Sign in to use this feature.

Years

Between: -

Subjects

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Journals

Article Types

Countries / Regions

Search Results (188)

Search Parameters:
Keywords = coupling mode conversion

Order results
Result details
Results per page
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
24 pages, 757 KB  
Article
Theoretical Characterization of Latencies in the Wide-Synchronization Control for Oscillations Damping
by Rossano Musca, Maria Luisa Di Silvestre, Liliana Mineo and Salvatore Favuzza
Electricity 2025, 6(4), 75; https://doi.org/10.3390/electricity6040075 - 15 Dec 2025
Abstract
Wide-area damping controls, like the wide-synchronization control (WSC), are crucial for power system stability but are vulnerable to communication latencies. This article presents a comprehensive theoretical characterization of the impact of time delays on the WSC. The formal analysis derives mathematical models for [...] Read more.
Wide-area damping controls, like the wide-synchronization control (WSC), are crucial for power system stability but are vulnerable to communication latencies. This article presents a comprehensive theoretical characterization of the impact of time delays on the WSC. The formal analysis derives mathematical models for both differential and common modes. Two distinct scenarios are investigated: a symmetric condition, where the WSC is applied to both coupled areas, and an asymmetric condition, where it is applied to only one area. A formal stability assessment is conducted to determine stability boundaries and critical delay-induced crossings into unstable regions. Key findings show that under symmetric conditions, the system remains stable for all delays, as latencies only affect the common mode. Conversely, the asymmetric condition introduces a coupling between modes, making the system susceptible to delay-induced instability, especially at high control gains. The work validates the theoretical findings through numerical experiments and evaluates the accuracy of various linear Padé approximant models for representing delays, highlighting how low-order models can fail to predict instabilities, requiring high-order approximants to guarantee adequate accuracy in the analysis. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

20 pages, 1899 KB  
Article
Experimental Study on Alternating Vacuum–Electroosmosis Treatment for Dredged Sludges
by Jiangfeng Wang, Yifeng Wu, Chunxue Du, Yang Yang, Xinhua Dong, Shen Yang, Jifeng Wang and Pei Zhang
Water 2025, 17(24), 3499; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17243499 - 10 Dec 2025
Viewed by 233
Abstract
The utilization of treated dredged sludge as a partial replacement for natural sand and gravel in construction projects offers a promising approach to reducing the exploitation of natural resources. The conventional vacuum preloading (VP) method, while widely used for soft soil improvement, is [...] Read more.
The utilization of treated dredged sludge as a partial replacement for natural sand and gravel in construction projects offers a promising approach to reducing the exploitation of natural resources. The conventional vacuum preloading (VP) method, while widely used for soft soil improvement, is often associated with prolonged consolidation periods and high energy consumption in its later stages. Conversely, the electroosmosis (EO) technique is effective in enhancing drainage in low-permeability soft clays but is constrained by issues including anode corrosion, high operational costs, and uneven soil reinforcement. This study presents an experimental investigation into an alternating vacuum preloading and electroosmosis method for sludge treatment based on the underlying reinforcement theory. A series of laboratory model tests was conducted using a self-made vacuum–electroosmosis alternating test device. The reinforcement efficiency was assessed through the continuous monitoring of key performance indicators during the tests, including water discharge, surface settlement, electric current, electrode corrosion, and energy consumption. Post-test evaluations of the final soil shear strength and moisture content were also performed. The test results demonstrate that the alternating vacuum–electroosmosis yielded more significant improvement than their synchronous application. Specifically, the alternating vacuum–electroosmosis increased total water discharge by 46.1%, reduced final moisture content by 20.8%, and enhanced shear strength by 35.6% relative to the synchronous mode. Furthermore, an alternating VP-EO mode was found to be particularly advantageous during the electroosmosis phases, facilitating a more stable and sustained dewatering process. In contrast, the application of vacuum preloading alone resulted in inefficient performance during the later stages, coupled with relatively high energy consumption. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Risk Assessment and Mitigation for Water Conservancy Projects)
Show Figures

