717 research outputs found
Turning the tide of antimicrobial resistance: Europe shows the way
To access publisher full text version of this article. Please click on the hyperlink in Additional Links fieldTen years ago, European officials, experts and other stakeholders met in Copenhagen, Denmark, at the invitation of the Danish Ministry of Health and the Danish Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries. This European conference on "The Microbial Threat" due to antimicrobial resistance resulted in the publication of "Copenhagen Recommendations" calling for action to limit the emerging problem of antimicrobial-resistant microorganisms [1]. Following the conference, the European Commission prepared a comprehensive Community strategy against antimicrobial resistance, which was published in 2001 [2] and presented in Eurosurveillance [3]. Later the same year, European Union (EU) Health Ministers adopted a Council Recommendation on the prudent use of antimicrobial agents in human medicine with a series of specific measures aimed at containing the spread of antimicrobial resistance by prudent use of antimicrobial agents [4
Amorphization of ZnAl2O4 spinel under heavy ion irradiation
ZnAl2O4 spinels have been irradiated with several ions (Ne, S, Kr and Xe) at the IRRSUD beam-line of the GANIL facility, in order to determine irradiation conditions (stopping power, fluence) for amorphisation. We observed by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) that with Xe ions at 92 MeV, individual ion tracks are still crystalline, whereas an amorphisation starts below a fluence of 5.1012 cm-2 up to a total amorphisation between 1x1013 and 1x1014 cm-2. The coexistence of amorphous and crystalline domains in the same pristine grain is clearly visible in the TEM images. All the crystalline domains remain close to the same orientation as the original grain. According to TEM and X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) results, the stopping power threshold for amorphisation is between 9 and 12 keV.nm-1
SPORT: A new sub-nanosecond time-resolved instrument to study swift heavy ion-beam induced luminescence - Application to luminescence degradation of a fast plastic scintillator
We developed a new sub-nanosecond time-resolved instrument to study the
dynamics of UV-visible luminescence under high stopping power heavy ion
irradiation. We applied our instrument, called SPORT, on a fast plastic
scintillator (BC-400) irradiated with 27-MeV Ar ions having high mean
electronic stopping power of 2.6 MeV/\mu m. As a consequence of increasing
permanent radiation damages with increasing ion fluence, our investigations
reveal a degradation of scintillation intensity together with, thanks to the
time-resolved measurement, a decrease in the decay constant of the
scintillator. This combination indicates that luminescence degradation
processes by both dynamic and static quenching, the latter mechanism being
predominant. Under such high density excitation, the scintillation
deterioration of BC-400 is significantly enhanced compared to that observed in
previous investigations, mainly performed using light ions. The observed
non-linear behaviour implies that the dose at which luminescence starts
deteriorating is not independent on particles' stopping power, thus
illustrating that the radiation hardness of plastic scintillators can be
strongly weakened under high excitation density in heavy ion environments.Comment: 5 figures, accepted in Nucl. Instrum. Methods
Discovery of a maximum damage structure for Xe-irradiated borosilicate glass ceramics containing powellite
In order to increase the waste loading efficiency in nuclear waste glasses, alternate glass ceramic (GC) materials are sought that trap problematic molybdenum in a water-durable CaMoO4 phase within a borosilicate glass matrix. In order to test the radiation resistance of these candidate wasteforms, accelerated external radiation can be employed to replicate long-term damage. In this study, several glasses and GCs were synthesized with up to 10 mol% MoO3 and subjected to 92 MeV Xe ions with fluences ranging between 5 × 10^12 to 1.8 × 10^14 ions/cm2. The main mechanisms of modification following irradiation involve: (i) thermal and defect-assisted diffusion, (ii) relaxation from the ion's added energy, (iii) localized damage recovery from overlapping ion tracks, and (iv) the accumulation of point defects or the formation of voids that created significant strain and led to longer-range modifications. Most significantly, a saturation in alteration could be detected for fluences greater than 4 × 10^13 ions/cm2, which represents an average structure that is representative of the maximum damage state from these competing mechanisms. The results from this study can therefore be used for long-term structural projections in the development of more complex GCs for nuclear waste applications.EPSRC (Grant No. EP/K007882/1
3D atom probe tomography of swift heavy ion irradiated multilayers
