164 research outputs found
Remote Inspection of a 46-Year-Old Buried High-Level Waste Storage Tank
This paper provides a description of the remote ultrasonic examinations of a high level radioactive waste storage tank at the Savannah River Site. The inspections were performed from the contaminated, annular space of the 46 year old, inactive, 1.03 million gallon waste storage tank
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Remote Inspection of a High Level Radioactive Waste Storage Tank for Cracking, Thinning, and Printing
Several of the high level radioactive waste storage tanks at the Savannah River Site (SRS) have been in service nearly 50 years. Periodic visual and ultrasonic (UT) nondestructive examinations (NDE) have been performed on the tanks to monitor the effects of service. These inspections revealed that several of the older tanks had suffered cracking as detected by through-wall visual indications. A new UT in-service inspection program has been recently established to provide for detection and characterization of cracking, thinning, or pitting of the sidewalls of the waste tanks. The program specifies examination of regions of the tank that would be most susceptible to corrosion attack, and to characterize the flaws and demonstrate acceptance to protect against potential leakage and instability. This paper summarizes the implementation of the program and inspection results for a tank that has been in service for over 40 years. No indications of reportable wall loss or pitting were detected. All thickness readings were above minimum design thickness. Several small indications of thinning were detected. The crack detection and sizing examinations detected five previously undetected indications, four of which were only partially through wall. The lengths of cracks that were examined are slightly longer than expected, but well below instability lengths
Towards a quantitative phase-field model of two-phase solidification
We construct a diffuse-interface model of two-phase solidification that
quantitatively reproduces the classic free boundary problem on solid-liquid
interfaces in the thin-interface limit. Convergence tests and comparisons with
boundary integral simulations of eutectic growth show good accuracy for
steady-state lamellae, but the results for limit cycles depend on the interface
thickness through the trijunction behavior. This raises the fundamental issue
of diffuse multiple-junction dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Better final discussion. 1 reference adde
Kinetics of Ordering in Fluctuation-Driven First-Order Transitions: Simulations and Dynamical Renormalization
Many systems where interactions compete with each other or with constraints
are well described by a model first introduced by Brazovskii. Such systems
include block copolymers, alloys with modulated phases, Rayleigh-Benard Cells
and type-I superconductors. The hallmark of this model is that the fluctuation
spectrum is isotropic and has a minimum at a nonzero wave vector represented by
the surface of a d-dimensional hyper-sphere. It was shown by Brazovskii that
the fluctuations change the free energy structure from a to a
form with the disordered state metastable for all quench depths.
The transition from the disordered to the periodic, lamellar structure changes
from second order to first order and suggests that the dynamics is governed by
nucleation. Using numerical simulations we have confirmed that the equilibrium
free energy function is indeed of a form. A study of the dynamics,
however, shows that, following a deep quench, the dynamics is described by
unstable growth rather than nucleation. A dynamical calculation, based on a
generalization of the Brazovskii calculations shows that the disordered state
can remain unstable for a long time following the quench.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures submitted to PR
Eutectic colony formation: A phase field study
Eutectic two-phase cells, also known as eutectic colonies, are commonly
observed during the solidification of ternary alloys when the composition is
close to a binary eutectic valley. In analogy with the solidification cells
formed in dilute binary alloys, colony formation is triggered by a
morphological instability of a macroscopically planar eutectic solidification
front due to the rejection by both solid phases of a ternary impurity that
diffuses in the liquid. Here we develop a phase-field model of a binary
eutectic with a dilute ternary impurity and we investigate by dynamical
simulations both the initial linear regime of this instability, and the
subsequent highly nonlinear evolution of the interface that leads to fully
developed two-phase cells with a spacing much larger than the lamellar spacing.
We find a good overall agreement with our recent linear stability analysis [M.
Plapp and A. Karma, Phys. Rev. E 60, 6865 (1999)], which predicts a
destabilization of the front by long-wavelength modes that may be stationary or
oscillatory. A fine comparison, however, reveals that the assumption commonly
attributed to Cahn that lamella grow perpendicular to the envelope of the
solidification front is weakly violated in the phase-field simulations. We show
that, even though weak, this violation has an important quantitative effect on
the stability properties of the eutectic front. We also investigate the
dynamics of fully developed colonies and find that the large-scale envelope of
the composite eutectic front does not converge to a steady state, but exhibits
cell elimination and tip-splitting events up to the largest times simulated.Comment: 18 pages, 18 EPS figures, RevTeX twocolumn, submitted to Phys. Rev.
An Integrated TCGA Pan-Cancer Clinical Data Resource to Drive High-Quality Survival Outcome Analytics
For a decade, The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) program collected clinicopathologic annotation data along with multi-platform molecular profiles of more than 11,000 human tumors across 33 different cancer types. TCGA clinical data contain key features representing the democratized nature of the data collection process. To ensure proper use of this large clinical dataset associated with genomic features, we developed a standardized dataset named the TCGA Pan-Cancer Clinical Data Resource (TCGA-CDR), which includes four major clinical outcome endpoints. In addition to detailing major challenges and statistical limitations encountered during the effort of integrating the acquired clinical data, we present a summary that includes endpoint usage recommendations for each cancer type. These TCGA-CDR findings appear to be consistent with cancer genomics studies independent of the TCGA effort and provide opportunities for investigating cancer biology using clinical correlates at an unprecedented scale. Analysis of clinicopathologic annotations for over 11,000 cancer patients in the TCGA program leads to the generation of TCGA Clinical Data Resource, which provides recommendations of clinical outcome endpoint usage for 33 cancer types
Driver Fusions and Their Implications in the Development and Treatment of Human Cancers.
Gene fusions represent an important class of somatic alterations in cancer. We systematically investigated fusions in 9,624 tumors across 33 cancer types using multiple fusion calling tools. We identified a total of 25,664 fusions, with a 63% validation rate. Integration of gene expression, copy number, and fusion annotation data revealed that fusions involving oncogenes tend to exhibit increased expression, whereas fusions involving tumor suppressors have the opposite effect. For fusions involving kinases, we found 1,275 with an intact kinase domain, the proportion of which varied significantly across cancer types. Our study suggests that fusions drive the development of 16.5% of cancer cases and function as the sole driver in more than 1% of them. Finally, we identified druggable fusions involving genes such as TMPRSS2, RET, FGFR3, ALK, and ESR1 in 6.0% of cases, and we predicted immunogenic peptides, suggesting that fusions may provide leads for targeted drug and immune therapy
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