The electronic properties and the thermoelectric power factors in the metal-band-insulator crossover of the perovskite-type oxygen deficient system SrTiO(3 - δ/2) with 0.0046 ≤ δ < 0.06 are explored through measurements of x-ray diffraction, electrical resistivity, thermoelectric power, Hall coefficient and magnetic susceptibility. The metallic transport is confirmed to be basically explained through scattering by electron correlations, acoustic phonons and polar optical phonons, where each scattering coefficient is almost linear in the inverse of the effective carrier concentration estimated from the Hall coefficient. The upper limit of the thermoelectric power factor is 2 × 10( - 3) W m( - 1) K( - 2) with the carrier concentration of 2 × 10(20) cm( - 3) at around the Fermi energy comparable to the Debye temperature.
This paper proposes a new solution to the vehicle routing problem with time windows using an evolution strategy adopting viral infection. The problem belongs to the NP-hard class and is very difficult to solve within practical time limits using systematic optimization techniques. In conventional evolution strategies, a schema with a high degree-of-fitness produced in the process of evolution may not be inherited when the fitness of the individual containing the schema is low. The proposed method preserves the schema as a virus and uses it by the infection operation in successive generations. Experimental results using extended Solomon's benchmark problems with 1000 customers proved that the proposed method is superior to conventional methods in both its rates of searches and the probability of obtaining solutions. Further experiments using the map of the central part of Tokyo with 20000 intersections and real traffic data also gave that the rate of search of the proposed method is higher than that of the conventional method.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.