• Title/Summary/Keyword: DIONISIO

Search Result 5, Processing Time 0.016 seconds

Assessing the impact of DIONISIO-SubChanFlow code coupling in nuclear fuel performance simulations

  • Mauricio Exequiel Cazado;Victor Hugo Sanchez-Espinoza;Alejandro Soba
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.56 no.11
    • /
    • pp.4843-4850
    • /
    • 2024
  • Realistic simulation of nuclear fuel performance requires not only validated models capable of describing the thermomechanical phenomena that take place within the fuel under irradiation conditions, but a detailed description of the thermal hydraulics of the channel surrounding the fuel rods, which provides the boundary conditions of the system. In this work, the main results and outlooks of coupling the thermal hydraulics code SubChanFlow with the fuel performance code DIONISIO are presented. To achieve this, an internal coupling was implemented, wherein DIONISIO is used as a master code controlling SubChanFlow as a thermal hydraulics subroutine replacing the simplified version already embedded in DIONISIO. Several tests were conducted to ensure the performance and quality of the coupling under normal operation conditions as a first approach. In addition, it was observed that the coupling demonstrated a significant improvement in the description of the cladding temperature and related variables, such as oxide thickness and hydrogen uptake, when compared with experimental data.

The Poetics of Overcoming: Christopher Dewdney's Transhumanism and Dionisio D. Martinez's Transnational Cultural Contamination

  • Kim, Youngmin
    • Journal of English Language & Literature
    • /
    • v.57 no.6
    • /
    • pp.1089-1109
    • /
    • 2011
  • In an attempt to demonstrate in context of Nietzsche's "overman" (ubermensch) and Heidegger's "Being-in-the-World" (Dasein) the collective human efforts to overcome humanism in crisis, I will provide the ground for the poetics of overcoming, the ground which are based upon the double movements of transhumanism and transnationalism. For this purpose, I will turn to the theories of two distinctive poets who reveal and disreveal their truths about the subjecthood or the subjectivity in terms of overcoming: Christopher Dewdney for posthuman transhumanity and Dionisio D. Martinez for transnational cultural contamination Transhumanism represented by Christopher Dewdney manifests an interfusion of outside and inside, thereby collapsing the boundary between the mind and the world, and provides a breakthrough from the limitedly defined mind to the transhuman perspective of overcoming by using terminalogy and techniques from science and technology. The emerging transhumanism reflects the growing interdependence between humans and bio technologies, and suggests a potential improvement of human beings. The main argument of transhumanism is that we humans can and should continue to develop in all possible directions, by overcoming our human limitations by shedding the body and having the disembodied consciousness which will liberate our mind. Kwame Anthony Appiah's "cultural contamination" is another form of overcoming as well as a way to otherness, a counter-ideal of cultural purity which sustains authentic culture, reversing the traditional binary opposition between enriching authenticity and threatening hybridization. Dionisio Martinez's poetry sublimates the negative side of Appiah's concept of contamination, by redeeming the value of the Appiah's list of the ideal of contamination such as hybridity, impurity, intermingling, the transformation that comes of new and unexpected combinations of human beings, a bit of this and a bit of that is how newness enters the world. When a poetic subject is doubly exiled and doubly homeless away from his/her native homeland and home of native language, one has no more identification with the authentic culture of both home and away, but rather anticipates a new identity as a transnational subject to cross the bridge beyond cultural authenticity and to enter into the field of cultural contamination.

Colourings and the Alexander Polynomial

  • Camacho, Luis;Dionisio, Francisco Miguel;Picken, Roger
    • Kyungpook Mathematical Journal
    • /
    • v.56 no.3
    • /
    • pp.1017-1045
    • /
    • 2016
  • Using a combination of calculational and theoretical approaches, we establish results that relate two knot invariants, the Alexander polynomial, and the number of quandle colourings using any finite linear Alexander quandle. Given such a quandle, specified by two coprime integers n and m, the number of colourings of a knot diagram is given by counting the solutions of a matrix equation of the form AX = 0 mod n, where A is the m-dependent colouring matrix. We devised an algorithm to reduce A to echelon form, and applied this to the colouring matrices for all prime knots with up to 10 crossings, finding just three distinct reduced types. For two of these types, both upper triangular, we found general formulae for the number of colourings. This enables us to prove that in some cases the number of such quandle colourings cannot distinguish knots with the same Alexander polynomial, whilst in other cases knots with the same Alexander polynomial can be distinguished by colourings with a specific quandle. When two knots have different Alexander polynomials, and their reduced colouring matrices are upper triangular, we find a specific quandle for which we prove that it distinguishes them by colourings.

Self-sustained n-Type Memory Transistor Devices Based on Natural Cellulose Paper Fibers

  • Martins, Rodrigo;Pereira, Luis;Barquinha, Pedro;Correia, Nuno;Goncalves, Goncalo;Ferreira, Isabel;Dias, Carlos;Correia, N.;Dionisio, M.;Silva, M.;Fortunato, Elvira
    • Journal of Information Display
    • /
    • v.10 no.4
    • /
    • pp.149-157
    • /
    • 2009
  • Reported herein is the architecture for a nonvolatile n-type memory paper field-effect transistor. The device was built via the hybrid integration of natural cellulose fibers (pine and eucalyptus fibers embedded in resin with ionic additives), which act simultaneously as substrate and gate dielectric, using passive and active semiconductors, respectively, as well as amorphous indium zinc and gallium indium zinc oxides for the gate electrode and channel layer, respectively. This was complemented by the use of continuous patterned metal layers as source/drain electrodes.

Morphological and Photosynthetic Responses of Rice to Low Radiation (일사 저하에 대한 벼의 형태적 특성 및 광합성 반응 변화)

  • Yang, Woon-Ho;Peng, Shaobing;Dionisio-Sese Maribel L.
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
    • /
    • v.52 no.1
    • /
    • pp.1-11
    • /
    • 2007
  • Light is an environmental component inevitably regulating photosynthesis and photo-morphogenesis, which are involved in the plant growth and development. Studies were conducted at the International Rice Research Institute, Philippines in 2004 and 2005, with aims to investigate 1) morphological responses of rice plants to low radiation, 2) morphological alteration of shade-grown plants when exposed to high light intensity, and 3) photosynthetic responses of shade-grown rice plants. Reduction in solar radiation by 40% induced increases in the area on a single leaf basis, biomass partitioning to leaves, and chlorophyll meter readings but brought about retardation of tiller development and decrease in above-ground biomass production of rice varieties. When the shade-grown plants from two weeks of transplanting to panicle initiation were exposed to full solar radiation after panicle initiation, they demonstrated less increase in chlorophyll meter readings and more decrease in leaf nitrogen concentrations from panicle initiation to flowering than control plants that were grown under the ambient solar radiation for whole growth period after transplanting. Shade-grown rice plants exhibited lower carbon assimilation rates but higher internal $CO_2$ concentrations on a single leaf basis than control plants, when measurements for shade-grown rice plants were made under the shading treatments. But when the measurements for shade-grown plants were made under the full solar radiation, light-saturated carbon assimilation rates were similar to control plants. Response of photosynthetic rates to varying light intensities was not considerably different between shading treatments and control. Yield reduction was observed in the shading treatments from panicle initiation to flowering and from flowering to physiological maturity, mainly by less spikelets per panicle and poor grain filling, respectively.