253 research outputs found
Influence of weathering and pre-existing large scale fractures on gravitational slope failure: insights from 3-D physical modelling
Using a new 3-D physical modelling technique we investigated the initiation and evolution of large scale landslides in presence of pre-existing large scale fractures and taking into account the slope material weakening due to the alteration/weathering. The modelling technique is based on the specially developed properly scaled analogue materials, as well as on the original vertical accelerator device enabling increases in the 'gravity acceleration' up to a factor 50. The weathering primarily affects the uppermost layers through the water circulation. We simulated the effect of this process by making models of two parts. The shallower one represents the zone subject to homogeneous weathering and is made of low strength material of compressive strength σ<sub>l</sub>. The deeper (core) part of the model is stronger and simulates intact rocks. Deformation of such a model subjected to the gravity force occurred only in its upper (low strength) layer. In another set of experiments, low strength (<i>σ<sub>w</sub></i>) narrow planar zones sub-parallel to the slope surface (<i>σ<sub>w</sub><σ<sub>l</sub></i>) were introduced into the model's superficial low strength layer to simulate localized highly weathered zones. In this configuration landslides were initiated much easier (at lower 'gravity force'), were shallower and had smaller horizontal size largely defined by the weak zone size. Pre-existing fractures were introduced into the model by cutting it along a given plan. They have proved to be of small influence on the slope stability, except when they were associated to highly weathered zones. In this latter case the fractures laterally limited the slides. Deep seated rockslides initiation is thus directly defined by the mechanical structure of the hillslope's uppermost levels and especially by the presence of the weak zones due to the weathering. The large scale fractures play a more passive role and can only influence the shape and the volume of the sliding units
Environmental Impacts of Tartaric Stabilisation Processes for Wines using Electrodialysis and Cold Treatment
The environmental impacts of the two tartaric stabilisation methods used for wines, electrodialysis andcold treatment, were studied by determining water consumption (for the process and cleaning), wasteproduced (organic load and the composition of wastewater and residues) and energy consumption, atthe pilot stage and in wineries. Thanks to an online treatment of electrodialysis brines by reverse osmosis(industrial facility that treats 30 hL wine/h), the recycling of permeates led to a 65% reduction in waterconsumption, the volume of which represented only 3.9% of the wine treated. When washing and cleaningwater from the ED-RO system was taken into account, overall water consumption was 5.5 L/hL wine. Thepresence of ethanol, due to an osmotic phenomenon with no loss of wine volume, and tartaric acid in thebrines contributes to the organic load of the brine, with a COD of close to 8.4 g O2/L. Overall electricalenergy consumption for stabilisation by electrodialysis (0.21 kWh/hL) turned out to be eight times lowerthan that of cold stabilisation. An evaluation of cold stabilisation effluents revealed that 66.6% of the CODdischarged came from the diatomaceous earth (DE), 21.8% from the washing of the filter and 11.4% fromthe washing of the cold treatment tank. The production of used DE was 2.64 g (wet weight)/L of wine, andthe ethanol present in the DE waste represented a loss in wine volume of 0.14 L/hL
Phase Field Model for Three-Dimensional Dendritic Growth with Fluid Flow
We study the effect of fluid flow on three-dimensional (3D) dendrite growth
using a phase-field model on an adaptive finite element grid. In order to
simulate 3D fluid flow, we use an averaging method for the flow problem coupled
to the phase-field method and the Semi-Implicit Approximated Projection Method
(SIAPM). We describe a parallel implementation for the algorithm, using Charm++
FEM framework, and demonstrate its efficiency. We introduce an improved method
for extracting dendrite tip position and tip radius, facilitating accurate
comparison to theory. We benchmark our results for two-dimensional (2D)
dendrite growth with solvability theory and previous results, finding them to
be in good agreement. The physics of dendritic growth with fluid flow in three
dimensions is very different from that in two dimensions, and we discuss the
origin of this behavior
Breakup Conditions of Projectile Spectators from Dynamical Observables
Momenta and masses of heavy projectile fragments (Z >= 8), produced in
collisions of 197Au with C, Al, Cu and Pb targets at E/A = 600 MeV, were
determined with the ALADIN magnetic spectrometer at SIS. An analysis of
kinematic correlations between the two and three heaviest projectile fragments
in their rest frame was performed. The sensitivity of these correlations to the
conditions at breakup was verified within the schematic SOS-model. The data
were compared to calculations with statistical multifragmentation models and to
classical three-body calculations. Classical trajectory calculations reproduce
the dynamical observables. The deduced breakup parameters, however, differ
considerably from those assumed in the statistical multifragmentation models
which describe the charge correlations. If, on the other hand, the analysis of
kinematic and charge correlations is performed for events with two and three
heavy fragments produced by statistical multifragmentation codes, a good
agreement with the data is found with the exception that the fluctuation widths
of the intrinsic fragment energies are significantly underestimated. A new
version of the multifragmentation code MCFRAG was therefore used to investigate
the potential role of angular momentum at the breakup stage. If a mean angular
momentum of 0.75/nucleon is added to the system, the energy fluctuations
can be reproduced, but at the same time the charge partitions are modified and
deviate from the data.
