Whole Specimen (whole + specimen)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Crack initiation in the brittle fracture of ferritic steels

FATIGUE & FRACTURE OF ENGINEERING MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES, Issue 9-10 2006
M. COATES
ABSTRACT Fracture in many steels is thought to initiate from fractured carbides. It is often supposed that in pre-cracked specimens, many carbides fracture in the plastic zone of the pre-crack, and that eventually fracture propagates from one of these to cause fracture of the whole specimen. Sources of fracture initiation in steels were investigated using a modified A533B steel as a model material. Specimens were annealed to produce a distribution of micron-sized carbides in a ferrite matrix. Four-point bend tests were carried out in the temperature range 77,373K to determine the material's ductile brittle transition. Pre-cracked samples were loaded up to 90% of the fracture strength at temperatures on the lower shelf (163K) and at the mid point of the transition region (243K). The samples were then sectioned and polished to produce SEM and TEM samples containing the crack tip. Other samples were made of areas some distance from the crack tip and out of the plastic zone. An extensive search for fracture initiation sites found no evidence for fracture initiation originating from fractured carbides. [source]


In vitro analysis of the cement mantle of femoral hip implants: Development and validation of a CT-scan based measurement tool

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 4 2005
Thierry Scheerlinck
Abstract We developed, validated and assessed inter- and intraobserver reliability of a CT-scan based measurement tool to evaluate morphological characteristics of the bone,cement,stem complex of hip implants in cadaver femurs. Two different models were investigated: the stem-cavity model using a double tapered polished femoral-stem that is removed after cement curing and the plastic-replica model using a stereolithographic stem replica that is left in place during CT-scanning. Software was developed to segment and analyze connective CT-images and identify the contours of bone, cement, and stem based on their respective gray values. Volume parameters (whole specimen, cement, stem, air contents of bone and cement), concentricity parameters (distances between centroids of stem and cement, cement and bone, stem and bone), contact surfaces (bone/air and cement/bone) and bone cement mantle thickness parameters were calculated. A three-dimensional protocol was developed to evaluate the minimal mantle thickness out of the CT-plane. The average accuracy for surfaces within CT-images was 7.47 mm2 (1.80%), for bone and cement mantle thickness it was 0.51 mm (9.39%), for distances between centroids it was 0.38 mm (18.5%) and contours: 0.27 mm (2.57%). The intra- and interobserver reliability of air content in bone and cement was sub-optimal (intraclass-correlation coefficient (JCC) as low as 0.54 with an average ICC of 0.85). All other variables were reliable (ICC > 0.81, average ICC: 0.96). This in vitro technique can assess characteristics of cement mantles produced by different cementing techniques, stem types or centralizers. © 2005 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. [source]


Biodiversity and biogeography of the islands of the Kuril Archipelago

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, Issue 9 2003
Theodore W. Pietsch
Abstract Aim Based on seven consecutive seasons of biotic survey and inventory of the terrestrial and freshwater plants and animals of the 30 major islands of the Kuril Archipelago, a description of the biodiversity and an analysis of the biogeography of this previously little known part of the world are provided. Location The Kuril Archipelago, a natural laboratory for investigations into the origin, subsequent evolution, and long-term maintenance of insular populations, forms the eastern boundary of the Okhotsk Sea, extending 1200 km between Hokkaido, Japan, and the Kamchatka Peninsula of Russia. A chain of more than 56 islands, the system is only slightly smaller than the Hawaiian Islands, covering an area of 15,600 km2 and providing 2409 km of coastline. Methods Collections of whole specimens of plants and animals, as well as tissue samples for future molecular studies, were made by teams of scientists from Russia, Japan, and the USA, averaging 34 people for each of the seven annual summer expeditions (1994,2000). Floral and faunal similarities between islands were evaluated by using Sorensen's coefficient of similarity. The similarity matrix resulting from pair-wise calculations was then subjected to UPGMA cluster analysis. Results Despite the relatively small geographical area of all islands combined, the Kuril Island biota is characterized by unusually high taxonomic diversity, yet endemism is very low. An example of a non-relict biota, it originated from two primary sources: a southern source, the Asian mainland by way of Sakhalin and Hokkaido, and a northern source by way of Kamchatka. The contribution of the southern source biota to the species diversity of the Kurils was considerably greater than the northern one. Main conclusion The Bussol Strait, lying between Urup and Simushir in the central Kurils, is the most significant biogeographical boundary within the Archipelago. Of lesser importance are two transitional zones, the De Vries Strait or ,Miyabe Line', which passes between Iturup and Urup in the southern Kurils, and the fourth Kuril Strait, between Onekotan and Paramushir in the northern Kurils. [source]


DNA-based identification of preys from non-destructive, total DNA extractions of predators using arthropod universal primers

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES, Issue 3 2006
JOAN PONS
Abstract Here, I show that prey sequences can be detected from DNA of tiger beetles of the genus Rivacindela using whole specimens, nondestructive methods, and universal cytochrome b primers for arthropods. BLAST searches of the obtained sequences against public databases revealed that the diet of Rivacindela is mostly composed of flies but also termites and other beetles. Accurate determination of order, family and even genus was achieved in most cases but rarely to species level. Results suggest that stored DNA samples extracted from whole predatory specimens could be an alternative to dissected gut contents as starting source for DNA-based dietary studies. [source]