3,408 research outputs found

    Silica final lenses under HiPER laser fusion reactor operation conditions

    Full text link
    We have studied the thermo-mechanical response and atomistic degradation of final lenses in HiPER project. Final silica lenses are squares of 75 × 75 cm2 with a thickness of 5 cm. There are two scenarios where lenses are located at 8 m from the centre: •HiPER 4a, bunches of 100 shots (maximum 5 DT shots <48 MJ at ≈0.1 Hz). No blanket in chamber geometry. •HiPER 4b, continuous mode with shots ≈50 MJ at 10 Hz to generate 0.5 GW. Liquid metal blanket in chamber design

    An overview on armor research for the laser fusion project HiPER

    Get PDF
    During the current preparatory phase of the European laser fusion project HiPER, an intensive effort has being placed to identify an armour material able to protect the internal walls of the chamber against the high thermal loads and high fluxes of x-rays and ions produced during the fusion explosions. This poster addresses the different threats and limitations of a poly-crystalline Tungsten armour. The analysis is carried out under the conditions of an experimental chamber hypothetically constructed to demonstrate laser fusion in a repetitive mode, subjected to a few thousand 48MJ shock ignition shots during its entire lifetime. If compared to the literature, an extrapolation of the thermomechanical and atomistic effects obtained from the simulations of the experimental chamber to the conditions of a Demo reactor (working 24/7 at hundreds of MW) or a future power plant (producing GW) suggests that “standard” tungsten will not be a suitable armour. Thus, new materials based on nano-structured W and C are being investigated as possible candidates. The research programme launched by the HiPER material team is introduced

    Time in history and emancipation in the philosophy of Guy Debord

    Get PDF
    El tiempo juega un papel central en la teoría de Guy Debord. En La sociedad del espectáculo (1967)le dedica dos capítulos, primero en referencia a la relación del tiempo y la historia, y después para explicar su función en la creación del espectáculo. En ambos casos recurre a diferentes formas de vivir el tiempo para explicar diferentes modalidades sociales e históricas. Detrás de su estilo críptico y concentrado se esconden profundas reflexiones respecto al sentido de los diferentes tiempos en torno a los que se construye la sociedad, cada uno de los cuales produce diferentes efectos y realidades. Y más aún, recurre al tiempo como referente central para entender los procesos de alienación y dominación, así como su contrapartida, la propuesta de liberación de la sociedad que nos propone en su obra. Por otro lado, Debord construye sobre múltiples influencias teóricas que se articulan y se entremezclan en su texto de forma orgánica, y que no siempre son fácilmente identificables, en gran medida debido a la práctica del desvío. Comenzaremos abordando los diferentes modos del tiempo, para ver la función que tienen en la historia, así como su papel en los procesos de alienación social y espectacular. Desde ahí expondremos la propuesta de liberación que plantea, y terminaremos con una breve recuperaciones de las influencias teóricas que marcan su perspectiva sobre el tiempo y la sociedadTime plays a central role in Guy Debord’s theory. In the society of the spectacle (1967) he dedicates two chapters to it, first in reference to the relationship of time and history, and later to explain its role in the creation of the spectacle. In both cases he resorts to different ways of living in time to explain different social and historical modalities. Behind his cryptic and concentrated style there are deep reflections regarding the meaning of the different times around which society is built, each of which produces different effects and realities. And even more, he uses time as a central reference to understand the processes of alienation and domination, as well as its counterpart, the proposal for the liberation of society that he proposes to us in his work. On the other hand, Debord builds on multiple theoretical influences that are articulated and intermingled in his text organically, and that are not always easily identifiable, largely due to the practice of deviation. We will begin by addressing the different modes of time, to see the function they have in history, as well as their role in the processes of social and spectacular alienation. From there we will expose the liberation proposal that he raises, and we will end with a brief recovery of the theoretical influences that mark his perspective on time and society

    Ion Beam irradiation of copper nitride: electronic vs elastic-collision mechanism

    Full text link
    Copper nitride is a metastable material which results very attractive because of their potential to be used in functional device. Cu3 N easily decomposes into Cu and N2 by annealing [1] or irradiation (electron, ions, laser) [2, 3]. Previous studies carried out in N-rich Cu3 N films irradiated with Cu at 42MeV evidence a very efficient sputtering of N whose yield (5×10 3 atom/ion), for a film with a thickness of just 100 nm, suggest that the origin of the sputtering has an electronic nature. This N depletion was observed to be responsible for new phase formation ( Cu2 O) and pure Cu [4

