68 results on '"Petr Kral"'
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2. Influence of High Pressure Sliding and Rotary Swaging on Creep Behavior of P92 Steel at 500 °C
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Petr Kral, Jiri Dvorak, Vaclav Sklenicka, Zenji Horita, Yoichi Takizawa, Yongpeng Tang, Lenka Kunčická, Marie Kvapilova, and Marie Ohankova
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creep-resistant steels ,severe plastic deformation ,creep behavior ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
High-pressure sliding (HPS) and rotary swaging (RS) at room temperature were used to form severely deformed microstructures in martensitic creep-resistant P92 steel. The deformed microstructures contained markedly different ratios of low- and high-angle grain boundaries (LAGBs/HAGBs). The application of the RS method, with an imposed equivalent strain of 1.4, led to the formation of a heterogeneous microstructure with a high number of LAGBs, while the HPS method, with an imposed equivalent strain of 7.8, led to the formation of a relatively homogeneous ultrafine-grained microstructure with a significant predominance of HAGBs. Microstructure analyses after creep testing showed that the microstructure of RS- and HPS-processed P92 steel is quite stable, but a slight coarsening of subgrains and grains during creep testing can be observed. Constant load tensile creep tests at 500 °C and initial stresses ranging from 300 to 900 MPa revealed that the specimens processed by HPS exhibited higher creep strength (slower minimum creep rate) and ductility compared to the coarse-grained and RS-processed P92 steel. However, the HPS-processed P92 steel also exhibited lower values of stress exponent n than the other investigated states of P92 steel. For this reason, the differences in minimum creep rates determined for different states decrease with decreasing values of applied stress, and at applied stresses lower than 500 MPa, the creep resistance of the RS-processed state is higher than the creep resistance of the HPS-processed state.
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- 2021
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3. High Temperature Creep Behaviour of Cast Nickel-Based Superalloys INC 713 LC, B1914 and MAR-M247
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Marie Kvapilova, Petr Kral, Jiri Dvorak, and Vaclav Sklenicka
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creep ,nickel-based superalloy ,fracture ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
Cast nickel-based superalloys INC713 LC, B1914 and MAR-M247 are widely used for high temperature components in the aerospace, automotive and power industries due to their good castability, high level of strength properties at high temperature and hot corrosion resistance. The present study is focused on the mutual comparison of the creep properties of the above-mentioned superalloys, their creep and fracture behaviour and the identification of creep deformation mechanism(s). Standard constant load uniaxial creep tests were carried out up to the rupture at applied stress ranging from 150 to 700 MPa and temperatures of 800–1000 °C. The experimentally determined values of the stress exponent of the minimum creep rate, n, were rationalized by considering the existence of the threshold stress, σ0. The corrected values of the stress exponent correspond to the power-law creep regime and suggest dislocation climb and glide as dominating creep deformation mechanisms. Fractographic observations clearly indicate that the creep fracture is a brittle mostly mixed transgranular and intergranular mode, resulting in relatively low values of fracture strain. Determined main creep parameters show that the superalloy MAR-M247 exhibits the best creep properties, followed by B1914 and then the superalloy INC713 LC. However, that each of the investigated superalloys can be successfully used for high temperature components fulfils the required service loading conditions.