Figure 1

9 pages, 2056 KB  
Communication
Investigation of the Effects of Alignment Errors on Coupling Efficiency in Lens-Based Coupling of Polarization-Maintaining Fibers
by Lina Luo, Zhiyong Yang, Shun Li and Enqing Chen
Photonics 2025, 12(12), 1194; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12121194 - 4 Dec 2025
Viewed by 201
Abstract
The fiber mode field overlap integral method is employed to analyze the influencing factors of coupling efficiency, as well as the effects of axial and radial alignment errors on coupling efficiency under different relative apertures of coupling lenses. The results indicate that there [...] Read more.
The fiber mode field overlap integral method is employed to analyze the influencing factors of coupling efficiency, as well as the effects of axial and radial alignment errors on coupling efficiency under different relative apertures of coupling lenses. The results indicate that there exists an optimal relative aperture of the coupling lens that maximizes coupling efficiency; however, at this optimal point, coupling efficiency is more susceptible to radial errors. Regarding axial and radial errors, when the relative aperture of the coupling lens is at its optimal value, the tolerance for alignment errors is minimal. Conversely, when the relative aperture exceeds the optimal value, both coupling efficiency and tolerance for alignment decrease. When the relative aperture is less than the optimal value, the requirement for installation accuracy decreases while the tolerance becomes larger. The trend of the simulation results aligns with the experimental data. This study provides instructive significance regarding the trade-off between coupling efficiency requirements and alignment accuracy in the design of actual polarization-maintaining fiber coupling systems. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

20 pages, 9724 KB  
Article
Conducted Common-Mode Electromagnetic Interference Analysis of Gate Drivers for High-Voltage SiC Devices
by Kai Xiao, Haibo Tang, Zhihong Cai, Yansheng Zou and Jianyu Pan
Energies 2025, 18(23), 6083; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18236083 - 21 Nov 2025
Viewed by 291
Abstract
Power conversion equipment based on high-voltage SiC devices offers significant advantages in efficiency and power density. However, during high-voltage, high-power switching operations, severe electromagnetic interference (EMI) can easily occur. It could cause the false triggering of devices and result in converter failure in [...] Read more.
Power conversion equipment based on high-voltage SiC devices offers significant advantages in efficiency and power density. However, during high-voltage, high-power switching operations, severe electromagnetic interference (EMI) can easily occur. It could cause the false triggering of devices and result in converter failure in severe conditions. This paper firstly establishes a mathematical model and conducts simulation analysis of the conducted common-mode interference path in high-voltage SiC device gate driver circuits. Based on the driver circuit architecture, a modeling method for the common-mode interference conduction network in half-bridge submodules is proposed, clarifying the key factors contributing to high common-mode currents. A low common-mode current design methodology for high-voltage SiC submodules is presented, including driver loop structure optimization, capacitor design, and submodule integration. A highly integrated 3.3 kV SiC-based submodule prototype has been successfully developed, serving as a building block for constructing multilevel modular converters (MMCs). Simulation and experimental results indicate that the amplitude of the common-mode current is primarily influenced by the coupling capacitance of the auxiliary power supply, exhibiting a proportional relationship. The developed SiC submodule achieves high-speed switching at 50 kV/μs under a 2 kV DC bus voltage, with excellent thermal stability and low common-mode current characteristics, validating the effectiveness of the proposed model and design approach. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

17 pages, 4113 KB  
Article
Influence of Random Corrosion on the Surface of Rock Bolts on the Propagation Characteristics of Ultrasonic Guided Waves: Taking Corrosion Depth and Area Ratio as Variables
by Manman Wang, Qianjin Zou, Haigang Li and Wen He
Buildings 2025, 15(21), 4009; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15214009 - 6 Nov 2025
Viewed by 265
Abstract
Corrosion of rock bolts in engineering exhibits random spatial distribution characteristics. To elucidate the influence mechanism of stochastic corrosion on the surface of rock bolts on the propagation behavior of ultrasonic guided waves, this study establishes a finite element model of rock bolts [...] Read more.
Corrosion of rock bolts in engineering exhibits random spatial distribution characteristics. To elucidate the influence mechanism of stochastic corrosion on the surface of rock bolts on the propagation behavior of ultrasonic guided waves, this study establishes a finite element model of rock bolts that incorporates stochastic corrosion characteristics. The coupled effects of corrosion depth and area ratio on guided wave propagation characteristics, time-domain response, energy distribution, and wave velocity variation are systematically investigated. Results indicate that corrosion depth and area ratio synergistically deteriorate guided wave morphology, transforming the stress field from symmetric and uniform to asymmetric and spiral. Reflections, scattering, and mode conversion induced by defects lead to a significant increase in the attenuation rate of pulse amplitude, with the two parameters governing the vertical interaction intensity and horizontal interference scope, respectively. Analysis of the Hilbert curve reveals that corrosion characteristics disrupt energy concentration. Under constant corrosion depth, an increase in area ratio disperses energy toward delayed scattered waves, while under constant area ratio, greater corrosion depth reduces the peak amplitude of the envelope curve. Overall, the energy integral exhibits an increasing trend with the degree of corrosion, whereas the peak-to-peak wave velocity shows a declining trend. The established multivariate nonlinear model accurately describes the coupled influence of corrosion parameters on wave velocity. This stochastic corrosion model overcomes the limitations of traditional simplified models and provides critical theoretical support for parameter calibration and engineering application of ultrasonic guided wave technology in the quantitative assessment of rock bolt corrosion. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
Show Figures