    Clinicopathological And Immunohistochemical Evaluation Of Oral And Oropharyngeal Squamous Cell Carcinoma In Chilean Population

    Get PDF
    In oral and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC and OPSCC) exist an association between clinical and histopathological parameters with cell proliferation, basal lamina, connective tissue degradation and surrounding stroma markers. We evaluated these associations in Chilean patients. A convenience sample of 37 cases of OCSCC (n=16) and OPSCC (n=21) was analyzed clinically (TNM, clinical stage) and histologically (WHO grade of differentiation, pattern of tumor invasion). We assessed the expression of p53, Ki67, HOXA1, HOXB7, type IV collagen (ColIV) and carcinoma-associated fibroblast (a-SMA-positive cells). Additionally we conducted a univariate/bivariate analysis to assess the relationship of these variables with survival rates. Males were mostly affected (56.2% OCSCC, 76.2% OPSCC). Patients were mainly diagnosed at III/IV clinical stages (68.8% OCSCC, 90.5% OPSCC) with a predominantly infiltrative pattern invasion (62.9% OCSCC, 57.1% OPSCC). Significant association between regional lymph nodes (N) and clinical stage with OCSCC-HOXB7 expression (Chi-Square test P < 0.05) was observed. In OPSCC a statistically significant association exists between p53, Ki67 with gender (Chi-Square test P < 0.05). In OCSCC and OPSCC was statistically significant association between ki67 with HOXA1, HOXB7, and between these last two antigens (Pearson's Correlation test P < 0.05). Furthermore OPSCC-p53 showed significant correlation when it was compared with a-SMA (Kendall's Tau-c test P < 0.05). Only OCSCC-pattern invasion and OPSCC-primary tumor (T) pattern resulted associated with survival at the end of the follow up period (Chi-Square Likelihood Ratio, P < 0.05). Clinical, histological and immunohistochemical features are similar to seen in other countries. Cancer proliferation markers were associated strongly from each other. Our sample highlights prognostic value of T and pattern of invasion, but the conclusions may be limited and should be considered with caution (small sample). Many cases were diagnosed in the advanced stages of the disease, which suggests that the diagnosis of OCSCC and OPSCC is made late.7959685977Wang, Q., Gao, P., Wang, X., Duan, Y., Investigation and identification of potential biomarkers in human saliva for the early diagnosis of oral squamous cell carcinoma (2013) Clin Chim Acta, 427 C, pp. 79-85Parkin, D., Bray, F., Ferlay, J., Pisani, P., Global cancer statistics, 2002 (2005) CA Cancer J Clin, 55, p. 74Dissanayaka, W.L., Pitiyage, G., Kumarasiri, P.V., Liyanage, R.L., Dias, K.D., Tilakaratne, W.M., Clinical and histopathologic parameters in survival of oral squamous cell carcinoma (2012) Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol, 113, pp. 518-525Koontongkaew, S., The tumor microenvironment contribution to development, growth, invasion and metastasis of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (2013) J Cancer, 4, p. 66Dalianis, T., Human papillomavirus and oropharyngeal cancer, the epidemics, and significance of additional clinical biomarkers for prediction of response to therapy (2014) Int J Oncol, 44, pp. 1799-1805Kostareli, E., Holzinger, D., Hess, J., New concepts for translational head and neck oncology: Lessons from HPV-related oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas (2012) Front Oncol, 2, p. 36Rivera, C., Venegas, B., Histological and molecular aspects of oral squamous cell carcinoma (2014) Oncol Lett, 8, pp. 7-11Bryne, M., Koppang, H.S., Lilleng, R., Kjærheim, Å., Malignancy grading of the deep invasive margins of oral squamous cell carcinomas has high prognostic value (2005) J Pathol, 166, pp. 