50 research outputs found
Comment on "Long-range electrostatic interactions between like-charged colloids: Steric and confinement effects"
In a recent study [Phys. Rev. E 60, 6530 (1999)], Trizac and Raimbault showed
that the effective pair interaction between like charged colloids immersed in a
cylindrically confined electrolyte remains repulsive even when the size of the
micro-ions or the finite longitudinal extension of the confining cylinder are
taken into account. Contrary to their claim, we argue that the case of finite
longitudinal confinement doesn't always generate repulsive interactions and to
illustrate this point we also provide a simple example.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E 200
Theory of Double-Sided Flux Decorations
A novel two-sided Bitter decoration technique was recently employed by Yao et
al. to study the structure of the magnetic vortex array in high-temperature
superconductors. Here we discuss the analysis of such experiments. We show that
two-sided decorations can be used to infer {\it quantitative} information about
the bulk properties of flux arrays, and discuss how a least squares analysis of
the local density differences can be used to bring the two sides into registry.
Information about the tilt, compressional and shear moduli of bulk vortex
configurations can be extracted from these measurements.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures not included (to request send email to
[email protected]
A scalable quantum computer with an ultranarrow optical transition of ultracold neutral atoms in an optical lattice
We propose a new quantum-computing scheme using ultracold neutral ytterbium
atoms in an optical lattice. The nuclear Zeeman sublevels define a qubit. This
choice avoids the natural phase evolution due to the magnetic dipole
interaction between qubits. The Zeeman sublevels with large magnetic moments in
the long-lived metastable state are also exploited to address individual atoms
and to construct a controlled-multiqubit gate. Estimated parameters required
for this scheme show that this proposal is scalable and experimentally
feasible.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
A mean-field kinetic lattice gas model of electrochemical cells
We develop Electrochemical Mean-Field Kinetic Equations (EMFKE) to simulate
electrochemical cells. We start from a microscopic lattice-gas model with
charged particles, and build mean-field kinetic equations following the lines
of earlier work for neutral particles. We include the Poisson equation to
account for the influence of the electric field on ion migration, and
oxido-reduction processes on the electrode surfaces to allow for growth and
dissolution. We confirm the viability of our approach by simulating (i) the
electrochemical equilibrium at flat electrodes, which displays the correct
charged double-layer, (ii) the growth kinetics of one-dimensional
electrochemical cells during growth and dissolution, and (iii) electrochemical
dendrites in two dimensions.Comment: 14 pages twocolumn, 17 figure
Domain regime in two-dimensional disordered vortex matter
A detailed numerical study of the real space configuration of vortices in
disordered superconductors using 2D London-Langevin model is presented. The
magnetic field is varied between 0 and for various pinning
strengths . For weak pinning, an inhomogeneous disordered vortex matter
is observed, in which the topologically ordered vortex lattice survives in
large domains. The majority of the dislocations in this state are confined to
the grain boundaries/domain walls. Such quasi-ordered configurations are
observed in the intermediate fields, and we refer it as the domain regime (DR).
The DR is distinct from the low-field and the high-fields amorphous regimes
which are characterized by a homogeneous distribution of defects over the
entire system. Analysis of the real space configuration suggests domain wall
roughening as a possible mechanism for the crossover from the DR to the
high-field amorphous regime. The DR also shows a sharp crossover to the high
temperature vortex liquid phase. The domain size distribution and the roughness
exponent of the lattice in the DR are also calculated. The results are compared
with some of the recent Bitter decoration experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Hidden Voices of Black Men
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66982/2/10.1177_002193479402500102.pd
Phase Behavior of Type-II Superconductors with Quenched Point Pinning Disorder: A Phenomenological Proposal
A general phenomenology for phase behaviour in the mixed phase of type-II
superconductors with weak point pinning disorder is outlined. We propose that
the ``Bragg glass'' phase generically transforms via two separate thermodynamic
phase transitions into a disordered liquid on increasing the temperature. The
first transition is into a glassy phase, topologically disordered at the
largest length scales; current evidence suggests that it lacks the long-ranged
phase correlations expected of a ``vortex glass''. This phase has a significant
degree of short-ranged translational order, unlike the disordered liquid, but
no quasi-long range order, in contrast to the Bragg glass. This glassy phase,
which we call a ``multi-domain glass'', is confined to a narrow sliver at
intermediate fields, but broadens out both for much larger and much smaller
field values. The multi-domain glass may be a ``hexatic glass''; alternatively,
its glassy properties may originate in the replica symmetry breaking envisaged
in recent theories of the structural glass transition. Estimates for
translational correlation lengths in the multi-domain glass indicate that they
can be far larger than the interline spacing for weak disorder, suggesting a
plausible mechanism by which signals of a two-step transition can be obscured.
Calculations of the Bragg glass-multi-domain glass and the multi-domain
glass-disordered liquid phase boundaries are presented and compared to
experimental data. We argue that these proposals provide a unified picture of
the available experimental data on both high-T and low-T materials,
simulations and current theoretical understanding.Comment: 70 pages, 9 postscript figures, modified title and minor changes in
published versio
An interlaboratory comparison on the characterization of a sub-micrometer polydisperse particle dispersion
The measurement of polydisperse protein aggregates and particles in biotherapeutics remains a challenge, especially for particles with diameters of ≈ 1 µm and below (sub-micrometer). This paper describes an interlaboratory comparison with the goal of assessing the measurement variability for the characterization of a sub-micrometer polydisperse particle dispersion composed of five sub-populations of poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and silica beads. The study included 20 participating laboratories from industry, academia, and government, and a variety of state-of-the-art particle-counting instruments. The received datasets were organized by instrument class to enable comparison of intralaboratory and interlaboratory performance. The main findings included high variability between datasets from different laboratories, with coefficients of variation from 13 % to 189 %. Intralaboratory variability was, on average, 37 % of the interlaboratory variability for an instrument class and particle sub-population. Drop-offs at either end of the size range and poor agreement on maximum counts of particle sub-populations were noted. The mean distributions from an instrument class, however, showed the size-coverage range for that class. The study shows that a poly-disperse sample can be used to assess performance capabilities of an instrument set-up (including hardware, software, and user settings) and provides guidance for the development of polydisperse reference materials.Drug Delivery Technolog
