234,870 research outputs found
Further results on independent Metropolis-Hastings-Klein sampling
Sampling from a lattice Gaussian distribution is emerging as an important problem in coding and cryptography. This paper gives a further analysis of the independent Metropolis-Hastings-Klein (MHK) algorithm we presented at ISIT 2015. We derive the exact spectral gap of the induced Markov chain, which dictates the convergence rate of the independent MHK algorithm. Then, we apply the independent MHK algorithm to lattice decoding and obtained the decoding complexity for solving the CVP as Õ(e∥Bx-c∥2 / mini ∥b̂i∥2). Finally, the tradeoff between decoding radius and complexity is also established
Electron-hydrogen scattering in Faddeev-Merkuriev integral equation approach
Electron-hydrogen scattering is studied in the Faddeev-Merkuriev integral
equation approach. The equations are solved by using the Coulomb-Sturmian
separable expansion technique. We present - and -wave scattering and
reactions cross sections up to the threshold.Comment: 2 eps figure
Exploring Quantum Phase Transitions with a Novel Sublattice Entanglement Scenario
We introduce a new measure called reduced entropy of sublattice to quantify
entanglement in spin, electron and boson systems. By analyzing this quantity,
we reveal an intriguing connection between quantum entanglement and quantum
phase transitions in various strongly correlated systems: the local extremes of
reduced entropy and its first derivative as functions of the coupling constant
coincide respectively with the first and second order transition points. Exact
numerical studies merely for small lattices reproduce several well-known
results, demonstrating that our scenario is quite promising for exploring
quantum phase transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Pyrolysis/gasification of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin for hydrogen production in the presence of various nickel-based catalysts
Cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin are the main components of biomass. This work presents research into the pyrolysis/gasification of all three main components of biomass, in order to evaluate and compare their hydrogen production and also understand their gasification processes. A fixed bed, two-stage reaction system has been used employing various nickel-based catalysts. Gas concentration (CO, H, CO, CO and CH ) was analysed for the produced non-condensed gases. Oil byproducts were analysed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Various techniques such as X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) coupled to an energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDXS), temperature- programmed oxidation (TPO) were applied to characterize the fresh or reacted catalysts. The experimental results show that the lignin sample generates the highest residue fraction (52.0 wt.%) among the three biomass components. When NiAZnAAl (1:1) catalyst was used in the gasification process, gas yield was increased from 62.4 to 68.2 wt.% for cellulose, and from 25.2 to 50.0 wt.% for the pyrolysis/gasification of lignin. Hydrogen production was increased from 7.0 to 18.7 (m mol g sample) when the NiAZnAAl (1:1) catalyst was introduced in the pyrolysis/gasification of cellulose. Among the investigated catalysts, NiACaAAl (1:1) was found to be the most effective for hydrogen production from cellulose pyrolysis/gasification
Random Isotropic Structures and Possible Glass Transitions in Diblock Copolymer Melts
We study the microstructural glass transitions in diblock-copolymer melts
using a thermodynamic replica approach. Our approach performs an expansion in
terms of the natural smallness parameter -- the inverse of the scaled degree of
polymerization, which allows us to systematically study the approach to
mean-field behavior as the degree of polymerization increases. We find that in
the limit of infinite long polymer chains, both the onset of glassiness and the
vitrification transition (Kauzmann temperature) collapse to the mean-field
spinodal, suggesting that the spinodal can be regarded as the mean-field
signature for glass transitions in this class of systems. We also study the
order-disorder transitions (ODT) within the same theoretical framework; in
particular, we include the leading-order fluctuation corrections due to the
cubic interaction in the coarse-grained Hamiltonian, which has been ignored in
previous works on the ODT in block copolymers. We find that the cubic term
stabilizes both the ordered (body-centered-cubic) phase and the glassy state
relative to the disordered phase. While in melts of symmetric copolymers the
glass transition always occurs after the order-disorder transition (below the
ODT temperature), for asymmetric copolymers, it is possible that the glass
transition precedes the ordering transition.Comment: An error corrected in the referenc
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