Article
Refine
Year of publication
- 2024 (35)
- 2023 (66)
- 2022 (80)
- 2021 (86)
- 2020 (102)
- 2019 (97)
- 2018 (85)
- 2017 (72)
- 2016 (79)
- 2015 (83)
- 2014 (93)
- 2013 (97)
- 2012 (82)
- 2011 (130)
- 2010 (121)
- 2009 (121)
- 2008 (103)
- 2007 (94)
- 2006 (86)
- 2005 (99)
- 2004 (131)
- 2003 (74)
- 2002 (92)
- 2001 (88)
- 2000 (84)
- 1999 (88)
- 1998 (82)
- 1997 (79)
- 1996 (70)
- 1995 (68)
- 1994 (77)
- 1993 (51)
- 1992 (48)
- 1991 (25)
- 1990 (35)
- 1989 (38)
- 1988 (54)
- 1987 (32)
- 1986 (18)
- 1985 (32)
- 1984 (18)
- 1983 (17)
- 1982 (26)
- 1981 (18)
- 1980 (35)
- 1979 (23)
- 1978 (30)
- 1977 (14)
- 1976 (13)
- 1975 (10)
- 1974 (3)
- 1972 (2)
- 1971 (1)
- 1968 (1)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (1361)
- INB - Institut für Nano- und Biotechnologien (503)
- Fachbereich Chemie und Biotechnologie (474)
- Fachbereich Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik (414)
- IfB - Institut für Bioengineering (412)
- Fachbereich Energietechnik (361)
- Fachbereich Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik (253)
- Fachbereich Maschinenbau und Mechatronik (152)
- Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften (116)
- Fachbereich Bauingenieurwesen (69)
Language
- English (3288) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (3288) (remove)
Keywords
- Einspielen <Werkstoff> (7)
- avalanche (5)
- Earthquake (4)
- FEM (4)
- Finite-Elemente-Methode (4)
- LAPS (4)
- additive manufacturing (4)
- biosensors (4)
- field-effect sensor (4)
- frequency mixing magnetic detection (4)
Shielding gas influences on laser weldability of tailored blanks of advanced automotive steels
(2010)
The effects of shielding gas types and flow rates on CO2 laser weldability of DP600/TRIP700 steel sheets were studied in this work. The evaluated shielding gases were helium (He), argon (Ar) and different mixtures of He and Ar. Weld penetration, tensile strength and formability (Erichsen test) of laser welds were found to be strongly dependent upon the shielding gas types. The ability of shielding gas in removing plasma plume and thus increasing weld penetration is believed to be closely related to ionization potential and atomic weight which determine the period of plasma formation and disappearance. It was found that the higher helium shielding gas flow rate, the deeper weld penetration and the lower weld width.
This paper aims to evaluate the formability of tailor welded blanks of dual phase (DP600)/transformation induced plasticity (TRIP700) steel sheets. In this work, bead on plate butt joints of 2·5 mm DP600 and 1·2 mm TRIP700 steel sheets were performed using CO2 laser beam welding. Microhardness measurements and transverse tensile testing were carried out to characterise the welds. The formability of base metals and welds were investigated by standard Erichsen test. In a perpendicular tensile test to the weld line, all specimens were fractured at the TRIP base metal, and the strengths were somewhat higher than those of base metal. There was a significant reduction in formability caused by welding of the DP600/TRIP700 steel sheets, and the formability increased with increasing welding speed.
Tumour cell death can be evaluated in the living mouse by externally measuring the rate of loss of tumour-bound DNA tracer. By sequentially labelling the tumour-bearing animals with ¹²⁵IUdR and ¹³¹IUdR 50 h apart, the average tumour cells at the time of the second injection are labelled by ¹²⁵IUdR and the euoxic tumour cells are specifically labelled with ¹³¹IUdR. Tumour treatment at this stage of labelling permits the observation of the reaction of euoxic cells and average tumour cells and finally yields data on hypoxic cells and thus on the oxygen enhancement ratio. This information adds to results from tumour control and growth delay.
With this technique effects were analysed of 60-Co γ-rays, cyclotron neutrons (E = 6 MeV), misonidazole (500 mg/kg body wt) and hyperthermia (42°C water-bath), or combinations of these.
Misonidazole (15 min before irradiation) altered the oxygen enhancement ratio by a factor of 1·5 for γ-rays and of 1·1 for neutrons; when evaluated from tumour-growth delay and TCD-50 misonidazole gave a dose modifying factor of 1·47 for γ-rays and of 1·2-1·3 for neutrons.
Based on percentage tumour regression 100 days after treatment, the enhancement ratio from hyperthermia (after irradiation) was 2·75 for γ-rays (at 10 Gray) and 2·2 for neutrons (at 3·2 Gray). For neutrons combined with misonidazole and hyperthermia the ratio was 2·4.
These results demonstrate that effects of neutron irradiation may be modified by electron-affinic substances and/or hyperthermia.