424 research outputs found
The EUROfusion materials property handbook for DEMO in-vessel components—Status and the challenge to improve confidence level for engineering data
The development of a specific materials database and handbook, for engineering design of in-vessel components of EU-DEMO, is an essential requirement for assessing the structural integrity by design. For baseline in-vessel materials, including EURFOER97, CuCrZr, Tungsten as well as dielectric and optical materials, this development has been ongoing for several years within the Engineering Data and Design Integration sub-project of the EUROfusion Materials Work Package. Currently the database is insufficient to ensure reliable engineering design and safety or hazard analysis and mostly does not yet exist in established nuclear codes.
In this paper the current status of EU-DEMO database and handbook for key in-vessel materials is provided. This comprises practical steps taken to obtain the raw data, screening procedures and data storage, to ensure quality and provenance. We discuss how this procedure has been utilized to produce materials handbook chapter on EUROFER97 and the critical challenges in data accumulation for CuCrZr and Tungsten, planned mitigations and the implications this has on structural design. Finally, key elements and methodology of our strategy to develop the materials database and handbook for the in-vessel materials are outlined, including concepts to accommodate sparse irradiated materials data and links to EU-DEMO engineering design criteria
comparison of methadone and levomethadone in long-term treatment
Background This study aimed to investigate the development of opioid tolerance
in patients receiving long-term methadone maintenance treatment (MMT). Methods
A region-wide cross-sectional study was performed focusing on dosage and
duration of treatment. Differences between racemic methadone and levomethadone
were examined. All 20 psychiatric hospitals and all 110 outpatient clinics in
Berlin licensed to offer MMT were approached in order to reach patients under
MMT fulfilling the DSM IV criteria of opiate dependence. In the study, 720
patients treated with racemic methadone or levomethadone gave information on
the dosage of treatment. Out of these, 679 patients indicated the duration of
MMT. Results Treatment with racemic methadone was reported for 370 patients
(54.5 %), with levomethadone for 309 patients (45.5 %). Mean duration of MMT
was 7.5 years. We found a significant correlation between dosage and duration
of treatment, both in a conjoint analysis for the two substances racemic
methadone and levomethadone and for each substance separately. These effects
remained significant when only patients receiving MMT for 1 year or longer
were considered, indicating proceeding tolerance development in long-term
treatment. When correlations were compared between racemic methadone and
levomethadone, no significant difference was found. Conclusions Our data show
a tolerance development under long-term treatment with both racemic methadone
and levomethadone. Tolerance development did not differ significantly between
the two substances
Intelligent middleware for adaptive sensing of tennis coaching sessions
In professional tennis training matches, the coach
needs to be able to view play from the most appropriate angle in order to monitor players activities. In this paper, we present a system which can adapt the operation of a series of cameras in order to maintain optimal system performance based on a set of wireless sensors. This setup is used as a testbed for an agent based intelligent middleware that can correlate data from many different wired and wireless sensors and provide effective in-situ decision making. The proposed solution is flexible enough
to allow the addition of new sensors and actuators. Within this setup we also provide details of a case study for the embedded control of cameras through the use of Ubisense data
Candida dubliniensis candidemia in patients with chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and bone marrow transplantation.
The recently described species Candida dubliniensis has been recovered primarily from superficial oral candidiasis in HIV-infected patients. No clinically documented invasive infections were reported until now in this patient group or in other immunocompromised patients. We report three cases of candidemia due to this newly emerging Candida species in HIV-negative patients with chemotherapy-induced immunosuppression and bone marrow transplantation
Extending the honey bee venome with the antimicrobial peptide apidaecin and a protein resembling wasp antigen 5
Honey bee venom is a complex mixture of toxic proteins and peptides. In the present study we tried to extend our knowledge of the venom composition using two different approaches. First, worker venom was analysed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and this revealed the antimicrobial peptide apidaecin for the first time in such samples. Its expression in the venom gland was confirmed by reverse transcription PCR and by a peptidomic analysis of the venom apparatus tissue. Second, genome mining revealed a list of proteins with resemblance to known insect allergens or venom toxins, one of which showed homology to proteins of the antigen 5 (Ag5)/Sol i 3 cluster. It was demonstrated that the honey bee Ag5-like gene is expressed by venom gland tissue of winter bees but not of summer bees. Besides this seasonal variation, it shows an interesting spatial expression pattern with additional production in the hypopharyngeal glands, the brains and the midgut. Finally, our immunoblot study revealed that both synthetic apidaecin and the Ag5-like recombinant from bacteria evoke no humoral activity in beekeepers. Also, no IgG4-based cross-reactivity was detected between the honey bee Ag5-like protein and its yellow jacket paralogue Ves v 5
The UA9 experimental layout
The UA9 experimental equipment was installed in the CERN-SPS in March '09
with the aim of investigating crystal assisted collimation in coasting mode.
Its basic layout comprises silicon bent crystals acting as primary
collimators mounted inside two vacuum vessels. A movable 60 cm long block of
tungsten located downstream at about 90 degrees phase advance intercepts the
deflected beam.
Scintillators, Gas Electron Multiplier chambers and other beam loss monitors
measure nuclear loss rates induced by the interaction of the beam halo in the
crystal. Roman pots are installed in the path of the deflected particles and
are equipped with a Medipix detector to reconstruct the transverse distribution
of the impinging beam. Finally UA9 takes advantage of an LHC-collimator
prototype installed close to the Roman pot to help in setting the beam
conditions and to analyze the efficiency to deflect the beam. This paper
describes in details the hardware installed to study the crystal collimation
during 2010.Comment: 15pages, 11 figure, submitted to JINS
Transonic Dislocation Propagation in Diamond
The motion of line defects (dislocations) has been studied for over 60 years
but the maximum speed at which they can move is unresolved. Recent models and
atomistic simulations predict the existence of a limiting velocity of
dislocation motions between the transonic and subsonic ranges at which the
self-energy of dislocation diverges, though they do not deny the possibility of
the transonic dislocations. We use femtosecond x-ray radiography to track
ultrafast dislocation motion in shock-compressed single-crystal diamond. By
visualizing stacking faults extending faster than the slowest sound wave speed
of diamond, we show the evidence of partial dislocations at their leading edge
moving transonically. Understanding the upper limit of dislocation mobility in
crystals is essential to accurately model, predict, and control the mechanical
properties of materials under extreme conditions
- …