156 research outputs found

    Dental Failure Analysis: The Need of a Comprehensive Failure Classification

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    For more than thirty percent of patients with implant-supported fixed dental prosthesis, various complications can be observed over five-years of function. In some cases, failure can be ascribed to mechanical reasons such as loosening of the retaining screws or fracture of the implant components. The paper evaluates three different failures of implant-supported prostheses. All cases were analyzed by optical and SEM microscopy to identify the failure modes and the possible failure causes. Improper design or errors in finishing operations or in assembly are identified as dental failure causes. A matrix classification is proposed to collect rupture cases of implant-supported prostheses

    Performance assessment of a vibro-finishing technology for additively manufactured components

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    Metal components produced by Additive Manufacturing (AM) technologies usually exhibit a rough surface, that in certain applications can result detrimental for the part’s functionality. Thus, it is of great interest to study the finishing processes that can be applied to the surfaces, both external and internal, of AM components. The aim of this work is the evaluation of the capabilities of a vibro-finishing process in the treatment of samples produced by Laser-Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) from AlSi10Mg powders. In this research, the abrasive media is identified, and the surface quality improvement is analysed in terms of surface roughness and modifications induced by the finishing treatment (i.e., edge rounding, material loss) against finishing duration. The cost of the treatment is also evaluated

    Spatial dependence of body mass index and exposure to night-time noise in the Geneva urban area

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    In this study, we calculated the night-noise mean (SonBase 2014, compatible with the EU Environmental Noise Directive) for the 5 classes obtained after computation of Local Indicators of Spatial Association (LISA; Anselin et al 1995) on the BMI of the participants in the Bus Santé study, a cohort managed by the Geneva University Hospitals (N=15’544; Guessous et al 2014). We expected the mean of dBs to be significantly higher in the group showing spatial dependence of high BMI values (high-high class). We ran an ANOVA and multiple T-tests to compare the dB means between LISA clusters. The approach was applied to the participants of the whole State Geneva cohort, and to a reduced set of individuals living in the urban environment of the municipality of Geneva only

    Dense matter with eXTP

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    In this White Paper we present the potential of the Enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry (eXTP) mission for determining the nature of dense matter; neutron star cores host an extreme density regime which cannot be replicated in a terrestrial laboratory. The tightest statistical constraints on the dense matter equation of state will come from pulse profile modelling of accretion-powered pulsars, burst oscillation sources, and rotation-powered pulsars. Additional constraints will derive from spin measurements, burst spectra, and properties of the accretion flows in the vicinity of the neutron star. Under development by an international Consortium led by the Institute of High Energy Physics of the Chinese Academy of Science, the eXTP mission is expected to be launched in the mid 2020s.Comment: Accepted for publication on Sci. China Phys. Mech. Astron. (2019

    Sorption and separation of palladium, platinum and gold chlorocomplexes by means of a dipicolinic acid polystyrene-based chelating resin

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    A chelating ion-exchange resin containing dipicolinic acid as functional group and based on microporous chloromethylated cross-linked polystyrene-divinylbenzene (2 %) copolymer has been prepared. Its sorption and desorption characteristics for Pd(II), Pt(II), Pt(IV) and Au(III) have been studied in aqueous chloride solutions under a number of experimental conditions, both in batch and in column, at room temperature and constant ionic strength (μ = 1 mol/l, KCl/ HCl). In column operations at pH 6, Pd(II) can be separated from Pt(H) or Pt(IV) owing to the different rate of formation of the immobilized chelated species. From a mixture of Pd(II, Pt(IV) and Au(III) at pH 6, Pt(IV) flows unaffected, whereas Au(III) and Pd(II) are both retained and successively separated by selective elution. From the same mixture at pH ≤ 0 only Au(III) is sorbed by anionic exchange. © 1991
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