International audienceNanometer scale layered systems are well suited to investigate atomic transport processes induced by high-energy electronic excitations in materials, through the characterization of the interface transformation. In this study, we used the atom probe technique to determine the distribution of the different elements in an (amorphous-FeTb 5 nm/hcp-Co 3 nm) multilayer before and after irradiation with Pb ions in the electronic stopping power regime. Atom probe tomography is based on reconstruction of a small volume of a sharp tip evaporated by field effect. It has unique capabilities to characterize internal interfaces and layer chemistry with sub-nanometer scale resolution in three dimensions. Depth composition profiles and 3D element mapping have been determined, evidencing for asymetric interfaces in the as-deposited sample, and very efficient Fe-Co intermixing after irradiation at the fluence ion cm. Estimation of effective atomic diffusion coefficients after irradiation suggests that mixing results from interdiffusion in a molten track across the interface in agreement with the thermal spike model
Méthodes de reconnaissance croisées pour l'analyse de stabilité des digues soumises à érosion interne
Les tronçons de digue autour de Grenoble font l'’objet d’une campagne de reconnaissances fondée sur l’utilisation d’'une méthode géophysique à grand rendement, le panneau électrique. L'’expérience montre que la détection de l’'écoulement, des hétérogénéités, de la géométrie, de la nature des couches obtenue par l'analyse électrique, n’'est pas toujours conforme à une réalité objective, mais que la méthode d’inversion conduit à une incertitude qui peut être importante. La recherche permet de réduire les erreurs de cette méthode par la prise en compte des géométries lorsqu’'elles sont connues. Des essais pressiométriques à cycle ont été réalisé et interprété en analyse inverse pour déterminer les caractéristiques mécaniques d’'élasticité et de résistance avec les méthodes développées au L3S-R. Des essais Lefranc, pour la détermination de la perméabilité des matériaux de la digue, ont été réalisé. Les résultats sont regroupés et confrontés aux mesures en laboratoire pour une meilleure analyse du risque d’'instabilit
Structural effects in UO thin films irradiated with fission-energy Xe ions
Uranium dioxide thin films have been successfully grown on LSAT (AlLaOSrTa) substrates by reactive magnetron sputtering. Irradiation by 92 MeV Xe ions to simulate fission damage that occurs within nuclear fuels caused microstructural and crystallographic changes. Initially flat and continuous thin films were produced by magnetron sputtering with a root mean square roughness of 0.35 nm determined by AFM. After irradiation, this roughness increased to 60-70 nm, with the films developing discrete microstructural features: small grains (~3 m), along with larger circular (up to 40 m) and linear formations with non-uniform composition according to the SEM, AFM and EDX results. The irradiation caused significant restructuring of the UO films that was manifested in significant filmsubstrate mixing, observed through EDX analysis. Diffusion of Al from the substrate into the film in unirradiated samples was also observed.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant ID: EP/ I036400/1), Radioactive Waste Management Ltd (formerly the Radioactive Waste Management Directorate of the UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority, contract NPO004411A-EPS02), Russian Foundation for Basic Research (projects 13-03-90916), CSAR, Grand Accelélérateur National d’Ions Lourds (GANIL) Caen France, French Network EMIR, CIMAP-CIRIL, M.V.Lomonosov Moscow State University Program of Development, CKP FMI IPCE RA
SuperMassive Black Holes in Bulges
We present spatially extended gas kinematics at parsec-scale resolution for
the nuclear regions of four nearby disk galaxies, and model them as rotation of
a gas disk in the joint potential of the stellar bulge and a putative central
black hole. The targets were selected from a larger set of long-slit spectra
obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope as part of the Survey of Nearby Nuclei
with STIS (SUNNS). They represents the 4 galaxies (of 24) that display
symmetric gas velocity curves consistent with a rotating disk. We derive the
stellar mass distribution from the STIS acquisition images adopting the stellar
mass-to-light ratio normalized so as to match ground-based velocity dispersion
measurements over a large aperture. Subsequently, we constrain the mass of a
putative black hole by matching the gas rotation curve, following two distinct
approaches. In the most general case we explore all the possible disk
orientations, alternatively we constrain the gas disk orientation from the
dust-lane morphology at similar radii. In the latter case the kinematic data
indicate the presence of a central black hole for three of the four objects,
with masses of 10^7 - 10^8 solar masses, representing up to 0.025 % of the host
bulge mass. For one object (NGC2787) the kinematic data alone provide clear
evidence for the presence of a central black hole even without external
constraints on the disk orientation. These results illustrate directly the need
to determine black-hole masses by differing methods for a large number of
objects, demonstrate that the variance in black hole/bulge mass is much larger
than previously claimed, and reinforce the recent finding that the black-hole
mass is tightly correlated with the bulge stellar velocity dispersion.Comment: 26 pages, 11 Postscript figures, accepted for publication on Ap
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