Description of the Atomic Positions Around Interfacial Ledges in Terms of the Somigliana Dislocation Model

1991 ◽  
Vol 238 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Bonnet ◽  
M. Loubradou

ABSTRACTIn many materials, crystalline interfaces are facetted. The experimental evidence is that on each side of an interfacial ledge, or along the facets meeting along a common line, low energy atomic structural units are preserved which accommodate elastically angular or/and length misfit(s). Each facet can be considered as a Somigliana dislocation (SD) whose core is extended on the facet. The elastic displacement field of a SD is derived in an anisotropic continuum, for any orientation of the facet relative to a given Cartesian frame. From an atomic point of view, the translation state of the two crystals on each side of the facet is defined. The dislocation content attached to a ledge or a dihedral angle formed by two joining facets along a common side is also analyzed. The local elastic field related to these cases are derived and applications are presented for depicting the positions of the atomic columns in theoretical plots. Comparisons are made with some other theoretical works and HRTEM images. Examples illustrate the application of the Somigliana model to grain boundaries in hexagonal crystals (Mg, WC), and an interphase interface Ni3AI/Ni3Nb.

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Zelevinsky

From the practical position of a quantum theoretician working in low-energy physics, here is a more modest point of view on the symmetry problem, including its various manifestations and violations.


2009 ◽  
Vol 1181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liangdeng Yu ◽  
S. Anuntalabhochai

AbstractMeV-ion beam has long been applied to biology research and applications for many decades as highly energetic ions are undoubtedly able to interact directly with biology molecules to cause changes in biology. However, low-energy ion beam at tens of keV and even lower has also been found to have significant biological effects on living materials. The finding has led to applications of ion-beam induced mutation and gene transfer. From the theoretical point of view, the low-energy ion beam effects on biology are difficult to understand since the ion range is so short that the ions can hardly directly interact with the key biological molecules for the changes. This talk introduces interesting aspects of low-energy ion beam biology, including basis of ion beam biotechnology and recent developments achieved in Chiang Mai University in relevant applications such as mutation and gene transfer and investigations on mechanisms involved in the low-energy ion interaction with biological matter such as eV-keV ion beam bombardments of naked DNA and the cell envelopes.


Author(s):  
L. Caillé ◽  
J L. Hanus ◽  
F. Delvare ◽  
N. Michaux-Leblonda

A method is proposed to solve an inverse problem in twodimensional linear isotropic elasticity. The inverse problem consists of the determination of both the entire displacement field and the boundary conditions inaccessible to the measurement from the partial knowledge of the displacement field. The algorithm is based on a fading regularization method (FRM) and is numerically implemented using the method of fundamental solutions (MFS). The inverse technique is first validated with synthetic data and is then applied to the interpretation of experimental measurements obtained by digital image correlation (DIC).


1989 ◽  
Vol 04 (08) ◽  
pp. 2031-2060 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. V. EFIMOV ◽  
M. A. IVANOV

We present a quark confinement model (QCM) for the description of the low energy physics of light hadrons (meson and baryons). The model is based on two hypotheses. First, the quark confinement is realized as averaging over some vacuum gluon fields which are believed to provide the confinement of any color objects. Second, hadrons are treated as collective colorless excitations of quark-gluon interactions. The description of strong, electromagnetic and weak interactions of mesons and baryons at the low energy is given from a unique point of view.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Even ◽  
Malte Westerhaus ◽  
Verena Simon

