10 research outputs found
High-pressure enzymatic hydrolysis to reveal physicochemical and thermal properties of bamboo fiber using a supercritical water fermenter
Bamboo fiber was treated using a high-pressure enzyme hydrolysis process. The process performance was compared with the pulping and bleaching process for bamboo fiber.Several analytical methods, including field emission scanning electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, thermogravimetry, and differential scanning calorimetry, were employed to determine the physicochemical and thermal properties of the treated cellulosic bamboo fiber. It was found that the pressurized enzyme hydrolysis treated bamboo fiber had the most uniform morphological structure, along with lowest crystallinity and highest thermal stability. Thus, utilizing high-pressure enzyme hydrolysis is the most effective process for treating fiber to remove non-cellulosic components from the raw material, including lignin, hemicelluloses, and waxy materials
Simulation of a New Self-Structured Fuzzy Controller Applied to a Temperature Control Process
Enabling Cellular Device to Device Data Exchange on WISDOM 5G by Actuating Cooperative Communication Based on SMNAT
In situ lift-off InAs quantum dots by pulsed laser irradiation
InAs/GaAs quantum dots (QDs) grown by molecular beam epitaxy were subjected to in situirradiation using a mono-beam pulsed laser. The evolution of the QD morphology was investigated as a function of irradiation intensity at temperatures of 525 °C and 480 °C. The temperature was found to exert a considerable influence on the reaction of the QDs to the irradiation. At the higher temperature (525 °C), both the height and width of the InAs QDs gradually decreased with increasing irradiation intensity, which was ascribed to the dominant effect of the laser desorption of indium. In contrast, at the lower temperature (480 °C), the height of the InAs islands decreased with increasing irradiation intensity while the width exhibited unexpected broadening, which was attributed to a combination of laser desorption and laser diffusion of indium. Remarkably, at the higher temperature, laser irradiation above a certain threshold intensity resulted in the lift off of the InAs QDs to afford a clear, smooth, and perfect GaAs surface. Through subsequent growth of QDs on this surface, it was found that the QDs exhibited the same nucleation properties and optical quality as the common Stranski–Krastanov mode on an as-prepared GaAs surface. Therefore, we have developed a technology for the damage-resistant fabrication of QDs using in situ pulsed laser irradiation (LIR), which is expected to find potential applications in the manufacture of patterned QDs upon upgrading the mono-beam irradiation to multi-beam interference irradiation in the futur
