468 research outputs found
Long term survival of mature autotransplanted teeth: A retrospective single center analysis
Objective: The replacement of an irremediably compromised tooth requires an implant rehabilitation or a traditional fixed partial denture. In well-selected cases, a further therapeutic possibility is represented by tooth autotransplantation. Although dental transplants are poorly understood and practiced, the international literature agrees that it is considered the first choice when applicable. The advantages of this technique are numerous: use of an autologous element, maintenance of tissue trophism, aesthetic and functional restoration, costs reduction. Although autotransplantation is often performed with immature teeth, even mature teeth with fully formed apex can be used as donors. The aim of the present work was to analyze consecutive cases of completely formed donor teeth autotransplantations performed from 2005 to 2011 in 21 patients for evaluating the survival and success rate. Materials and methods: The medical records of patients who underwent transplantation in a specialized center in Rimini (Italy) from 2005 to 2011 were checked. Only transplants of mature donor molars were considered. Patients were called up to evaluate the survival rate and success rate. Results: The mean age at the time of the surgery was 33,6 \ub1 7,4; mean follow up was 11,9 years \ub11,9. Success rate at the time of latest recall visit was 80 % and survival 95 % of the analyzed cases. Conclusions: The survival and success rate are in complete agreement with the most recent literature and confirm that the technique of autotransplantation is reliable when indications and protocols are rigidly followed, also using mature teeth as donors
Natural risk management for industrial plants and infrastructures: the DaBo system
Natural risk management on complex critical infrastructures often requires integration of data coming out from
a huge number of sensors. Solutions are sometimes derived by classical supervisory control and data acquisition
systems (SCADAs), usually employed in manufacturing and industrial plants environment. This “control room”
approach often proves to be ineffective when the system to be monitored goes beyond the limits of the single plant
and it is extended to the surrounding environment including buildings and public infrastructures in a strong interaction
with local communities. The paper presents the case study of a hydroelectric plant extended over a territory
of a few tens of square kilometers and subject to hydrogeological problems of various kinds, with interactions
with buildings and infrastructures. The huge number of sensors installed for production control proved to be far
to monitor the safety of the plant in its environmental context. We present here the risk assessment procedure and
the proposed actions, also in terms of sensor installation. DaBo platform work as a data integrator. The structural
and hydraulic “ordinary state” is continuously generated by means of numerical modeling basing upon real time
observed boundary conditions. This state, via a suitable set of state variables, is compared with sensor data allowing
a clear synthesis of the safety of the infrastructure and its natural and anthropic context. DaBo poses itself as
a systems integrator both from a conceptual and an operational point of view, able to activate direct measures to
reduce the risk in case of emergency, involving also local civil protection authorities.
The platform integrates information from a wide range of sensors (viz. temperature, water level, strain, water content),
weather alerts, weather forecast from high resolution limited area models. The main innovation of DaBo
consists in the dashboard designed to provide communication of risk to the end user and to link the warnings to
action procedures. It is technically a responsive single page web application that is based on an information storage
and management layer by a high capacity relational database, a powerful scalable business logic tier for decision
support and early warning system, and a multi profiled responsive user interface. The goal is to ensure the operation
of the entire supply chain that connects the various sources of information to the entire user range
Effect of an electric field on an intermittent granular flow
Granular gravity driven flows of glass beads have been observed in a silo
with a flat bottom. A DC high electric field has been applied perpendicularly
to the silo to tune the cohesion. The outlet mass flow has been measured. An
image subtraction technique has been applied to visualize the flow geometry and
a spatiotemporal analysis of the flow dynamics has been performed. The outlet
mass flow is independent of voltage, but a transition from funnel flow to
rathole flow is observed. This transition is of probabilistic nature and an
intermediate situation exists between the funnel and the rathole situations. At
a given voltage, two kinds of flow dynamics can occur : a continuous flow or an
intermittent flow. The electric field increases the probability to observe an
intermittent flow.Comment: Accepted for publication in PRE on Apr 9, 201
Dirac dispersion and non-trivial Berry's phase in three-dimensional semimetal RhSb3
We report observations of magnetoresistance, quantum oscillations and
angle-resolved photoemission in RhSb, a unfilled skutterudite semimetal
with low carrier density. The calculated electronic band structure of RhSb
entails a quantum number in analogy to
strong topological insulators, and inverted linear valence/conduction bands
that touch at discrete points close to the Fermi level, in agreement with
angle-resolved photoemission results. Transport experiments reveal an
unsaturated linear magnetoresistance that approaches a factor of 200 at 60 T
magnetic fields, and quantum oscillations observable up to 150~K that are
consistent with a large Fermi velocity ( ms), high
carrier mobility ( /Vs), and small three dimensional hole pockets
with nontrivial Berry phase. A very small, sample-dependent effective mass that
falls as low as bare masses scales with Fermi velocity, suggesting
RhSb is a new class of zero-gap three-dimensional Dirac semimetal.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Coherent ultrafast spin-dynamics probed in three dimensional topological insulators
