scholarly journals Assessment of load bearing clay brick masonry for analyzing long-term durability through field measurement and visual review

Author(s):  
Blair E. Williams

This thesis examines a load bearing clay brick century home research house in Toronto (Canada) which has recently undergone the addition of polyurethane foam insulation on all interior sides of the exterior clay brick load bearing walls, increasing the insulating value in areas to RSI 7.9 W/m2K, on average. This study introduces and advances techniques to create high-resolution stitched mosaic images of the elevations to visually document the current physical condition of the brick. The critical saturation point was used to determine the capabilities of the clay brick masonry to resist freeze-thaw damage by way of frost dilatometry testing and compared to measurements taken by in-situ moisture content sensors in the brick masonry. This project also reveals how bricks expand and deteriorate in non-uniform manner during saturated three-dimensional dilatometry testing.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blair E. Williams

This thesis examines a load bearing clay brick century home research house in Toronto (Canada) which has recently undergone the addition of polyurethane foam insulation on all interior sides of the exterior clay brick load bearing walls, increasing the insulating value in areas to RSI 7.9 W/m2K, on average. This study introduces and advances techniques to create high-resolution stitched mosaic images of the elevations to visually document the current physical condition of the brick. The critical saturation point was used to determine the capabilities of the clay brick masonry to resist freeze-thaw damage by way of frost dilatometry testing and compared to measurements taken by in-situ moisture content sensors in the brick masonry. This project also reveals how bricks expand and deteriorate in non-uniform manner during saturated three-dimensional dilatometry testing.


2016 ◽  
Vol 40 (5) ◽  
pp. 425-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blair Williams ◽  
Russell Richman

This article analyses the use of dilatometry to assess the durability of load-bearing clay brick masonry in a century home in Toronto (Canada). The building had recently undergone the addition of medium density closed-cell polyurethane spray-applied foam insulation on all interior sides of the exterior clay brick load-bearing walls, increasing the insulating value in areas to RSI 7.9 m2K/W, on average, from the original RSI 0.5 m2K/W, on average. The critical moisture content (saturation degree) of representative samples from the building were compared with values obtained from frost dilatometry testing. The later indicate critical moisture content for freeze–thaw. The frost dilatometry method was furthered by studying three-dimensional testing, rather than the traditional two-dimensional approach. The results showed the brick masonry in the study building are at a relatively low risk of freeze–thaw damage thanks to good resistance of freeze–thaw of the subject brick masonry and low wetting potential of the brick masonry on site. This further strengthens the need for good water shedding characteristics.


2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 04018058 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alper Aldemir ◽  
Baris Binici ◽  
Erdem Canbay ◽  
Ahmet Yakut

2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-69
Author(s):  
V. L. Dorofeev ◽  
L. I. Sukhikh

Herein, we present a simulation of the dynamics of Black Sea ecosystems using a three-dimensional interdisciplinary model that assimilates satellite color scanner measurements. Calculations were performed for the fifteen years from 1998 and a set of 3-d biogeochemical fields of the Black Sea were generated on a regular grid with a discreteness time of 1 day. Analyses of core biogeochemical parameters of the marine ecosystem were then performed. The qualities of received fields were evaluated using comparisons with existing data from in situ measurements.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 918
Author(s):  
S. M. Kamrul Hasan ◽  
Ran Li ◽  
Yichao Wang ◽  
Narendra Reddy ◽  
Wanshuang Liu ◽  
...  

