977 resultados para Polar Configuration
Resumo:
Usual long, flexible, ED tethers kept vertical by the gravity gradient might be less efficient for deorbiting S/C in near-polar orbits than conventional (Hall, Ion) electrical thrusters. A trade-off study on this application is here presented for tethers kept horizontal and perpendicular to the orbital plane. A tether thus oriented must be rigid and short for structural reasons, requiring a non-convex cross section and a power supply as in the case of electrical thrusters. Very recent developments on bare-tether collection theory allow predicting the current collected by an arbitrary cross section. For the horizontal tether, structural considerations on length play the role of ohmic effects in vertical tethers, in determining the optimal contribution of tether mass to the overall deorbiting system. For a given deorbiting-mission impulse, tether-system mass is minimal at some optimal length that increases weakly with the impulse. The horizontal-tether system may beat both the vertical tether and the electrical thruster as regards mass requirements for a narrow length range centered at about 100 m, allowing, however, for a broad mission-impulse range.
Resumo:
A power generation scheme based on bare electrodynamic tethers (EDT), working in passive mode is investigated for the purpose of supplying power to scientific missions at Saturn. The system employs a spinning EDT on a lowaltitude polar orbit which permits to efficiently convert plasmasphere energy into useful power. After optimizing the tether design for power generation we compute the supplied power along the orbit and the impact of the Lorentz force on the orbital elements as function of the tether and orbit characteristics. Although uncertainties in the current ionosphere density modeling strongly affect the performance of the system the peak power density of the EDT appears be greater than conventional power systems.
Resumo:
La presente tesis es un estudio analítico y numérico del electrospray. En la configuración más sencilla, un caudal constante del líquido a atomizar, que debe tener una cierta conductividad eléctrica, se inyecta en un medio dieléctrico (un gas u otro líquido inmiscible con el primero) a través de un tubo capilar metálico. Entre este tubo y un electrodo lejano se aplica un voltaje continuo que origina un campo eléctrico en el líquido conductor y en el espacio que lo rodea. El campo eléctrico induce una corriente eléctrica en el líquido, que acumula carga en su superficie, y da lugar a un esfuerzo eléctrico sobre la superficie, que tiende a alargarla en la dirección del campo eléctrico. El líquido forma un menisco en el extremo del tubo capilar cuando el campo eléctrico es suficientemente intenso y el caudal suficientemente pequeño. Las variaciones de presión y los esfuerzos viscosos asociados al movimiento del líquido son despreciables en la mayor parte de este menisco, siendo dominantes los esfuerzos eléctrico y de tensión superficial que actúan sobre la superficie del líquido. En el modo de funcionamiento llamado de conochorro, el balance de estos esfuerzos hace que el menisco adopte una forma cónica (el cono de Taylor) en una región intermedia entre el extremo del tubo y la punta del menisco. La velocidad del líquido aumenta al acercarse al vértice del cono, lo cual propicia que las variaciones de la presión en el líquido generadas por la inercia o por la viscosidad entren en juego, desequilibrando el balance de esfuerzos mencionado antes. Como consecuencia, del vértice del cono sale un delgado chorro de líquido, que transporta la carga eléctrica que se acumula en la superficie. La acción del campo eléctrico tangente a la superficie sobre esta carga origina una tracción eléctrica que tiende a alargar el chorro. Esta tracción no es relevante en el menisco, donde el campo eléctrico tangente a la superficie es muy pequeño, pero se hace importante en el chorro, donde es la causa del movimiento del líquido. Lejos del cono, el chorro puede o bien desarrollar una inestabilidad asimétrica que lo transforma en una espiral (whipping) o bien romperse en un spray de gotas prácticamente monodispersas cargadas eléctricamente. La corriente eléctrica transportada por el líquido es la suma de la corriente de conducción en el interior del líquido y la corriente debida a la convección de la carga acumulada en su superficie. La primera domina en el menisco y la segunda en el chorro lejano, mientras que las dos son comparables en una región intermedia de transferencia de corriente situada al comienzo del chorro aunque aguas abajo de la región de transición cono-chorro, en la que el menisco deja de ser un cono de Taylor. Para un campo exterior dado, la acumulación de carga eléctrica en la superficie del líquido reduce el campo eléctrico en el interior del mismo, que llega a anularse cuando la carga alcanza un estado final de equilibrio. El tiempo característico de este proceso es el tiempo de relajación dieléctrica, que es una propiedad del líquido. Cuando el tiempo de residencia del líquido en la región de transición cono-chorro (o en otra región del campo fluido) es grande frente al tiempo de relajación dieléctrica, la carga superficial sigue una sucesión de estados de equilibrio y apantalla al líquido del campo exterior. Cuando esta condición deja de cumplirse, aparecen efectos de relajación de carga, que se traducen en que el campo exterior penetra en el líquido, a no ser que su constante dieléctrica sea muy alta, en cuyo caso el campo inducido por la carga de polarización evita la entrada del campo exterior en el menisco y en una cierta región del chorro. La carga eléctrica en equilibrio en la superficie de un menisco cónico intensifica el campo eléctrico y determina su variación espacial hasta distancias aguas abajo del menisco del orden de su tamaño. Este campo, calculado por Taylor, es independiente del voltaje aplicado, por lo que las condiciones locales del flujo y el valor de la corriente eléctrica son también independientes del voltaje en tanto los tamaños de las regiones que determinan estas propiedades sean pequeños frente al tamaño del menisco. Los resultados experimentales publicados en la literatura muestran que existe un caudal mínimo para el que el modo cono-chorro que acabamos de describir deja de existir. El valor medio y la desviación típica de la distribución de tamaños de las gotas generadas por un electrospray son mínimos cuando se opera cerca del caudal mínimo. A pesar de que los mecanismos responsables del caudal mínimo han sido muy estudiados, no hay aún una teoría completa del mismo, si bien su existencia parece estar ligada a la aparición de efectos de relajación de carga en la región de transición cono-chorro. En esta tesis, se presentan estimaciones de orden de magnitud, algunas existentes y otras nuevas, que muestran los balances dominantes responsables de las distintas regiones de la estructura asintótica