Figure 1

18 pages, 2721 KB  
Article
Bayesian Network-Based Earth-Rock Dam Breach Probability Analysis Integrating Machine Learning
by Zongkun Li, Qing Shi, Heqiang Sun, Yingjian Zhou, Fuheng Ma, Jianyou Wang and Pieter van Gelder
Water 2025, 17(21), 3085; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17213085 - 28 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 663
Abstract
Earth-rock dams are critical components of hydraulic engineering, undertaking core functions such as flood control and disaster mitigation. However, the potential occurrence of dam breach poses a severe threat to regional socioeconomic stability and ecological security. To address the limitations of traditional Bayesian [...] Read more.
Earth-rock dams are critical components of hydraulic engineering, undertaking core functions such as flood control and disaster mitigation. However, the potential occurrence of dam breach poses a severe threat to regional socioeconomic stability and ecological security. To address the limitations of traditional Bayesian network (BN) in capturing the complex nonlinear coupling and dynamic mutual interactions among risk factors, they are integrated with machine learning techniques, based on a collected dataset of earth-rock dam breach case samples, the PC structure learning algorithm was employed to preliminarily uncover risk associations. The dataset was compiled from public databases, including the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and Dam Safety Management Center of the Ministry of Water Resources of China, as well as engineering reports from provincial water conservancy departments in China and Europe. Expert knowledge was integrated to optimize the network topology, thereby correcting causal relationships inconsistent with engineering mechanisms. The results indicate that the established hybrid model achieved AUC, accuracy, and F1-Score values of 0.887, 0.895, and 0.899, respectively, significantly outperforming the data-driven model G1. Forward inference identified the key drivers elevating breach risk. Conversely, backward inference revealed that overtopping was the direct failure mode with the highest probability of occurrence and the greatest contribution. The integration of data-driven approaches and domain knowledge provides theoretical and technical support for the probabilistic quantification of earth-rock dam breach and risk prevention and control decision-making. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Hydraulics and Hydrodynamics)
Show Figures

Figure 1

19 pages, 3060 KB  
Article
Design and Optimization of a Hybrid Design for Quantum Transduction
by Enrico Bargagna, Julian Delgado, Changqing Wang, Ivan Gonin, Vyacheslav P. Yakovlev, Paolo Neri, Donato Passarelli and Silvia Zorzetti
Sensors 2025, 25(20), 6365; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25206365 - 15 Oct 2025
Viewed by 673
Abstract
This study presents the mechanical design and analysis of a quantum electro-optical transducer engineered to operate at millikelvin temperatures within a dilution refrigerator. The transducer enables bidirectional microwave-optical frequency conversion through a hybrid architecture that integrates a superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) cavity with an [...] Read more.
This study presents the mechanical design and analysis of a quantum electro-optical transducer engineered to operate at millikelvin temperatures within a dilution refrigerator. The transducer enables bidirectional microwave-optical frequency conversion through a hybrid architecture that integrates a superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) cavity with an electro-optic optical cavity. Among several design options investigated, the configuration offering the best thermal and mechanical performance was selected, yielding a robust solution with reduced sensitivity to fabrication tolerances, improved heat dissipation, as well as alignment precision. The design ensures uniform temperature distribution, enabling higher laser pump powers and, thus, increased conversion efficiency, while maintaining mechanical stresses safely below the material yield strength. Electromagnetic simulations further validate the design, demonstrating enhanced coupling between the optical and microwave modes, as well as a broader tuning range achieved with smaller tuner displacements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
Show Figures

