scholarly journals Nanometer Materials & Nanotechology and T heir Application Prospect

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-9
Author(s):  
Guangquan Hu ◽  

Due to the unique surface effect, volume effect and quantum size effect of nanomaterials, the electrical, mechanical, magnetic, optical and other properties of the materials have produced amazing changes. At present, nanotechnology has become one of the hotspots of scientific research. The application of nanotechnology in the future will far exceed the computer industry or genetic medicine, and become the core of the information age in the 21st century. The thesis introduced in detail the characteristics of nanomaterials and the broad application prospects of nanotechnology in the fields of electronics, ceramics and chemical engineering.

1979 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 357-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. E. Williams ◽  
R. I. Crane

A numerical technique is developed for predicting the evolution of drop-size spectra in turbulent, two-phase pipe flows. While relevant to many chemical engineering processes, it is applied here to the crossover pipes of a nuclear wet-steam turbine. Valid expressions for turbulent coagulation rate in the cross-over pipes are available only for drops below about 10 μm diameter in the core flow, and for those exceeding about 20 μm near the pipe wall. Using these expressions, it is found that the rapid formation of large drops in the core allows prediction for only a small fraction of the typical residence time in the pipe, but near the wall the volume median diameter of an initial 20 μm monodispersion can double in 100 ms. Further work is required to validate the technique and extend it to handle the intervening ranges of drop size and turbulence parameters.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-143
Author(s):  
Zejun Huang ◽  
Shunhua Gao ◽  
Shijun Wang

In the first paper, a description was given of the scattering of light by metallic liquid surfaces, particularly of the manner in which the intensity and state of polarisation of the scattered rays vary with the angle of incidence of the primary rays and the direction of observation. We now proceed to consider the phenomena observed when the clean and dust-free surface of a transparent liquid is strongly illuminated. Whereas in the case of metals we have a very few substances which are liquid at ordinary temperatures, an enormous variety of transparent liquids is available for the purpose of the present study. In fact, at the time the investigation was taken up, an extensive collection of pure organic chemicals had been obtained from Kahlbaum, and bulbs containing some 64 different liquids, rendered dust-free by repeated distillation in cacuo , were ready for a programme of quantitative studies of the internal lightscattering. This collection naturally proved very convenient also for the purpose of the comparative study of the surface-scattering, and the extended observations made possible by its aid served to bring out very clearly the influence on the phenomenon of the surface tension of the liquid, and thus to establish its molecular nature. As already remarked in the first paper, in the case of transparent fluids, the surface-scattering is accompanied by the internal-scattering within the liquid when a pencil of light is concentrated upon the surface, but the two effects are distinguishable from each other in several particulars. By using a good achromatic lens to focus a well-defined image of the sun on the boundary, the surface opalescence appears as a sharply bounded circular or elliptic disc of light, whose aspect varies very much with the direction of observation while that of the internal-scattering does not. The colour of the surface opalescence is also much less blue than that of the internal-scattering, and, indeed, by contrast with it appears nearly white. Green, yellow and red filters held in front of the eye diminish the brightness of the volume effect much more (in increasing order) than they do that of the surface effect, and hence assist greatly in studying or photographing the latter phenomenon. The brightness of the surface-scattering also varies with the direction of observation, while that of the internal-scattering in dust-free liquids is practically invariable. In the case of oblique incidence of the primary beam, the surface-opalescence is conspicuously brighter when viewed in directions adjacent to those of the reflected or transmitted pencils than in other directions. In fact, it then stands out very clearly, and may be distinguished even with liquids such as carbon disulphide or nitrobenzene, in which the internal-scattering is so strong that it usually overpowers the surface effect.


2013 ◽  
Vol 823 ◽  
pp. 58-61
Author(s):  
Ye Li ◽  
Shu Kun Cao

Abstract. DSP has been one of the most fashionable embedded technology after SCM and the core engine of the digital information age. With the constantly effort and innovation of the Texas instrument(TI) ,Freescale and other companies, performance and function of DSP has been more and more stable and powerful. Digital Signal Processing (DSP) which is a rapidly developing neotype branch has provided a perfect solution for controlling all kinds of motor. The TMS320F28335 from TI has been used as the core of the control. The connecting of the system of the motor and DSP,wave mode for operating,the program for controlling are elaborated .Moreover the different between DSP and other method for control and the caution notes has been analyzed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 111-123
Author(s):  
Peter Zweifel ◽  
Xian XU

The objective of this contribution is to model the behaviour of IT specialists who engage in open source activity while on the job thus privately provide a public good. Both the regular and the social types are assumed to be interested in income and leisure; however, for the social types effective leisure is enhanced by the number of external users, which enhances their intrinsic motivation because the ‘good deed’ can be made known to millions worldwide. The core finding is that contrary to the regular ones, social type may defy the threat of the employer (higher probability of detection, size of the sanction if detected) by engaging in more rather than less open source work, provided the number of external user is high enough. This finding suggests that the information age may facilitate the private production of a public good. The originality of this contribution lies in the prediction that certain type of workers may act against contractual incentives – a rare event in economics.


2020 ◽  
pp. 303-318
Author(s):  
Michael Syrotinski

For Barbara Cassin, the distinguished French philosopher and Greek philologist, and editor of the acclaimed Vocabulaire européen des philosophies: Dictionnaire des intraduisibles, the question of form coalesces at the juncture of several intertwined disciplinary interests, and theoretical enterprises: the ever-expanding ‘Untranslatables’ project, in which literary and aesthetic form are at the heart of a very different way of 'doing philosophy' multilingually; the reading of Lacanian psychoanalysis as a form of modern-day sophistry; and the critique of Google’s domination of the information age.  This chapter reads 'form' in her work through a consideration of how it functions in each of a series of interrelated operations   — the sophistic challenge to Platonic or Aristotelian form; the status of transformation in Lacanian psychoanalysis; an Austinian performative reading of political discourse; and how the so-called information age is redefining the very form itself of knowledge — all of which, I will argue, are tied in different ways to the core notion of the untranslatable. 


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