de la solución en varios casos de interés. Cuando la inercia del líquido juega un papel en la transición cono-chorro, los resultados muestran que la región de transferencia de corriente, donde la mayor parte de la corriente pasa a la superficie, está en el chorro aguas abajo de la región de transición cono-chorro. Los efectos de relajación de carga aparecen de forma simultánea en el chorro y la región de transición cuando el caudal se disminuye hasta valores de un cierto orden. Para caudales aún menores, los efectos de relajación de carga se notan en el menisco, en una región grande comparada con la de transición cono-chorro. Cuando el efecto de las fuerzas de viscosidad es dominante en la región de transición, la región de transferencia de corriente está en el chorro pero muy próxima a la región de transición cono-chorro. Al ir disminuyendo el caudal, los efectos de relajación de carga aparecen progresivamente en el chorro, en la región de transición y por último en el menisco. Cuando el caudal es mucho mayor que el mínimo del modo cono-chorro, el menisco deja de ser cónico. El campo eléctrico debido al voltaje aplicado domina en la región de transferencia de corriente, y tanto la corriente eléctrica como el tamaño de las diferentes regiones del problema pasan a depender del voltaje aplicado. Como resultado de esta dependencia, el plano caudal-voltaje se divide en diferentes regiones que se analizan separadamente. Para caudales suficientemente grandes, la inercia del líquido termina dominando frente a las fuerzas de la viscosidad. Estos resultados teóricos se han validado con simulaciones numéricas. Para ello se ha formulado un modelo simplificado del flujo, el campo eléctrico y el transporte de carga en el menisco y el chorro del electrospray. El movimiento del líquido se supone casi unidireccional y se describe usando la aproximación de Cosserat para un chorro esbelto. Esta aproximación, ampliamente usada en la literatura, permite simular con relativa facilidad múltiples casos y cubrir amplios rangos de valores de los parámetros reteniendo los efectos de la viscosidad y la inercia del líquido. Los campos eléctricos dentro y fuera del liquido están acoplados y se calculan sin simplificación alguna usando un método de elementos de contorno. La solución estacionaria del problema se calcula mediante un método iterativo. Para explorar el espacio de los parámetros, se comienza calculando una solución para valores fijos de las propiedades del líquido, el voltaje aplicado y el caudal. A continuación, se usa un método de continuación que permite delinear la frontera del dominio de existencia del modo cono-chorro, donde el método iterativo deja de converger. Cuando el efecto de la inercia del líquido domina en la región de transición cono-chorro, el caudal mínimo para el cual el método iterativo deja de converger es del orden del valor estimado del caudal para el que comienza a haber efectos de relajación de carga en el chorro y el cono. Aunque las simulaciones no convergen por debajo de dicho caudal, el valor de la corriente eléctrica para valores del caudal ligeramente mayores parece ajustarse a las estimaciones para caudales menores, reflejando un posible cambio en los balances aplicables. Por el contrario, cuando las fuerzas viscosas dominan en la región de transición, se pueden obtener soluciones estacionarias para caudales bastante menores que aquel para el que aparecen efectos de relajación de carga en la región de transición cono-chorro. Los resultados numéricos obtenidos para estos pequeños caudales se ajustan perfectamente a las estimaciones de orden de magnitud que se describen en la memoria. Por último, se incluyen como anexos dos estudios teóricos que han surgido de forma natural durante el desarrollo de la tesis. El primero hace referencia a la singularidad en el campo eléctrico que aparece en la línea de contacto entre el líquido y el tubo capilar en la mayoría de las simulaciones. Primero se estudia en qué situaciones el campo eléctrico tiende a infinito en la línea de contacto. Después, se comprueba que dicha singularidad no supone un fallo en la descripción del problema y que además no afecta a la solución lejos de la línea de contacto. También se analiza si los esfuerzos eléctricos infinitamente grandes a los que da lugar dicha singularidad pueden ser compensados por el resto de esfuerzos que actúan en la superficie del líquido. El segundo estudio busca determinar el tamaño de la región de apantallamiento en un chorro de líquido dieléctrico sin carga superficial. En esta región, el campo exterior es compensado parcialmente por el campo que induce la carga de polarización en la superficie del líquido, de forma que en el interior del líquido el campo eléctrico es mucho menor que en el exterior. Una región como ésta aparece en las estimaciones cuando los efectos de relajación de carga son importantes en la región de transferencia de corriente en el chorro. ABSTRACT This aim of this dissertation is a theoretical and numerical analysis of an electrospray. In its most simple configuration, a constant flow rate of the liquid to be atomized, which has to be an electrical conductor, is injected into a dielectric medium (a gas or another inmiscible fluid) through a metallic capillary tube. A constant voltage is applied between this tube and a distant electrode that produces an electric field in the liquid and the surrounding medium. This electric field induces an electric current in the liquid that accumulates charge at its surface and leads to electric stresses that stretch the surface in the direction of the electric field. A meniscus appears on the end of the capillary tube when the electric field is sufficiently high and the flow rate is small. Pressure variations and viscous stresses due to the motion of the liquid are negligible in most of the meniscus, where normal electric and surface tension stresses acting on the surface are dominant. In the so-called cone-jet mode, the balance of these stresses forces the surface to adopt a conical shape -Taylor cone- in a intermediate region between the end of the tube and the tip of the meniscus. When approaching the cone apex, the velocity of the liquid increases and leads to pressure variations that eventually disturb the balance of surfaces tension and electric stresses. A thin jet emerges then from the tip of the meniscus that transports the charge accumulated at its surface. The electric field tangent to the surface of the jet acts on this charge and continuously stretches the jet. This electric force is negligible in the meniscus, where the component of the electric field tangent to the surface is small, but becomes very important in the jet. Far from the cone, the jet can either develop an asymmetrical instability named “whipping”, whereby the jet winds into a spiral, or break into a spray of small, nearly monodisperse, charged droplets. The electric current transported by the liquid has