2,188 research outputs found

    Cryogenic gear technology for an orbital transfer vehicle engine and tester design

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    Technology available for gears used in advanced Orbital Transfer Vehicle rocket engines and the design of a cryogenic adapted tester used for evaluating advanced gears are presented. The only high-speed, unlubricated gears currently in cryogenic service are used in the RL10 rocket engine turbomachinery. Advanced rocket engine gear systems experience operational load conditions and rotational speed that are beyond current experience levels. The work under this task consisted of a technology assessment and requirements definition followed by design of a self-contained portable cryogenic adapted gear test rig system

    Wannier interpolation of the electron-phonon matrix elements in polar semiconductors: Polar-optical coupling in GaAs

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    We generalize the Wannier interpolation of the electron-phonon matrix elements to the case of polar-optical coupling in polar semiconductors. We verify our methodological developments against experiments, by calculating the widths of the electronic bands due to electron-phonon scattering in GaAs, the prototype polar semiconductor. The calculated widths are then used to estimate the broadenings of excitons at critical points in GaAs and the electron-phonon relaxation times of hot electrons. Our findings are in good agreement with available experimental data. Finally, we demonstrate that while the Fr\"ohlich interaction is the dominant scattering process for electrons/holes close to the valley minima, in agreement with low-field transport results, at higher energies, the intervalley scattering dominates the relaxation dynamics of hot electrons or holes. The capability of interpolating the polar-optical coupling opens new perspectives in the calculation of optical absorption and transport properties in semiconductors and thermoelectrics.Comment: To appear on Phys. Rev.

    Dynamical properties of a strongly correlated model for quarter-filled layered organic molecular crystals

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    The dynamical properties of an extended Hubbard model, which is relevant to quarter-filled layered organic molecular crystals, are analyzed. We have computed the dynamical charge correlation function, spectral density, and optical conductivity using Lanczos diagonalization and large-N techniques. As the ratio of the nearest-neighbour Coulomb repulsion, V, to the hopping integral, t, increases there is a transition from a metallic phase to a charge ordered phase. Dynamical properties close to the ordering transition are found to differ from the ones expected in a conventional metal. Large-N calculations display an enhancement of spectral weight at low frequencies as the system is driven closer to the charge ordering transition in agreement with Lanczos calculations. As V is increased the charge correlation function displays a plasmon-like mode which, for wavevectors close to (pi,pi), increases in amplitude and softens as the charge ordering transition is approached. We propose that inelastic X-ray scattering be used to detect this mode. Large-N calculations predict superconductivity with dxy symmetry close to the ordering transition. We find that this is consistent with Lanczos diagonalization calculations, on lattices of 20 sites, which find that the binding energy of two holes becomes negative close to the charge ordering transition.Comment: 22 pages, 16 eps figures; caption of Fig. 5 correcte

    Numerical Contractor Renormalization Method for Quantum Spin Models

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    We demonstrate the utility of the numerical Contractor Renormalization (CORE) method for quantum spin systems by studying one and two dimensional model cases. Our approach consists of two steps: (i) building an effective Hamiltonian with longer ranged interactions using the CORE algorithm and (ii) solving this new model numerically on finite clusters by exact diagonalization. This approach, giving complementary information to analytical treatments of the CORE Hamiltonian, can be used as a semi-quantitative numerical method. For ladder type geometries, we explicitely check the accuracy of the effective models by increasing the range of the effective interactions. In two dimensions we consider the plaquette lattice and the kagome lattice as non-trivial test cases for the numerical CORE method. On the plaquette lattice we have an excellent description of the system in both the disordered and the ordered phases, thereby showing that the CORE method is able to resolve quantum phase transitions. On the kagome lattice we find that the previously proposed twofold degenerate S=1/2 basis can account for a large number of phenomena of the spin 1/2 kagome system. For spin 3/2 however this basis does not seem to be sufficient anymore. In general we are able to simulate system sizes which correspond to an 8x8 lattice for the plaquette lattice or a 48-site kagome lattice, which are beyond the possibilities of a standard exact diagonalization approach.Comment: 15 page

    Bench-to-bedside review: Candida infections in the intensive care unit.

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    Invasive mycoses are life-threatening opportunistic infections and have emerged as a major cause of morbidity and mortality in critically ill patients. This review focuses on recent advances in our understanding of the epidemiology, diagnosis and management of invasive candidiasis, which is the predominant fungal infection in the intensive care unit setting. Candida spp. are the fourth most common cause of bloodstream infections in the USA, but they are a much less common cause of bloodstream infections in Europe. About one-third of episodes of candidaemia occur in the intensive care unit. Until recently, Candida albicans was by far the predominant species, causing up to two-thirds of all cases of invasive candidiasis. However, a shift toward non-albicans Candida spp., such as C. glabrata and C. krusei, with reduced susceptibility to commonly used antifungal agents, was recently observed. Unfortunately, risk factors and clinical manifestations of candidiasis are not specific, and conventional culture methods such as blood culture systems lack sensitivity. Recent studies have shown that detection of circulating beta-glucan, mannan and antimannan antibodies may contribute to diagnosis of invasive candidiasis. Early initiation of appropriate antifungal therapy is essential for reducing the morbidity and mortality of invasive fungal infections. For decades, amphotericin B deoxycholate has been the standard therapy, but it is often poorly tolerated and associated with infusion-related acute reactions and nephrotoxicity. Azoles such as fluconazole and itraconazole provided the first treatment alternatives to amphotericin B for candidiasis. In recent years, several new antifungal agents have become available, offering additional therapeutic options for the management of Candida infections. These include lipid formulations of amphotericin B, new azoles (voriconazole and posaconazole) and echinocandins (caspofungin, micafungin and anidulafungin)

