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Institution

Technische Universität Darmstadt

EducationDarmstadt, Germany
About: Technische Universität Darmstadt is a education organization based out in Darmstadt, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Neutron & Finite element method. The organization has 17316 authors who have published 40619 publications receiving 937916 citations. The organization is also known as: Darmstadt University of Technology & University of Darmstadt.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a distributed optical PMD equalizer with one piece of polarization-maintaining fiber twisted by 64 stepper motors has been proposed and tested in transmission systems with bit rates of 10, 20 and 40 Gb/s.
Abstract: Polarization mode dispersion (PMD), especially in "old" fibers, is considered harmful for installation and upgrading of trunk lines. An optical PMD equalizer should have several or many differential group delay (DGD) sections with polarization transformers in between which can endlessly transform any input polarization into a principal state of the following DGD section. The sections must practically have fixed DGDs unless there is only one section. The small-signal baseband transfer function for PMD, higher order PMD, and the necessary number of sections as well as their control by the output signals of an electrical filter bank in the receiver are also discussed in this context. Several PMD equalizers have been realized and successfully tested in transmission systems with bit rates of 10, 20, and 40 Gb/s. The systems operated stably with well-opened eye diagrams for DGDs ranging between 0 and 1.7 bit durations. Best performance is obtained from a distributed PMD equalizer with one piece of polarization-maintaining fiber twisted by 64 stepper motors. The principle can also be realized in LiNbO/sub 3/.

262 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The catecholase activity of a series of dicopper(II) complexes containing different numbers of phenol groups coordinated to the metal centers was studied to identify functional as well as structural models for the type III copper enzymes tyrosinase and catechl oxidase.
Abstract: The catecholase activity of a series of dicopper(II) complexes containing different numbers of phenol groups coordinated to the metal centers was studied to identify functional as well as structural models for the type III copper enzymes tyrosinase and catechol oxidase. The syntheses and characterization of complexes [Cu(2)(H(2)bbppnol)(mu-OAc)(H(2)O)(2)]Cl(2).2H(2)O (1) and [Cu(2)(Hbtppnol)(mu-OAc)](ClO(4))(2) (2) were previously reported by us (Inorg. Chim. Acta 1998, 281, 111-115; Inorg. Chem. Commun. 1999, 2, 334-337), and complex [Cu(2)(P1-O(-))(OAc(-))](ClO(4))(2) (3) was previously reported by Karlin et al. (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1997, 119, 2156-2162). The catalytic activity of the complexes 1-3 on the oxidation of 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol was determined spectrophotometrically by monitoring the increase of the 3,5-di-tert-butyl-o-benzoquinone characteristic absorption band at about 400 nm over time in methanol saturated with O(2)/aqueous buffer pH 8 solutions at 25 degrees C. The complexes were able to oxidize 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol to the corresponding o-quinone with distinct catalytic activity. A kinetic treatment of the data based on the Michaelis-Menten approach was applied. The [Cu(2)(H(2)bbppnol)(mu-OAc)(H(2)O)(2)]Cl(2) small middle dot2H(2)O complex showed the highest catalytic activity of the three complexes as a result of a high turnover rate (k(cat) = 28 h(-1)) combined with a moderate substrate-catalyst binding constant (K(ass) = 1.3 x 10(3) M(-1)). A mechanism for the oxidation reaction is proposed, and reactivity differences, k(cat)/K(M) of the complexes, were found to be dependent on (DeltaE)(1,2), the difference in the driving force for the reduction reactions Cu(II)(2)/Cu(II)Cu(I) and Cu(II)Cu(I)/Cu(I)(2).

262 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Oct 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present simple calculation strategies and discuss their limits for the mechanical design of high-speed machines with either surface mounted or buried magnets, and the results of the calculations are compared with FE-calculations.
Abstract: High-speed applications involve technical and economical advantages, because as direct drives they avoid the gear as an additional mechanical drive component Permanent magnet synchronous machines are attracting growing attention for high-speed drives. Surface mounted permanent magnet synchronous machines request a glass or carbon fibre bandage to fasten the magnets to the rotor surface at high speed. At rotors with "buried" magnets the rotor iron itself fixes the magnets. The paper presents simple calculation strategies and discusses their limits for the mechanical design of high-speed machines with either surface mounted or buried magnets. The results of the calculations are compared with FE-calculations.

262 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new method for eliminating speckles in the far field by using a diffractive optical element is proposed, which can be reduced to a few percent while good beam quality is preserved.
Abstract: In laser projection systems the observer in the far field of the image points on the screen will recognize serious speckle noise There are many methods to reduce or eliminate speckles in the near field by reducing or eliminating temporal or spatial coherence of the laser But for the far field it is hardly possible to change the coherence properties of laser sources so that speckles will disappear We propose a new method for eliminating speckles in the far field by using a diffractive optical element The intensity modulation depth in the far-field speckle pattern can be reduced to a few percent while good beam quality is preserved

262 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a series of Au/C catalysts were prepared by the gold sol method with different reducing agents and different kinds of carbon support providing Au mean particle diameters in the range 3-6nm.

261 citations


Authors

Showing all 17627 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yang Gao1682047146301
Herbert A. Simon157745194597
Stephen Boyd138822151205
Jun Chen136185677368
Harold A. Mooney135450100404
Bernt Schiele13056870032
Sascha Mehlhase12685870601
Yuri S. Kivshar126184579415
Michael Wagner12435154251
Wolf Singer12458072591
Tasawar Hayat116236484041
Edouard Boos11675764488
Martin Knapp106106748518
T. Kuhl10176140812
Peter Braun-Munzinger10052734108
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023135
2022624
20212,462
20202,585
20192,609
20182,493