two components, the conduction current in the bulk of the liquid and the convection current due to the transport of the surface charge by the flow. The first component dominates in the meniscus, the second one in the far jet, and both are comparable in a current transfer region located in the jet downstream of the cone-jet transition region where the meniscus ceases to be a Taylor cone. Given an external electric field, the charge that accumulates at the surface of the liquid reduces the electric field inside the liquid, until an equilibrium is reached in which the electric field induced by the surface charge counters the external electric field and shields the liquid from this field. The characteristic time of this process is the electric relaxation time, which is a property of the liquid. When the residence time of the liquid in the cone-jet transition region (or in other region of the flow) is greater than the electric relaxation time, the surface charge follows a succession of equilibrium states and continuously shield the liquid from the external field. When this condition is not satisfied, charge relaxation effects appear and the external field penetrates into the liquid unless the liquid permittivity is large. For very polar liquids, the field due to the polarization charge at the surface prevents the external field from entering the liquid in the cone and in certain region of the jet. The charge at the surface of a conical meniscus intensifies the electric field around the cone, determining its spatial variation up to distances downstream of the apex of the order of the size of the meniscus. This electric field, first computed by Taylor, is independent of the applied voltage. Therefore local flow characteristics and the electric current carried by the jet are also independent of the applied voltage provided the size of the regions that determine these magnitudes are small compared with the size of the meniscus. Many experiments in the literature show the existence of a minimum flow rate below which the cone-jet mode cannot be established. The mean value and the standard deviation of the electrospray droplet size distribution are minimum when the device is operated near the minimum flow rate. There is no complete explanation of the minimum flow rate, even though possible mechanisms have been extensively studied. The existence of a minimum flow rate seems to be connected with the appearance of charge relaxation effects in the transition region. In this dissertation, order of magnitude estimations are worked out that show the dominant balances in the different regions of the asymptotic structure of the solution for different conditions of interest. When the inertia of the liquid plays a role in the cone-jet transition region, the region where most of the electric current is transfered to the surface lies in the jet downstream the cone-jet transition region. When the flow rate decreases to a certain value, charge relaxation effects appear simultaneously in the jet and in the transition region. For smaller values of the flow rate, charge relaxation effects are important in a region of the meniscus larger than the transition region. When viscous forces dominate in the flow in the cone-jet transition region, the current transfer region is located in the jet immediately after the transition region. When flow rate is decreased, charge relaxation effects appears gradually, first in the jet, then in the transition region, and finally in the meniscus. When flow rate is much larger than the cone-jet mode minimum, the meniscus ceases to be a cone. The electric current and the structure of the solution begin to depend on the applied voltage. The flow rate-voltage plane splits into different regions that are analyzed separately. For sufficiently large flow rates, the effect of the inertia of the liquid always becomes greater than the effect of the viscous forces. A set of numerical simulations have been carried out in order to validate the theoretical results. A simplified model of the problem has been devised to compute the flow, the electric field and the surface charge in the meniscus and the jet of an electrospray. The motion of the liquid is assumed to be quasi-unidirectional and described by Cosserat’s approximation for a slender jet. This widely used approximation allows to easily compute multiple configurations and to explore wide ranges of values of the governing parameters, retaining the effects of the viscosity and the inertia of the liquid. Electric fields inside and outside the liquid are coupled and are computed without any simplification using a boundary elements method. The stationary solution of the problem is obtained by means of an iterative method. To explore the parameter space, a solution is first computed for a set of values of the liquid properties, the flow rate and the applied voltage, an then a continuation method is used to find the boundaries of the cone-jet mode domain of existence, where the iterative method ceases to converge. When the inertia of the liquid dominates in the cone-jet transition region, the iterative method ceases to converge for values of the flow rate for which order-of-magnitude estimates first predict charge relaxation effects to be important in the cone and the jet. The electric current computed for values of the flow rate slightly above the minimum for which convergence is obtained seems to agree with estimates worked out for lower flow rates. When viscous forces dominate in the transition region, stationary solutions can be obtained for flow rates significantly smaller than the one for which charge relaxation effects first appear in the transition region. Numerical results obtained for those small values of the flow rate agree with our order of magnitude estimates. Theoretical analyses of two issues that have arisen naturally during the thesis are summarized in two appendices. The first appendix contains a study of the singularity of the electric field that most of the simulations show at the contact line between the liquid and the capillary tube. The electric field near the contact line is analyzed to determine the ranges of geometrical configurations and liquid permittivity where a singularity appears. Further estimates show that this singularity does not entail a failure in the description of the problem and does not affect the solution far from the contact line. The infinite electric stresses that appear at the contact line can be effectively balanced by surface tension. The second appendix contains an analysis of the size and slenderness of the shielded region of a dielectric liquid in the absence of free surface charge. In this region, the external electric field is partially offset by the polarization charge so that the inner electric field is much lower than the outer one. A similar region appears in the estimates when charge relaxation effects are important in the current transfer region.
