scholarly journals High-Frequency Metal-Oxide Varistor Modeling Response to Early-time Electromagnetic Pulses

Author(s):  
Tyler Bowman ◽  
Matt Halligan ◽  
Rodrigo Llanes
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang Fang ◽  
Jie Zhang ◽  
Pei Zhuang ◽  
Pingting Liu ◽  
Liang Li ◽  
...  

AbstractRecently, we established silicone oil-induced ocular hypertension (SOHU) mouse model with significant glaucomatous neurodegeneration. Here we characterize two additional variations of this model that simulate two distinct glaucoma types. The first is a chronic model produced by high frequency (HF) pupillary dilation after SO-induced pupillary block, which shows sustained moderate IOP elevation and corresponding slow, mild glaucomatous neurodegeneration. We also demonstrate that although SO removal quickly returns IOP to normal, the glaucomatous neurodegeneration continues to advance to a similar degree as in the HF group without SO removal. The second, an acute model created by no pupillary dilation (ND), shows a greatly elevated IOP and severe inner retina degeneration at an early time point. Therefore, by a straightforward dilation scheme, we extend our original SOHU model to recapitulate phenotypes of two major glaucoma forms, which will be invaluable for selecting neuroprotectants and elucidating their molecular mechanisms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Rivera Martinez ◽  
Diego Santaren ◽  
Olivier Laurent ◽  
Ford Cropley ◽  
Cecile Mallet ◽  
...  

<p>Deploying a dense network of sensors around emitting industrial facilities allows to detect and quantify possible CH<sub>4 </sub>leaks and monitor the emissions continuously. Designing such a monitoring network with highly precise instruments is limited by the elevated cost of instruments, requirements of power consumption and maintenance. Low cost and low power metal oxide sensor could come handy to be an alternative to deploy this kind of network at a fraction of the cost with satisfactory quality of measurements for such applications.</p><p>Recent studies have tested Metal Oxide Sensors (MO<sub>x</sub>) on natural and controlled conditions to measure atmospheric methane concentrations and showed a fair agreement with high precision instruments, such as those from Cavity Ring Down Spectrometers (CRDS). Such results open perspectives regarding the potential of MOx to be employed as an alternative to measure and quantify CH<sub>4</sub> emissions on industrial facilities. However, such sensors are known to drift with time, to be highly sensitive to water vapor mole fraction, have a poor selectivity with several known cross-sensitivities to other species and present significant sensitivity environmental factors like temperature and pressure. Different approaches for the derivation of CH<sub>4</sub> mole fractions from the MO<sub>x</sub> signal and ancillary parameter measurements have been employed to overcome these problems, from traditional approaches like linear or multilinear regressions to machine learning (ANN, SVM or Random Forest).</p><p>Most studies were focused on the derivation of ambient CH<sub>4</sub> concentrations under different conditions, but few tests assessed the performance of these sensors to capture CH<sub>4</sub> variations at high frequency, with peaks of elevated concentrations, which corresponds well with the signal observed from point sources in industrial sites presenting leakage and isolated methane emission. We conducted a continuous controlled experiment over four months (from November 2019 to February 2020) in which three types of MOx Sensors from Figaro® measured high frequency CH<sub>4</sub> peaks with concentrations varying between atmospheric background levels up to 24 ppm at LSCE, Saclay, France. We develop a calibration strategy including a two-step baseline correction and compared different approaches to reconstruct CH<sub>4</sub> spikes such as linear, multilinear and polynomial regression, and ANN and random forest algorithms. We found that baseline correction in the pre-processing stage improved the reconstruction of CH<sub>4</sub> concentrations in the spikes. The random forest models performed better than other methods achieving a mean RMSE = 0.25 ppm when reconstructing peaks amplitude over windows of 4 days. In addition, we conducted tests to determine the minimum amount of data required to train successful models for predicting CH<sub>4</sub> spikes, and the needed frequency of re-calibration / re-training under these controlled circumstances. We concluded that for a target RMSE <= 0.3 ppm at a measurement frequency of 5s, 4 days of training are required, and a recalibration / re-training is recommended every 30 days.</p><p>Our study presents a new approach to process and reconstruct observations from low cost CH<sub>4</sub> sensors and highlights its potential to quantify high concentration releases in industrial facilities.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 (1) ◽  
pp. 000365-000369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiming Liu ◽  
Sara Hunegnaw ◽  
Hailuo Fu ◽  
Jun Wang ◽  
Tafadzwa Magaya ◽  
...  

Inorganic interposers made of glass are attractive for advanced high frequency applications and ultra- fine line patterning technology. Because glass combines a couple of benefits like large form factor, good coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) matching to silicon, smooth surface and a low dielectric constant and loss tangent. Recently much progress has been made with respect to glass electrical and physical properties. This allows for handling of thin glass sheets down to 100 μm in a typical PCB panel format. Also advances have been made in the area of laser drilling allowing aspect ratio up to 1:10 for 25 μm diameter of through glass via (TGV). Another major challenge is the cost competitive and reliable metallization of smooth glass, a critical prerequisite for the use of glass substrates in the electronic packaging market. Plated copper does not adhere directly to glass. Sputtering technology typically also requires a 50 nm thick adhesion promoting metal layer (like Ti) before copper can be seeded. This metal layer could not be etched together with the copper and needs to be removed between traces by etching in an additional step. A volatile flammable solvent based metal oxide precursor coating solution has been used to make an adhesive metal oxide layer by a modified sol-gel process. To prevent potential safety issue for mass production water based metal oxide precursor coating solution so called VitroCoat GI W has been developed. The VitroCoat GI W solution can be dip-coated on flat glass surface and TGVs followed by sintering to form an ultrathin metal oxide adhesion layer (about 10nm). The thin adhesive layer enables electroless and electrolytic copper plating directly onto glass substrates without changing any of the glass properties or impacting high frequency performance. The thin metal oxide adhesive layer is non-conductive and can be easily removed from the area between circuit traces. This paper will focus on the coating uniformity and capability of VitroCoat GI W on flat glass surface and TGVs and the adhesion of wet chemical metallization on glass interposer. This adhesion layer can be used for copper fine line patterning on glass and radio frequency (RF) device fabrication.


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