Academic literature on the topic 'Plasma edge theory'

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Journal articles on the topic "Plasma edge theory"

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Stangeby, P. C. "Plasma edge theory in fusion devices." Nuclear Fusion 32, no. 11 (November 1992): 2059–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0029-5515/32/11/424.

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Stacey, W. M. "Neoclassical theory of the plasma edge." Physics of Fluids B: Plasma Physics 5, no. 5 (May 1993): 1413–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.860881.

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Stacey, W. M. "Recent Developments in Plasma Edge Theory." Contributions to Plasma Physics 56, no. 6-8 (July 12, 2016): 495–503. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ctpp.201610060.

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Hooper, E. B., R. H. Cohen, and D. D. Ryutov. "Theory of edge plasma in a spheromak." Journal of Nuclear Materials 278, no. 1 (February 2000): 104–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0022-3115(99)00217-2.

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Carreras, Benjamin A. "Plasma edge cross-field transport: experiment and theory." Journal of Nuclear Materials 337-339 (March 2005): 315–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jnucmat.2004.10.034.

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Donnelly, I. J., B. E. Clancy, and N. F. Cramer. "Alfvén wave heating of a cylindrical plasma using axisymmetric waves. Part 2. Kinetic theory." Journal of Plasma Physics 35, no. 1 (February 1986): 75–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022377800011144.

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Kinetic theory, including ion Larmor radius effects, is used to analyse the Alfvén wave heating of cylindrical plasmas using axisymmetric waves excited by an antenna at frequencies up to the ion cyclotron frequency. At the Alfvén resonance position, the compressional wave is mode converted to a quasi-electrostatic wave (QEW) which propagates towards the plasma centre or edge depending on whether the plasma is hot or warm. The energy absorbed by the plasma agrees with the MHD theory predictions provided the QEW is heavily damped before reaching the plasma centre or edge; if it is not, then QEW resonances may occur with a consequent increase in antenna resistance. The relation between ion cyclotron wave resonances and QEW resonances in a hot plasma is shown. The behaviour described above is demonstrated by numerical solution of the wave equations for small and large tokamak-like plasmas. WKB theory has been used to derive useful expressions which quantify the QEW behaviour.
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Stacey, W. M. "Extended fluid transport theory in the tokamak plasma edge." Nuclear Fusion 57, no. 6 (May 3, 2017): 066034. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/aa6b34.

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Rogister, A. L. "Revisited neoclassical transport theory for steep, collisional plasma edge profiles." Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion 36, no. 7A (July 1, 1994): A213—A217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0741-3335/36/7a/030.

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Rogister, André. "Revisited neoclassical transport theory for steep, collisional plasma edge profiles." Physics of Plasmas 1, no. 3 (March 1994): 619–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.870807.

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Mondt, J. P., and J. Weiland. "Two-fluid theory of thermal transport in current-carrying edge plasma." Physica Scripta 39, no. 1 (January 1, 1989): 92–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0031-8949/39/1/014.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Plasma edge theory"

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Weber, S. "Power dissipation in a divertor plasma." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1993. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.358923.

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Floyd, John-Patrick II. "A numerical investigation of extending diffusion theory codes to solve the generalized diffusion equation in the edge pedestal." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/39607.

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The presence of a large pinch velocity in the edge pedestal of high confinement (H-mode) tokamak plasmas implies that particle transport in the plasma edge must be treated by a pinch-diffusion theory, rather than a pure diffusion theory. Momentum balance also requires the inclusion of a pinch term in descriptions of edge particle transport. A numerical investigation of solving generalized pinch-diffusion theory using methods extended from the numerical solution methodology of pure diffusion theory has been carried out. The generalized diffusion equation has been numerically integrated using the central finite-difference approximation for the diffusion term and three finite difference approximations of the pinch term, and then solved using Gauss reduction. The pinch-diffusion relation for the radial particle flux was solved directly and used as a benchmark for the finite-difference algorithm solutions to the generalized diffusion equation. Both equations are solved using several mesh spacings, and it is found that a finer mesh spacing will be required in the edge pedestal, where the inward pinch velocity is large in H-mode plasmas, than is necessary for similar accuracy further inward where the pinch velocity diminishes. An expression for the numerical error of various finite-differencing algorithms is presented.
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Wilks, Theresa M. "Toroidal phasing of resonant magnetic perturbation effect on edge pedestal transport in the DIII-D tokamak." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/47558.