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The use of the Laser MegaJoule facility within the shock ignition scheme has been considered. In the first part of the study, one-dimensional hydrodynamic calculations were performed for an inertial confinement fusion capsule in the context of the shock ignition scheme providing the energy gain and an estimation of the increase of the peak power due to the reduction of the photon penetration expected during the high-intensity spike pulse. In the second part, we considered a Laser MegaJoule configuration consisting of 176 laser beams that have been grouped providing two different irradiation schemes. In this configuration the maximum available energy and power are 1.3 MJ and 440 TW. Optimization of the laser?capsule parameters that minimize the irradiation non-uniformity during the first few ns of the foot pulse has been performed. The calculations take into account the specific elliptical laser intensity profile provided at the Laser MegaJoule and the expected beam uncertainties. A significant improvement of the illumination uniformity provided by the polar direct drive technique has been demonstrated. Three-dimensional hydrodynamic calculations have been performed in order to analyse the magnitude of the azimuthal component of the irradiation that is neglected in twodimensional hydrodynamic simulations.
Resumo:
Esta Tesis trata sobre el desarrollo y crecimiento -mediante tecnología MOVPE (del inglés: MetalOrganic Vapor Phase Epitaxy)- de células solares híbridas de semiconductores III-V sobre substratos de silicio. Esta integración pretende ofrecer una alternativa a las células actuales de III-V, que, si bien ostentan el récord de eficiencia en dispositivos fotovoltaicos, su coste es, a día de hoy, demasiado elevado para ser económicamente competitivo frente a las células convencionales de silicio. De este modo, este proyecto trata de conjugar el potencial de alta eficiencia ya demostrado por los semiconductores III-V en arquitecturas de células fotovoltaicas multiunión con el bajo coste, la disponibilidad y la abundancia del silicio. La integración de semiconductores III-V sobre substratos de silicio puede afrontarse a través de diferentes aproximaciones. En esta Tesis se ha optado por el desarrollo de células solares metamórficas de doble unión de GaAsP/Si. Mediante esta técnica, la transición entre los parámetros de red de ambos materiales se consigue por medio de la formación de defectos cristalográficos (mayoritariamente dislocaciones). La idea es confinar estos defectos durante el crecimiento de sucesivas capas graduales en composición para que la superficie final tenga, por un lado, una buena calidad estructural, y por otro, un parámetro de red adecuado. Numerosos grupos de investigación han dirigido sus esfuerzos en los últimos años en desarrollar una estructura similar a la que aquí proponemos. La mayoría de éstos se han centrado en entender los retos asociados al crecimiento de materiales III-V, con el fin de conseguir un material de alta calidad cristalográfica. Sin embargo, prácticamente ninguno de estos grupos ha prestado especial atención al desarrollo y optimización de la célula inferior de silicio, cuyo papel va a ser de gran relevancia en el funcionamiento de la célula completa. De esta forma, y con el fin de completar el trabajo hecho hasta el momento en el desarrollo de células de III-V sobre silicio, la presente Tesis se centra, fundamentalmente, en el diseño y optimización de la célula inferior de silicio, para extraer su máximo potencial. Este trabajo se ha estructurado en seis capítulos, ordenados de acuerdo al desarrollo natural de la célula inferior. Tras un capítulo de introducción al crecimiento de semiconductores III-V sobre Si, en el que se describen las diferentes alternativas para su integración; nos ocupamos de la parte experimental, comenzando con una extensa descripción y caracterización de los substratos de silicio. De este modo, en el Capítulo 2 se analizan con exhaustividad los diferentes tratamientos (tanto químicos como térmicos) que deben seguir éstos para garantizar una superficie óptima sobre la que crecer epitaxialmente el resto de la estructura. Ya centrados en el diseño de la célula inferior, el Capítulo 3 aborda la formación de la unión p-n. En primer lugar se analiza qué configuración de emisor (en términos de dopaje y espesor) es la más adecuada para sacar el máximo rendimiento de la célula inferior. En este primer estudio se compara entre las diferentes alternativas existentes para la creación del emisor, evaluando las ventajas e inconvenientes que cada aproximación ofrece frente al resto. Tras ello, se presenta un modelo teórico capaz de simular el proceso de difusión de fosforo en silicio en un entorno MOVPE por medio del software Silvaco. Mediante este modelo teórico podemos determinar qué condiciones experimentales son necesarias para conseguir un emisor con el diseño seleccionado. Finalmente, estos modelos serán validados y constatados experimentalmente mediante la caracterización por técnicas analíticas (i.e. ECV o SIMS) de uniones p-n con emisores difundidos. Uno de los principales problemas asociados a la formación del emisor por difusión de fósforo, es la degradación superficial del substrato como consecuencia de su exposición