14 research outputs found

    On the development of a relationship between fractal dimension and impact toughness

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    V-notch Charpy samples of a commercial medium-carbon ferrite-pearlite steel rolled (10% and 25%) at 25, 200, 500 and 700 ºC, wern tested at room temperature to determine fractal dimensions, Df, of the fracture surfaces. The fractal dimensional increment, Df’, as measured by the slit island technique and the impact toughness, KCV, showed a positive relationship, contrary to some previous results. This discrepancy could be explained from the basic features of the different fracture micromechanisms, wich involve a pattern of discrete fractographic structural units, different in size for each case, related to the energy absorption during the fracture process

    Spinodal Decomposition in Functionally Graded Super Duplex Stainless Steel and Weld Metal

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    Low-temperature phase separations (T &lt; 500 °C), resulting in changes in mechanical and corrosion properties, of super duplex stainless steel (SDSS) base and weld metals were investigated for short heat treatment times (0.5 to 600 minutes). A novel heat treatment technique, where a stationary arc produces a steady state temperature gradient for selected times, was employed to fabricate functionally graded materials. Three different initial material conditions including 2507 SDSS, remelted 2507 SDSS, and 2509 SDSS weld metal were investigated. Selective etching of ferrite significantly decreased in regions heat treated at 435 °C to 480 °C already after 3 minutes due to rapid phase separations. Atom probe tomography results revealed spinodal decomposition of ferrite and precipitation of Cu particles. Microhardness mapping showed that as-welded microstructure and/or higher Ni content accelerated decomposition. The arc heat treatment technique combined with microhardness mapping and electrolytical etching was found to be a successful approach to evaluate kinetics of low-temperature phase separations in SDSS, particularly at its earlier stages. A time-temperature transformation diagram was proposed showing the kinetics of 475 °C-embrittlement in 2507 SDSS.First Online: 17 April 2018</p

    MYC overexpression imposes a nonimmunogenic phenotype on Epstein–Barr virus-infected B cells

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    Lymphoblastoid cell lines, generated by immortalization of normal B cells by Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) in vitro, have strong antigen-presenting capacity, are sensitive to EBV-specific cytotoxic T cells, and are highly allostimulatory in mixed lymphocyte culture. By contrast, EBV-positive Burkitt lymphoma (BL) cells are poor antigen presenters, are not recognized by EBV-specific cytotoxic T cells, and are poorly allostimulatory, which raises the question of whether immunological pressure exerted during BL pathogenesis in vivo has selected for a ‘nonimmunogenic’ tumor phenotype. The present work addresses this question by examining the immunogenicity/antigenicity of cell lines, generated by conversion of a conditionally immortalized lymphoblastoid cell line to permanent growth independent of EBV-latent proteins by introduction of a constitutively active or tetracycline-regulated c-myc gene (A1 and P493–6 cells, respectively). Compared with its parental lymphoblastoid cell line, A1 cells showed many of the features of the nonimmunogenic BL phenotype, namely poor allostimulatory activity, poor antigen-presenting function associated with impaired proteasomal activity, down-regulation of peptide transporter, reduced HLA class I expression, and an inability to present endogenously expressed EBV-latent proteins to cytotoxic T cells. P493–6 cells, when grown in the presence of estrogen with the exogenous c-myc gene switched off, were strongly immunogenic. The cells had lost their immunogenic potential, however, when grown on a c-myc-driven proliferation program in the absence of estrogen. Deregulation of c-myc, a step central to the development of uncontrolled BL cell growth in vivo, can thus impose a nonimmunogenic phenotype on proliferating human B cells in the absence of any immune pressure
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