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Resonant Magnetic Perturbation (RMP) fields produced by external control coils are considered a viable option for the suppression of Edge Localized Modes (ELMs) in present and future tokamaks. Repeated reversals of the toroidal phase of the I-coil magnetic field in RMP shot 147170 on DIII-D has generated uniquely different edge pedestal profiles, implying different edge transport phenomena. The causes, trends, and implications of RMP toroidal phase reversal on edge transport is analyzed by comparing various parameters at 0 and 60 degree toroidal phases, with an I-coil mode number of n=3. An analysis of diffusive and non-diffusive transport effects of these magnetic perturbations it the plasma edge pedestal for this RMP shot is characterized by interpreting the ion and electron heat diffusivities, angular momentum transport frequencies, ion diffusion coefficients, and pinch velocities for both phases.
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Books on the topic "Plasma edge theory"

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Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. Magneto-Fluid Dynamics Division. A survey of problems in divertor and edge plasma theory. [New York]: New York University, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. Magneto-Fluid Dynamics Division, 1992.

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Divertor and edge plasma theory working group. A survey of problems in divertor and edge plasma theory. New York: Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Plasma edge theory"

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Shoucri, Magdi. "Charge Separation and Electric Field at a Cylindrical Plasma Edge." In Numerical Simulation - From Theory to Industry. InTech, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/48353.

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M. Orona-Hinojos, Jesus. "Innovative Double Cathode Configuration for Hybrid ECM + EDM Blue Arc Drilling." In Drilling Technology. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.97547.

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Electrical discharge machining is a machining method generally used for machining hard metals, those that would be high cost or have poor performance to machine with other techniques using, e.g., lathes, drills, or conventional machining. Therefore, also known as thermal processes like EDM, Plasma or Laser cutting can be used in drilling operations with poor metallurgical quality on cutting edge and will be necessary complement with other processes such as electrochemical machining (ECM). Both ECM and EDM processes use electrical current under direct-current (DC) voltage to electrically power the material removal rate (MRR) from the workpiece. However in ECM, an electrically conductive liquid or electrolyte is circulated between the electrode(s) and the workpiece for permitting electrochemical dissolution of the workpiece material. While the EDM process, a nonconductive liquid or dielectric is circulated between the cathode and workpiece to permit electrical discharges in the gap there between for removing the workpiece material. Both are principle too different, EC using an electrical conductive and ED using a dielectric medium. But exist a way that can to do a combination of Pulsed EC + ED Simultaneous and allowing the coexist both process, in a semidielectric medium, where both condition exist in the same time, therefore in this hybrid is possible create a tooling device dual cathode for drilling process with promissory advantages fast hole for this innovative hybrid ECDM Simultaneous, this hybrid it’s knew as blue arc drilling technology.
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Li, Jie Jack. "Blood Thinners: From Heparin to Plavix." In Blockbuster Drugs. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199737680.003.0008.

