Scanning Technique (scanning + technique)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Investigation and correlation of manikin and bench-scale fire testing of clothing systems

FIRE AND MATERIALS, Issue 6 2002
Calvin Lee
The US Army currently has five flame/thermal protective clothing systems to provide protection for soldiers against fire hazards. The protective performance of these clothing systems against burn injuries was investigated in full-scale manikin tests. The protective performance of fabric layers of these clothing systems was also examined in bench-scale tests. In addition, air gap thicknesses and distributions of the five clothing systems were determined by using a three-dimensional laser scanning technique. In this paper, test conditions of the manikin and bench-scale tests are compared, and the test results are correlated in light of the air gap measurements. The behavior of individual sensors on the manikin with similar test conditions to those of bench-scale tests are compared with the bench-scale tests. It is found that if the air gap distribution of a clothing system is known, bench-scale tests could provide useful information for full-scale performance, especially bench-scale tests with zero air gap measurements. Published in 2002 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Strength of two structured soils in triaxial compression

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL AND ANALYTICAL METHODS IN GEOMECHANICS, Issue 2 2001
Ron C. K. Wong
Abstract Oil sands are dense granular materials with interlocked structure and clay shales are heavily overconsolidated clays. They are classified as structured soil or weak rock, exhibiting high peak strength with severe softening and dilation, particularly at low confining stress. The triaxial compression test results indicate that both materials yield linear Mohr,Coulomb envelopes with an apparent cohesion for peak and residual strengths. However, the strength components mobilized from these two materials are very different. This paper investigates if these strength parameters are intrinsic properties or responses derived in triaxial compression conditions. Computer tomography scanning technique is used to aid in examining the micro-structural features of the sheared specimens such as shear banding pattern, shear band thickness, spatial porosity distributions inside and outside shear bands. These micro-structural features are used to explain the macro-deformation response observed in the triaxial compression tests. Mobilization of strength components derived from interlocked structure, cementation, dilation, rolling and critical state are analysed for pre-, post-peak softening and residual stages. It is found that the empirical correlation such as Mohr,Coulomb failure criterion based on triaxial compression test results does not necessarily reflect the intrinsic properties of the test materials. Testing conditions are embedded in the empirical correlation. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Infrequent microsatellite instability in liver fluke infection-associated intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas from Thailand

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 3 2003
Upama Liengswangwong
Abstract The liver fluke infection-associated intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) is a major liver cancer in Northeast Thailand. The molecular basis of this ICC is poorly understood. To address possible roles of the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system in ICC carcinogenesis, a fluorescence-labeling PCR/laser scanning technique with high sensitivity was employed to analyze genomic instability in the nuclear DNA (nDNA) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in 24 fresh and 13 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues of ICC and their corresponding normal parts. Microsatellite instability (MSI) was assessed in nDNA, using 12 highly polymorphic loci including 5 Bethesda markers. These loci were mainly related to major MMR genes, hMSH2 and hMLH1. Also 3 (C)n and/or (C)n(A)n repeat instability at 1 noncoding region in the displacement-loop (D-loop) and 2 coding sequences in NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1 and subunit 5 gene in mtDNA were analyzed. MSI was only detected in 1 (2.7%), 6 (16.7%), 1 (2.9%), 1 (2.9%) or 2 (6.3%) out of 37, 36, 35, 35 or 32 cases at BAT-25, D2S123, D3S1611, D11S904 or D17S250, respectively. LOH was found at D3S1298, D3S1561, D5S346 and TP53 in 4 (18.2%) out of 22, 2 (18.2%) out of 11, 6 (33.3%) out of 18 and 3 (12.5%) out of 24 informative cases, respectively. In mtDNA, none except a single case out of the 37 (2.7%) exhibited repeat sequence instability in the D-loop. We conclude that the liver fluke infection-associated ICC in Thailand is classified as low frequency MSI or microsatellite stable type and that DNA MMR system, through hMSH2 and hMLH1 gene mutations, does not play a major role in its carcinogenesis. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


IR and UV laser-induced morphological changes in silicon surface under oxygen atmosphere

PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (C) - CURRENT TOPICS IN SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 10 2005
J. Jiménez-Jarquín
Abstract We irradiated silicon (100) wafers with IR (1064 nm) and UV (355 nm) nanosecond laser pulses with energy densities within the ablation regime and used scanning electron microscopy to analyze the morphological changes induced on the Si surface. The changes in the wafer morphology depend both on the incident radiation wavelength and the environmental atmosphere. We have patterned Si surfaces with a single focused laser spot and, in doing the experiments with IR or UV this reveals significant differences in the initial surface cracking and pattern formation, however if the experiment is carried out in O2 the final result is an array of microcones. We also employed a random scanning technique to irradiate the silicon wafer over large areas, in this case the microstructure patterns consist of a "semi-ordered" array of micron-sized cones. (© 2005 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]