375-381Santos-Garcia, A., Abad-Hernandez, M.M., Fonseca-Sanchez, E., Julian-Gonzalez, R., Galindo-Villardon, P., Cruz-Hernandez, J.J., Bullon-Sopelana, A., E-cadherin, laminin and collagen IV expression in the evolution from dysplasia to oral squamous cell carcinoma (2006) Med Oral Patol Oral Cir Bucal, 11, pp. E100-E105Ramqvist, T., Dalianis, T., Oropharyngeal cancer epidemic and human papillomavirus (2010) Emerg Infect Dis, 16, pp. 1671-1677Rodrigues, P.C., Miguel, M.C., Bagordakis, E., Fonseca, F.P., de Aquino, S.N., Santos-Silva, A.R., Lopes, M.A., Coletta, R.D., Clinicopathological prognostic factors of oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma: a retrospective study of 202 cases (2014) Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg, 43, pp. 795-801Agarwal, A., Sethi, A., Sareen, D., Dhingra, S., Oral and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma in our population: the clinic-pathological and morphological description of 153 casescarcinoma de Células Escamosas Oral y Orofaríngeo en Nuestra Población: Descripción Clínico-Patológica y Morfológica de 153 Casos (2011) Int J Morphol, 29, pp. 686-693Roosli, C., Tschudi, D.C., Studer, G., Braun, J., Stoeckli, S.J., Outcome of patients after treatment for a squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx (2009) Laryngoscope, 119, pp. 534-540Riera, P., Martinez, B., [Morbidity and mortality for oral and pharyngeal cancer in Chile] (2005) Rev Med Chil, 133, pp. 555-563Marsh, D., Suchak, K., Moutasim, K.A., Vallath, S., Hopper, C., Jerjes, W., Upile, T., Thomas, G.J., Stromal features are predictive of disease mortality in oral cancer patients (2011) J Pathol, 223, pp. 470-481Woolgar, J., Rogers, S., West, C., Errington, R., Brown, J., Vaughan, E., Survival and patterns of recurrence in 200 oral cancer patients treated by radical surgery and neck dissection (1999) Oral Oncol, 35, pp. 257-265Bórquez, P., Capdeville, F., Madrid, A., Veloso, M., Cárcamo, M., Sobrevida global y por estadios de 137 pacientes con cáncer intraoral: experiencia del Instituto Nacional del CáncerAnalysis of survival of 137 patients with oral cancer (2011) Rev Chil Cir, 63, pp. 351-355Woolgar, J.A., Triantafyllou, A., Pitfalls and procedures in the histopathological diagnosis of oral and oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma and a review of the role of pathology in prognosis (2009) Oral Oncol, 45, pp. 361-385Li, Y., Bai, S., Carroll, W., Dayan, D., Dort, J.C., Heller, K., Jour, G., Brandwein-Gensler, M., Validation of the risk model: high-risk classification and tumor pattern of invasion predict outcome for patients with low-stage oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (2013) Head Neck Pathol, 7, pp. 211-223Chang, Y.C., Nieh, S., Chen, S.F., Jao, S.W., Lin, Y.L., Fu, E., Invasive pattern grading score designed as an independent prognostic indicator in oral squamous cell carcinoma (2010) Histopathology, 57, pp. 295-303Adeyemi, B.F., Olusanya, A.A., Lawoyin, J.O., Oral squamous cell carcinoma, socioeconomic status and history of exposure to alcohol and tobacco (2011) J Natl Med Assoc, 103, pp. 498-502De Souza Setubal Destro, M.F., Bitu, C.C., Zecchin, K.G., Graner, E., Lopes, M.A., Kowalski, L.P., Coletta, R.D., Overexpression of HOXB7 homeobox gene in oral cancer induces cellular proliferation and is associated with poor prognosis (2010) Int J Oncol, 36, pp. 141-149Bitu, C.C., Destro, M.F., Carrera, M., Da Silva, S.D., Graner, E., Kowalski, L.P., Soares, F.A., Coletta, R.D., HOXA1 is overexpressed in oral squamous cell carcinomas and its expression is correlated with poor prognosis (2012) BMC Cancer, 12, p. 146Liao, W.T., Jiang, D., Yuan, J., Cui, Y.M., Shi, X.W., Chen, C.M., Bian, X.W., Ding, Y.Q., HOXB7 as a prognostic factor and mediator of colorectal cancer progression (2011) Clin Cancer Res, 17, pp. 3569-357