Figure 1

22 pages, 6649 KB  
Article
Multifunctional Metasurface Based on Cascaded Multilayer Modules
by Tongxing Huang, Shuai Huang, Zhijin Wen, Wei Jiang, Jianxun Wang, Yong Luo and Zewei Wu
Nanomaterials 2025, 15(20), 1563; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano15201563 - 14 Oct 2025
Viewed by 756
Abstract
This paper proposes a novel design method for multifunctional modular metasurfaces based on cascaded multilayer modules. Strong electromagnetic coupling between cascaded modules and balanced interface impedance achieved through optimized resonator configurations enable broadband operation. By pairwise cascading of the three modules to maximize [...] Read more.
This paper proposes a novel design method for multifunctional modular metasurfaces based on cascaded multilayer modules. Strong electromagnetic coupling between cascaded modules and balanced interface impedance achieved through optimized resonator configurations enable broadband operation. By pairwise cascading of the three modules to maximize utilization and achieve maximum channel count, the system realizes comprehensive electromagnetic wavefront manipulation across 4 broadband frequency ranges, demonstrating diverse functionalities including orbital angular momentum beam generation, polarization conversion, beam splitting, and radar cross-section reduction with 7 operational channels: two reciprocal co-polarized transmission channels at 14–20.7 GHz, individual reflection channels in +z and −z spaces at 32–38 GHz, two reciprocal cross-polarized transmission channels at 11.9–13.2 GHz, and a reflection channel in −z space at 20–28 GHz, spanning both transmission and reflection modes. The proposed cascading method is accomplished through direct attachment assembly, avoiding air coupling while enabling rapid installation and fast functional switching, providing flexibility for multifunctional electromagnetic wave control applications. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

30 pages, 8197 KB  
Article
Numerical and Experimental Study of Mode Coupling Due to Localised Few-Mode Fibre Bragg Gratings and a Spatial Mode Multiplexer
by James Hainsworth, Adriana Morana, Lucas Lescure, Philippe Veyssiere, Sylvain Girard and Emmanuel Marin
Sensors 2025, 25(19), 6087; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25196087 - 2 Oct 2025
Viewed by 769
Abstract
Mode conversion effects in Fibre Bragg Gratings (FBGs) are widely exploited in applications such as sensing and fibre lasers. However, when FBGs are inscribed into Few-mode optical Fibres (FMFs), the mode interactions become highly complex due to the increased number of guided modes, [...] Read more.
Mode conversion effects in Fibre Bragg Gratings (FBGs) are widely exploited in applications such as sensing and fibre lasers. However, when FBGs are inscribed into Few-mode optical Fibres (FMFs), the mode interactions become highly complex due to the increased number of guided modes, rendering their practical use difficult. In this study, we investigate whether the addition of a spatial mode multiplexer, used to selectively excite specific fibre modes, can simplify the interpretation and utility of few-mode FBGs (FM-FBGs). We focus on point-by-point (PbP)-inscribed FBGs, localised with respect to the transverse cross-section of the fibre core, and study their interaction with a range of Hermitian Gauss input modes. We present a comprehensive numerical study supported by experimental validation, examining the mechanisms of mode coupling induced by localised FBGs and its implications, with a focus on sensing applications. Our results show that the introduction of a spatial mode multiplexer leads to slight simplification of the FBG transmission spectrum. Nevertheless, significant simplification of the reflection spectrum is achievable after modal filtering occurs as the reflected light re-traverses the spatial mode multiplexer, potentially enabling WDM monitoring of FM-FBGs. Notably, we report a novel approach to multiplexing FBGs based on their transverse location within the fibre core and the modal content initially coupled into the fibre. To the best of our knowledge, this multiplexing technique is yet to be reported. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Papers in Sensing and Imaging 2025)
Show Figures