<p>The cavern field at Epe has been brined out of a salt deposit belonging to the lower Rhine salt flat, which extends under the surface of the North German lowlands and part of the Netherlands, and is used to store e.g. natural gas, brine and petroleum. Cavern convergence and operational pressure changes cause surface displacements that have been studied for this work with the help of SAR interferometry (InSAR) using distributed and persistent scatterers. Vertical and East-West movements have been determined based on Sentinel-1 data from ascending and descending orbit. Simple geophysical modeling is used to support InSAR processing and helps to interpret the observations. In particular, an approach is presented that allows to relate the deposit pressures with the observed surface displacements. Seasonal movements occurring over a fen situated over the western part of the storage site further complicate the analysis. Findings are validated with ground truth from levelling and groundwater level measurements.</p><p>For porous storage sites the geomechanic response can be described as elastic: displacement is almost proportional to reservoir pressure and displays the same pronounced seasonal behavior. At Epe the visco-elastic response of the salt layer has to be considered. The general appearance of the surface displacement is that of a strongly smoothed and shifted version of the cavern pressure curve. To deal with this situation a temporal model for displacement with pressure changes (pressure response) is derived that relates cavern pressure with observed displacement based on the theory for visco-elastic behavior of a Kelvin-Voigt body.</p><p>In order to deal successfully with the challenging displacement field at Epe several algorithmic improvements were implemented. To obtain a more complete picture of the displacement field DS pre-processing has been combined with StaMPS. Furthermore, StaMPS was modified in order to support unwrapping with a phase model composed of linear trend, pressure response and a seasonal component (caused by ground water level changes). Finally, refining the iterative estimation scheme of StaMPS helped avoiding leakage of the displacement signal to the spatially correlated noise term.</p><p>Determining vertical and east-west displacements from InSAR line-of-sight displacements is fundamental for interpretation and integration with levelling data. In this study, a basic method of orbit combination and another one supported by a simplistic geophysical model were applied in order to obtain 2D-displacements. For the basic method the north-south component was handled as if it were zero, while the geophysical model predicts the LOS effect of NS displacements. It assumes that caverns act as spherical pressure/volume sources embedded in an elastic half space (“Mogi” sources). To incorporate the visco-elastic component, each cavern is encompassed by a spherical salt shell that obeys the Kelvin-Voigt differential equations. The model is used here to describe either the parameters of the linear component of the displacement model or of the pressure response. A novelty of the orbit combinations implemented for this study is that the different components of the phase model are combined separately. This allows for a better understanding of the phenomena that contribute to the displacement field.</p>


2004 ◽  
Vol 233-234 ◽  
pp. 61-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.A. Kodentsov ◽  
A. Paul ◽  
F.J.J. van Loo

There is now a considerable body of experimental evidence to indicate that in a volumediffusion controlled interaction the Kirkendall plane need not be unique. The Kirkendall plane can microstructurally be stable as well as unstable (it does not exist!). Under predictable circumstances, it can also bifurcate and even trifurcate. This can be rationalised in terms of Kirkendall velocity construction as well as from a purely chemical point of view considering diffusion-controlled interactions at the interphase interfaces. The physico-chemical approach is also used to explain significance of the Kirkendall effect in the morphogenesis of interdiffusion systems.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christoph P. Hofmann

The systematic effective Lagrangian method was first formulated in the context of the strong interaction; chiral perturbation theory (CHPT) is the effective theory of quantum chromodynamics (QCD). It was then pointed out that the method can be transferred to the nonrelativistic domain—in particular, to describe the low-energy properties of ferromagnets. Interestingly, whereas for Lorentz-invariant systems the effective Lagrangian method fails in one spatial dimension (ds=1), it perfectly works for nonrelativistic systems in ds=1. In the present brief review, we give an outline of the method and then focus on the partition function for ferromagnetic spin chains, ferromagnetic films, and ferromagnetic crystals up to three loops in the perturbative expansion—an accuracy never achieved by conventional condensed matter methods. We then compare ferromagnets in ds=1, 2, 3 with the behavior of QCD at low temperatures by considering the pressure and the order parameter. The two apparently very different systems (ferromagnets and QCD) are related from a universal point of view based on the spontaneously broken symmetry. In either case, the low-energy dynamics is described by an effective theory containing Goldstone bosons as basic degrees of freedom.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (14) ◽  
pp. 2966-2978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Ribet ◽  
Marco Sabatini ◽  
Luca Lampani ◽  
Paolo Gasbarri

Interaction between elastic dynamics and attitude control is a serious problem in space operations, which often involve satellites with highly flexible appendages. Monitoring and eventually control of the vibrations are a major concern to avoid a decrease in the expected performance. In particular, the classic case of a central bus with two lateral appendages (solar panels) is considered. The design of a system for structural vibration monitoring is proposed both from a numerical and an experimental point of view. Piezoelectric devices are a usual solution for measuring the deformation of the structures. In the proposed work, optical sensors are also implemented: the combined use of the two sets allows for the monitoring of the elastic displacement of the solar panels and for the reconstruction of the modal shapes of the entire flexible multibody system.


2018 ◽  
Vol 53 ◽  
pp. 01031 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fangyuan Cheng ◽  
Xueyong Zhou ◽  
Yanmei Liu

Spray drying is a kind of unit operation with high energy consumption and relatively low energy utilization, and the problem of low thermal efficiency has been attracted the attention by scholars at home and abroad. The factors affecting the thermal efficiency of spray dryer are analyzed. From a technical point of view, the thermal efficiency of spray dryer can be increased through the unit operation. Measurements for the reduction of energy saving of spray dryer were put forward.


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