    The Role of the Spatial and Temporal Radiation Deposition in Inertial Fusion Chambers: The case of HiPER

    Get PDF
    The first wall armour for the reactor chamber of HiPER will have to face short energy pulses of 5 to 20 MJ mostly in the form of x-rays and charged particles at a repetition rate of 5–10 Hz. Armour material and chamber dimensions have to be chosen to avoid/minimize damage to the chamber, ensuring the proper functioning of the facility during its planned lifetime. The maximum energy fluence that the armour can withstand without risk of failure, is determined by temporal and spatial deposition of the radiation energy inside the material. In this paper, simulations on the thermal effect of the radiation–armour interaction are carried out with an increasing definition of the temporal and spatial deposition of energy to prove their influence on the final results. These calculations will lead us to present the first values of the thermo-mechanical behaviour of the tungsten armour designed for the HiPER project under a shock ignition target of 48 MJ. The results will show that only the crossing of the plasticity limit in the first few micrometres might be a threat after thousands of shots for the survivability of the armour

    TechnoFusion: new Spanish singular scientific-technical facility for fusion research

    Get PDF
    Technofusion is the scientific&technical installation for fusion research in Spain, based on three pillars: • It is an open facility to European users. • It is a facility with instrumentation not accesible to small research groups. • It is designed to be closely coordiated with the European Fusion Program. With a budget of 80-100 M€ over five years, several top laboratories will be constructe

    Temperature Evolution and Light Species Diffusion in Armor and Structural Material for Inertial Fusion Reactor Chambers: a Case for HiPER 4a

    Full text link
    One of the most advance designs for HiPER fusion reactor is a spherical chamber 10 m in diameter based on dry wall concept. In this system, the first wall will have to withstand short energy pulses of 5 to 20 MJ at a repetition rate of 0.5-10 Hz mostly in form of X-rays and charged particles. To avoid melting of the inner surface, the first wall consists on a thin armor attached to the structural material. Thickness (th) and material of each layer have to be chosen to assure the proper functioning of the facility during its planned lifetime

    Lifetime of silica final lenses subject to HiPER irradiation conditions

    Get PDF
    The goal of the European laser fusion project, is to build an engineering facility for repetitive laser operation (HiPER 4a) and later a fusion reactor (HiPER 4b). A key aspect for laser fusion energy is the final optics. At the moment, it is based on silica transmission lenses located 8 m away from the chamber center. Lens lifetime depends on the irradiation conditions. We have used a 48 MJ shock ignition target for calculations. We have studied the thermo-mechanical effects of ions and X-rays on the lenses. Ions lead to lens melting and must therefore be mitigated. On the other hand, X-rays (~1% of the energy) does not produce either a significant temperature rise or detrimental stresses. Finally, we calculated the neutron flux and gamma dose rate on the lenses. Next, based on a simple model we studied the formation of color centers in the sample, which lead to optical absorption. Calculations show that simultaneous neutron and gamma irradiation does not significantly increase the optical absorption during the expected lifetime of the HiPER 4a facility. Under severe conditions (HiPER 4b), operation above 800 K or lens refreshing by thermal annealing treatments seem to assure adequate behavior

    Experimental-Theoretic Approach to Drug-Lymphocyte Interactome Networks with Flow Cytometry and Spectral Moments Perturbation Theory

    Get PDF
    Modelos matematicos y citometria de flujoAbstract: We can combine experimental techniques like Flow Cytometry Analysis (FCA) with Chemoinformatics methods to predict the complex networks of interactions between organic compounds and targets in the immune system. In this work, we determined experimentally the values of EC50 = 17.82 μg/mL and Cytotoxicity = 20.6 % for the antimicrobial / anti-parasite drug Dermofural over Balb/C CD9 lymphocytes using flow cytometry. After that, we developed a new Perturbation-theory model for Drug-Cell Target Interactome in Lymphocytes based on dispersion-polarization moments of drug structure. The models correctly classifies 34591 out of 42715 (Accuracy = 80.9%) cases of perturbations in assay endpoints of 11492 drugs (including both train and validation series). Each endpoint correspond to one out of 2616 assays, 38 molecular and cellular targets, 77 standard type measures, in four possible (human and rodentsCONACY
    corecore