98 research outputs found

    Methodology for studying strain inhomogeneities in polycrystalline thin films during in situ thermal loading using coherent x-ray diffraction

    Get PDF
    International audienceCoherent x-ray diffraction is used to investigate the mechanical properties of a single grain within a polycrystalline thin film in situ during a thermal cycle. Both the experimental approach and finite element simulation are described. Coherent diffraction from a single grain has been monitored in situ at different temperatures. This experiment offers unique perspectives for the study of the mechanical properties of nano-objects

    Deformation-Induced Martensite: A New Paradigm for Exceptional Steels

    Get PDF
    Atom-probe tomography (APT) and synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD) were combined to study the carbon supersaturation of ferrite for two pearlitic steel-wire compositions, eutectoid and hypereutectoid. The samples were cold-drawn at different strains up to true drawing strains for the eutectoid steel and the hypereutectoid steel, respectively. The wire diameters range from 1.7 mm down to 0.058 mm for the eutectoid steel and from 0.54 mm down to 0.02 mm for the hypereutectoid steel. The findings reveal that cold-drawing of pearlitic steel wires leads to a carbon-supersaturated ferrite causing a spontaneous tetragonal distortion of the ferrite unit cell through a strain-induced deformation driven martensitic transformation. We fi nd that the drawing process induced a significant increase in the carbon content inside the originally nearcarbon-free ferrite until a steady state is approached at drawing strains larger than ca. 4 for the wires. The change of carbon concentration in the ferrite grains during the drawing process is closely related to the tetragonal distortion of the ferrite unit cell

    Heterogeneous microstructures tuned in a high throughput architecture

    Get PDF
    A new method applied to the sensor proposed by Zhang et al. in 2018 is demonstrated in this paper that combines the benefits of this design with the fast heating possible with nanocalorimetry. By applying a PID regulated pulse instead of a constant wattage, we unlock an accessible method to sense morphological changes occurring over short time periods that would be invisible to methods based only on heat capacity. In this study, multilayer Ni/Al thin films were linearly heated at 25, 50, 100, and 200 K/s to over 700°C, showing two distinct peaks in resistance change with activation energies of 554 and 747 kJ/mol, respectively. Through Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM) and Energy Dispersive X-ray Analysis (EDX) analysis on cross sections taken ex situ from samples quenched before and after the peaks of interest, we find strong evidence that peak 1 corresponds to Ni diffusing through Al grain boundaries forming intermetallic phases that essentially block the highly conductive Al pathway. This presents the potential to design and calibrate novel heterogeneous structures in a high throughput manner

    "Delirium Day": A nationwide point prevalence study of delirium in older hospitalized patients using an easy standardized diagnostic tool

    Get PDF
    Background: To date, delirium prevalence in adult acute hospital populations has been estimated generally from pooled findings of single-center studies and/or among specific patient populations. Furthermore, the number of participants in these studies has not exceeded a few hundred. To overcome these limitations, we have determined, in a multicenter study, the prevalence of delirium over a single day among a large population of patients admitted to acute and rehabilitation hospital wards in Italy. Methods: This is a point prevalence study (called "Delirium Day") including 1867 older patients (aged 65 years or more) across 108 acute and 12 rehabilitation wards in Italian hospitals. Delirium was assessed on the same day in all patients using the 4AT, a validated and briefly administered tool which does not require training. We also collected data regarding motoric subtypes of delirium, functional and nutritional status, dementia, comorbidity, medications, feeding tubes, peripheral venous and urinary catheters, and physical restraints. Results: The mean sample age was 82.0 \ub1 7.5 years (58 % female). Overall, 429 patients (22.9 %) had delirium. Hypoactive was the commonest subtype (132/344 patients, 38.5 %), followed by mixed, hyperactive, and nonmotoric delirium. The prevalence was highest in Neurology (28.5 %) and Geriatrics (24.7 %), lowest in Rehabilitation (14.0 %), and intermediate in Orthopedic (20.6 %) and Internal Medicine wards (21.4 %). In a multivariable logistic regression, age (odds ratio [OR] 1.03, 95 % confidence interval [CI] 1.01-1.05), Activities of Daily Living dependence (OR 1.19, 95 % CI 1.12-1.27), dementia (OR 3.25, 95 % CI 2.41-4.38), malnutrition (OR 2.01, 95 % CI 1.29-3.14), and use of antipsychotics (OR 2.03, 95 % CI 1.45-2.82), feeding tubes (OR 2.51, 95 % CI 1.11-5.66), peripheral venous catheters (OR 1.41, 95 % CI 1.06-1.87), urinary catheters (OR 1.73, 95 % CI 1.30-2.29), and physical restraints (OR 1.84, 95 % CI 1.40-2.40) were associated with delirium. Admission to Neurology wards was also associated with delirium (OR 2.00, 95 % CI 1.29-3.14), while admission to other settings was not. Conclusions: Delirium occurred in more than one out of five patients in acute and rehabilitation hospital wards. Prevalence was highest in Neurology and lowest in Rehabilitation divisions. The "Delirium Day" project might become a useful method to assess delirium across hospital settings and a benchmarking platform for future surveys

    Understanding Factors Associated With Psychomotor Subtypes of Delirium in Older Inpatients With Dementia

    Get PDF
    corecore