Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Conference Object Citation - WoS: 24Effect of pH and Hydration on the Normal and Lateral Interaction Forces Between Alumina Surfaces(2006) Polat, Mehmet; Sato, Kimiyasu; Nagaoka, Takaaki; Watari, KojiNormal and lateral interaction forces between alumina surfaces were measured using Atomic Force Microscopy-Colloid Probe Method at different pH. The normal force curves exhibit a well-defined repulsive barrier and an attractive minimum at acidic pH and the DLVO theory shows excellent agreement with the data. The normal forces are always repulsive at basic pH and the theory fails to represent the measurements. Lateral forces are almost an order of magnitude smaller in the basic solutions. These differences, which have important implications in the study of stability and rheology, are attributed to the hydration of the alumina surface at basic pH. © 2013 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.Article Citation - Scopus: 105Moisture Sorption Isotherm Characteristics of Peppers(Elsevier Science Ltd, 2001) Kaymak-Ertekin,F.; Sultanoglu,M.Moisture sorption isotherms of green and red peppers were determined at three different temperatures (30 °C, 45 °C and 60 °C) and relative humidities (10-90%), using the standard static, gravimetric method. The GAB, Halsey, Oswin and BET sorption models were tested to fit the experimental data. A nonlinear regression analysis method was used to evaluate the constants of four sorption equations. The Halsey equation gave the best fit to the experimental sorption data for a wide range of water activity while BET gave the best fit for a water activity range of 0.1-0.5. The agreement between experimental and calculated values was found to be satisfactory. The isosteric heats of desorption and adsorption of water were determined from the equilibrium data at different temperatures using the Clasius-Clapeyron equation.Article Citation - Scopus: 60Distribution of Elements in Honeys and Effect of a Thermoelectric Power Plant on the Element Contents(1998) Üren,A.; Şerifoglu,A.; Sarikahya,Y.Lead, cadmium, iron, copper, zinc, manganese, calcium, magnesium and potassium contents of Turkish honeys were investigated. Most of the elements were more abundant in honeydew honeys than in flower honeys. But calcium content of honeydew honeys was smaller than in flower honeys. Considerable temporal fluctuation of elements was observed in honeydew honeys produced in the same area and from the same hives during autumn 1992, 1993 and 1994. Element contents of Turkish honeys showed high coefficients of variation, and the coefficients of variation decreased with increasing amounts of total minerals in honeys. The thermoelectric power plant which was 15-18 km away from the hives did not cause any pollution in honeys. Turkish honeys did not show any contamination of lead, cadmium, iron or zinc, and amounts of these elements were found well below the permitted limits.Article Citation - Scopus: 179Mineral Content of Some Herbs and Herbal Teas by Infusion and Decoction(Elsevier Ltd., 2008) Özcan, Mehmet Musa; Ünver, Ahmet; Uçar, Tolga; Arslan, DeryaSage (Salvia fruticosa L.), anise (Pimpinella anisum L.), Hawthorn (Crataegus orientalis), rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis L.), mountain tea (Sideritis spp), basil (Ocimum basilicum L.), lime flower (Tilia cordata), nettle (Urtica dioica L.), thyme (Thymbra spicata), coriander (Coriandrum sativum L.), rosehip (Rosa canina L.), mentha (Mentha piperita L.), balm (Melissa officinalis L.), tea (Camelia sinensis L.) (Black and green), sena leaf (Casia angustifolia), camomile (Matricaria chamomilla), tarragon (Artemisia dracunculus L.), cinnamon (Cinnamomum casia) and fennel (Foeniculum vulgare L.) were used as plant material in this study. Decoction was applied to R. canina, A. dracunculus and C. casia, and infusion was applied to other plant materials. Ten, 15 and 20 min were used as a time parameter for both infusion and decection. Inductive coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AEs) has been used for the determination of the elements in all infusions, decoctions and plant material. The Fe (1295.65 ppm) and Mg (3178.74 ppm) of M. officinalis, P (12698.05 ppm) and Pb (3.85 ppm) of green tea, Ca (19685.70 ppm) of C. orientalis, K (29167.53 ppm), Cu (12.18 ppm) and Na (2563.86 ppm) of C. casia, Zn (26.00 ppm) of M. chamomille and Se (23.53 ppm) contents of C. sativum were higher than the other