61,255 research outputs found
The origin of the difference in the superconducting critical temperatures of the beta_H and beta_L phases of (BEDT-TTF)_2I_3
Incommensurate lattice fluctuations are present in the beta_L phase (T_c =
1.5 K) of ET_2I_3 (where ET is BEDT-TTF -
bis(ethylenedithio)tetrathiafulvalene) but are absent in the beta_H phase (T_c
= 7 K). We propose that the disorder in the conformational degrees of freedom
of the terminal ethylene groups of the ET molecules, which is required to
stabilise the lattice fluctuations, increases the quasiparticle scattering rate
and that this leads to the observed difference in the superconducting critical
temperatures, T_c, of the two phases. We calculate the dependence of T_c on the
interlayer residual resistivity. Our theory has no free parameters. Our
predictions are shown to be consistent with experiment. We describe experiments
to conclusively test our hypothesis.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Tone-burst technique measures high-intensity sound absorption
Tone-burst technique, in which narrow-bandwidth, short-duration sonic pulse is propagated down a standing-wave tube, measures sound absorbing capacity of materials used in jet engine noise abatement. Technique eliminates effects of tube losses and yields normal-incidence absorption coefficient of specimen
Geometrical frustration in the spin liquid beta'-Me3EtSb[Pd(dmit)2]2 and the valence bond solid Me3EtP[Pd(dmit)2]2
We show that the electronic structures of the title compounds predicted by
density functional theory (DFT) are well described by tight binding models. We
determine the frustration ratio, J'/J, of the Heisenberg model on the
anisotropic triangular lattice, which describes the spin degrees of freedom in
the Mott insulating phase for a range of Pd(dmit)2 salts. All of the
antiferromagnetic materials studied have J'/J 0.9, consistent
with predictions for the Heisenberg model. All salts with 0.5 < J'/J < 0.9,
where many-body theories find a number of competing ground states, are known,
experimentally, to be charge ordered, valence bond solids or spin liquids.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. 4+11 pages, 3+15
figures, major rewrite, added calculations of Hubbard
Advanced high-temperature electromagnetic pump
Three phase helical, electromagnetic induction pump for use as boiler feed pump in potassium Rankine-cycle power system is described. Techniques for fabricating components of pump are discussed. Specifications of pump are analyzed
Hydrogen detection study
The effectiveness was assessed of a hydrogen (H2) detection concept for regenerative environmental control life support systems (EC/LSS). The concept evaluated was that utilized for the electrochemical depolarized concentrator (EDC) design, constructed, and tested for the EC/LSS space station prototype program. The EDC contains combustible gas detectors (CGDs) which were evaluated with H2. The CGDs were evaluated for linearity, position sensitivity, reproducibility, ambient effects, repeatability, speed of response, recovery time, and interchangeability. The effectiveness of CGDs located within the EDC for sensing H2 leaks at various line replaceable units in the subsystem was determined. The effects of H2 leak rate, H2 concentration of leaking gas and air currents in the vicinity of the EDC were determined. Proposed improvements for the H2 detection concept were documented and alternative H2 detection approaches were identified and analyzed
Unified explanation of the Kadowaki-Woods ratio in strongly correlated materials
Discoveries of ratios whose values are constant within broad classes of
materials have led to many deep physical insights. The Kadowaki-Woods ratio
(KWR) compares the temperature dependence of a metal's resistivity to that of
its heat capacity; thereby probing the relationship between the
electron-electron scattering rate and the renormalisation of the electron mass.
However, the KWR takes very different values in different materials. Here we
introduce a ratio, closely related to the KWR, that includes the effects of
carrier density and spatial dimensionality and takes the same (predicted) value
in organic charge transfer salts, transition metal oxides, heavy fermions and
transition metals - despite the numerator and denominator varying by ten orders
of magnitude. Hence, in these materials, the same emergent physics is
responsible for the mass enhancement and the quadratic temperature dependence
of the resistivity and no exotic explanations of their KWRs are required.Comment: Final version accepted by Nature Phy
An Experimental Test of Buffer Utility as a Technique for Managing Pool-Breeding Amphibians
Vegetated buffers are used extensively to manage wetland-dependent wildlife. Despite widespread application, buffer utility has not been experimentally validated for most species. To address this gap, we conducted a six-year, landscape-scale experiment, testing how buffers of different widths affect the demographic structure of two amphibian species at 11 ephemeral pools in a working forest of the northeastern U.S. We randomly assigned each pool to one of three treatments (i.e., reference, 100m buffer, 30m buffer) and clearcut to create buffers. We captured all spotted salamanders and wood frogs breeding in each pool and examined the impacts of treatment and hydroperiod on breeding-population abundance, sex ratio, and recapture rate. The negative effects of clearcutting tended to increase as forest-buffer width decreased and be strongest for salamanders and when other stressors were present (e.g., at short-hydroperiod pools). Recapture rates were reduced in the 30m, but not 100m, treatment. Throughout the experiment for frogs, and during the first year post-cut for salamanders, the predicted mean proportion of recaptured adults in the 30m treatment was only 62% and 40%, respectively, of that in the reference treatment. Frog sex ratio and abundance did not differ across treatments, but salamander sex ratios were increasingly male-biased in both cut treatments. By the final year, there were on average, only about 40% and 65% as many females predicted in the 100m and 30m treatments, respectively, compared to the first year. Breeding salamanders at short-hydroperiod pools were about 10% as abundant in the 100m versus reference treatment. Our study demonstrates that buffers partially mitigate the impacts of habitat disturbance on wetland-dependent amphibians, but buffer width and hydroperiod critically mediate that process. We provide the first experimental evidence showing that 30-m-wide buffers may be insufficient for maintaining resilient breeding populations of pool-dependent amphibians, at least during the first six years post-disturbance
Improved device measures performance of batteries under load
Kordesch-Marko interrupter bridge circuit includes capability of varying frequency of interruption in steps from 60 Hz to 2000 Hz range extension, and addition of operating modes to allow instrument to serve as steady dc constant-current source or load, or source of interrupted constant current
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