Institution
Exponent
Company•Menlo Park, California, United States•
About: Exponent is a company organization based out in Menlo Park, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Risk assessment. The organization has 1589 authors who have published 2680 publications receiving 88140 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, a hybrid microplasma/semiconductor photodetector, having a Si cathode in the form of an inverted square pyramid encompassing a neon micro-plasma, exhibits a photosensitivity in the ∼420-1100 nm region as high as 3.5 A/W.
Abstract: Coupling electron-hole (e–- h+) and electron-ion plasmas across a narrow potential barrier with a strong electric field provides an interface between the two plasma genres and a pathway to electronic and photonic device functionality. The magnitude of the electric field present in the sheath of a low temperature, nonequilibrium microplasma is sufficient to influence the band structure of a semiconductor region in immediate proximity to the solid-gas phase interface. Optoelectronic devices demonstrated by leveraging this interaction are described here. A hybrid microplasma/semiconductor photodetector, having a Si cathode in the form of an inverted square pyramid encompassing a neon microplasma, exhibits a photosensitivity in the ∼420–1100 nm region as high as 3.5 A/W. Direct tunneling of electrons into the collector and the Auger neutralization of ions arriving at the Si surface appear to be facilitated by an n -type inversion layer at the cathode surface resulting from bandbending by the microplasma sheath electric field. Recently, an npn plasma bipolar junction transistor (PBJT), in which a low temperature plasma serves as the collector in an otherwise Si device, has also been demonstrated. Having a measured small signal current gain hfe as large as 10, this phototransistor is capable of modulat-ing and extinguishing the collector plasma with emitter-base bias voltages <1 V. Electrons injected into the base when the emitter-base junction is forward-biased serve primarily to replace conduction band electrons lost to the collector plasma by secondary emission and ion-enhanced field emission in which ions arriving at the base-collector junction deform the electrostatic potential near the base surface, narrowing the potential barrier and thereby facilitating the tunneling of electrons into the collector. Of greatest significance, therefore, are the implications of active, plasma/solid state interfaces as a new frontier for plasma science. Specifically, the PBJT provides the first opportunity to control the electronic properties of a material at the boundary of, and interacting with, a plasma. By specifying the relative number densities of free (conduction band) and bound (valence band) electrons at the base-collector interface, the PBJT's emitter-base junction is able to dictate the rates of secondary electron emission (including Auger neutralization) at the semiconductor-plasma interface, thereby offering the ability to vary at will the effective secondary electron emission coefficient for the base surface (© 2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
36 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a full-scale load test was performed on a selected Florida highway bridge with two fully loaded trucks, and the strain, acceleration, and displacement at selected points were recorded for the investigation of the bridge's dynamic response.
Abstract: Several full-scale load tests were performed on a selected Florida highway bridge. The bridge was dynamically excited by two fully loaded trucks, and the strain, acceleration, and displacement at selected points were recorded for the investigation of the bridge’s dynamic response. Experimental data were compared with simplified vehicle and bridge finite-element models. The vehicle was represented as a three-dimensional mass–spring–damper system with 11 degrees of freedom, and the bridge was modeled as a combination of plate and beam elements that characterize the slab and girders, respectively. The equations of motion were formulated with physical components for the vehicle and modal components for the bridge. The coupled equations were solved using a central difference method. It was found that the numerical analysis matched well with the experimental data and was used to successfully explain critical dynamic phenomena observed during the testing. Impact factors for this tested bridge were thoroughly inv...
36 citations
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TL;DR: Evaluated the association between breast cancer and Val432Leu polymorphism in the CYP1B1 gene and the tetranucleotide repeats in intron 4 of the CYp19 gene and found no association with any individual CYP19 allele.
36 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the research that has gone into quantifying the rate of oxidation the steel belt rubber oxidizes in different climates from tire samples retrieved from consumers' vehicles and compared the information obtained from the field is then compared to data collected from various resources attempting to develop accelerated tire aging protocols.
Abstract: While a new tire may have excellent resistance to crack initiation and propagation between the steel belts, an aged tire of the exact same construction can exhibit dramatically reduced crack growth resistance, which in some cases may contribute to tire failure. This article will review the research that has gone into quantifying the rate of oxidation the steel belt rubber oxidizes in different climates from tire samples retrieved from consumers' vehicles. The information obtained from the field is then compared to data collected from various resources attempting to develop accelerated tire aging protocols. Finally, methods for potentially improving tire aging are reviewed.
36 citations
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TL;DR: The scientific issues that were central to the EPA Administrator’s 2008 revision of the NAAQS for ozone will undoubtedly also be critical to the next review of the ozone standard.
Abstract: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), under the authority of the Clean Air Act (CAA), is required to promulgate National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQSs) for criteria air pollutants, including ozone. Each NAAQS includes a primary health-based standard and a secondary or welfare-based standard. This paper considers only the science used for revision of the primary standard for ozone in 2008. This paper summarizes deliberations of a small group of scientists who met in June 2007 to review the scientific information informing the EPA Administrator's proposed revision of the 1997 standard. The Panel recognized that there is no scientific methodology that, in the absence of judgment, can define the precise numerical level, related averaging time, and statistical form of the NAAQS. The selection of these elements of the NAAQS involves policy judgments that should be informed by scientific information and analyses. Thus, the Panel members did not feel it appropriate to offer either their individual or collective judgment on the specific numerical level of the NAAQS for ozone. The Panel deliberations focused on the scientific data available on the health effects of exposure to ambient concentrations of ozone, controlled ozone exposure studies with human volunteers, long-term epidemiological studies, time- series epidemiological studies, human panel studies, and toxicological investigations. The deliberations also dealt with the issue of background levels of ozone of nonanthropogenic origin and issues involved with conducting formal risk assessments of the health impacts of current and prospective levels of ambient ozone. The scientific issues that were central to the EPA Administrator's 2008 revision of the NAAQS for ozone will undoubtedly also be critical to the next review of the ozone standard. That review should begin very soon if it is to be completed within the 5-year cycle specified in the CAA. It is hoped that this Report will stimulate discussion of these scientific issues, conduct of additional research, and conduct of new analyses that will provide an improved scientific basis for the policy judgment that will have to be made by a future EPA Administrator in considering potential revision of the ozone standard.
36 citations
Authors
Showing all 1593 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Hans-Olov Adami | 145 | 908 | 83473 |
Melvin E. Andersen | 83 | 517 | 26856 |
Joseph Katz | 81 | 691 | 27793 |
Lorna J. Gibson | 75 | 178 | 33835 |
Buddhima Indraratna | 64 | 735 | 15596 |
Barbara A. Goff | 61 | 227 | 11859 |
Jack S. Mandel | 60 | 171 | 22308 |
Antonio Gens | 58 | 269 | 14987 |
Ellen T. Chang | 57 | 209 | 11567 |
Dayang Wang | 55 | 185 | 9513 |
Edmund Lau | 52 | 183 | 22520 |
Steven M. Kurtz | 52 | 249 | 8066 |
Alfred J. Crosby | 51 | 206 | 8310 |
Suresh H. Moolgavkar | 51 | 169 | 8833 |
Michael T. Halpern | 51 | 237 | 16566 |