Figure 1

45 pages, 2444 KB  
Review
A Review of Modified/Consistent Couple Stress and Strain Gradient Theories for Analyzing Static and Dynamic Behaviors of Functionally Graded Microscale Plates and Shells
by Chih-Ping Wu and Ting-Yu Chang
Materials 2025, 18(19), 4475; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18194475 - 25 Sep 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 561
Abstract
This paper provides an overview of various size-dependent theories based on modified/consistent couple stress and strain gradient theories (CSTs and SGTs), highlighting the development of two-dimensional (2D) refined and advanced shear deformation theories (SDTs) and three-dimensional (3D) pure analytical and semi-analytical numerical methods, [...] Read more.
This paper provides an overview of various size-dependent theories based on modified/consistent couple stress and strain gradient theories (CSTs and SGTs), highlighting the development of two-dimensional (2D) refined and advanced shear deformation theories (SDTs) and three-dimensional (3D) pure analytical and semi-analytical numerical methods, including their applications, for analyzing the static and dynamic behaviors of microscale plates and shells made from advanced materials such as fiber-reinforced composites, functionally graded (FG) materials, and carbon nanotube/graphene platelet-reinforced composite materials. The strong and weak formulations of the 3D consistent CST, along with their corresponding boundary conditions for FG microplates, are derived and presented for illustration. A comparison study is provided to show the differences in the results of a simply supported FG microplate’s central deflection, stress, and lowest natural frequency obtained using various 2D size-dependent SDTs and 3D analytical and numerical methods based on the consistent CST. A parametric study is conducted to examine how primary factors, such as the effects of dilatational and deviatoric strain gradients and couple stress, impact the static bending and free vibration behaviors of a simply supported FG microplate using a size-dependent local Petrov–Galerkin meshless method based on the consistent SGT. Influences such as the inhomogeneity index and length-to-thickness ratio are considered. It is shown that the significance of the impact of various material length-scale parameters on the central deflection and its lowest natural frequency (in the flexural mode) of the FG microplate is ranked, from greatest to least, as follows: the couple stress effect, the deviatoric strain gradient effect, and finally the dilatational strain gradient effect. Additionally, when the microplate’s thickness is less than 10−7 m, the couple stress effect on its static and dynamic behaviors becomes saturated. Conversely, the impact of the dilatational and deviatoric strain gradients consistently influences the microplate’s static and dynamic behaviors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mechanics of Materials)
Show Figures

Figure 1

21 pages, 7268 KB  
Article
Effect of Specimen Dimensions and Strain Rate on the Longitudinal Compressive Strength of Chimonobambusa utilis
by Xudan Wang, Meng Zhang, Chunnan Liu, Bo Xu, Wei Li, Yonghong Deng, Yu Zhang, Chunlei Dong and Qingwen Zhang
Materials 2025, 18(17), 4013; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18174013 - 27 Aug 2025
Viewed by 549
Abstract
The combined influence of specimen size and strain rate on the mechanical behaviour of small-diameter bamboo culms remains insufficiently characterised. This study investigates the longitudinal compressive strength of Chimonobambusa utilis through axial compression tests on specimens measuring 15 × 15 × 5 mm, [...] Read more.
The combined influence of specimen size and strain rate on the mechanical behaviour of small-diameter bamboo culms remains insufficiently characterised. This study investigates the longitudinal compressive strength of Chimonobambusa utilis through axial compression tests on specimens measuring 15 × 15 × 5 mm, 18 × 18 × 6 mm, and 21 × 21 × 7 mm under strain rates of 10−4, 10−3, and 10−2 s−1. Coupling experimental data with theoretical analysis, this study develops a size–strain rate interaction model to quantitatively assess the effects of specimen size and strain rate on the compressive strength of small-diameter bamboo. Increasing specimen size reduced strength and shifted failure modes from shear to buckling and splitting. At a strain rate of 10−4 s−1, strength decreased from 73.35 MPa for the 15 × 15 × 5 mm specimens to 62.84 MPa for the 21 × 21 × 7 mm specimens. Conversely, increasing the strain rate from 10−4 s−1 to 10−2 s−1 for the 15 × 15 × 5 mm specimens increased strength from 73.35 MPa to 80.27 MPa, indicating suppressed crack propagation. The Type II Weibull model exhibited higher predictive accuracy and parameter stability than the Type I variant. Coupling the Type II Weibull function with a power-law strain rate term and an interaction exponent developed a predictive equation, achieving relative errors below 5%. The findings demonstrate that specimen size predominantly governs strength, whereas strain rate exerts a secondary but enhancing influence. The proposed coupling model enables reliable axial load prediction for small-diameter bamboo culms, supporting material selection and dimensional optimisation in structural applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mechanics of Materials)
Show Figures

