1,816 research outputs found
Universality of ac-conduction in anisotropic disordered systems: An effective medium approximation study
Anisotropic disordered system are studied in this work within the random
barrier model. In such systems the transition probabilities in different
directions have different probability density functions. The
frequency-dependent conductivity at low temperatures is obtained using an
effective medium approximation. It is shown that the isotropic universal
ac-conduction law, , is recovered if properly scaled
conductivity () and frequency () variables are used.Comment: 5 pages, no figures, final form (with corrected equations
Tunable asymmetric reflectance in silver films near the percolation threshold
We report on the optical characterization of semicontinuous nanostructured
silver films exhibiting tunable optical reflectance asymmetries. The films are
obtained using a multi-step process, where a nanocrystalline silver film is
first chemically deposited on a glass substrate and then subsequently coated
with additional silver via thermal vacuum-deposition. The resulting films
exhibit reflectance asymmetries whose dispersions may be tuned both in sign and
in magnitude, as well as a universal, tunable spectral crossover point. We
obtain a correlation between the optical response and charge transport in these
films, with the spectral crossover point indicating the onset of charge
percolation. Such broadband, dispersion-tunable asymmetric reflectors may find
uses in future light-harvesting systems.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Journal of Applied Physic
Effective Elastic Moduli in Solids with High Crack Density
We investigate the weakening of elastic materials through randomly
distributed circles and cracks numerically and compare the results to
predictions from homogenization theories. We find a good agreement for the case
of randomly oriented cracks of equal length in an isotropic plane-strain medium
for lower crack densities; for higher densities the material is weaker than
predicted due to precursors of percolation. For a parallel alignment of cracks,
where percolation does not occur, we analytically predict a power law decay of
the effective elastic constants for high crack densities, and confirm this
result numerically.Comment: 8 page
British Bryological Society expedition to Mulanje Mountain, Malawi : 13., new and other unpublished records
Further results are provided of the 1991 British Bryological Society Expedition to Mulanje Mt., Malawi including 168 taxa of bryophyte, comprising 72 taxa of liverwort (38 new to Malawi) and 96 taxa of mosses (45 new to Malawi)
Spectral Representation for the Effective Macroscopic Response of a Polycrystal: Application to Third-Order Nonlinear Susceptibility
Erratum:
In our paper, we show that the spectral representation for isotropic
two-component composites also applies to uniaxial polycrystals. We have learned
that this result was, in fact, first conjectured by G.W. Milton. While our
derivation is more detailed, our result for the spectral function is the same
as Milton's. We very much regret not having been aware of this work at the time
of writing our paper.
Original abstract:
We extend the spectral theory used for the calculation of the effective
linear response functions of composites to the case of a polycrystalline
material with uniaxially anisotropic microscopic symmetry. As an application,
we combine these results with a nonlinear decoupling approximation as modified
by Ma et al., to calculate the third-order nonlinear optical susceptibility of
a uniaxial polycrystal, assuming that the effective dielectric function of the
polycrystal can be calculated within the effective-medium approximation.Comment: v2 includes erratum and the original preprin
Potential dietary feed additives with antibacterial effects and their impact on performance of weaned piglets : a meta-analysis
This meta-analysis evaluated the use of potential dietary feed additives (pDFA) with antibacterial effects and their impact on the perfomance of weaned piglets. Twenty-three peer-reviewed in vivo studies, comprising 50 trials, were identified between January 2010 and January 2017. The pDFA in these studies could be grouped in 5 classes: antimicrobial peptides, chitosan, lysozyme, medium chain fatty acids/triglycerides and plant extracts. Mixed-effect meta-analyses with type of pDFA as fixed effect were performed for the growth parameters 'average daily gain' (ADG) and 'feed conversion ratio' (FCR), which are the two most important and used economic performance parameters for farmers.