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- 2021
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4. Bioinspired Separator with Ion-Selective Nanochannels for Lithium Metal Batteries
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Yi Chen, Philip Mickel, Huijie Pei, Yingfeng Wen, Xin Guan, Yun Wang, Xuyang Wang, Omar Al Mhtachem, Cheng Zhang, Hui Nie, Xingping Zhou, Petr Kral, and Xiaolin Xie
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General Materials Science - Published
- 2023
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5. Creep in Nanostructured Materials
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Vaclav Sklenicka, Petr Kral, Jiri Dvorak, Marie Kvapilova, and Kveta Kucharova
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Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics - Published
- 2023
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6. Investigation of the thermal creep behaviour of non-irradiated Zr1%Nb cladding alloys between 623 and 1223K
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Vaclav Sklenicka, Kveta Kucharova, Petr Kral, Jiri Dvorak, Marie Kvapilova, Vera Vrtilková, and Jakub Krejcí
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,General Materials Science - Published
- 2023
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7. NATO and evidence-based military and disaster medicine: case for Vigorous Warrior Live Exercise Series
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Vladimír Bencko, Adrijana Atanasoska Arsov, Alexander V Bongartz, John Mitchell, Petr Kral, Veronika Reinhard, Laszlo Fazekas, Zoltan Bubenik, Stefano De Porzi, John M. Quinn, Milos Bohonek, Preslava Stoeva, Jozef Kuca, Ronald Ti, Jack Taylor, and Petr Majovsky
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Evidence-based practice ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Doctrine ,General Medicine ,Public administration ,Collective security ,Disaster Medicine ,Military medicine ,Military Personnel ,Alliance ,Political science ,Humans ,Military Medicine ,Natural disaster ,Exercise ,Disaster medicine ,North Atlantic Treaty ,media_common - Abstract
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is the premier and only security alliance uniting 30 countries and growing with many partner states in the provision of collective security and against threats posed by conflict and natural disasters. Security of countries and communities is increasingly threatened by a broad spectrum of unconventional types of war and disease threats - from hybrid and asymmetric to multi-domain and peer-to-peer/near-peer conflict. The NATO Centre of Excellence for Military Medicine (MILMED COE) is the centre of gravity for medical best practices and promotion of medical doctrine across the NATO alliance. Disaster medicine is multidisciplinary and in NATO, multinational, requiring best practices that are driven by data and evidence to prevent death on the battlefield and prepare for future conflicts. "Vigorous Warrior" is a live military and disaster medicine exercise series using both civilian and military actors across all sectors of health focused on health security and identifying lessons learned to ready the alliance for future threats. In this brief report, we make the case that the Vigorous Warrior exercise exposes gaps, highlights challenges and generates an evidence base to make NATO military medicine systems more robust, more efficient and in provision of best medical practices. We specifically argue that clinical data capture must be duplicated and continuous across the alliance to ensure evidence-based medicine stays current in NATO military medical doctrine.
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- 2020
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8. Influence of Cryo-Processing and Post-SPD Annealing on Creep Behavior of CP Titanium
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Jiri Dvorak, Petr Kral, Andrey G. Kadomtsev, Vladimir I. Betekhtin, Maria V. Narykova, Marie Kvapilova, and Vaclav Sklenicka
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titanium ,creep properties ,severe plastic deformation ,static annealing ,cryo-processing ,General Materials Science - Abstract
The commercial purity of VT1-0 titanium was processed by the rolling process and executed at elevated, room, and cryo-temperatures. These processings led to the formation of an ultrafine-grained microstructure, with the mean grain size at a nanometer level. Some of these materials were statically annealed at a temperature of 823 K for 1 h, which led to significant subgrains and grain coarsening. The constant load creep tests in tension were carried out in argon on all states of materials, at temperatures of 648–723 K and different ranges of applied stresses. From the value of the steady-state creep rate, the control creep mechanisms were determined. The microstructure analyses were carried out via SEM and TEM. It was found that titanium prepared at elevated and room temperatures have a higher creep strength than titanium prepared at cryo-temperatures. Furthermore, the post-SPD —annealing led to a significant decrease in the creep properties. The influence of the preparation temperature on the difference of the creep behavior were discussed and explained using the microstructure analyses of the tests’ samples.
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- 2022
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9. Creep Resistance of S304H Austenitic Steel Processed by High-Pressure Sliding
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Petr Kral, Jiri Dvorak, Vaclav Sklenicka, Zenji Horita, Yoichi Takizawa, Yongpeng Tang, Lubomir Kral, Marie Kvapilova, Pavla Roupcová, and Jakub Horvath
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Technology ,Microscopy ,QC120-168.85 ,austenitic steels ,creep properties ,severe plastic deformation ,QH201-278.5 ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,Article ,TK1-9971 ,Descriptive and experimental mechanics ,General Materials Science ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
Sheets of coarse-grained S304H austenitic steel were processed by high-pressure sliding (HPS) at room temperature and a ultrafine-grained microstructure with a mean grain size of about 0.14 µm was prepared. The microstructure changes and creep behavior of coarse-grained and HPS-processed steel were investigated at 500–700 °C under the application of different loads. It was found that the processing of S304H steel led to a significant improvement in creep strength at 500 °C. However, a further increase in creep temperature to 600 °C and 700 °C led to the deterioration of creep behavior of HPS-processed steel. The microstructure results suggest that the creep behavior of HPS-processed steel is associated with the thermal stability of the SPD-processed microstructure. The recrystallization, grain growth, the coarsening of precipitates led to a reduction in creep strength of the HPS-processed state. It was also observed that in the HPS-processed microstructure the fast formation of σ-phase occurs. The σ-phase was already formed during slight grain coarsening at 600 °C and its formation was enhanced after recrystallization at 700 °C.
