366 research outputs found

    Comments Upon an Earth Dam Severely Damaged by Foundation Liquefaction

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    The damage of the Draganesti earth dam on lower sector of the Olt river due to foundation liquefaction during 30th May 1990, 0.12 g in site maximum acceleration, Vrancea earthquake is described. The dam is up to 20 m maximum height and border cross-wise and laterally the reservoir with 12.6 km length of the low head hydroelectric power station. The damage consisting of a large slide with about 60 m length at the dam downstream face and some cracks and lift-up of the reinforced concrete slabs at the corresponding upstream toe zone was placed in a zone where any special technology for increasing the relative density of the foundation loose sand layer was not applied. The natural relative density of the above mentioned layer having 1.20…7.00 m thickness was Dr =0.15…0.30, but it was increased up to 0.55…0.65 by vibrated-compacted gravel microcolumns technology, that was applied for over 80 % of dam foundation area. A comprehensive seismic backanalysis is performed in order to explain the damage mechanism

    0+ states and collective bands in 228Th studied by the (p,t) reaction

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    The excitation spectra in the deformed nucleus 228Th have been studied by means of the (p,t)-reaction, using the Q3D spectrograph facility at the Munich Tandem accelerator. The angular distributions of tritons were measured for about 110 excitations seen in the triton spectra up to 2.5 MeV. Firm 0+ assignments are made for 17 excited states by comparison of experimental angular distributions with the calculated ones using the CHUCK3 code. Assignments up to spin 6+ are made for other states. Sequences of states are selected which can be treated as rotational bands and as multiplets of excitations. Moments of inertia have been derived from these sequences, whose values may be considered as evidence of the two-phonon nature of most 0+ excitations. Experimental data are compared with interacting boson model and quasiparticle-phonon model calculations and with experimental data for 229Pa.Comment: 21 pages, 14 figure

    Nanomedicines design:Approaches towards the imaging and therapy of brain tumours

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    Identification of temperature profile and heat transfer on a dielectric membrane for gas sensors by `COSMOS' program simulation

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    The application of commercial 3-D software `COSMOS' for the design and thermal analysis of the low power consumption test structures with dielectric membrane for gas microsensors is presented. Within this work, the simulation provides the estimation of the temperature profile on the active area and the whole membrane including the four bridges and the heating efficiency in the temperature range 20-500 °C. Unravelling of the heat loss mechanisms in terms of radiation, convection, conduction by air and solid materials during heat transfer on the dielectric membrane is reported for the first time as a mean to evaluate by 3-D simulation the contribution of technological processes and lay-out design to the total heat losses

    Novel rhenium(V) nitride complexes with dithiocarbimate ligands: A synchrotron X-ray and DFT structural investigation

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    The application of rhenium complexes as therapeutic agents in nuclear medicine has propelled research into the chemistry of these compounds. In our effort to develop and investigate new therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals based on the complexes of rhenium we have investigated the nitride core, [ReN]2+. This work looks at the behavior of sulfonamide based dithiocarbimates towards the rhenium(V) nitride core. The aim here was to prepare anionic complexes with aromatic as well as fluorescent aromatic groups in the sulfonamide substituent located on the dithiocarbimate backbone. We envisaged that the polar sulfonamide and dianionic charge would confer solubility in water. Here we report the reactions of the dithiocarbimate ligands towards the rhenium(V) precursors: [ReNCl2(PPh3)2] and [ReNCl2(PMe2Ph)3]. These reactions proceeded with bis-substitution by the dithiocarbimate ligand, resulting in the formation of a dianionic rhenium(V) complex, of the type [ReN(S-S)2]2-, where (S-S) denotes the sulfonamide-tagged dithiocarbimato unit. Spectroscopic characterization data, as well as the synchrotron X-ray diffraction structure of the metal complex with the phenyl sulfonamide backbone shed light into the structural features of this interesting class of ligands and opens up opportunities for further studies in molecular imaging and therapeutic arenas.</p
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