a grandes concentraciones de fosfina (fuente de fósforo). En efecto, la rugosidad del silicio debe ser minuciosamente controlada, puesto que éste servirá de base para el posterior crecimiento epitaxial y por tanto debe presentar una superficie prístina para evitar una degradación morfológica y cristalográfica de las capas superiores. En este sentido, el Capítulo 4 incluye un análisis exhaustivo sobre la degradación morfológica de los substratos de silicio durante la formación del emisor. Además, se proponen diferentes alternativas para la recuperación de la superficie con el fin de conseguir rugosidades sub-nanométricas, que no comprometan la calidad del crecimiento epitaxial. Finalmente, a través de desarrollos teóricos, se establecerá una correlación entre la degradación morfológica (observada experimentalmente) con el perfil de difusión del fósforo en el silicio y por tanto, con las características del emisor. Una vez concluida la formación de la unión p-n propiamente dicha, se abordan los problemas relacionados con el crecimiento de la capa de nucleación de GaP. Por un lado, esta capa será la encargada de pasivar la subcélula de silicio, por lo que su crecimiento debe ser regular y homogéneo para que la superficie de silicio quede totalmente pasivada, de tal forma que la velocidad de recombinación superficial en la interfaz GaP/Si sea mínima. Por otro lado, su crecimiento debe ser tal que minimice la aparición de los defectos típicos de una heteroepitaxia de una capa polar sobre un substrato no polar -denominados dominios de antifase-. En el Capítulo 5 se exploran diferentes rutinas de nucleación, dentro del gran abanico de posibilidades existentes, para conseguir una capa de GaP con una buena calidad morfológica y estructural, que será analizada mediante diversas técnicas de caracterización microscópicas. La última parte de esta Tesis está dedicada al estudio de las propiedades fotovoltaicas de la célula inferior. En ella se analiza la evolución de los tiempos de vida de portadores minoritarios de la base durante dos etapas claves en el desarrollo de la estructura Ill-V/Si: la formación de la célula inferior y el crecimiento de las capas III-V. Este estudio se ha llevado a cabo en colaboración con la Universidad de Ohio, que cuentan con una gran experiencia en el crecimiento de materiales III-V sobre silicio. Esta tesis concluye destacando las conclusiones globales del trabajo realizado y proponiendo diversas líneas de trabajo a emprender en el futuro. ABSTRACT This thesis pursues the development and growth of hybrid solar cells -through Metal Organic Vapor Phase Epitaxy (MOVPE)- formed by III-V semiconductors on silicon substrates. This integration aims to provide an alternative to current III-V cells, which, despite hold the efficiency record for photovoltaic devices, their cost is, today, too high to be economically competitive to conventional silicon cells. Accordingly, the target of this project is to link the already demonstrated efficiency potential of III-V semiconductor multijunction solar cell architectures with the low cost and unconstrained availability of silicon substrates. Within the existing alternatives for the integration of III-V semiconductors on silicon substrates, this thesis is based on the metamorphic approach for the development of GaAsP/Si dual-junction solar cells. In this approach, the accommodation of the lattice mismatch is handle through the appearance of crystallographic defects (namely dislocations), which will be confined through the incorporation of a graded buffer layer. The resulting surface will have, on the one hand a good structural quality; and on the other hand the desired lattice parameter. Different research groups have been working in the last years in a structure similar to the one here described, being most of their efforts directed towards the optimization of the heteroepitaxial growth of III-V compounds on Si, with the primary goal of minimizing the appearance of crystal defects. However, none of these groups has paid much attention to the development and optimization of the bottom silicon cell, which, indeed, will play an important role on the overall solar cell performance. In this respect, the idea of this thesis is to complete the work done so far in this field by focusing on the design and optimization of the bottom silicon cell, to harness its efficiency. This work is divided into six chapters, organized according to the natural progress of the bottom cell development. After a brief introduction to the growth of III-V semiconductors on Si substrates, pointing out the different alternatives for their integration; we move to the experimental part, which is initiated by an extensive description and characterization of silicon substrates -the base of the III-V structure-. In this chapter, a comprehensive analysis of the different treatments (chemical and thermal) required for preparing silicon surfaces for subsequent epitaxial growth is presented. Next step on the development of the bottom cell is the formation of the p-n junction itself, which is faced in Chapter 3. Firstly, the optimization of the emitter configuration (in terms of doping and thickness) is handling by analytic models. This study includes a comparison between the different alternatives for the emitter