For each class of pDFA, results of the meta-analysis showed significantly higher average daily gain in the group with pDFA compared to the negative control group, while no significant difference with the positive control group was observed. Furthermore, a positive effect on FCR was found, i.e. significantly less feed was needed to gain 1 kg of body weight in the group with pDFA compared to the negative control group. No significant differences with positive control groups were observed for each class of pDFA, except for plant extracts, where the FCR was also significantly reduced in the treatment group. These results suggest that pDFA could reduce the use of antimicrobials without significant negative effects on performance indicators
A Superlens Based on Metal-Dielectric Composites
Pure noble metals are typically considered to be the materials of choice for
a near-field superlens that allows subwavelength resolution by recovering both
propagating and evanescent waves. However, a superlens based on bulk metal can
operate only at a single frequency for a given dielectric host. In this Letter,
it is shown that a composite metal-dielectric film, with an appropriate metal
filling factor, can operate at practically any desired wavelength in the
visible and near-infrared ranges. Theoretical analysis and simulations verify
the feasibility of the proposed lens.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Modelling water-harvesting systems in the arid south of Tunisia using SWAT
In many arid countries, runoff water-harvesting systems support the livelihood of the rural population. Little is known, however, about the effect of these systems on the water balance components of arid watersheds. The objective of this study was to adapt and evaluate the GIS-based watershed model SWAT (Soil Water Assessment Tool) for simulating the main hydrologic processes in arid environments. The model was applied to the 270-km(2) watershed of wadi Koutine in southeast Tunisia, which receives about 200 mm annual rain. The main adjustment for adapting the model to this dry Mediterranean environment was the inclusion of water-harvesting systems, which capture and use surface runoff for crop production in upstream subbasins, and a modification of the crop growth processes. The adjusted version of the model was named SWAT-WH. Model evaluation was performed based on 38 runoff events recorded at the Koutine station between 1973 and 1985. The model predicted that the average annual watershed rainfall of the 12-year evaluation period (209 mm) was split into ET (72%), groundwater recharge (22%) and outflow (6%). The evaluation coefficients for calibration and validation were, respectively, R-2 (coefficient of determination) 0.77 and 0.44; E (Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient) 0.73 and 0.43; and MAE (Mean Absolute Error) 2.6 mm and 3.0 mm, indicating that the model could reproduce the observed events reasonably well. However, the runoff record was dominated by two extreme events, which had a strong effect on the evaluation criteria. Discrepancies remained mainly due to uncertainties in the observed daily rainfall and runoff data. Recommendations for future research include the installation of additional rainfall and runoff gauges with continuous data logging and the collection of more field data to represent the soils and land use. In addition, crop growth and yield monitoring is needed for a proper evaluation of crop production, to allow an economic assessment of the different water uses in the watershed
Anisotropic dielectric function in polar nano-regions of relaxor ferroelectrics
The paper suggests to treat the infrared reflectivity spectra of single
crystal perovskite relaxors as fine-grained ferroelectric ceramics: locally
frozen polarization makes the dielectric function strongly anisotropic in the
phonon frequency range and the random orientation of the polarization at
nano-scopic scale requires to take into account the inhomogeneous
depolarization field. Employing a simple effective medium approximation
(Bruggeman symmetrical formula) to dielectric function describing the polar
optic modes as damped harmonic oscillators turns out to be sufficient for
reproducing all principal features of room temperature reflectivity of PMN. One
of the reflectivity bands is identified as a geometrical resonance entirely
related to the nanoscale polarization inhomogeneity. The approach provides a
general guide for systematic determination of the polar mode frequencies split
by the inhomogeneous polarization at nanometer scale.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Plasmon tunability in metallodielectric metamaterials
The dielectric properties of metamaterials consisting of periodically
arranged metallic nanoparticles of spherical shape are calculated by rigorously
solving Maxwell's equations. Effective dielectric functions are obtained by
comparing the reflectivity of planar surfaces limiting these materials with
Fresnel's formulas for equivalent homogeneous media, showing mixing and
splitting of individual-particle modes due to inter-particle interaction.
Detailed results for simple cubic and fcc crystals of aluminum spheres in
vacuum, silver spheres in vacuum, and silver spheres in a silicon matrix are
presented. The filling fraction of the metal f is shown to determine the
position of the plasmon modes of these metamaterials. Significant deviations
are observed with respect to Maxwell-Garnett effective medium theory for large
f, and multiple plasmons are predicted to exist in contrast to Maxwell-Garnett
theory.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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