    Thermodynamic stabilities of ternary metal borides: An ab initio guide for synthesizing layered superconductors

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    Density functional theory calculations have been used to identify stable layered Li-MM-B crystal structure phases derived from a recently proposed binary metal-sandwich (MS) lithium monoboride superconductor. We show that the MS lithium monoboride gains in stability when alloyed with electron-rich metal diborides; the resulting ordered Li2(1x)Mx_{2(1-x)}M_xB2_2 ternary phases may form under normal synthesis conditions in a wide concentration range of xx for a number of group-III-V metals MM. In an effort to pre-select compounds with the strongest electron-phonon coupling we examine the softening of the in-plane boron phonon mode at Γ\Gamma in a large class of metal borides. Our results reveal interesting general trends for the frequency of the in-plane boron phonon modes as a function of the boron-boron bond length and the valence of the metal. One of the candidates with a promise to be an MgB2_2-type superconductor, Li2_2AlB4_4, has been examined in more detail: according to our {\it ab initio} calculations of the phonon dispersion and the electron-phonon coupling λ\lambda, the compound should have a critical temperature of 4\sim4 K.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PR

    Zero-Temperature Properties of the Quantum Dimer Model on the Triangular Lattice

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    Using exact diagonalizations and Green's function Monte Carlo simulations, we have studied the zero-temperature properties of the quantum dimer model on the triangular lattice on clusters with up to 588 sites. A detailed comparison of the properties in different topological sectors as a function of the cluster size and for different cluster shapes has allowed us to identify different phases, to show explicitly the presence of topological degeneracy in a phase close to the Rokhsar-Kivelson point, and to understand finite-size effects inside this phase. The nature of the various phases has been further investigated by calculating dimer-dimer correlation functions. The present results confirm and complement the phase diagram proposed by Moessner and Sondhi on the basis of finite-temperature simulations [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 86}, 1881 (2001)].Comment: 10 pages, 16 figure

    Angular dependence of core hole screening in LiCoO2: A DFT+U calculation of the oxygen and cobalt K-edge x-ray absorption spectra

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    Angular dependent core-hole screening effects have been found in the cobalt K-edge x-ray absorption spectrum of LiCoO2, using high-resolution data and parameter-free GGA+U calculations. The Co 1s core-hole on the absorber causes strong local attraction. The core-hole screening on the nearest neighbours cobalt induces a 2 eV shift in the density of states with respect to the on-site 1s-3d transitions, as detected in the Co K pre-edge spectrum. Our DFT+U calculations reveal that the off-site screening is different in the out-of-plane direction, where a 3 eV shift is visible in both calculations and experiment. The detailed analysis of the inclusion of the core-hole potential and the Hubbard parameter U shows that the core-hole is essential for the off-site screening, while U improves the description of the angular dependent screening effects. In the case of oxygen K-edge, both the core-hole potential and the Hubbard parameter improve the relative positions of the spectral features

    Large-N expansion based on the Hubbard operator path integral representation and its application to the t-J model II. The case for finite JJ

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    We have introduced a new perturbative approach for tJVt-J-V model where Hubbard operators are treated as fundamental objects. Using our vertices and propagators we have developed a controllable large-N expansion to calculate different correlation functions. We have investigated charge density-density response and the phase diagram of the model. The charge correlations functions are not very sensitive to the value of JJ and they show collective peaks (or zero sound) which are more pronounced when they are well separated (in energy) from the particle-hole continuum. For a given JJ a Fermi liquid state is found to be stable for doping δ\delta larger than a critical doping δc\delta_c. δc\delta_c decreases with decreasing JJ. For the physical region of the parameters and, for δ<δc\delta< \delta_c, the system enters in an incommensurate flux or DDW phase. The inclusion of the nearest-neighbors Coulomb repulsion VV leads to a CDW phase when VV is larger than a critical value VcV_c. The dependence of VcV_c with δ\delta and JJ is shown. We have compared the results with other ones in the literature.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    From antiferromagnetism to d-wave superconductivity in the 2D t-J model

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    We have found that the two dimensional t-J model, for the physical parameter range J/t = 0.4 reproduces the main experimental qualitative features of High-Tc copper oxide superconductors: d-wave superconducting correlations are strongly enhanced upon small doping and clear evidence of off diagonal long range order is found at the optimal doping \delta ~ 0.15. On the other hand antiferromagnetic long range order, clearly present at zero hole doping, is suppressed at small hole density with clear absence of antiferromagnetism at \delta >~ 0.1.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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