274 research outputs found

    Investigation of Damp Heat aging on soda-lime glass for photovoltaic applications

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    International audienceDamp heat test was performed on commercial soda-lime glass to characterize functional properties of glass in photovoltaic applications and to define aging mechanisms. In addition to the measurements of optical properties, FTIR, SEM-EDX and XPS analyses were carried out. The damp heat exposed samples presented an increased transmittance in UV, visible and near-IR ranges. The results were explained by hydration of glass network with heat. Molecular water adsorption involves a leaching process of network modifier cations and especially sodium ions. Hydrolysis also occurs in silica network with free molecular water reaction. This phenomenon enhances concentration of hydroxyl groups in glass highlighted by FTIR measurements and promotes formation of silanol groups. The tin side dependence on sodium leaching which acts as a passivating barrier for ionic transport is emphasized which would be worth taking into consideration for photovoltaic module design

    Evaluation of response after SBRT for liver tumors

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    Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) has developed over the last few years for the treatment of primary and metastatic hepatic tumors. The tumoral and adjacent peritumoral modifications caused by this radiosurgery limit the evaluation of response by anatomic imaging and dimensional criteria alone, such as with RECIST. This suggests that it is of interest to also take into account the residual enhancement and hyper metabolism of these hepatic targets. We have reviewed the English language literature regarding the response of hepatic lesions treated by SBRT, and found that only seven articles were specifically concerned with this problem.The response of the hepatocellular carcinoma after SBRT has been studied specifically with multiphase enhanced CT-scan. Criteria set by the European Association of Study of the Liver better estimate response at each time point of follow up than RECIST does. Non-enhancement, reflecting tumor necrosis, is additionally an early indicator of response with extended response in time and a best non-enhancement percentage is observed at 12 months. The response after treatment by SBRT of cholangiocarcinoma has not yet generated a specific report.Use of RECIST criteria is also inadequate in the evaluation of response after SBRT for hepatic metastases. Response of liver metastases to SBRT is better assessed with a combination of size and enhancement pattern. The occurrence of a lobulated enhancement during follow up is efficient to predict local progression in a specific, reproducible, and sensitive way. Patients with FDG-avid hepatic metastases are also better evaluated with PET-CT and functional criteria than routine imaging and metric evaluation alone

    Thermal study of an aluminium nitride ceramic heater for spray CVD on glass substrates by quantitative thermography

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    A thermographic approach is used to determine the temperature of an aluminium nitride hot plate as a glass substrate heater for depositing thin films by spray CVD (Chemical Vapour Deposition). In this context, the temperature of the hot plate is conditioned by the evaluation of both effective emissivity and environment temperature with calibration curve of the commercial camera. We first examined the consistency of the thermosignal/temperature correspondence by employing the software calibration. The environment temperature is evaluated by means of a ruffled aluminium foil according to ASTM. The effective emissivity is measured in situ by using a commercial IR camera on the temperature range of [40°C, 540°C] with a better than 3% accuracy. Absolute value of effective emissivity is in agreement with spectrometric values up to 120°C. Above this temperature, a strong dependence with temperature is highlighted. The radiometric temperature values are thereby corrected with an exactitude of temperature better than 2.5% in Celsius degree for the highest temperatures considered

    Bilateral kidney preservation by volumetric-modulated arc therapy (RapidArc) compared to conventional radiation therapy (3D-CRT) in pancreatic and bile duct malignancies

