Ruben Nelson
Florida State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ruben Nelson.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013
Jamie Gomez; Egwu Eric Kalu; Ruben Nelson; Mark H. Weatherspoon; Jim P. Zheng
Binder-free Co–Mn composite oxide was successfully deposited at low temperature on a woven substrate through a combination of electroless and electrolytic steps. The principle of the approach was illustrated with cobalt metal and a successful thin film metal oxide formation was supported by CV, XRD and XPS data. The viability of the binder-free Co–Mn oxide electrode was tested as a Li–air battery electrocatalyst and yielded an initial specific capacity of up to 2000 mA h g−1 and survived multiple charge–discharge–recharge cycles. The oxidation time in the electrolytic oxidation-step was found to affect the battery discharge period. In comparison to the conventional polymeric binder methods, the present binder-free method is potentially adaptable to a roll–roll continuous processing approach.
southeastern symposium on system theory | 2008
Ruben Nelson; Simon Y. Foo; Mark H. Weatherspoon
Hidden Markov models (HMM) have largely demonstrated their usefulness in the fields of statistics and pattern recognition, particularly for speech recognition and hand writing recognition. In the field of genetics, the same principles of statistics and probability can be applied. DNA primarily has four bases: adenine, guanine, thymine, and cytosine, which when paired together can form nucleotides. However, the length of a nucleotide chain can be uncertain. The DNA sequence constitutes the heritable genetic information in nuclei that forms the basis for the developmental programs of all living organisms. Determining the DNA sequence is therefore useful in studying fundamental biological processes, as well as in diagnostic or forensic research. In this study, we will utilize hidden Markov models (HMM) to determine DNA sequence likelihoods. A training sequence of nucleotide bases of the first 1000 bases of rice chromosomes will be used, and the transition and emission probabilities would determine a probable DNA sequence of the next 2000 bases. This sequence should be comparable to the actual sequence. However, experimentation did not show this to be the case, despite previous experiments showing otherwise. Only a fourth of a nucleotide sequence was ever classified correctly.
Journal of Power Sources | 2011
Jamie Gomez; Ruben Nelson; Egwu Eric Kalu; Mark H. Weatherspoon; Jim P. Zheng
Electrochemistry Communications | 2013
Ruben Nelson; Mark H. Weatherspoon; Jamie Gomez; Egwu E. Kalu; Jim P. Zheng
ECS Electrochemistry Letters | 2012
Jamie Gomez; Egwu Eric Kalu; Ruben Nelson; Charlemagne Akpovo; Mark H. Weatherspoon; Jim P. Zheng
224th ECS Meeting (October 27 – November 1, 2013) | 2014
Ruben Nelson; Joyce Kosivi; Mark H. Weatherspoon; Eric E. Kalu; Jim P. Zheng
231st ECS Meeting (May 28 - June 1, 2017) | 2017
Ruben Nelson; Mark H. Weatherspoon
PRiME 2016/230th ECS Meeting (October 2-7, 2016) | 2016
Ruben Nelson; Mark H. Weatherspoon
228th ECS Meeting (October 11-15, 2015) | 2015
Ruben Nelson; Mark H. Weatherspoon
227th ECS Meeting (May 24-28, 2015) | 2015
Eugene Newton Moss; Ruben Nelson; Larry Morris; Mark H. Weatherspoon; Pedro L. Moss