122 research outputs found
Professor DS Kothari : The Architect of Defence Science in India
Defence science in India owes its origin and early growth to Professor DS Kothari. From humble beginnings the Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO) has grown into a major national scientific agency over the last four and a half decades
Advances in Instrumentation and Monitoring in Geotechnical Engineering
[Extract] Geotechnical instrumentation to monitor the performances of earth and earth-supported structures is increasingly becoming popular. Verification of long-term performances, validation of new theories, construction control, warning against any impending failures, quality assurance, and legal protection are some of the many reasons for geotechnical instrumentation. They are not only used in field situations, but in laboratories too. With the recent advances in materials and technology, and the need for more stringent performance control, there had been significant developments in the recent past in instrumentation and monitoring techniques
Design and Performance of INMAS Whole Body Counter
A whole-body counter has been commissioned at INMAS for radiation protection and clinical applications including body potassium estimations. It has 4-crystal bed geometry inside a shielded enclosure. The background index of the system (counts) per minute per cc detector volume in the energy band 0.1-2 me V is about 0.6 comparing favorably with other whole-body monitors in the world. The sensitivity is 0.5 cpm per gram of K. Body potassium can be estimated can be estimated correct to 10 g for one hour counting. The variation in detector response to a point source on the mid-line of the bed is + - 10% of the mean over a length of 170 cm. The usefulness of the large dimensions of the enclosure chosen is discussed
Optimised and slotted cold-formed steel channels: a solution for modular buidling systems
The steel construction industry has recently put a lot of effort to better understand Modular Building Systems (MBS) and replaced, where possible, conventional construction methods. MBS claims promising advantages including speed of erection, improved quality, reduced cost, and flexibility. Therefore, research efforts are tuned to the structural, social, and safety evaluations of MBS while it is recognised that there are challenges associated with their use, yet to be addressed. The main challenges are improving structural, fire, and energy performances, need for lightweight materials, more access space during renovation and transportation difficulties. This paper investigates how the use of optimised Cold-Formed Steel (CFS) members with slotted web can address such challenges. The optimisation was performed using Particle Swarm Optimisation (PSO) method and subsequently, slotted perforations were added to enhance the structural, fire and energy performances, respectively. Finite Element (FE) analysis was employed to assess the performance of optimised innovative CFS beams with slotted perforations. As a result, the optimisation and FE analyses resulted in a 30-65% of flexural capacity enhancements along with notable performance improvement in fire and energy performances over conventional Lipped Channel Beam (LCB). Using such optimised innovative sections a conceptual design of a corner-post module was also developed. Hence, the optimised CFS channels with slotted perforations would be a convenient tool to overcome the reported challenges related to MBS, result in more cost-effective and efficient building solutions
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Elastic and anelastic relaxation behaviour of perovskite multiferroics II: PbZrTiO (PZT)āPbFeTaO (PFT)
Elastic and anelastic properties of ceramic samples of multiferroic perovskites with nominal compositions across the binary join PbZrTiOāPbFeTaO (PZTāPFT) have been assembled to create a binary phase diagram and to address the role of strain relaxation associated with their phase transitions. Structural relationships are similar to those observed previously for PbZrTiOāPbFeNbO (PZTāPFN), but the magnitude of the tetragonal shear strain associated with the ferroelectric order parameter appears to be much smaller. This leads to relaxor character for the development of ferroelectric properties in the end member PbFeTaO. As for PZTāPFN, there appear to be two discrete instabilities rather than simply a reorientation of the electric dipole in the transition sequence cubicātetragonalāmonoclinic, and the second transition has characteristics typical of an improper ferroelastic. At intermediate compositions, the ferroelastic microstructure has strain heterogeneities on a mesoscopic length scale and, probably, also on a microscopic scale. This results in a wide anelastic freezing interval for strain-related defects rather than the freezing of discrete twin walls that would occur in a conventional ferroelastic material. In PFT, however, the acoustic loss behaviour more nearly resembles that due to freezing of conventional ferroelastic twin walls. Precursor softening of the shear modulus in both PFT and PFN does not fit with a VogelāFulcher description, but in PFT there is a temperature interval where the softening conforms to a power law suggestive of the role of fluctuations of the order parameter with dispersion along one branch of the Brillouin zone. Magnetic ordering appears to be coupled only weakly with a volume strain and not with shear strain but, as with multiferroic PZTāPFN perovskites, takes place within crystals which have significant strain heterogeneities on different length scales.RUS facilities in Cambridge were established with funding from the Natural Environment Research Council (Grants NE/B505738/1, NE/F017081/1). The present work was supported by Grant No. EP/ I036079/1 from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. We thank Dr. Sam Crossley for his assistance with dielectric analysis and the use of his software to run those measurements. JAS gratefully acknowledges the hospitality of the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids. The Nanopaleomagnetism lab has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Unionās Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007ā 2013)/ERC Grant Agreement 320750. SED and HS acknowledge support from the Winton Programme for the physics of sustainability. HS also acknowledges support from the Funai Foundation for Information Technology and the British Council Japan Association. Part of the work was carried out at the University of Puerto Rico, supported by the DOEEBSCoR project DEG02-ER46526
