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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
231

Extension of the ANSYS® creep and damage simulation capabilities

Altstadt, Eberhard, Mössner, Thomas January 2000 (has links)
The user programmable features (UPF) of the finite element code ANSYS® are used to generate a customized ANSYS-executable including a more general creep behaviour of materials and a damage module. The numerical approach for the creep behaviour is not restricted to a single creep law (e.g. strain hardening model) with parameters evaluated from a limited stress and temperature range. Instead of this strain rate - strain relations can be read from external creep data files for different temperature and stress levels. The damage module accumulates a damage measure based on the creep strain increment and plastic strain increment of the load step and the current fracture strains for creep and plasticity (depending on temperature and stress level). If the damage measure of an element exceeds a critical value this element is deactivated. Examples are given for illustration and verification of the new program modules.
232

Residual Stresses and the Bauschinger Effect

Huebner, Raymond M. 01 June 1965 (has links)
Within the last ten years there has been much interest in the field of elasto-plastic behavior of engineering materials. Hie recent popularity of the low-cost light-weight plastically designed structures has added a great deal of impetus to this interest. This thesis deals with one of the aspects of elasto-plastic behavior, namely, the distribution of the residual stresses in a simple member which has been plastically deformed in tension and/or compression,. In particular, an attempt has been made to relate these residual stresses to the well-known but little understood Bauschinger effect.
233

Breaking Free From Thermodynamic Constraints: Thermal Acclimation and Metabolic Compensation in a Freshwater Zooplankton Species

Coggins, B. L., Anderson, C. E., Hasan, R., Pearson, A. C., Ekwudo, M. N., Bidwell, Joe R., Yampolsky, Lev Y. 01 February 2021 (has links)
Respiration rates of ectothermic organisms are affected by environmental temperatures, and sustainable metabolism at high temperatures sometimes limits heat tolerance. Organisms are hypothesized to exhibit acclimatory metabolic compensation effects, decelerating their metabolic processes below Arrhenius expectations based on temperature alone. We tested the hypothesis that either heritable or plastic heat tolerance differences can be explained by metabolic compensation in the eurythermal freshwater zooplankton crustacean Daphnia magna. We measured respiration rates in a ramp-up experiment over a range of assay temperatures (5-37°C) in eight genotypes of D. magna representing a range of previously reported acute heat tolerances and, at a narrower range of temperatures (10-35°C), in D. magna with different acclimation history (either 10 or 25°C). We discovered no difference in temperature-specific respiration rates between heat-tolerant and heat-sensitive genotypes. In contrast, we observed acclimationspecific compensatory differences in respiration rates at both extremes of the temperature range studied. Notably, there was a deceleration of oxygen consumption at higher temperature in 25°Cacclimated D. magna relative to their 10°C-acclimated counterparts, observed in active animals, a pattern corroborated by similar changes in filtering rate and, partly, by changes in mitochondrial membrane potential. A recovery experiment indicated that the reduction of respiration was not caused by irreversible damage during exposure to a sublethal temperature. Response time necessary to acquire the respiratory adjustment to high temperature was lower than for low temperature, indicating that metabolic compensation at lower temperatures requires slower, possibly structural changes.
234

Impact of Sox9 Dosage and Hes1-mediated Notch Signaling in Controlling the Plasticity of Adult Pancreatic Duct Cells in Mice / Sox9発現量とHes1を介したNotch signalingによるマウス成体膵管細胞の可塑性制御

Hosokawa, Shinichi 23 July 2015 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(医学) / 甲第19224号 / 医博第4023号 / 新制||医||1010(附属図書館) / 32223 / 京都大学大学院医学研究科医学専攻 / (主査)教授 長船 健二, 教授 稲垣 暢也, 教授 斎藤 通紀 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Medical Science / Kyoto University / DFAM
235

Mechanisms of hardening in HCP structures through dislocation transmutation and accommodation effects by glide twinning: application to magnesium

Oppedal, Andrew Lars 07 August 2010 (has links)
At low temperatures, glide twinning activates in HCP structures easier than non-close packed slip necessary to accommodate strain along the c-axis. In contrast to slip, twinning occurs as an accumulation of successive stacking faults that properly report reconstruction of the stacking sequence in a new crystal-reorientated lenticular lamella. These faults are spread by partial dislocations known as twinning dislocations, forcing atoms to switch positions by shear into new crystal planes. As the twinning dislocations thread the faults, the new crystal lamella grows at the expense of the parent. Grain texture changes upon strain, and a strong non-linear trend marks the strain hardening rate. The strain hardening rate changes to a point where it switches sign upon strain. Since activation of these twinning dislocations obey Schmid’s law, twinning could be precluded or exhaustively promoted in sharp textures upon slight changes in loading orientations, so strong anisotropy arises. Moreover, a twinning shear can only reproduce the stacking sequence in one direction, unless the twin mode changes or the c/a ratio crosses a certain ratio. When a twin mode arises with reversed sign, the reorientation is different and more importantly, the strength is different and also the growth rate. Therefore, in addition to strain anisotropy, twin polarity induces a strong asymmetry in textured HCP structures, e.g. wrought HCP metals. This anisotropy/asymmetry is still a barrier to the great economic gain expected from the industrialization of low density, high specific strength and stiffness, HCP Magnesium. This barrier has stimulated efforts to identify the missing links in current scientific knowledge to proper prediction of Magnesium anisotropy. The effect of twinninginduced texture change on the mechanical response is of a major concern. Mesoscale modelers still struggle, without success to predict simultaneously twinning and strain hardening rates upon arbitrary loading directions. We propose a new mechanism that relies on admitting dislocation populations of the twin by dislocations transmuted from the parent when they intersect twinning disconnections. These dislocations interact with original dislocations created in the twin to cause hardening able to faithfully capture anisotropy upon any loading orientation and any initial texture.
236

