1,384 research outputs found
Correlation between electric-field-induced phase transition and piezoelectricity in lead zirconate titanate films
We observed that electric field induces phase transition from tetragonal to
rhombohedral in polycrystalline morphotropic lead zirconate titanate (PZT)
films, as reported in 2011 for bulk PZT. Moreover, we evidenced that this
field-induced phase transition is strongly correlated with PZT film
piezoelectric properties, that is to say the larger the phase transition, the
larger the longitudinal piezoelectric coefficient d 33,eff . Although d 33,eff
is already comprised between as 150 to 170 pm/V, our observation suggests that
one could obtain larger d 33,eff values, namely 250 pm/V, by optimizing the
field-induced phase transition thanks to composition fine tuning
Histogram analysis as a method for determining the line tension by Monte-Carlo simulations
A method is proposed for determining the line tension, which is the main
physical characteristic of a three-phase contact region, by Monte-Carlo (MC)
simulations. The key idea of the proposed method is that if a three-phase
equilibrium involves a three-phase contact region, the probability distribution
of states of a system as a function of two order parameters depends not only on
the surface tension, but also on the line tension. This probability
distribution can be obtained as a normalized histogram by appropriate MC
simulations, so one can use the combination of histogram analysis and
finite-size scaling to study the properties of a three phase contact region.
Every histogram and results extracted therefrom will depend on the size of the
simulated system. Carrying out MC simulations for a series of system sizes and
extrapolating the results, obtained from the corresponding series of
histograms, to infinite size, one can determine the line tension of the three
phase contact region and the interfacial tensions of all three interfaces (and
hence the contact angles) in an infinite system. To illustrate the proposed
method, it is applied to the three-dimensional ternary fluid mixture, in which
molecular pairs of like species do not interact whereas those of unlike species
interact as hard spheres. The simulated results are in agreement with
expectations
Multilayer approximation for a confined fluid in a slit pore
A simple Lennard-Jones fluid confined in a slit nanopore with hard walls is
studied on the basis of a multilayer structured model. Each layer is
homogeneous and parallel to the walls of the pore. The Helmholtz energy of this
system is constructed following van der Waals-like approximations, with the
advantage that the model geometry permits to obtain analytical expressions for
the integrals involved. Being the multilayer system in thermodynamic
equilibrium, a system of non-linear equations is obtained for the densities and
widths of the layers. A numerical solution of the equations gives the density
profile and the longitudinal pressures. The results are compared with Monte
Carlo simulations and with experimental data for Nitrogen, showing very good
agreement.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures
A General Theory of Non-equilibrium Dynamics of Lipid-protein Fluid Membranes
We present a general and systematic theory of non-equilibrium dynamics of
multi-component fluid membranes, in general, and membranes containing
transmembrane proteins, in particular. Developed based on a minimal number of
principles of statistical physics and designed to be a meso/macroscopic-scale
effective description, the theory is formulated in terms of a set of equations
of hydrodynamics and linear constitutive relations. As a particular emphasis of
the theory, the equations and the constitutive relations address both the
thermodynamic and the hydrodynamic consequences of the unconventional material
characteristics of lipid-protein membranes and contain proposals as well as
predictions which have not yet been made in already existed work on membrane
hydrodynamics and which may have experimental relevance. The framework
structure of the theory makes possible its applications to a range of
non-equilibrium phenomena in a range of membrane systems, as discussions in the
paper of a few limit cases demonstrate.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures, minor changes and addition
Status of the EDELWEISS-II experiment
EDELWEISS is a direct dark matter search experiment situated in the low
radioactivity environment of the Modane Underground Laboratory. The experiment
uses Ge detectors at very low temperature in order to identify eventual rare
nuclear recoils induced by elastic scattering of WIMPs from our Galactic halo.
We present results of the commissioning of the second phase of the experiment,
involving more than 7 kg of Ge, that has been completed in 2007. We describe
two new types of detectors with active rejection of events due to surface
contamination. This active rejection is required in order to achieve the
physics goals of 10-8 pb cross-section measurement for the current phase
Cryogenic silicon detectors with implanted contacts for the detection of visible photons using the Neganov-Luke Effect
There is a common need in astroparticle experiments such as direct dark
matter detection, 0{\nu}\b{eta}\b{eta} (double beta decay without emission of
neutrinos) and Coherent Neutrino Nucleus Scattering experiments for light
detectors with a very low energy threshold. By employing the Neganov-Luke
Effect, the thermal signal of particle interactions in a semiconductor absorber
operated at cryogenic temperatures, can be amplified by drifting the
photogenerated electrons and holes in an electric field. This technology is not
used in current experiments, in particular because of a reduction of the signal
amplitude with time which is due to trapping of the charges within the
absorber. We present here the first results of a novel type of Neganov-Luke
Effect detector with an electric field configuration designed to improve the
charge collection within the semiconductor.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Journal of Low Temperature Physic
Electrocaloric effects in the lead-free Ba(Zr,Ti)O relaxor ferroelectric from atomistic simulations
Atomistic effective Hamiltonian simulations are used to investigate
electrocaloric (EC) effects in the lead-free Ba(ZrTi)O
(BZT) relaxor ferroelectric. We find that the EC coefficient varies
non-monotonically with the field at any temperature, presenting a maximum that
can be traced back to the behavior of BZT's polar nanoregions. We also
introduce a simple Landau-based model that reproduces the EC behavior of BZT as
a function of field and temperature, and which is directly applicable to other
compounds. Finally, we confirm that, for low temperatures (i.e., in non-ergodic
conditions), the usual indirect approach to measure the EC response provides an
estimate that differs quantitatively from a direct evaluation of the
field-induced temperature change.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Low-Temperature Relative Reflectivity Measurements of Reflective and Scintillating Foils used in Rare Event Searches
In this work we investigate the reflectivity of highly reflective multilayer
polymer foils used in the CRESST experiment. The CRESST experiment searches
directly for dark matter via operating scintillating CaWO crystals as
targets for elastic dark matter-nucleon scattering. In order to suppress
background events, the experiment employs the so-called phonon-light technique
which is based on the simultaneous measurement of the heat signal in the main
CaWO target crystal and of the emitted scintillation light with a separate
cryogenic light detector. Both detectors are surrounded by a highly reflective
and scintillating multilayer polymer foil to increase the light collection
efficiency and to veto surface backgrounds. While this study is motivated by
the CRESST experiment, the results are also relevant for other rare event
searches using scintillating cryogenic bolometers in the field of the search of
dark matter and neutrinoless double beta decay (). In this work
a dedicated experiment has been set up to determine the relative reflectivity
at 300 K and 20 K of three multilayer foils ("VM2000", "VM2002", "Vikuiti")
produced by the company 3M. The intensity of a light beam reflected off the
foil is measured with a CCD camera. The ratio of the intensities at 300 K and
20 K corresponds to the relative reflectivity change. The measurements
performed in this work show no significant change in the reflectivity with
temperature for all foils studied.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Efficient analysis in planet transit surveys
With the growing number of projects dedicated to the search for extrasolar
planets via transits, there is a need to develop fast, automatic, robust
methods with a statistical background in order to efficiently do the analysis.
We propose a modified analysis of variance (AoV) test particularly suitable for
the detection of planetary transits in stellar light curves. We show how
savings of labor by a factor of over 10 could be achieved by the careful
organization of computations. Basing on solid analytical statistical
formulation, we discuss performance of our and other methods for different
signal-to-noise and number of observations.Comment: 7 pages, to be published in MNRAS, downloadable software from
http://www.camk.edu.pl/~alex/#softwar
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