The three-dimensional (3D) ultrafine fibrous scaffolds loaded with functional components can not only provide support to 3D tissue repair, but also deliver the components in-situ with small dosage and low fusion frequency. However, the conventional loading methods possess drawbacks such as low loading capacity or high burst release. In this research, an ultralow concentration phase separation (ULCPS) technique was developed to form 3D ultrafine gelatin fibers and, meanwhile, load an anti-inflammatory drug, diclofenac, with high capacities for the long-term delivery. The developed scaffolds could achieve a maximum drug loading capacity of 12 wt.% and a highest drug loading efficiency of 84% while maintaining their 3D ultrafine fibrous structure with high specific pore volumes from 227.9 to 237.19 cm3/mg. The initial release at the first hour could be reduced from 34.7% to 42.2%, and a sustained linear release profile was observed with a rate of about 1% per day in the following 30 days. The diclofenac loaded in and released from the ULCPS scaffolds could keep its therapeutic molecular structure. The cell viability has not been affected by the release of drug when the loading was less than 12 wt.%. The results proved the possibility to develop various 3D ultrafine fibrous scaffolds, which can supply functional components in-situ with a long-term.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (22) ◽  
pp. 8539
Author(s):  
Macoura Gadji ◽  
Shubha Mathur ◽  
Brigitte Bélanger ◽  
Jaganmohan Reddy Jangamreddy ◽  
Josée Lamoureux ◽  
...  

Mechanisms of recurrence in oligodendrogliomas are poorly understood. Recurrence might be driven by telomere dysfunction-mediated genomic instability. In a pilot study, we investigated ten patients with oligodendrogliomas at the time of diagnosis (first surgery) and after recurrence (second surgery) using three-dimensional nuclear telomere analysis performed with quantitative software TeloView® (Telo Genomics Corp, Toronto, Ontario, Canada). 1p/19q deletion status of each patient was determined by fluorescent in situ hybridization on touch preparation slides. We found that a very specific 3D telomeric profile was associated with two pathways of recurrence in oligodendrogliomas independent of their 1p/19q status: a first group of 8 patients displayed significantly different 3D telomere profiles between both surgeries (p < 0.0001). Their recurrence happened at a mean of 231.375 ± 117.42 days and a median time to progression (TTP) of 239 days, a period defined as short-term recurrence; and a second group of three patients displayed identical 3D telomere profiles between both surgery samples (p > 0.05). Their recurrence happened at a mean of 960.666 ± 86.19 days and a median TTP of 930 days, a period defined as long-term recurrence. Our results suggest a potential link between nuclear telomere architecture and telomere dysfunction with time to recurrence in oligodendrogliomas, independently of the 1p/19q status.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 4025 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steffen Beck-Broichsitter ◽  
Horst Gerke ◽  
Rainer Horn

The soil shrinkage behavior of mineral substrates needs to be considered for engineering long-term durable mineral liners of landfill capping systems. For this purpose, a novel three-dimensional laser scanning device was coupled with (a) a mathematical-empirical model and (b) in-situ tensiometer measurements as a combined approach to simultaneously determine the shrinkage behavior of a boulder marl, installed as top and bottom liner material at the Rastorf landfill (Northern Germany). The shrinkage behavior, intensity, and geometry were determined during a drying experiment with undisturbed soil cores (100 cm3) from two soil pits; the actual in-situ shrinkage was also determined in 0.2, 0.5, 0.8, and 1.0 m depth by pressure transducer tensiometer measurements during a four-year period. The volume shrinkage index was used to describe the pore size dependent shrinkage tendency and it was classified as low (4.9%) for the bottom liner. The in-situ matric potentials in the bottom liner ranged between −100 and −150 hPa, even during drier periods, thus, the previously highest observed drying range (pre-shrinkage stress) with values below −500 hPa and −1000 hPa was not exceeded. Therefore, the hydraulic stability of the bottom liner was given.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 3885-3885 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark C. Allenby ◽  
Asma Tahlawi ◽  
Ruth Misener ◽  
Susana Brito dos Santos ◽  
Athanasios Mantalaris ◽  
...  