Lateral buckling of beams with web holes

Lam, Cheuk-wing. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
237

State-dependent changes in astrocyte regulation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptor signaling in neurosecretory neurons

Fleming, Tiffany M. January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
238

Quantitative Genetics of Zebrafish Ontogeny Under Changing Environmental Conditions

Marks, Christopher 02 May 2012 (has links)
No description available.
239

Modulation of Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Type 5 (mGlu5) Reduces the Enhanced Rewarding Effects of Nicotine in a Neonatal Quinpirole Model of Psychosis

Cuozzo, Anthony M, Peeters, Loren D, Wills, Liza J, Ivanich, Kira L, Turney, Seth E, Bullock, Luke P, Massey, Sam R, Gass, Justin T, Brown, Russell W 25 April 2023 (has links)
Nicotine has been indicated as a prevalent drug for substance abuse comorbidities in mental illness. Tobacco use is elevated in those suffering from psychiatric disorders, most notably in schizophrenia (SZ), where a three-to-five fold increase in usage compared to the general population is observed. Our laboratory has established a rodent model of psychosis. In this model, male and female rats are neonatally treated with quinpirole (NQ), a dopamine (DA) D2-like agonist for 21 days postpartum, resulting in lifelong supersensitization of the DAD2 receptor. Increases in dopamine D2 receptor sensitivity is a hallmark of psychosis. Interestingly, the dopamine D2 receptor forms a triple mutual inhibitor heteromer in the dorsal striatum with the adenosine A(2A) and metabotropic glutamate receptor type 5 (mGlu5), such that stimulation of the A(2A) or mGlu5 receptor results in decreased dopamine D2 signaling. The present study was designed to analyze the role of the mGlu5 receptor in a behavioral task involved in testing the associative aspects of rewarding drugs known as conditioned place preference (CPP). CPP is a behavioral task in which animals are conditioned with a reinforcing drug to prefer a particular environmental context. Male and female rats were neonatally treated with saline (NS) or quinpirole from postnatal day (P) 1 to 21. From P41-51, which is mid-adolescence in a rat, all rats were behaviorally tested on CPP. Results revealed that compared to NS rats, NQ animals administered nicotine demonstrated enhanced CPP, replicating our past work. Groups receiving a positive allosteric modulator to mGlu5, which results in stimulation of the mGlu5 receptor, reduced the enhanced rewarding effects of nicotine in CPP for NQ treated rats equal to control levels. Brain tissue was analyzed for brain-derived neurotropic factor (BDNF), a neurotrophin involved in cell growth, as well cell adhesion molecule cadherin-13 in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), which is a brain area rich in dopamine cell bodies. Results revealed elevations of BDNF in NQ-treated rats given nicotine compared to all other groups, and a sex difference in the increase in cadherin-13, with female NQ rats given nicotine demonstrating increases compared to all other groups. These effects were blocked by the mGlu5 receptor positive allosteric modulator. In addition, we analyzed phospho-p70S6 kinase in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc), which is the dopamine neuronal terminal region in the VTA mitigating drug reward. The NQ group given nicotine demonstrated significant increases in NAcc P70S6 kinase compared to all other groups, suggesting increased synaptic growth, which was also blocked by the positive allosteric modulator to mGlu5. Taken together, these results elucidate mGlu5 as a drug target for reducing the rewarding effects of nicotine via CDPPB administration in a model of substance abuse in psychosis.
240

The Timing of Reproduction is Responding Plastically, not Genetically, to Climate Change in Yellow-Bellied Marmots (Marmota flaviventer)

St Lawrence, Sophia Helen 23 August 2022 (has links)
With global climates changing rapidly, animals must adapt to new environmental conditions with altered weather and phenology. Key to adapting to these new conditions is adjusting the timing of reproduction to have offspring when the conditions are best to maximize growth and survival. Using a long-term dataset on a wild population of yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventer) at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory (RMBL), we investigated how the timing of reproduction changed with changing spring conditions over the past 50 years. Marmots are hibernators with a four-month active season. It is thus crucial to reproduce early enough in the season to have time to prepare for hibernation, but not too early so as snow cover prevents access to food. Importantly, climate change in this area has increased spring temperatures by 5 °C and decreased spring snowpack by 50 cm over the past 50 years. This directional change in climate may have caused adaptation. Given that adaptation to environmental conditions could arise from either microevolution or phenotypic plasticity, we evaluated how female marmots adjust the timing of their reproduction and estimated the importance of both genetic variance and plasticity in the variation in this timing. We show that, within a year, the timing of reproduction is not as tightly linked to the date a female emerges from hibernation as previously thought. We report a positive effect of spring snowpack but not of spring temperature on the timing of reproduction. There is inter-individual variation in the timing of reproduction but not in its response to changing spring conditions. Genetic variance in the timing of reproduction is low, and heritability was 8%. Earlier pup emergence date increases the number and weighted proportion of pups surviving their first winter, indicative of directional selection on this trait. The same pattern is not found for litter size with no effect of pup emergence date on the number of pups born. Further, all three of these traits are not under stabilizing selection. Taken together, it seems that we should expect some changes in this population with changing climatic conditions, but because of plasticity and not due to natural selection. Further, future studies on the marmots should not operate under the assumption that females reproduce immediately following their emergence.

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