plant materials. Ca (28.621 mg/100 ml) was the highest in concentration in the infusion of C. angustifolia for 10, 15 and 20 min. Ca could not be found in black and green teas. K (231.390 mg/100 ml) and P (24.857 mg/100 ml) contents were the highest in A. dracunculus tea. Mg (16.230 mg/100 ml) content of O. basilicum was determined as the highest. In general, the minerals that difuse to the tea at higher concentrations at the 10th minute were Ag, B, Cu, Co, Fe, ln and Zn, at the 15th minute were Ag, B, Cu, Co, K, ln and Zn and at the 20th minute were Ag, B, Cu, Co, ln, Fe and K. As a result, 10 min was the optimum time for getting the minerals into the tea, and it is apparent that plants and teas are good sources of the minerals. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Article Citation - WoS: 53Citation - Scopus: 63Effective Stress Principle for Saturated Fractured Porous Media(Wiley-Blackwell, 1995) Tuncay, Kağan; Çorapçıoğlu, M. YavuzAn effective stress principle for saturated fractured porous media is proposed based On the double-porosity representation. Both the solid grains and the fractured porous medium are assumed to be linearly elastic materials. The derivation employs volume averaging technique to obtain macroscopic scale expressions. Two parameters, the bulk modulus of the fractured medium and bulk modulus of the porous matrix, are introduced in the formulation. The final expression reduces to the one obtained by Blot and Willis [1957], Skempton [1960], Nur and Byeerle [1971], and Verruijt [1984] when the volume fraction of the fractures vanishes, that is, for a nonfractured porous medium.Article Citation - WoS: 18Citation - Scopus: 31Applied Mel-Frequency Discrete Wavelet Coefficients and Parallel Model Compensation for Noise-Robust Speech Recognition(Elsevier, 2006) Tüfekçi, Zekeriya; Gowdy, John N.; Gürbüz, Sabri; Patterson, EricInterfering noise severely degrades the performance of a speech recognition system. The Parallel Model Compensation (PMC) technique is one of the most efficient techniques for dealing with such noise. Another approach is to use features local in the frequency domain, such as Mel-Frequency Discrete Wavelet Coefficients (MFDWCs). In this paper, we investigate the use of PMC and MFDWC features to take advantage of both noise compensation and local features (MFDWCs) to decrease the effect of noise on recognition performance. We also introduce a practical weighting technique based on the noise level of each coefficient. We evaluate the performance of several wavelet-schemes using the NOISEX-92 database for various noise types and noise levels. Finally, we compare the performance of these versus Mel-Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCCs), both using PMC. Experimental results show significant performance improvements for MFDWCs versus MFCCs, particularly after compensating the HMMs using the PMC technique. The best feature vector among the six MFDWCs we tried gave 13.72 and 5.29 points performance improvement, on the average, over MFCCs for -6 and 0 dB SNR, respectively. This corresponds to 39.9% and 62.8% error reductions, respectively. Weighting the partial score of each coefficient based on the noise level further improves the performance. The average error rates for the best MFDWCs dropped from 19.57% to 16.71% and from 3.14% to 2.14% for -6 dB and 0 dB noise levels, respectively, using the weighting scheme. These improvements correspond to 14.6% and 31.8% error reductions for -6 dB and 0 dB noise levels, respectively. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Article Citation - WoS: 67Citation - Scopus: 78Chirp Group Delay Analysis of Speech Signals(Elsevier, 2007) Bozkurt, Barış; Couvreur, Laurent; Dutoit, ThierryThis study proposes new group delay estimation techniques that can be used for analyzing resonance patterns of short-term discrete-time signals and more specifically speech signals. Phase processing or equivalently group delay processing of speech signals are known to be difficult due to large spikes in the phase/group delay functions that mask the formant structure. In this study, we first analyze in detail the z-transform zero patterns of short-term speech signals in the z-plane and discuss the sources of spikes on group delay functions, namely the zeros closely located to the unit circle. We show that windowing largely influences these patterns, therefore short-term phase processing. Through a systematic study, we then show that reliable