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1.
Health Phys ; 125(4): 312, 2023 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37669235
2.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 34(30)2022 May 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35550572

ABSTRACT

A large and increasing number of different types of interatomic potentials exist, either based on parametrised analytical functions or machine learning. The choice of potential to be used in a molecular dynamics simulation should be based on the affordable computational cost and required accuracy. We develop and compare four interatomic potentials of different complexity for iron: a simple machine-learned embedded atom method (EAM) potential, a potential with machine-learned two- and three-body-dependent terms, a potential with machine-learned EAM and three-body terms, and a Gaussian approximation potential with the smooth overlap of atomic positions descriptor. All potentials are trained to the same diverse database of body-centred cubic and liquid structures computed with density functional theory. The first three potentials are tabulated and evaluated efficiently using cubic spline interpolations, while the fourth one is implemented without additional optimisation. The four potentials span three orders of magnitude in computational cost. We compare and discuss the advantages of each potential in terms of transferability and the balance between accuracy and computational cost.

3.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 31(40): 405402, 2019 Oct 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31266004

ABSTRACT

We have performed a systematic molecular dynamics investigation of the effects of overlap of collision cascades in tungsten with pre-existing vacancy-type defects. In particular, we focus on the implications for fusion neutron irradiated tungsten in relation to comparisons with damage production under ion irradiation conditions. We find that overlap of a cascade with a vacancy-type defect decreases the number of new defects with roughly the same functional dependence as previously shown for interstitial clusters. We further find that different mechanisms govern the formation of dislocation loops, resulting in different Burgers vectors, depending on the degree of overlap between the cascade and the defect. Furthermore, we show that overlapping cascades consistently decrease the size of the pre-existing defect. We also observe void-induced cascade splitting at energies far below the subcascade splitting threshold in tungsten. The impact of these mechanisms on radiation damage accumulation and dose rate effects are discussed.

4.
Radiat Res ; 137(2): 238-50, 1994 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8134548

ABSTRACT

The biokinetics of polonium in nonhuman primates (Papio anubis) has been studied after intravenous injection of 210Po citrate. The urinary excretion of polonium in the baboon could be described by a single exponential function with a half-time of 15.6 days. Excretion fractions of polonium were found to be markedly different from those reported for other species, including humans. Polonium-210 was found to be distributed throughout the soft tissues of the baboon with 29% of the injected polonium being deposited in liver, 7% in kidneys and 0.6% in spleen. Retention of polonium in all tissues exhibited single exponential functions; however, the biological half-times were variable, ranging from 15 to 50 days.


Subject(s)
Polonium/pharmacokinetics , Animals , Feces/chemistry , Female , Papio , Tissue Distribution
6.
Health Phys ; 57(4): 615-21, 1989 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2507478

ABSTRACT

Historically, radiochemical analysis of 210Po in urine has used spontaneous deposition of the nuclide directly from raw urine onto a suitable metal disc. Consequently, the urinary excretion fraction for Po in some current metabolic and dosimetric models is based on studies which inherently assume that metabolized (i.e., filtered out of the blood by the kidneys) 210Po is plated with the same efficiency as tracer 210Po which has been added to urine samples. Urine samples collected after intravenous administration of 210Po citrate to two species of nonhuman primates were divided and simultaneously analyzed via two methods: the historical procedure of plating 210Po from raw urine for one sample and a method which includes the addition of 208Po tracer and sample digestion with concentrated HNO3 prior to 210Po deposition for the other sample. A more significant amount of 210Po was consistently recovered when the urine was wet ashed then when it was not wet ashed. A temporal relationship was found to describe the change in the ratio of the deposition recoveries for the two methods. Possible mechanisms for this phenomenon and its dosimetric implications are discussed.


Subject(s)
Polonium/urine , Animals , Callitrichinae , Female , Humans , Methods , Papio
8.
Rev Am Hist ; 4(4): 558-64, 1976.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11610794
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