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To compare volumetric-modulated arc therapy plans with conventional radiation therapy (3D-CRT) plans in pancreatic and bile duct cancers, especially for bilateral kidney preservation.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A dosimetric analysis was performed in 21 patients who had undergone radiotherapy for pancreatic or bile duct carcinoma at our institution. We compared 4-field 3D-CRT and 2 arcs RapidArc (RA) plans. The treatment plan was designed to deliver a dose of 50.4 Gy to the planning target volume (PTV) based on the gross disease in a 1.8 Gy daily fraction, 5 days a week. Planning objectives were 95% of the PTV receiving 95% of the prescribed dose and no more than 2% of the PTV receiving more than 107%. Dose-volume histograms (DVH) for the target volume and the organs at risk (right and left kidneys, bowel tract, liver and healthy tissue) were compared. Monitor units and delivery treatment time were also reported.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>All plans achieved objectives, with 95% of the PTV receiving ≥ 95% of the dose (D95% for 3D-CRT = 48.9 Gy and for RA = 48.6 Gy). RapidArc was shown to be superior to 3D-CRT in terms of organ at risk sparing except for contralateral kidney: for bowel tract, the mean dose was reduced by RA compared to 3D-CRT (16.7 vs 20.8 Gy, p = 0.0001). Similar result was observed for homolateral kidney (mean dose of 4.7 Gy for RA vs 12.6 Gy for 3D-CRT, p < 0.0001), but 3D-CRT significantly reduced controlateral kidney dose with a mean dose of 1.8 Gy vs 3.9 Gy, p < 0.0007. Compared to 3D-CRT, mean MUs for each fraction was significantly increased with RapidArc: 207 vs 589, (p < 0.0001) but the treatment time was not significantly different (2 and 2.66 minutes, p = ns).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>RapidArc allows significant dose reduction, in particular for homolateral kidney and bowel, while maintaining target coverage. This would have a promising impact on reducing toxicities.</p

    A Circuit-Based Approach to Simulate the Characteristics of a Silicon Photovoltaic Module With Aging

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    The aging of photovoltaic modules results inevitably in a decrease of their efficiency all through their lifetime utilization. An approach to simulate the evolution of electrical characteristics of a photovoltaic module with aging is presented. The photovoltaic module is modeled by an equivalent electrical circuit whose components have time-dependent characteristics determined under accelerated tests. By entering sun irradiance and temperature, I–V and P–V curves as well as efficiency evolution can be simulated over years assuming equivalent time. The methodology is applied for the case of a monocrystalline photovoltaic module modeled by a one-diode circuit and aging laws are determined with experimental results of damp heat (DH) tests 85 °C/85% RH performed by Hulkoff (2009, “Usage of Highly Accelerated Stress Test (HAST) in Solar Module Aging Procedures,” M.S. thesis, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden). A power degradation rate of 0.53%/yr is found. A parametric study shows that the rundown of optical transmittance of the upper layers with aging has the most important impact by reducing the initial efficiency by 11.5% over a 25-year exposure contrary to electrical degradations which cause a decrease of 1.85% of the initial efficiency

    Brachytherapy for penile cancer: Efficacy and impact on sexual function

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    AbstractPurposePenis brachytherapy (PB) remains an alternative in the cancer treatment. The objective of this study was to assess the oncologic outcomes, sexual function, and the sexual behavior of men treated by PB for a cancer of the penis.Methods and MaterialsBetween 1992 and 2009, 47 patients with a cancer of the penis were treated by PB (192Ir), in the Toulouse, Montpellier, and Barcelona cancer centers. The investigation into their sexuality was obtained by means of questionnaire. A total of 21 French patients were approached, of whom 19 (mean age=73.2 years) agreed to answer the questionnaire (participation rate=90.5%).ResultsOncologic data: The specific survival and the disease-free survival at 5 years was 87.6% (95% confidence interval, 72.4–94.7%) and 84% (95% confidence interval, 57.6–94.7%), respectively. The rate of preservation of the penis was 66% (n=31). Sexual data: Among the 17 patients sexually active before brachytherapy, 10 patients remained sexually active after treatment (58.8%). Of the 18 patients who had erections before PB, 17 still had them after treatment (94.4%). Age was the main predictive factor.ConclusionThe PB seems to have a moderated impact on the sexual functions and the sexual behavior of the patients

    Three Years of Salvage IMRT for Prostate Cancer: Results of the Montpellier Cancer Center