formation, evaluating the advantages and disadvantages of each approach. After the theoretical design of the emitter, it is defined (through the modeling of the P-in-Si diffusion process) a practical parameter space for the experimental implementation of this emitter configuration. The characterization of these emitters through different analytical tools (i.e. ECV or SIMS) will validate and provide experimental support for the theoretical models. A side effect of the formation of the emitter by P diffusion is the roughening of the Si surface. Accordingly, once the p-n junction is formed, it is necessary to ensure that the Si surface is smooth enough and clean for subsequent phases. Indeed, the roughness of the Si must be carefully controlled since it will be the basis for the epitaxial growth. Accordingly, after quantifying (experimentally and by theoretical models) the impact of the phosphorus on the silicon surface morphology, different alternatives for the recovery of the surface are proposed in order to achieve a sub-nanometer roughness which does not endanger the quality of the incoming III-V layers. Moving a step further in the development of the Ill-V/Si structure implies to address the challenges associated to the GaP on Si nucleation. On the one hand, this layer will provide surface passivation to the emitter. In this sense, the growth of the III-V layer must be homogeneous and continuous so the Si emitter gets fully passivated, providing a minimal surface recombination velocity at the interface. On the other hand, the growth should be such that the appearance of typical defects related to the growth of a polar layer on a non-polar substrate is minimized. Chapter 5 includes an exhaustive study of the GaP on Si nucleation process, exploring different nucleation routines for achieving a high morphological and structural quality, which will be characterized by means of different microscopy techniques. Finally, an extensive study of the photovoltaic properties of the bottom cell and its evolution during key phases in the fabrication of a MOCVD-grown III-V-on-Si epitaxial structure (i.e. the formation of the bottom cell; and the growth of III-V layers) will be presented in the last part of this thesis. This study was conducted in collaboration with The Ohio State University, who has extensive experience in the growth of III-V materials on silicon. This thesis concludes by highlighting the overall conclusions of the presented work and proposing different lines of work to be undertaken in the future.
Resumo:
In this work, a new law for magnetic control of satellites in near-polar orbits is presented. This law has been developed for the UMPSat-2 microsatellite, which has been designed and manufactured by Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid. The control law is a modification of the B-dot strategy that enables the satellite to control the rotation rate. Besides, the satellite?s equilibrium state is characterized by having the rotation axis perpendicular to the orbit?s plane. The control law described in the present work only needs magnetometers and magnetorquers, as sensors and actuators, respectively, to carry out a successful attitude control on the spacecraft. A description of the analysis is included. Performance and applicability of the proposed method have been demonstrated by control dynamics together with Monte Carlo techniques and by implementing the control law in the UPMSat-2 mission simulator. Results show good performance in terms of acquisition and stability of the satellite rotation rate and orientation with respect to its orbit?s plane.
Resumo:
The purpose of this work is to analyze a complex high lift configuration for which significant regions of separated flow are present. Current state of the art methods have some diffculty to predict the origin and the progression of this separated flow when increasing the angle of attack. The mechanisms responsible for the maximum lift limit on multi-element wing con?gurations are not clear; this stability analysis could help to understand the physics behind the phenomenon and to find a relation between the flow separation and the instability onset. The methodology presented herein consists in the computation of a steady base flow solution based on a finite volume discretization and a proposal of the solution for a generalized eigenvalue problem corresponding to the perturbed and linearized problem. The eigenvalue problem has been solved with the Arnoldi iterative method, one of the Krylov subspace projection methods. The described methodology was applied to the NACA0012 test case in subsonic and in transonic conditions and, finally, for the first time to the authors knowledge, on an industrial multi-component geometry, such as the A310 airfoil, in order to identify low frequency instabilities related to the separation. One important conclusion is that for all the analyzed geometries, one unstable mode related to flow separation appears for an angle of attack greater than the one correspondent to the maximum lift coe?cient condition. Finally, an adjoint study was carried out in order to evaluate the receptivity and the structural sensitivity of the geometries, giving an indication of the domain region that could be modified resulting in the biggest change of the flowfield.
