absorber thickness
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Author(s):  
Rajkumar Santra ◽  
V. G. Vamaravalli ◽  
Ankur Roy ◽  
Balaram Dey ◽  
Subinit Roy

The energy loss behavior of fission fragments (FFs) from [Formula: see text]Cf(sf) in thin Mylar [Formula: see text] and Aluminium absorber foils has been revisited. The aim is to investigate the observed change in the well-known asymmetric energy of spontaneous fission of [Formula: see text]Cf as the fragments pass through increasingly thick absorber foils. Two different types of absorbers have been used: one elemental and the other an organic compound. The stopping powers have been determined as a function of energy for three fragment mass groups with average masses having [Formula: see text], 141.8, 125.8 corresponding to light, heavy and symmetric fragments of [Formula: see text]Cf. The energy loss data have been compared with the predictions of SRIM 2013 code. The best representations of the data have been achieved using the effective Z correction term in the stopping power relation from the classical Bohr theory. Using the effective charge ([Formula: see text]) in the stopping power relation in the classical Bohr theory best describes the stopping power data. Spectrum shape parameters, subsequently, have been extracted from the energy spectra of FFs for different foil thicknesses. The effective charge ([Formula: see text]) correction term determined from the stopping power data is then used in the simulation for the absorber thickness dependence of the shape parameters of the energy spectrum. The present simulation results are compared with the TRIM prediction. The trends of the absorber thickness dependence of the spectrum shape parameters, for both Mylar and Aluminium, are well reproduced with the present simulation.


Author(s):  
Muhammad Amin Harun ◽  
Zafri Azran Abdul Majid ◽  
Zairul Azrul Zakaria ◽  
Ahmad Faris Ismail ◽  
Sany Izan Ihsan ◽  
...  

Several types of flat plate solar collectors have been designed and developed with various technical parameters involved in the design. The inappropriate flat plate solar collector parameter design and material chosen will affect its performance. Investigation on the effect of flat plate absorber collector material, glass thickness, air gap distance, thermal cell absorber thickness, and flat plate absorber base collector thickness on the performance of solar thermal collectors was conducted in this work. The experiment was performed using the solar simulator with solar radiation of 450 and 750 W/m2. The flat plate absorber collector materials used in this experiment were stainless steel 304 and aluminum. The glass thickness used in this experiment was 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, and 10.0 mm. The air gap between the flat plate absorber and glass used in this experiment was 0, 5.0, 10.0, 20.0, and 30.0 mm. The stainless steel thermal cell absorber thickness applied in this experiment was 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mm. Meanwhile, the aluminum flat plate base absorber base collector thickness was 0.5, 0.8, and 1.0 mm. The results showed that the 2.0 mm glass thickness has the maximum flat plate absorber temperature (88.1 oC at t = 600 s), high heat gain rate (0.097 oC/s), and the highest total heat gain (1207.33 J). The results also revealed that the air gap distance of 10 mm achieved the maximum flat plate absorber temperature (64.6 oC at t = 600 s), the highest heat gain rate (0.058 oC/s), and the highest total heat gain (4750.92 J). The stainless steel thermal cell absorber thickness of 1.0 mm has the thermal cell absorber temperature of 76.2 oC at t = 600 s and a high heat gain rate at 0.08 oC/s. The aluminum flat plate base absorber achieved the highest flat plate absorber temperature (67.2 oC at t = 600 s) and the highest heat gain rate (0.062 oC/s). By using double glass as glass cover increase the flat plate absorber temperature (76.3 oC at t = 600 s) and the highest heat gain rate (0.077 oC/s). This research aims to produce a flat plate absorber with better energy storage, i.e., the performance of the stainless steel plate absorber is better than aluminum with the same thickness. Although the stainless steel flat plate absorber collector showed a lower temperature than aluminum, it has a higher temperature drop than the latter.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 1175-1181
Author(s):  
Mu Zhang ◽  
Jiahang Qiu ◽  
Shixin Song ◽  
Fangqi Gui ◽  
Xudong Sun

On the basis of replacing carbonyl iron powders with reduced iron powders which is environmentally friendly in the production process and has low cost, the problems of poor impedance matching and poor oxidation resistance of iron powders are improved by anisotropy and core-shell structure construction. The results show that the microwave absorption performance of the flaky reduced iron powders are improved obviously after coating of SiO2 and carbon shell successively. When the absorber thickness is 2.00 mm and the frequency is 13.3 GHz, the minimum RL value reaches −47.72 dB, and the effective absorption bandwidth is 4.9 GHz (10.6 GHz to 15.5 GHz).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Devonte Sherman ◽  
Jesus Marquez ◽  
Yves Ramirez ◽  
Mariano Urbina ◽  
Andres Meza ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 9
Author(s):  
Klaas Bakker ◽  
Alix Rasia ◽  
Suzanne Assen ◽  
Basma Ben Said Aflouat ◽  
Arthur Weeber ◽  
...  

When a PV module is partially shaded, the shaded solar cells operate in a reverse bias condition. For Cu(In,Ga)Se2 cells this condition can cause defects that irreversibly reduce the output of these cells and the full module. In order to design robust shade-tolerant CIGS modules details need to be known of the conditions at which these defects will be formed. In this study a large number of cells were exposed to different reverse bias conditions. By using simple statistics the probability of the occurrence of defects as a result of reverse bias at any given voltage has been determined. Based on our experiments we have found that the absorber thickness is one of the main parameters that affects the shade-tolerance: the thicker the absorber, the more shade tolerant the CIGS module will be.


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