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    Background. To assess the feasibility of salvage intensity-modulated radiation Therapy (IMRT) and to examine clinical outcome. Patients and Methods. 57 patients were treated with salvage IMRT to the prostate bed in our center from January, 2007, to February, 2010. The mean prescription dose was 68 Gy in 34 fractions. Forty-four patients received concomitant androgen deprivation. Results. Doses to organs at risk were low without altering target volume coverage. Salvage IMRT was feasible without any grade 3 or 4 acute gastrointestinal or urinary toxicity. With a median follow-up of 21 months, one grade 2 urinary and 1 grade ≥2 rectal late toxicities were reported. Biological relapse-free survival was 96.5% (2.3% (1/44) relapsed with androgen suppression and 7.7% (1/13) without). Conclusion. Salvage IMRT is feasible and results in low acute and chronic side-effects. Longer follow-up is warranted to draw conclusions in terms of oncologic control

    Implementation of the Calypso system: a commissioning experience

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    Background: The aim of this study was to describe the clinical implementation of the Calypso system with its potential impact on the treatment delivery. Materials and methods: The influence of the electromagnetic array was investigated on the kilovoltage cone beam computed tomography (kV-CBCT) image quality using the CATPHAN 504 CBCT images. Then, the QFix kVue Calypso couch top and the array attenuation, and their dosimetric influence on the Volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) treatments of prostate was evaluated. Results: Regarding the image quality, a significant increase of noise (p &lt; 0.01) was detected with the array in place, resulting in a significant decrease in signal noise ratio (SNR) (p &lt; 0.01). No difference in absolute contrast was observed. Finally, there was a significant decrease in contrast noise ratio (CNR) (p &lt; 0.01) even if the deviation was only of 2.5%. For the dosimetric evaluation, the maximum attenuation of the couch was 12.02% and 13.19% for X6 and X6 FFF, respectively (configuration of rails out). Besides, the mean attenuation of the array was 1.15% and 1.67% for X6 and X6 FFF, respectively. For the VMAT treatment plans, the mean dose was reduced by 0.61% for X6 and by 0.31% for X6 FFF beams when using the electromagnetic array. Conclusions: The Calypso system does not affect significantly the kV-CBCT image quality and the VMAT plan dose distribution

    Evaluation of reproducibility of tumor repositioning during multiple breathing cycles for liver stereotactic body radiotherapy treatment

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    AimTo evaluate the tumor repositioning during gated volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) for liver stereotactic body radiotherapy(SBRT) treatment using implanted fiducial markers and intrafraction kilovoltage (kV) images acquired during dose delivery.Materials and methodsSince 2012, 47 liver cancer patients with implanted fiducial markers were treated using the gated VMAT technique with a Varian Truebeam STx linear accelerator. The fiducial markers were implanted inside or close to the tumor target before treatment simulation. They were defined at the maximum inhalation and exhalation phases on a 4-dimensionnal computed tomography (4DCT) acquisition. During the treatment, kV images were acquired just before the beam-on at each breathing cycle at maximum exhalation and inhalation phases to verify the fiducial markers positions. For the five first fractions of treatment in the first ten consecutive patients, a total of 2705 intrafraction kV images were retrospectively analyzed to assess the differences between expected and actual positions of the fiducial markers along the cranio-caudal (CC) direction during the exhalation phase.ResultsThe mean absolute intrafractional fiducial marker deviation along the CC direction was 1.0[[ce:hsp sp="0.25"/]]mm at the maximum exhalation phase. In 99%, 95% and 90% cases, the fiducial marker deviations were ≤4.5[[ce:hsp sp="0.25"/]]mm, 2.8[[ce:hsp sp="0.25"/]]mm and 2.2[[ce:hsp sp="0.25"/]]mm, respectively.ConclusionIntrafraction kV images allowed us to ensure the consistency of tumor repositioning during treatment. In 99% cases, the fiducial marker deviations were ≤4.5[[ce:hsp sp="0.25"/]]mm corresponding to our 5[[ce:hsp sp="0.25"/]]mm treatment margin. This margin seems to be well-adapted to the gated VMAT SBRT treatment in liver disease
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