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Three types of blood cells exist in the human body: red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets, in addition to plasma, which takes up 55 percent of the blood’s volume. Red blood cells take up approximately 45 percent of the blood’s volume. They transport oxygen from the lungs to other body parts. White cells defend us against bacterial and viral invasions. Platelets (less than 1 percent of the blood), the third type of blood cells, are sticky little cell fragments that are involved in helping the blood clot, a process known as coagulation. Without platelets (even though they constitute less than 1 percent of blood), our blood would not be able to clot, and we would have uncontrolled bleeding. However, formation of blood clots is a double-edged sword. Clots are beneficial because they heal cuts and wounds; blood clots in the bloodstream are harmful because they block coronary arteries, constrict vital oxygen supplies, and cause heart attacks and strokes, more and more frequent modern maladies as the baby boomers get older. Whenever the body is cut or injured and blood comes into contact with cells outside the bloodstream, a tissue factor on these cells encounters a particular protein within the blood, which triggers the clotting process. In the same vein, a series of other blood factors then come into action and amplify one another to quickly form a jelly-like blood clot. Blood clots form when an enzyme called thrombin marshals fibrin (a blood protein) and platelets (tiny cells that circulate in the blood) to coagulate at the site of an injury. Individuals with no ability to clot have a genetic condition called hemophilia; such people are also known as “bleeders.” Queen Victoria was hemophilic, and she passed on her genes to her many heirs who ruled Europe for over a century. This is why hemophilia is sometimes known as the royal disease. Symptoms of hemophilia manifest only in male offspring. People with hemophilia must periodically administer a clotting factor to their blood to prevent constant bleeding.
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Kennel, Charles F. "The Reconnection Substorm." In Convection and Substorms. Oxford University Press, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195085297.003.0010.

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The reconnection model of magnetospheric substorms was designed 20 years ago to rationalize the time-dependent changes in the magnetospheric structure associated with auroral substorms. By 1970, it was becoming apparent that there was a characteristic sequence of events prior to auroral onset: The dayside magnetopause moved earthward, the inner edge of the cross-tail current sheet approached the earth, the field strength in the tail lobes increased, and the magnetic flux in the polar caps and tail lobes increased, all while the evening side aurora were migrating equatorward prior to onset. The increase in lobe magnetic field clearly suggested that the growth phase commenced with an increase in the dayside reconnection rate. By the early 1980s, studies quantitatively correlating the ionospheric electric field with southward interplanetary field had confirmed that the changes in structure accompanied enhanced convection as had been suspected all along. Both were related somehow to substorms. There was no other choice in the reconnection model but to spotlight its two reconnection events, at the dayside magnetopause and in the plasma sheet on the nightside, as the “main events” in the magnetospheric substorm. Dayside reconnection clearly initiated the growth phase, and tail reconnection had to follow with some delay. It seemed natural to associate tail reconnection with the onset of the auroral substorm. Sections 7.2 through 7.6 are devoted to growth-phase phenomenology. Section 7.2 deals with the changes in magnetopause position that follow a single isolated southward shift of the interplanetary field, and Section 7.3 deals with the changes in the geomagnetic tail that occur as a result. These changes take place as the rate of convection builds up in the ionosphere (Section 7.4) and the dayside magnetosphere (Section 7.5). A growth phase that begins with enhanced dayside reconnection has to lead to enhanced tail reconnection—the second key event in the reconnection model of substorms. In an MHD model, the time and place where the new reconnection event takes place is determined by the propagation of waves along the characteristics connecting the dayside reconnection region to the tail lobes (Section 7.6).
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Broughton, Chad. "The Mike Allen Question." In Boom, Bust, Exodus. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199765614.003.0012.

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From the Moment she started at Planta Maytag III in December 2004, Laura Flora’s financial circumstances turned bleak. She had earned much more during her peripatetic travels through tobacco fields and orange groves in the United States. In fact, Veracruzanos could sometimes earn an even better wage harvesting limes or picking chiles back in their rural villages than they did at the border. Flora felt demeaned by the low wages Maytag paid and found the work tedious and the factory culture oppressive and demoralizing. Yet she stayed. As a single mother, Flora lived on the razor’s edge of survival, but she had something her friends back in Tierra Blanca did not: steady work. Back in Veracruz, work ebbed and flowed with the weather, the seasons, and the rhythms of rural life. At the border, work was unrelenting, driven by the demands of global competition, time-discipline, and the ravenous consumer market to the north. It was the sheer volume of available jobs for unskilled workers—and the promise of overtime—that lured people like Flora to Reynosa. Based on income figures in 2004, about 50 million people in her country, 47 percent of the population, lived in poverty. With overtime Flora could cross the poverty threshold to move into the nonpoor half. The border was also where Flora, who turned 41 the week she began at Maytag, thought she could be a better parent. She had failed to sneak her three young girls into the United States in September, and now they were stuck in a place where they knew no one. But at least they would be together, unlike when Flora was in the United States with her two older children. And here in modernizing Reynosa, her daughters—if not herself—had a much better chance at getting ahead than they had had in Veracruz. “The education is better here, a lot better,” Flora reflected over a glass of sweet lemonade on a hot July afternoon in 2007. Her boyfriend, Arturo Mireles Guzman, agreed. The girls needed a technical profession, in his view.
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Broughton, Chad. "Little Detroit, El Cártel, and Aguamiel." In Boom, Bust, Exodus. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199765614.003.0020.