Figure 1

37 pages, 8995 KB  
Article
Process Analysis of Waste Animal Fat Pyrolysis and Fractional Distillation in Semi-Batch Reactors: Influence of Temperature and Reaction Time
by Alex Lopes Valente, Marcelo Figueiredo Massulo Aguiar, Ana Claudia Fonseca Baia, Lauro Henrique Hamoy Guerreiro, Renan Marcelo Pereira Silva, Lucas Sabino do Vale Scaff, Dilson Nazareno Pereira Cardoso, Hugo Fernando Meiguins da Silva, Davi do Socorro Barros Brasil, Neyson Martins Mendonça, Sergio Duvoisin Junior, Douglas Alberto Rocha de Castro, Luiz Eduardo Pizarro Borges, Nélio Teixeira Machado and Lucas Pinto Bernar
Energies 2025, 18(17), 4517; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174517 - 26 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1658
Abstract
Waste animal fat (WAF) can be converted to distillate fractions similar to petroleum solvents and used as solvents via pyrolysis and fractional distillation. Pyrolysis oil from triglyceride materials presents adequate viscosity and volatility, compared to petroleum fuels, but shows acid values between 60–140 [...] Read more.
Waste animal fat (WAF) can be converted to distillate fractions similar to petroleum solvents and used as solvents via pyrolysis and fractional distillation. Pyrolysis oil from triglyceride materials presents adequate viscosity and volatility, compared to petroleum fuels, but shows acid values between 60–140 mg KOH/g, impeding its direct use as biofuels without considerable purification of its distillates. Fractional distillation can be applied for the purification of bio-oil, but only a few studies accurately describe the process. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of temperature in the conversion of waste animal fat into fuel-like fractions by pyrolysis and fractional distillation in a semi-batch stirred bed reactor (2 L) according to reaction time. Waste animal fat was extracted (rendering) from disposed meat cuts obtained from butcher shops and pyrolyzed in a stainless-steel stirred bed reactor operating in semi-batch mode at 400–500 °C. The obtained liquid fraction was separated according to reaction time. The pyrolysis bio-oil at 400 °C was separated into four distinct fractions (gasoline, kerosene, diesel, and heavy phase) by fractional distillation with reflux. The bio-oil and distillate fractions were analyzed by density, kinematic viscosity, acid value, and chemical composition by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectra (GC-MS). The results show that, for semi-batch reactors with no inert gas flow, higher temperature is associated with low residence time, reducing the conversion of fatty acids to hydrocarbons. The distillate fractions were tested in a common application not sensible to the fatty acid concentration as a diluent in the preparation of diluted asphalt cutback for the priming of base pavements in road construction. Kerosene and diesel fractions can be successfully applied in the preparation of asphalt cutbacks, even with a high acid value. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section A: Sustainable Energy)
Show Figures

Figure 1

21 pages, 19398 KB  
Article
A Non-Isolated High Gain Step-Up DC/DC Converter Based on Coupled Inductor with Reduced Voltage Stresses
by Yuqing Yang, Song Xu, Wei Jiang and Seiji Hashimoto
J. Low Power Electron. Appl. 2025, 15(3), 48; https://doi.org/10.3390/jlpea15030048 - 22 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1027
Abstract
Hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) have gained significant attention for their superior energy efficiency and are becoming a predominant mode of urban transportation. The DC/DC converter plays a critical role in HEV energy management systems, especially in matching the voltage levels between the battery [...] Read more.
Hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) have gained significant attention for their superior energy efficiency and are becoming a predominant mode of urban transportation. The DC/DC converter plays a critical role in HEV energy management systems, especially in matching the voltage levels between the battery and DC bus. This paper proposes a novel high-gain DC/DC converter with a wide input voltage range based on coupled inductors. The innovation lies in the integration of a resonant cavity and the simultaneous realization of zero-voltage switching (ZVS) and zero-current switching (ZCS), effectively reducing both voltage/current stresses on the power switches and switching losses. Compared with conventional topologies, the proposed design achieves higher voltage gain without extreme duty cycles, improved conversion efficiency, and enhanced reliability. Detailed operating principles are analyzed, and design conditions for voltage stress reduction, gain extension, and soft switching are derived. The simulation model has been conducted in a PSIM environment, and a 300 W experimental prototype, implemented using a dsPIC33FJ64GS606 digital controller, has been established and demonstrates 93% peak efficiency at a 10 times voltage gain. The performance and practical feasibility of the proposed topology have been evaluated by both simulation and experiments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Integrated Circuit Design and Application)
Show Figures

