16 research outputs found

    Multiscale analysis of materials with anisotropic microstructure as micropolar continua

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    Multiscale procedures are often adopted for the continuum modeling of materials composed of a specific micro-structure. Generally, in mechanics of materials only two-scales are linked. In this work the original (fine) micro-scale description, thought as a composite material made of matrix and fibers/particles/crystals which can interact among them, and a scale-dependent continuum (coarse) macro-scale are linked via an energy equivalence criterion. In particular the multiscale strategy is proposed for deriving the constitutive relations of anisotropic composites with periodic microstructure and allows us to reduce the typically high computational cost of fully microscopic numerical analyses. At the microscopic level the material is described as a lattice system while at the macroscopic level the continuum is a micropolar continuum, whose material particles are endowed with orientation besides position. The derived constitutive relations account for shape, texture and orientation of inclusions as well as internal scale parameters, which account for size effects even in the elastic regime in the presence of geometrical and/or load singularities. Applications of this procedure concern polycrystals, wherein an important descriptor of the underlying microstructure gives the orientation of the crystal lattice of each grain, fiber reinforced composites, as well as masonry-like materials. In order to investigate the effects of micropolar constants in the presence of material non central symmetries, some numerical finite element simulations, with elements specifically formulated for micropolar media, are presented. The performed simulations, which extend several parametric analyses earlier performed [1], involve two-dimensional media, in the linear framework, subjected to compression loads distributed in a small portion of the medium

    History of Stepped Channels and Spillways: a Rediscovery of the 'Wheel'

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    Recently, spillways with a stepped profile have regained interest and favor among design engineers to pass flood waters over the dams. The stepped geometry enhances the energy dissipation above the spillway and reduces the size of a downstream stilling basin. In this paper, the author shows that the technique of stepped channels has been developed since Antiquity. Spillways and irrigation channels with stepped profiles were developed by several civilisations around the Mediterranean sea and in America. The main characteristics of the stepped spillways along the ages suggest a regular evolution rather than a revolution. Present stepped spillways are designed to pass similar discharges as two hundred years ago

    Multiscale analysis of materials with anisotropic microstructure as micropolar continua

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    Multiscale procedures are often adopted for the continuum modeling of materials composed of a specific micro-structure. Generally, in mechanics of materials only two-scales are linked. In this work the original (fine) micro-scale description, thought as a composite material made of matrix and fibers/particles/crystals which can interact among them, and a scale-dependent continuum (coarse) macro-scale are linked via an energy equivalence criterion. In particular the multiscale strategy is proposed for deriving the constitutive relations of anisotropic composites with periodic microstructure and allows us to reduce the typically high computational cost of fully microscopic numerical analyses. At the microscopic level the material is described as a lattice system while at the macroscopic level the continuum is a micropolar continuum, whose material particles are endowed with orientation besides position. The derived constitutive relations account for shape, texture and orientation of inclusions as well as internal scale parameters, which account for size effects even in the elastic regime in the presence of geometrical and/or load singularities. Applications of this procedure concern polycrystals, wherein an important descriptor of the underlying microstructure gives the orientation of the crystal lattice of each grain, fiber reinforced composites, as well as masonry-like materials. In order to investigate the effects of micropolar constants in the presence of material non central symmetries, some numerical finite element simulations, with elements specifically formulated for micropolar media, are presented. The performed simulations, which extend several parametric analyses earlier performed [1], involve two-dimensional media, in the linear framework, subjected to compression loads distributed in a small portion of the medium

    Frequent deletions and down-regulation of micro- RNA genes miR15 and miR16 at 13q14 in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

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    Micro-RNAs (miR genes) are a large family of highly conserved noncoding genes thought to be involved in temporal and tissue-specific gene regulation. MiRs are transcribed as short hairpin precursors (≈70 nt) and are processed into active 21- to 22-nt RNAs by Dicer, a ribonuclease that recognizes target mRNAs via base-pairing interactions. Here we show that miR15 and miR16 are located at chromosome 13q14, a region deleted in more than half of B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemias (B-CLL). Detailed deletion and expression analysis shows that miR15 and miR16 are located within a 30-kb region of loss in CLL, and that both genes are deleted or down-regulated in the majority (≈68%) of CLL cases
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