Topological insulators are candidates to open up a novel route in spin based
electronics. Different to traditional ferromagnetic materials, where the
carrier spin-polarization and magnetization are based on the exchange
interaction, the spin properties in topological insulators are based on the
coupling of spin- and orbit interaction connected to its momentum. Specific
ways to control the spin-polarization with light have been demonstrated: the
energy momentum landscape of the Dirac cone provides spin-momentum locking of
the charge current and its spin. The directionality of spin and momentum, as
well as control with light has been demonstrated. Here we demonstrate a
coherent femtosecond control of spin-polarization for states in the valence
band at around the Dirac cone.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Influence of Spin Orbit Coupling in the Iron-Based Superconductors
We report on the influence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) in the Fe-based
superconductors (FeSCs) via application of circularly-polarized spin and
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We combine this technique in
representative members of both the Fe-pnictides and Fe-chalcogenides with ab
initio density functional theory and tight-binding calculations to establish an
ubiquitous modification of the electronic structure in these materials imbued
by SOC. The influence of SOC is found to be concentrated on the hole pockets
where the superconducting gap is generally found to be largest. This result
contests descriptions of superconductivity in these materials in terms of pure
spin-singlet eigenstates, raising questions regarding the possible pairing
mechanisms and role of SOC therein.Comment: For supplementary information, see
http://qmlab.ubc.ca/ARPES/PUBLICATIONS/articles.htm
Doping dependent charge order correlations in electron-doped cuprates
Understanding the interplay between charge order (CO) and other phenomena
(e.g. pseudogap, antiferromagnetism, and superconductivity) is one of the
central questions in the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. The
discovery that similar forms of CO exist in both hole- and electron-doped
cuprates opened a path to determine what subset of the CO phenomenology is
universal to all the cuprates. Here, we use resonant x-ray scattering to
measure the charge order correlations in electron-doped cuprates (La2-xCexCuO4
and Nd2-xCexCuO4) and their relationship to antiferromagnetism, pseudogap, and
superconductivity. Detailed measurements of Nd2-xCexCuO4 show that CO is
present in the x = 0.059 to 0.166 range, and that its doping dependent
wavevector is consistent with the separation between straight segments of the
Fermi surface. The CO onset temperature is highest between x = 0.106 and 0.166,
but decreases at lower doping levels, indicating that it is not tied to the
appearance of antiferromagnetic correlations or the pseudogap. Near optimal
doping, where the CO wavevector is also consistent with a previously observed
phonon anomaly, measurements of the CO below and above the superconducting
transition temperature, or in a magnetic field, show that the CO is insensitive
to superconductivity. Overall these findings indicate that, while verified in
the electron-doped cuprates, material-dependent details determine whether the
CO correlations acquire sufficient strength to compete for the ground state of
the cuprates.Comment: Supplementary information available upon reques
A Zero-Order Flood Damage Model for Regional-Scale Quick Assessments
Quantitative data on observed flood ground effects are precious information to assess current risk levels and to improve our capability to forecast future flood damage, with the final aim of defining effective prevention policies and checking their success. This paper presents the first collection and analysis of flood damage claims produced in Italy in the past 7 years since a homogeneous national procedure for damage recognition became available. The database currently contains more than 70,000 claims referring to significant events and shows good homogeneity on the intensity of the related phenomena. We then propose an empirical model, based on observed data, to allow for a quick estimation of direct damage to private assets (i.e., residential buildings), based only on the knowledge of the perimeter of the flooded area. Single model calibration was performed at the multi-regional scale, focused on southern Italy. Model validation shows encouraging performances, considering the considerable natural uncertainty that characterizes this type of estimate. The procedure is of great interest when there is a need to evaluate, however roughly, flood damage in the immediacy of the event to assess the extent of the flood effects and to plan support actions for the affected communities
Emergence of pseudogap from short-range spin-correlations in electron doped cuprates
Electron interactions are pivotal for defining the electronic structure of
quantum materials. In particular, the strong electron Coulomb repulsion is
considered the keystone for describing the emergence of exotic and/or ordered
phases of quantum matter as disparate as high-temperature superconductivity and
charge- or magnetic-order. However, a comprehensive understanding of
fundamental electronic properties of quantum materials is often complicated by
the appearance of an enigmatic partial suppression of low-energy electronic
states, known as the pseudogap. Here we take advantage of ultrafast
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to unveil the temperature evolution
of the low-energy density of states in the electron-doped cuprate
NdCeCuO, an emblematic system where
the pseudogap intertwines with magnetic degrees of freedom. By photoexciting
the electronic system across the pseudogap onset temperature T*, we report the
direct relation between the momentum-resolved pseudogap spectral features and
the spin-correlation length with an unprecedented sensitivity. This transient
approach, corroborated by mean field model calculations, allows us to establish
the pseudogap in electron-doped cuprates as a precursor to the incipient
antiferromagnetic order even when long-range antiferromagnetic correlations are
not established, as in the case of optimal doping.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
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