PACS numbers: 25.70.Mn, 25.70.Pq, 25.75.Ld, 25.75.-qComment: 38 pages, RevTeX with 21 included figures; Also available from
http://www-kp3.gsi.de/www/kp3/aladin_publications.htm
Crack-Like Processes Governing the Onset of Frictional Slip
We perform real-time measurements of the net contact area between two blocks
of like material at the onset of frictional slip. We show that the process of
interface detachment, which immediately precedes the inception of frictional
sliding, is governed by three different types of detachment fronts. These
crack-like detachment fronts differ by both their propagation velocities and by
the amount of net contact surface reduction caused by their passage. The most
rapid fronts propagate at intersonic velocities but generate a negligible
reduction in contact area across the interface. Sub-Rayleigh fronts are
crack-like modes which propagate at velocities up to the Rayleigh wave speed,
VR, and give rise to an approximate 10% reduction in net contact area. The most
efficient contact area reduction (~20%) is precipitated by the passage of slow
detachment fronts. These fronts propagate at anomalously slow velocities, which
are over an order of magnitude lower than VR yet orders of magnitude higher
than other characteristic velocity scales such as either slip or loading
velocities. Slow fronts are generated, in conjunction with intersonic fronts,
by the sudden arrest of sub-Rayleigh fronts. No overall sliding of the
interface occurs until either of the slower two fronts traverses the entire
interface, and motion at the leading edge of the interface is initiated. Slip
at the trailing edge of the interface accompanies the motion of both the slow
and sub-Rayleigh fronts. We might expect these modes to be important in both
fault nucleation and earthquake dynamics.Comment: 19 page, 5 figures, to appear in International Journal of Fractur
Regular dendritic patterns induced by non-local time-periodic forcing
The dynamic response of dendritic solidification to spatially homogeneous
time-periodic forcing has been studied. Phase-field calculations performed in
two dimensions (2D) and experiments on thin (quasi 2D) liquid crystal layers
show that the frequency of dendritic side-branching can be tuned by oscillatory
pressure or heating. The sensitivity of this phenomenon to the relevant
parameters, the frequency and amplitude of the modulation, the initial
undercooling and the anisotropies of the interfacial free energy and molecule
attachment kinetics, has been explored. It has been demonstrated that besides
the side-branching mode synchronous with external forcing as emerging from the
linear Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin analysis, modes that oscillate with higher
harmonic frequencies are also present with perceptible amplitudes.Comment: 15 pages, 23 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Phase-field approach to polycrystalline solidification including heterogeneous and homogeneous nucleation
Advanced phase-field techniques have been applied to address various aspects of polycrystalline solidification including different modes of crystal nucleation. The height of the nucleation barrier has been determined by solving the appropriate Euler-Lagrange equations. The examples shown include the comparison of various models of homogeneous crystal nucleation with atomistic simulations for the single component hard-sphere fluid. Extending previous work for pure systems (Gránásy L, Pusztai T, Saylor D and Warren J A 2007 Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 art no 035703), heterogeneous nucleation in unary and binary systems is described via introducing boundary conditions that realize the desired contact angle. A quaternion representation of crystallographic orientation of the individual particles (outlined in Pusztai T, Bortel G and Gránásy L 2005 Europhys. Lett. 71 131) has been applied for modeling a broad variety of polycrystalline structures including crystal sheaves, spherulites and those built of crystals with dendritic, cubic, rhombododecahedral, truncated octahedral growth morphologies. Finally, we present illustrative results for dendritic polycrystalline solidification obtained using an atomistic phase-field model
Model counting for complex data structures
We extend recent approaches for calculating the probability of program behaviors, to allow model counting for complex data structures with numeric fields. We use symbolic execution with lazy initialization to compute the input structures leading to the occurrence of a target event, while keeping a symbolic representation of the constraints on the numeric data. Off-the-shelf model counting tools are used to count the solutions for numerical constraints and field bounds encoding data structure invariants are used to reduce the search space. The technique is implemented in the Symbolic PathFinder tool and evaluated on several complex data structures. Results show that the technique is much faster than an enumeration-based method that uses the Korat tool and also highlight the benefits of using the field bounds to speed up the analysis
Interphase chromosome positioning in in vitro porcine cells and ex vivo porcine tissues
Copyright @ 2012 The Authors. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and 85 reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. The article was made available through the Brunel University Open Access Publishing Fund.BACKGROUND: In interphase nuclei of a wide range of species chromosomes are organised into their own specific locations termed territories. These chromosome territories are non-randomly positioned in nuclei which is believed to be related to a spatial aspect of regulatory control over gene expression. In this study we have adopted the pig as a model in which to study interphase chromosome positioning and follows on from other studies from our group of using pig cells and tissues to study interphase genome re-positioning during differentiation. The pig is an important model organism both economically and as a closely related species to study human disease models. This is why great efforts have been made to accomplish the full genome sequence in the last decade. RESULTS: This study has positioned most of the porcine chromosomes in in vitro cultured adult and embryonic fibroblasts, early passage stromal derived mesenchymal stem cells and lymphocytes. The study is further expanded to position four chromosomes in ex vivo tissue derived from pig kidney, lung and brain. CONCLUSIONS: It was concluded that porcine chromosomes are also non-randomly positioned within interphase nuclei with few major differences in chromosome position in interphase nuclei between different cell and tissue types. There were also no differences between preferred nuclear location of chromosomes in in vitro cultured cells as compared to cells in tissue sections. Using a number of analyses to ascertain by what criteria porcine chromosomes were positioned in interphase nuclei; we found a correlation with DNA content.This study is partly supported by Sygen International PLC
One Net Fits All: A unifying semantics of Dynamic Fault Trees using GSPNs
Dynamic Fault Trees (DFTs) are a prominent model in reliability engineering.
They are strictly more expressive than static fault trees, but this comes at a
price: their interpretation is non-trivial and leaves quite some freedom. This
paper presents a GSPN semantics for DFTs. This semantics is rather simple and
compositional. The key feature is that this GSPN semantics unifies all existing
DFT semantics from the literature. All semantic variants can be obtained by
choosing appropriate priorities and treatment of non-determinism.Comment: Accepted at Petri Nets 201
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