3,195 research outputs found
Creating a ‘new space’: code-switching among British-born Greek-Cypriots in London
This paper, located in the traditions of Interactional Sociolinguistics (Gumperz 1982) and Social Constructionism (Berger and Luckmann 1966), explores code-switching and identity practices amongst British-born Greek-Cypriots. The speakers, members of a Greek-Cypriot youth organization, are fluent in English and (with varying levels of fluency) speak the Greek-Cypriot Dialect. Quantitative and qualitative analyses of recordings of natural speech during youth community meetings and a social event show how a new ‘third space’ becomes reified through code-switching practices. By skilfully manipulating languages and styles, speakers draw on Greek-Cypriot cultural resources to accomplish two inter-related things. First, by displaying knowledge of familiar Greek-Cypriot cultural frames, they establish themselves as different from mainstream British society and establish solidarity as an in-group. Secondly, by using these frames in non-serious contexts, and at times mocking cultural attitudes and stereotypes, they challenge and re-appropriate their inherited Greek-Cypriot identity, thereby constructing the identity of British-born Greek-Cypriot youth
A model for time-dependent grain boundary diffusion of ions and electrons through a film or scale, with an application to alumina
A model for ionic and electronic grain boundary transport through thin films,
scales or membranes with columnar grain structure is introduced. The grain
structure is idealized as a lattice of identical hexagonal cells - a honeycomb
pattern. Reactions with the environment constitute the boundary conditions and
drive the transport between the surfaces. Time-dependent simulations solving
the Poisson equation self-consistently with the Nernst-Planck flux equations
for the mobile species are performed. In the resulting Poisson-Nernst-Planck
system of equations, the electrostatic potential is obtained from the Poisson
equation in its integral form by summation. The model is used to interpret
alumina membrane oxygen permeation experiments, in which different oxygen gas
pressures are applied at opposite membrane surfaces and the resulting flux of
oxygen molecules through the membrane is measured. Simulation results involving
four mobile species, charged aluminum and oxygen vacancies, electrons, and
holes, provide a complete description of the measurements and insight into the
microscopic processes underpinning the oxygen permeation of the membrane. Most
notably, the hypothesized transition between p-type and n-type ionic
conductivity of the alumina grain boundaries as a function of the applied
oxygen gas pressure is observed in the simulations. The range of validity of a
simple analytic model for the oxygen permeation rate, similar to the Wagner
theory of metal oxidation, is quantified by comparison to the numeric
simulations. The three-dimensional model we develop here is readily adaptable
to problems such as transport in a solid state electrode, or corrosion scale
growth
Equality and Differences
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Herbert Hart, published The Concept of Law, still deservedly best-seller in thought about law. It presents law, especially common law and constitutionally ordered systems such as ours, as a social reality which results from the sharing of ideas and making of decisions that, for good or evil, establish rules of law which are what they are, whether just or unjust. But right at its centre is a chapter on justice, informed by Hart’s professional knowledge of Plato and Aristotle and the tradition of civilized thought about justice, thought which he sums up like this: “the general principle latent in [the] diverse applications of the idea of justice is that individuals are entitled in respect of each other to a certain relative position of equality or inequality.” “Hence”, he goes on, “[the] leading precept [of justice] is often formulated as ‘Treat like cases alike’; though we need to add … ‘and treat different cases differently’”. This article will say something about three aspects of this vast topic: (i) about the factual basis and normative grounds of equality; (ii) about the proposed principle of equal concern; and (iii) about laws and social policies that pursue equality by selective prohibition of direct and indirect discrimination, and of harassment or vilification, victimisation and offence
Automatic Generation of Matrix Element Derivatives for Tight Binding Models
Tight binding (TB) models are one approach to the quantum mechanical many
particle problem. An important role in TB models is played by hopping and
overlap matrix elements between the orbitals on two atoms, which of course
depend on the relative positions of the atoms involved. This dependence can be
expressed with the help of Slater-Koster parameters, which are usually taken
from tables. Recently, a way to generate these tables automatically was
published. If TB approaches are applied to simulations of the dynamics of a
system, also derivatives of matrix elements can appear. In this work we give
general expressions for first and second derivatives of such matrix elements.
Implemented in a computer program they obviate the need to type all the
required derivatives of all occuring matrix elements by hand.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
A Stabilization Mechanism of Zirconia Based on Oxygen Vacancies Only
The microscopic mechanism leading to stabilization of cubic and tetragonal
forms of zirconia (ZrO) is analyzed by means of a self-consistent
tight-binding model. Using this model, energies and structures of zirconia
containing different vacancy concentrations are calculated, equivalent in
concentration to the charge compensating vacancies associated with dissolved
yttria (YO) in the tetragonal and cubic phase fields (3.2 and 14.4% mol
respectively). The model is shown to predict the large relaxations around an
oxygen vacancy, and the clustering of vacancies along the directions,
in good agreement with experiments and first principles calculations. The
vacancies alone are shown to explain the stabilization of cubic zirconia, and
the mechanism is analyzed.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures. To be published in J. Am. Ceram. So
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