Abstract Current in vitro human erythroid culture platforms require abnormally high cytokine supplementation and use lower cell density (<106/mL) compared with that present in bone marrow during physiologic erythropoiesis. These in vitro culture conditions limit extracellular interactions, are not dynamic, and exhaust stem and progenitor cell pools, thereby limiting culture longevity. We have developed a three-dimensional hollow fibre perfusion bioreactor (HFBR) comprised of a collagen-coated polyurethane scaffold which surrounded ceramic hollow fibres (HFs) and expanded dense inocula of human umbilical cord blood (CB) mononuclear cells (MNCs; >107/mL) when perfused with cytokine-free media in long-term culture. In order to study the role of this manufactured HFBR microenvironment on spatiotemporal physiologic erythropoiesis, we now extend our previous reports by implementing 5-fold less cytokine concentrations than those used in typical ex vivo erythropoietic cultures. Herein, we show a >107 red cell harvest from the HFBR culture over 28-days with spontaneous expansion of stromal cells, maintenance of erythroid progenitor pools, and formation of stromal and erythroid cell niches in defined areas within the HFBR structure with differential in situ production of 23 growth factors varying over time. The 5.25 mL HFBR scaffold was inoculated with 108 CBMNCs and HFs were rapidly perfused (20 mL/h) with serum-free StemSpan medium gradually supplemented with a cytokine gradient of decreasing SCF (50 - 0 ng/mL) and increasing EPO (0 - 0.3 U/mL) over 28 days in order to maintain progenitor cells whilst inducing erythropoiesis. Quantitative confocal microscopy analyses of HFBR sections demonstrated that DAPI+ CBMNCs maintained high cell density (>107/mL), and high viability (>80%), while more than 107 enucleated cells were filtered through HFs over the 28-day culture. Inside the HFBR, hematopoietic progenitor cells were maintained (total of 3.1∙106 CD34+ and 5.5∙106 CKIT+ MNCs) while erythroid cells were expanded across various stages of maturation (28-day total increase of 1.2∙107 EPOR+, 1.8∙107 CD71+, and 2.3∙107 CD235a+ MNCs); CD235a+mature red cell phenotypes were enriched 10-fold in the HF filtrate over 28 days. Stromal cells expanded and differentiated during the 28-day HFBR culture with a total increase of mesenchymal stem cell marker Stro-1 (2.2∙107 cells), pre-osteoblast marker osterix (OSx; 1.6∙107 cells), and mature osteoblast marker osteopontin (OPN; 0.5∙107 cells). Expression of human collagen-1, fibronectin, and laminin-2 was detected by microscopy, while enzyme-linked immunoassays on HFBR filtrate detected 23 multilineal, unsupplemented cytokine profiles including interleukins produced primarily from day 0-12 (IL-6, IL-10, IL-21) as well as colony stimulating factors and stromal growth factors which increased in production from day 20-28 (G-CSF, GM-CSF, EGF, VEGF, Ang-2, PDGF, FGF-β). Using a novel confocal microscopy computational analyses that we have developed, DAPI+MNCs were found to self-associate into expanding 50-500µm clusters throughout the 28-day culture which increased local cell density 10-20 fold, representing niche-like areas. At day 14 and 28, MNCs formed clustered niches far from HFs which expressed hypoxic (HIF1a, PIMO), stromal, and erythroid markers (Stro-1, OSx, collagen-1, laminin-2, VCAM-1, CD45, EPOR: >1400µm from HFs). At day 28, 3-fold more MNC clusters formed near HFs and were comprised of hematopoietic progenitor and erythroid phenotypes (CD45, CD34, CKIT, CD235a, CD71: <700µm from HFs). Our data suggested that the dense inoculation of CBMNCs in a serum-free HFBR platform using physiologic concentrations of SCF and EPO enabled the long-term simultaneous differentiation of human erythroid, stromal, and osteogenic lineages, and the generation of an ex vivo erythroid inductive environment. This environment maintained multilineal progenitors, enabled harvest of mature erythrocytes, generated cytokine support in situ, and formed interactive cell niches which could be quantitatively mapped in spatiotemporal zones. The HFBR we have developed may represent a more physiologically-relevant culture system to study ex vivo erythropoiesis and could potentially provide a platform for translational cell expansion protocols. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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