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The Second-Shifters Filed in slowly on a late Thursday afternoon. From the outside, the factory was a long (nearly a third of a mile), nondescript white box, baking silently in the desert sun of the Ramos Arizpe mountain valley. Inside, it was fairly dark and noisy, with long rows of metal-stamping machines, soldering stations, and assembly lines. Neat green pathways edged with yellow lines, stretching as far as the eye could see, marked the safe routes through. Full-sized and colorful cardboard cutouts of a smiling man and woman greeted workers, highlighting appropriate safety gear. The operators, an even mix of men and women, meandered down the green paths like high school students reluctantly heading to class. There were young men with sagging jeans and others with Def Leppard and Metallica T-shirts. One young man sported a fauxhawk. Another had a pony tail and looked slightly hungover. Many of the women wore tight-fitting jeans, some of them bejeweled. A large number appeared to be in their teens. The factory in Ramos Arizpe—a desiccated and spacious industrial valley just southwest of Monterrey, Nuevo León, and just north of Saltillo, Coahuila—was on a refrigerator continental divide. The Whirlpool, Maytag, and KitchenAid refrigerators they assembled here—including the side-by-side, which had been perfected and popularized by Galesburg’s Admiral plant fifty years earlier—flowed north. The hip and colorful Brastemp side-by-sides shipped south to Brazil. The enormous Whirlpool factory was only seven years old in 2013, but it paled in comparison to the massive Dodge Ram truck plant we visited on the other side of Saltillo. Planta Ensamble Saltillo had its own valley, rigorous security, and produced 220,000 trucks a year in nearly infinite combinations of engine sizes, body types, and colors. It sat next to a Chrysler engine factory and a DHL logistics center, which handled some of the highly complicated sequencing for the massive operation. From the back of an electric cart, we saw Dodge trucks start off as metal pieces, pressed out and shaped by hundreds of enormous robotic arms, jerking precisely from position to position, sending up sparks behind tall metal cages.
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"Advances in Fish Tagging and Marking Technology." In Advances in Fish Tagging and Marking Technology, edited by Julian M. Hughes, John Stewart, Bronwyn M. Gillanders, and Iain M. Suthers. American Fisheries Society, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9781934874271.ch28.