Structural insights into the function of the catalytically active human Taspase1
19 pags., 7 figs., 2 tabs.Taspase1 is an Ntn-hydrolase overexpressed in primary human cancers, coordinating cancer cell proliferation, invasion, and metastasis. Loss of Taspase1 activity disrupts proliferation of human cancer cells in vitro and in mouse models of glioblastoma. Taspase1 is synthesized as an inactive proenzyme, becoming active upon intramolecular cleavage. The activation process changes the conformation of a long fragment at the C-terminus of the Ī± subunit, for which no full-length structural information exists and whose function is poorly understood. We present a cloning strategy to generate a circularly permuted form of Taspase1 to determine the crystallographic structure of active Taspase1. We discovered that this region forms a long helix and is indispensable for the catalytic activity of Taspase1. Our study highlights the importance of this element for the enzymatic activity of Ntn-hydrolases, suggesting that it could be a potential target for the design of inhibitors with potential to be developed into anticancer therapeutics.This project has been funded in whole with Federal funds from the National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), under Chemical Biology Consortium contract no. HHSN261200800001E
Elastic and anelastic relaxation behaviour of perovskite multiferroics II: PbZr0.53Ti0.47O3 (PZT)āPbFe0.5Ta0.5O3 (PFT)
Elastic and anelastic properties of ceramic samples of multiferroic perovskites with nominal compositions across the binary join PbZr0.53Ti0.47O3āPbFe0.5Ta0.5O3 (PZTāPFT) have been assembled to create a binary phase diagram and to address the role of strain relaxation associated with their phase transitions. Structural relationships are similar to those observed previously for PbZr0.53Ti0.47O3āPbFe0.5Nb0.5O3 (PZTāPFN), but the magnitude of the tetragonal shear strain associated with the ferroelectric order parameter appears to be much smaller. This leads to relaxor character for the development of ferroelectric properties in the end member PbFe0.5Ta0.5O3. As for PZTāPFN, there appear to be two discrete instabilities rather than simply a reorientation of the electric dipole in the transition sequence cubicātetragonalāmonoclinic, and the second transition has characteristics typical of an improper ferroelastic. At intermediate compositions, the ferroelastic microstructure has strain heterogeneities on a mesoscopic length scale and, probably, also on a microscopic scale. This results in a wide anelastic freezing interval for strain-related defects rather than the freezing of discrete twin walls that would occur in a conventional ferroelastic material. In PFT, however, the acoustic loss behaviour more nearly resembles that due to freezing of conventional ferroelastic twin walls. Precursor softening of the shear modulus in both PFT and PFN does not fit with a VogelāFulcher description, but in PFT there is a temperature interval where the softening conforms to a power law suggestive of the role of fluctuations of the order parameter with dispersion along one branch of the Brillouin zone. Magnetic ordering appears to be coupled only weakly with a volume strain and not with shear strain but, as with multiferroic PZTāPFN perovskites, takes place within crystals which have significant strain heterogeneities on different length scales
Elastic and anelastic relaxation behaviour of perovskite multiferroics I: PbZr0.53Ti0.47O3(PZT)-PbFe0.5Nb0.5O3(PNF)
Perovskites in the ternary system PbTiO3 (PT)āPbZrO3 (PZ)āPb(Fe0.5Nb0.5)O3 (PFN) have attracted close interest because they can display simultaneous ferroelectric, magnetic and ferroelastic properties. Those with the most sensitive response to external fields are likely to have compositions near the morphotropic phase boundary (MPB) which lies close to the binary join Pb(Zr0.53Ti0.47)O3 (PZT)āPFN. In the present study, the strength and dynamics of strain coupling behaviour which accompanies the development of ferroelectricity and (anti)ferromagnetism in ceramic PZTāPFN samples have been investigated by resonant ultrasound spectroscopy. Elastic softening ahead of the cubicātetragonal transition does not fit with models based on dispersion of the soft mode or relaxor characteristics but is attributed, instead, to coupling between acoustic modes and a central peak mode from correlated relaxations and/or microstructure dynamics. Softening of the shear modulus through the transition by up to ~50 % fits with the expected pattern for linear/quadratic strain/order parameter coupling at an improper ferroelastic transition and close to tricritical evolution for the order parameter. Superattenuation of acoustic resonances in a temperature interval of ~100 K below the transition point is indicative of mobile ferroelastic twin walls. By way of contrast, the first-order tetragonalāmonoclinic transition involves only a small change in the shear modulus and is not accompanied by significant changes in acoustic dissipation. The dominant feature of the elastic and anelastic properties at low temperatures is a concave-up variation of the shear modulus and relatively high loss down to the lowest temperature, which appears to be the signature of materials with substantial local strain heterogeneity and a spectrum of strain relaxation times. No evidence of magnetoelastic coupling has been found, in spite of the samples displaying ferromagnetism below ~550 K and possible spin glass ordering below ~50 K. For the important multiferroic perovskite ceramics with compositions close to the MPB of ternary PT-PZ-PFN, there must be some focus in future on the role of strain heterogeneity
Cerebral perfusion in sepsis
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Yearbook of Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2010 (Springer Verlag) and co-published as a series in Critical Care. Other articles in the series can be found online at http://ccforum.com/series/yearbook. Further information about the Yearbook of Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from http://www.springer.com/series/2855
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