Figure 1

17 pages, 7291 KB  
Article
Numerical Investigation on the Creep-Induced Microdamage Evolution in Rock
by Jing Chen, Junxiang Hu, Changhu Li, Yuan Gao and Weiqiang Chen
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(16), 8827; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15168827 - 10 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 731
Abstract
Rock creep, a key factor in the long-term stability of deep geotechnical engineering, remains challenging to study due to the complexity of its microscopic damage mechanisms. Laboratory creep tests are limited by long durations and scale effects, while phenomenological models cannot fully capture [...] Read more.
Rock creep, a key factor in the long-term stability of deep geotechnical engineering, remains challenging to study due to the complexity of its microscopic damage mechanisms. Laboratory creep tests are limited by long durations and scale effects, while phenomenological models cannot fully capture the underlying processes. This study employs the parallel-bonded stress corrosion (PSC) model in PFC2D to simulate sandy mudstone’s creep behavior, systematically correlating macroscopic creep deformation with microscopic damage evolution and energy conversion. The model reproduces the four stages of the idealized creep curve and quantifies the effects of axial stress level and confining pressure on creep lifetime, rate, and failure mode. Increasing axial stress shortens creep lifetime; every 10% increase raises the creep rate by a factor of 4–14, and high stress enhances nonlinear deformation, producing stair-stepping curves due to unstable microcrack propagation. In contrast, confining pressure prolongs lifetime; at 90% uniaxial compressive strength (UCS), 15 MPa extends it from 2.78 h to ~25 years. Confinement also enhances ductility by suppressing tensile stresses and delaying damage accumulation. This study reveals the coupling mechanism of stress-corrosion-induced subcritical crack propagation and energy dissipation, clarifies the microscopic origin of stepped creep curves, and provides a micromechanical framework for long-term stability evaluation in deep geotechnical engineering. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

17 pages, 1725 KB  
Article
Ring Opening upon Valence Shell Excitation in β-Butyrolactone: Experimental and Theoretical Methods
by Pedro A. S. Randi, Márcio H. F. Bettega, Nykola C. Jones, Søren V. Hoffmann, Małgorzata A. Śmiałek and Paulo Limão-Vieira
Molecules 2025, 30(15), 3137; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules30153137 - 26 Jul 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 650
Abstract
The valence-shell electronic state spectroscopy of β-butyrolactone (CH3CHCH2CO2) is comprehensively investigated by employing experimental and theoretical methods. We report a novel vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) absorption spectrum in the photon wavelength range from 115 to 320 nm (3.9–10.8 [...] Read more.
The valence-shell electronic state spectroscopy of β-butyrolactone (CH3CHCH2CO2) is comprehensively investigated by employing experimental and theoretical methods. We report a novel vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) absorption spectrum in the photon wavelength range from 115 to 320 nm (3.9–10.8 eV), together with ab initio quantum chemical calculations at the time-dependent density functional (TD-DFT) level of theory. The dominant electronic excitations are assigned to mixed valence-Rydberg and Rydberg transitions. The fine structure in the CH3CHCH2CO2 photoabsorption spectrum has been assigned to C=O stretching, v7a, CH2 wagging, v14a, C–O stretching, v22a, and C=O bending, v26a modes. Photolysis lifetimes in the Earth’s atmosphere from 0 km up to 50 km altitude have been estimated, showing to be a non-relevant sink mechanism compared to reactions with the OH radical. The nuclear dynamics along the C=O and C–C–C coordinates have been investigated at the TD-DFT level of theory, where, upon electronic excitation, the potential energy curves show important carbonyl bond breaking and ring opening, respectively. Within such an intricate molecular landscape, the higher-lying excited electronic states may keep their original Rydberg character or may undergo Rydberg-to-valence conversion, with vibronic coupling as an important mechanism contributing to the spectrum. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Density Functional Theory (DFT) Calculation)
Show Figures

Figure 1

Back to TopTop