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<i>Abstract</i>.—The population structure of the eastern Australian salmon <i>Arripis trutta </i>stock in the waters of southeastern (SE) Australia was examined using information provided by historical as well as current data sources. An extensive tag-recapture program and aging study undertaken during the 1960s demonstrated widespread mixing of the <i>A. trutta </i>population in SE Australian waters and established a robust model of general movement of fish from Tasmania north to Victoria and NSW with the approach of sexual maturity at ~four years of age. However, this work also hypothesized that the portion of the stock at Flinders Island in Tasmanian waters was resident and did not undergo this northward migration. Otolith chemistry analyses were therefore used as a tool in a ‘weight of evidence’ approach to further examine the population structure of the <i>A. trutta </i>stock in SE Australia. Samples of five year old <i>A. trutta </i>for analysis of otolith chemistry were collected over seven weeks from two sites (10 per site) within each of four locations: northern NSW, southern NSW, Victoria and Tasmania. The cores and edges of otoliths were analyzed using laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Univariate analyses did not find spatial differences for any of the elements Li, Na, Mg, Mn, Ba or Sr between locations. Multivariate analyses however, did find differences between the multi-element ‘fingerprints’ of fish from Tasmania compared to each of the other locations (which were similar). This difference was driven by a group of fish collected from Flinders Island in north-eastern Tasmanian waters. The fish collected at this site were also significantly smaller at five years of age than fish from all other sites, indicating reduced growth rates. The lack of consequential and definitive differences in otolith chemistry data combined with the highly migratory nature of <i>A. trutta </i>in this region demonstrated by tagging studies confirm that the most likely stock structure model for <i>A. trutta </i>in SE Australia is of a single well mixed biological stock spanning Tasmania, Victoria and NSW with fish moving north from Tasmania to mainland Australia with the approach of sexual maturity. However, the reduced growth rates and distinct elemental signature for <i>A. trutta </i>from Flinders Island highlights the need for further work to examine the preexisting hypothesis of a potential resident sub-population there.
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Conference papers on the topic "Plasma edge theory"

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Dendy, R. O., Bengt Eliasson, and Padma K. Shukla. "Information Theory and Plasma Turbulence." In NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN NONLINEAR PLASMA PHYSICS: Proceedings of the 2009 ICTP Summer College on Plasma Physics and International Symposium on Cutting Edge Plasma Physics. AIP, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3266803.

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Brodin, Gert, Mattias Marklund, Jens Zamanian, Bengt Eliasson, and Padma K. Shukla. "Spin Kinetic Models of Plasmas—Semiclassical and Quantum Mechanical Theory." In NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN NONLINEAR PLASMA PHYSICS: Proceedings of the 2009 ICTP Summer College on Plasma Physics and International Symposium on Cutting Edge Plasma Physics. AIP, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3266806.

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Connor, J. W., A. Kirk, H. R. Wilson, and Sadruddin Benkadda. "Edge Localised Modes (ELMs): Experiments and Theory." In TURBULENT TRANSPORT IN FUSION PLASMAS: First ITER International Summer School. AIP, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2939030.

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Chiu, S. C., M. J. Mayberry, R. I. Pinsker, C. C. Petty, and M. Porkolab. "Theory of Ion Bernstein Wave Coupling at Low Edge Densities." In Radio frequency power in plasmas. AIP, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.41692.

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Morozov, D. Kh. "Radiative Plasmas At The Edge And Their Basic Properties." In THEORY OF FUSION PLASMAS: Joint Varenna-Lausanne International Workshop. AIP, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2404549.

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Omiya, Yuya, Kenji Toyota, Ryota Nakanishi, Akira Okada, Togo Shinonaga, and Masahiro Fujii. "Strength Characterization of Adhesive Joint Surface-Modified by Large-Area EB Irradiation." In JSME 2020 Conference on Leading Edge Manufacturing/Materials and Processing. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/lemp2020-8585.

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Abstract With recent improvement in adhesive performance, adhesive joints are used more in various industrial fields. Despite their advantage in connecting dissimilar adherends, adhesive joints are considered not suitable for key components of mechanical structures due to their large scatter in joint strengths. There are many factors that affect the strength of adhesive joint. However, the general bonding factors are (1) mechanical bond, (2) physical bonding, (3) chemical bonding. The adhesion mechanism is complex because these theories occur at same time. Thus, it is necessary to consider the factors separately. And it is important to understand the bonding mechanism on interfaces in adhesive joint and to improve the reliability of the joint strength more. In this study, the tensile strength of single lap joint was measured in order to investigate the influence of various surface treatments and strength characterization of adhesive. Specimens consist of aluminum alloy plates (A6061). Large-area electron beam (EB) and plasma were used for surface treatment. Each one of specimens were examined from the view of wettability, roughness parameter. Compared with unirradiated specimens, other joints improved the wettability and tensile strength. The inference of large-area EB irradiation on adhesive mechanism was discussed.
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Palmeri, P., T. R. Kallman, C. Mendoza, M. A. Bautista, and J. H. Krolik. "Photoionization Modeling: the K Lines and Edges of Iron." In X-RAY DIAGNOSTICS OF ASTROPHYSICAL PLASMAS: Theory, Experiment, and Observation. AIP, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1960915.

