully ferric deprotonated form FeIII6O4(OH)8CO3~3H2O by adding the correct
amount of H2O2, without any further oxidation or degradation of the samples
Finding the Center of Mass of a Soft Spring
This article shows how to use calculus to find the center of mass position of
a soft cylindrical helical spring that is suspended vertically. The spring is
non-uniformly stretched by the action of gravity. A general expression for the
vertical position of the center of mass is obtained.Comment: LaTeX, 7 pages, 2 figures. Minor changes to agree with published
versio
Synthesis process and hydrodynamic behavior of a new filtration material for passive wastewater dephosphatation
International audienceThe preparation optimization of a filter material intended to be used as a phosphate sorbent in flow-through conditions is investigated. The mixing of ferrihydrite (Fh) and pozzolana (Pz) using a “dry contact method” is found to be the most efficient and leads to the formation of a micrometric thick Fh coating deposited into the honeycombed structure of Pz. The maximal Fh content of ~ 8.5 wt.% is significantly higher than the quantity deposited on other classical substrates such as sand. The phosphate sorption kinetics and isotherms, under dynamic conditions in batch experiments, are best described by pseudo-second-order and Freundlich models respectively. Moreover, under static conditions, sorption kinetics reveals intra-aggregate diffusion process. Phosphate ion retention in packed columns, and especially the breakthrough point, can be adequately predicted when coupling the classical convection dispersion equation and the surface complexation model. Breakthrough curves of phosphate ions are strongly dependent on flow rate; which is important for future industrial applications. Finally, and unexpectedly, a high value of phosphate adsorption capacity (80 mg PO4 g− 1) is observed when phosphate-containing wastewater is used as feed solution. This is mostly explained by soluble calcium ions, which favors the phosphate fixation onto the filter material surfac
Long Term Capsaicin Administration Effects on Skeletal Muscle Function in Aging Mice
Please view abstract in the attached PDF fil
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