Resumo:
Las metodologías de desarrollo ágiles han sufrido un gran auge en entornos industriales durante los últimos años debido a la rapidez y fiabilidad de los procesos de desarrollo que proponen. La filosofía DevOps y específicamente las metodologías derivadas de ella como Continuous Delivery o Continuous Deployment promueven la gestión completamente automatizada del ciclo de vida de las aplicaciones, desde el código fuente a las aplicaciones ejecutándose en entornos de producción. La automatización se ve como un medio para producir procesos repetibles, fiables y rápidos. Sin embargo, no todas las partes de las metodologías Continuous están completamente automatizadas. En particular, la gestión de la configuración de los parámetros de ejecución es un problema que ha sido acrecentado por la elasticidad y escalabilidad que proporcionan las tecnologías de computación en la nube. La mayoría de las herramientas de despliegue actuales pueden automatizar el despliegue de la configuración de parámetros de ejecución, pero no ofrecen soporte a la hora de fijar esos parámetros o de validar los ficheros que despliegan, principalmente debido al gran abanico de opciones de configuración y el hecho de que el valor de muchos de esos parámetros es fijado en base a preferencias expresadas por el usuario. Esto hecho hace que pueda parecer que cualquier solución al problema debe estar ajustada a una aplicación específica en lugar de ofrecer una solución general. Con el objetivo de solucionar este problema, propongo un modelo de configuración que puede ser inferido a partir de instancias de configuración existentes y que puede reflejar las preferencias de los usuarios para ser usado para facilitar los procesos de configuración. El modelo de configuración puede ser usado como la base de un proceso de configuración interactivo capaz de guiar a un operador humano a través de la configuración de una aplicación para su despliegue en un entorno determinado o para detectar cambios de configuración automáticamente y producir una configuración válida que se ajuste a esos cambios. Además, el modelo de configuración debería ser gestionado como si se tratase de cualquier otro artefacto software y debería ser incorporado a las prácticas de gestión habituales. Por eso también propongo un modelo de gestión de servicios que incluya información relativa a la configuración de parámetros de ejecución y que además es capaz de describir y gestionar propuestas arquitectónicas actuales tales como los arquitecturas de microservicios. ABSTRACT Agile development methodologies have risen in popularity within the industry in recent years due to the speed and reliability of the processes they propose. The DevOps philosophy and specifically the methodologies derived from it such as Continuous Delivery and Continuous Deployment push for a totally automated management of the application lifecycle, from the source code to the software running in production environment. Automation in this regard is used as a means to produce repeatable, reliable and fast processes. However, not all parts of the Continuous methodologies are completely automatized. In particular, management of runtime parameter configuration is a problem that has increased its impact in deployment process due to the scalability and elasticity provided by cloud technologies. Most deployment tools nowadays can automate the deployment of runtime parameter configuration, but they offer no support for parameter setting o configuration validation, as the range of different configuration options and the fact that the value of many of those parameters is based on user preference seems to imply that any solution to the problem will have to be tailored to a specific application. With the aim to solve this problem I propose a configuration model that can be inferred from existing configurations and reflect user preferences in order to ease the configuration process. The configuration model can be used as the base of an interactive configuration process capable of guiding a human operator through the configuration of an application for its deployment in a specific environment or to automatically detect configuration changes and produce valid runtime parameter configurations that take into account those changes. Additionally, the configuration model should be managed as any other software artefact and should be incorporated into current management practices. I also propose a service management model that includes the configuration information and that is able to describe and manage current architectural practices such as the microservices architecture.
Resumo:
Hydrophilic drugs are often poorly absorbed when administered orally. There has been considerable interest in the possibility of using absorption enhancers to promote absorption of polar molecules across membrane surfaces. The bile acids are one of the most widely investigated classes of absorption enhancers, but there is disagreement about what features of bile acid enhancers are responsible for their efficacy. We have designed a class of glycosylated bile acid derivatives to evaluate how increasing the hydrophilicity of the steroid nucleus affects the ability to transport polar molecules across membranes. Some of the glycosylated molecules are significantly more effective than taurocholate in promoting the intestinal absorption of a range of drugs, showing that hydrophobicity is not a critical parameter in transport efficacy, as previously suggested. Furthermore, the most effective glycosylated compound is also far less damaging to membranes than the best bile acid absorption promoters, presumably because it is more hydrophilic. The results reported here show that it is possible to decouple absorption-promoting activity from membrane damage, a finding that should spark interest in the design of new compounds to facilitate the delivery of polar drugs.
Resumo:
A coarse-grained model for protein-folding dynamics is introduced based on a discretized representation of torsional modes. The model, based on the Ramachandran map of the local torsional potential surface and the class (hydrophobic/polar/neutral) of each residue, recognizes patterns of both torsional conformations and hydrophobic-polar contacts, with tolerance for imperfect patterns. It incorporates empirical rates for formation of secondary and tertiary structure. The method yields a topological representation of the evolving local torsional configuration of the folding protein, modulo the basins of the Ramachandran map. The folding process is modeled as a sequence of transitions from one contact pattern to another, as the torsional patterns evolve. We test the model by applying it to the folding process of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, obtaining a kinetic description of the transitions between the contact patterns visited by the protein along the dominant folding pathway. The kinetics and detailed balance make it possible to invert the result to obtain a coarse topographic description of the potential energy surface along the dominant folding pathway, in effect to go backward or forward between a topological representation of the chain conformation and a topographical description of the potential energy surface governing the folding process. As a result, the strong structure-seeking character of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor and the principal features of its folding pathway are reproduced in a reasonably quantitative way.
Resumo:
Auxins are plant hormones that mediate many aspects of plant growth and development. In higher plants, auxins are polarly transported from sites of synthesis in the shoot apex to their sites of action in the basal regions of shoots and in roots. Polar auxin transport is an important aspect of auxin functions and is mediated by cellular influx and efflux carriers. Little is known about the molecular identity of its regulatory component, the efflux carrier [Estelle, M. (1996) Current Biol. 6, 1589–1591]. Here we show that mutations in the Arabidopsis thaliana AGRAVITROPIC 1 (AGR1) gene involved in root gravitropism confer increased root-growth sensitivity to auxin and decreased sensitivity to ethylene and an auxin transport inhibitor, and cause retention of exogenously added auxin in root tip cells. We used positional cloning to show that AGR1 encodes a putative transmembrane protein whose amino acid sequence shares homologies with bacterial transporters. When expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, AGR1 promotes an increased efflux of radiolabeled IAA from the cells and confers increased resistance to fluoro-IAA, a toxic IAA-derived compound. AGR1 transcripts were localized to the root distal elongation zone, a region undergoing a curvature response upon gravistimulation. We have identified several AGR1-related genes in Arabidopsis, suggesting a global role of this gene family in the control of auxin-regulated growth and developmental processes.