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Lee, Woo-Young, Young-Jun Jang, Takayuki Tokoroyama, Motoyuki Murashima, and Noritsugu Umehara. "The Influence of Defects in ta-C Coating Deposited by FCVA Method on Their Tribological Behavior." In JSME 2020 Conference on Leading Edge Manufacturing/Materials and Processing. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/lemp2020-8591.

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Abstract Diamond like-carbon (DLC) coatings is a form of amorphous consisting of sp2-bonded and sp3-bonded phase. Among the DLC series, DLC coatings containing a large percentage of sp3 ratio, referred as tetrahedral amorphous carbon (ta-C) coatings, have attracted significant attention as protective coatings in various fields such as tribological applications and automobile components that demand superior durability, chemical inertness and low friction at high temperature. Particularly, the filtered cathodic vacuum arc (FCVA) technique with an energetic plasma can deposit the ta-C coating, but it has a drawback such as decreasing deposition rate and occurring macroparticles. Research on morphological and structural change of defects in ta-C coatings fabricated by FCVA is important for understanding their wear and friction behavior. In this study, the types of defects presented on a ta-C coating were classified as spike, droplet and pore with their morphology, structural and mechanical properties. The tribological behavior of the coating was characterized by ball-on-disk test using a Si3N4 ball at a testing temperature of 170 °C. In order to confirm the effect of defects in the ta-C coating on the tribological behavior, the defects in a designated area were investigated as a function of different sliding cycles. Initially, a running-in cycle is maintained until 2,000 cycles, following which a steady-state value of 0.1 is observed from sliding cycles of 2,000 to 10,000. At the end of 10,000 cycles, the wear rate of the ta-C coating is 4.3 × 10−6 mm3/Nm. Structural changes among the defects are apparent on droplet and pore after the friction test at 170 °C. The nodular defects including spikes and droplet is grinded off on top surface of that and is retained until 1,000 cycles. In steady state up to 6,000 cycles, droplet was survived, on the other hand, the spikes are almost polished from sliding.
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Coster, D. P., X. Bonnin, D. Reiter, A. Kukushkin, S. Gori, P. Krstic, P. Strand, L. G. Eriksson, Shaoping Zhu, and Jun Yan. "Simulations of the edge plasma: the role of atomic, molecular and surface physics." In ICAMDATA-2008: 6th International Conference on Molecular Data and Their Applications. AIP, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3141685.

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Zobnin, A. V. "Spatial Separation of Dust Particles by their Sizes at the Diffuse Edge of RF Inductive Discharge Plasma." In DUSTY PLASMAS IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM: Third Conference on the Physics of Dusty Plasmas. AIP, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1527782.

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Reports on the topic "Plasma edge theory"

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Boozer, A., B. Braams, H. Weitzner, R. Cohen, R. Hazeltine, F. Hinton, W. Houlberg, et al. A survey of problems in divertor and edge plasma theory. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10141235.

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Boozer, A., B. Braams, H. Weitzner, R. Cohen, R. Hazeltine, F. Hinton, and W. Houlberg. A survey of problems in divertor and edge plasma theory. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6601519.

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Conn, R. W., F. Najmabadi, A. Grossman, B. Merriman, and M. Day. UCLA program in theory and modeling of edge physics and plasma material interaction. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6915879.

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Holod, Ihor. Final Technical Report for DOE theory grant DE-SC0010416 Gyrokinetic Particle Simulation of Plasma Edge Pedestal. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1346024.

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Conn, R. W., F. Najmabadi, A. Grossman, B. Merriman, and M. Day. UCLA program in theory and modeling of edge physics and plasma material interaction. Progress report, June 1991--June 1992. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10111727.

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