forcefield
End-to-end Material Thermal Conductivity Prediction through Machine Learning
Srivastava, Yagyank, Jain, Ankit
For the particular case of thermal transport, while these approaches are gaining popularity, they are still limited. Thermal conductivity (κ) is an important material For instance, Pal et al. [25] employed a scale-invariant property critical in determining the performance and efficiency ML model to accelerate the search of quaternary chalcogenides of devices in various technological applications with low κ, Hu et al. [26] employed ML to minimize such as thermoelectric energy generation, thermal insulation, coherent heat conduction across aperiodic superlattices, and memory storage [1-4]. For many of these applications, Rodiguez et al. [27] trained neural network based low thermal conductivity semiconducting solids interatomic forcefield to do bottom-up prediction of κ are desired, while for others (such as heat dissipation based on intermediate phonon properties such as mean and microprocessors), materials with high κ are desired square displacements and bonding/anti-bonding characters, [2, 5, 6]. For materials used in most of these applications, and Visaria and Jain [28] employed neural network the thermal transport is dominated by atomic vibrations, based auto-encoders to do space transformation to search i.e., phonons, with room temperature κ in the range of for material configurations with low-and high-κ from the 0.1-3000 W/m-K [7]. The traditional search for novel low exponentially-large search space of considered superlattices.
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Small island prison first to install anti-drone 'forcefield'
Prisons have a drone problem, in that they're being used to fly drugs and other contraband over walls and into the hands of inmates. Dealing with these airborne mules is tricky because you either need to hope they crash or catch their operators in the act, but one prison is taking a more proactive approach to stopping undesirable deliveries. Alongside other security upgrades, the small, 139-capacity Les Nicolles Prison in Guernsey, Channel Islands, is said to be the first in the world to receive an anti-drone fence. It's not a physical barrier, but an invisible wall that jams pilot signals and stops drones from passing beyond its threshold. Two British companies, Drone Defence and Eclipse Digital Solutions, adapted existing jamming technology to create the "Sky Fence."