Resumo:
We have carried out conformational energy calculations on alanine-based copolymers with the sequence Ac-AAAAAXAAAA-NH2 in water, where X stands for lysine or glutamine, to identify the underlying source of stability of alanine-based polypeptides containing charged or highly soluble polar residues in the absence of charge–charge interactions. The results indicate that ionizable or neutral polar residues introduced into the sequence to make them soluble sequester the water away from the CO and NH groups of the backbone, thereby enabling them to form internal hydrogen bonds. This solvation effect dictates the conformational preference and, hence, modifies the conformational propensity of alanine residues. Even though we carried out simulations for specific amino acid sequences, our results provide an understanding of some of the basic principles that govern the process of folding of these short sequences independently of the kind of residues introduced to make them soluble. In addition, we have investigated through simulations the effect of the bulk dielectric constant on the conformational preferences of these peptides. Extensive conformational Monte Carlo searches on terminally blocked 10-mer and 16-mer homopolymers of alanine in the absence of salt were carried out assuming values for the dielectric constant of the solvent ɛ of 80, 40, and 2. Our simulations show a clear tendency of these oligopeptides to augment the α-helix content as the bulk dielectric constant of the solvent is lowered. This behavior is due mainly to a loss of exposure of the CO and NH groups to the aqueous solvent. Experimental evidence indicates that the helical propensity of the amino acids in water shows a dramatic increase on addition of certain alcohols, such us trifluoroethanol. Our results provide a possible explanation of the mechanism by which alcohol/water mixtures affect the free energy of helical alanine oligopeptides relative to nonhelical ones.
Resumo:
Although many polar residues are directly involved in transmembrane protein functions, the extent to which they contribute to more general structural features is still unclear. Previous studies have demonstrated that asparagine residues can drive transmembrane helix association through interhelical hydrogen bonding [Choma, C., Gratkowski, H., Lear, J. D. & DeGrado, W. F. (2000) Nat. Struct. Biol. 7, 161–166; and Zhou, F. X., Cocco, M. J., Russ, W. P., Brunger, A. T. & Engelman, D. M. (2000) Nat. Struct. Biol. 7, 154–160]. We have studied the ability of other polar residues to promote helix association in detergent micelles and in biological membranes. Our results show that polyleucine sequences with Asn, Asp, Gln, Glu, and His, residues capable of being simultaneously hydrogen bond donors and acceptors, form homo- or heterooligomers. In contrast, polyleucine sequences with Ser, Thr, and Tyr do not associate more than the polyleucine sequence alone. The results therefore provide experimental evidence that interactions between polar residues in the helices of transmembrane proteins may serve to provide structural stability and oligomerization specificity. Furthermore, such interactions can allow structural flexibility required for the function of some membrane proteins.
Resumo:
The Rho small GTP-binding proteins are versatile, conserved molecular switches in eukaryotic signal transduction. Plants contain a unique subfamily of Rho-GTPases called Rop (Rho-related GTPases from plants). Our previous studies involving injection of antibodies indicated that the pea Rop GTPase Rop1Ps is critical for pollen tube growth. In this study we show that overexpression of an apparent Arabidopsis ortholog of Rop1Ps, Rop1At, induces isotropic cell growth in fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces pombe) and that green fluorescence protein-tagged Rop1At displays polar localization to the site of growth in yeast. We found that Rop1At and two other Arabidopsis Rops, Rop3At and Rop5At, are all expressed in mature pollen. All three pollen Rops fall into the same subgroup as Rop1Ps and diverge from those Rops that are not expressed in mature pollen, suggesting a coupling of the structural conservation of Rop GTPases to their gene expression in pollen. However, pollen-specific transcript accumulation for Rop1At is much higher than that for Rop3At and Rop5At. Furthermore, Rop1At is specifically expressed in anthers, whereas Rop3At and Rop5At are also expressed in vegetative tissues. In transgenic plants containing the Rop1At promoter:GUS fusion gene, GUS is specifically expressed in mature pollen and pollen tubes. We propose that Rop1At may play a predominant role in the regulation of polarized cell growth in pollen, whereas its close relatives Rop3At and Rop5At may be functionally redundant to Rop1At in pollen.
Resumo:
We have developed and characterized a system to analyze light effects on auxin transport independent of photosynthetic effects. Polar transport of [3H]indole-3-acetic acid through hypocotyl segments from etiolated cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) seedlings was increased in seedlings grown in dim-red light (DRL) (0.5 μmol m−2 s−1) relative to seedlings grown in darkness. Both transport velocity and transport intensity (export rate) were increased by at least a factor of 2. Tissue formed in DRL completely acquired the higher transport capacity within 50 h, but tissue already differentiated in darkness acquired only a partial increase in transport capacity within 50 h of DRL, indicating a developmental window for light induction of commitment to changes in auxin transport. This light-induced change probably manifests itself by alteration of function of the auxin efflux carrier, as revealed using specific transport inhibitors. Relative to dark controls, DRL-grown seedlings were differentially less sensitive to two inhibitors of polar auxin transport, N-(naphth-1-yl) phthalamic acid and 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid. On the basis of these data, we propose that the auxin efflux carrier is a key target of light regulation during photomorphogenesis.