phase/group delay estimation for speech signals can be achieved by appropriate windowing and group delay functions can reveal formant information as well as some of the characteristics of the glottal flow component in speech signals. However, such phase estimation is highly sensitive to noise and robust extraction of group delay based parameters remains difficult in real acoustic conditions even with appropriate windowing. As an alternative, we propose processing of chirp group delay functions, i.e. group delay functions computed on a circle other than the unit circle in z-plane, which can be guaranteed to be spike-free. We finally present one application in feature extraction for automatic speech recognition (ASR). We show that chirp group delay representations are potentially useful for improving ASR performance. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Article Citation - WoS: 6Citation - Scopus: 6Variation of the Light and Period of the Magnetic Cataclysmic Variable Am Her(IOP Publishing, 2008) Kalomeni, Belinda; Yakut, KadriGround-based, long-term optic variability of AM Her, covering the period between 2003-2008, has been conducted to study the features seen in both low and high states of the system. Low-state analysis shows the presence of short-term, low-amplitude light variations of about 0.02-0.03 mag with a mean power time between 16 s and 226 s. Brightness variations on the order of 0.7-2 mag, which could be due to the stellar activity of the component in the system, are also detected. A total of 30 years' times of minimum light given in the literature are combined with nine times of minima obtained in this study. We represented the (observed-calculated) diagram by a parabolic curve and also by two broken lines. Under the assumption of a parabolic variation, we estimate an increase in period, dP/dt = 7.5(1.2) x 10(-9) days yr(-1), with a mass transfer rate of. M = 8(2) x 10(-9) M(circle dot) yr(-1), in agreement with the previous findings by a different method.Article Citation - WoS: 38Citation - Scopus: 40Influences of Deposition Time and Ph on Magnetic Nife Nanowires Fabrication(Elsevier, 2009) Atalay, Funda E.; Kaya, Harun; Atalay, Selcuk; Tarı, SüleymanIn this work, NiFe nanowires were grown into highly ordered porous anodic alumina oxide (AAO) templates by dc electrodeposition at various deposition times and pH values. During the deposition process some electrochemical bath parameters such as ion content, deposition voltage, and temperature of solution were kept constant. The morphological properties of the nanowire arrays were studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), the chemical composition was determined by examination of the energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectra, and the magnetic behavior of the arrays was determined by vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM). (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Article Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 5Conductance Fluctuations in Undoped Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon-Germanium Alloy Thin Films(Elsevier Ltd., 2002) Güneş, Mehmet; Johanson, Robert E.; Kasap, Safa O.; Yang, Jeffrey C.; Guha, SubhenduWe report coplanar conductance fluctuations of device quality, undoped hydrogenated amorphous silicon-germanium alloy thin films (a-SiGe:H) measured from 430 to 490 K. The a-SiGe:H alloys produce noise power spectra similar to coplanar undoped a-Si:H films in the same temperature range. The noise power spectrum S(n) does not fit a single 1/fα power law but rather has two distinct regions, each accurately fitted by a power law, but with different slopes. The low frequency slope α1 is similar to that observed in undoped a-Si:H films varying from 1.30 to 1.46 for different Ge concentrations and shows a slight temperature dependence. At higher frequencies, the slope α2 is less than unity and temperature independent but depends on the Ge content of the film. α2 decreases from 0.60 for no Ge (pure a-Si:H) to 0.15 for 40 at.% Ge. The noise power at lower frequencies increases and at higher frequencies decreases substantially as the temperature increases from 430 to 490 K. We infer that similar noise mechanisms are operating in undoped a-SiGe:H and a-Si:H films but that the Ge content is influencing the noise, particularly the slope at higher frequencies. In addition, the noise has the expected quadratic dependence on bias current and obeys Gaussian statistics.