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- 2022
10. Production of Superplastic Ti–6Al–7Nb Alloy Using High-Pressure Sliding Process
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Kyohei Watanabe, Maki Ashida, Takahiro Masuda, Petr Kral, Yoichi Takizawa, Manabu Yumoto, Yoshiharu Otagiri, Vaclav Sklenicka, Takao Hanawa, and Zenji Horita
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Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics - Published
- 2019
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11. Coupling of SARS-CoV‑2 to Aβ Amyloid Fibrils
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Francesco Coppola, Tomáš Pavlíček, and Petr Král
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Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2024
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12. Antiviral fibrils of self-assembled peptides with tunable compositions
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Joseph Dodd-o, Abhishek Roy, Zain Siddiqui, Roya Jafari, Francesco Coppola, Santhamani Ramasamy, Afsal Kolloli, Dilip Kumar, Soni Kaundal, Boyang Zhao, Ranjeet Kumar, Alicia S. Robang, Jeffrey Li, Abdul-Rahman Azizogli, Varun Pai, Amanda Acevedo-Jake, Corey Heffernan, Alexandra Lucas, Andrew C. McShan, Anant K. Paravastu, B. V. Venkataram Prasad, Selvakumar Subbian, Petr Král, and Vivek Kumar
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Science - Abstract
Abstract The lasting threat of viral pandemics necessitates the development of tailorable first-response antivirals with specific but adaptive architectures for treatment of novel viral infections. Here, such an antiviral platform has been developed based on a mixture of hetero-peptides self-assembled into functionalized β-sheets capable of specific multivalent binding to viral protein complexes. One domain of each hetero-peptide is designed to specifically bind to certain viral proteins, while another domain self-assembles into fibrils with epitope binding characteristics determined by the types of peptides and their molar fractions. The self-assembled fibrils maintain enhanced binding to viral protein complexes and retain high resilience to viral mutations. This method is experimentally and computationally tested using short peptides that specifically bind to Spike proteins of SARS-CoV-2. This platform is efficacious, inexpensive, and stable with excellent tolerability.
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- 2024
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13. Molecular dynamics simulations of metabolite fibrils
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Petr Kral and REHAK,PAVEL L
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- 2020
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14. Computational design of ACE2-based short peptide inhibitors of SARS-CoV-2
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Yanxiao Han and Petr Kral
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Protease ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Chemistry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Peptide ,Computational biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Enzyme ,medicine ,Computational design ,Protein secondary structure ,Coronavirus - Abstract
Peptide inhibitors against the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, currently causing a worldwide pandemic, are designed and simulated. The inhibitors are formed by two sequential self-supporting alpha-helices (bundle) extracted from the protease domain (PD) of angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), which binds to the SARS-CoV-2 receptor binding domains. Molecular dynamics simulations revealed that the peptides maintain their secondary structure and provide a highly specific and stable binding (blocking) to SARS-CoV-2, determined by their sequences and conformations. The proposed peptide inhibitors could provide simple therapeutics against the COVID-19 disease.
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- 2020
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15. IMPROVEMENT IN MULTINATIONAL MILITARY MEDICAL MODULAR APPROACH
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Petr Kral
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Engineering management ,Multinational corporation ,business.industry ,Business ,Modular design - Published
- 2019
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16. Author Correction: Antiviral fibrils of self-assembled peptides with tunable compositions
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Joseph Dodd-o, Abhishek Roy, Zain Siddiqui, Roya Jafari, Francesco Coppola, Santhamani Ramasamy, Afsal Kolloli, Dilip Kumar, Soni Kaundal, Boyang Zhao, Ranjeet Kumar, Alicia S. Robang, Jeffrey Li, Abdul-Rahman Azizogli, Varun Pai, Amanda Acevedo-Jake, Corey Heffernan, Alexandra Lucas, Andrew C. McShan, Anant K. Paravastu, B. V. Venkataram Prasad, Selvakumar Subbian, Petr Král, and Vivek Kumar
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Science - Published
- 2024
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17. Unidirectional rotation of micromotors on water powered by pH-controlled disassembly of chiral molecular crystals
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Itai Carmeli, Celine M. Bounioux, Philip Mickel, Mark B. Richardson, Yael Templeman, Joel M. P. Scofield, Greg G. Qiao, Brian Ashley Rosen, Yelena Yusupov, Louisa Meshi, Nicolas H. Voelcker, Oswaldo Diéguez, Touvia Miloh, Petr Král, Hagai Cohen, and Shachar E. Richter
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Biological and synthetic molecular motors, fueled by various physical and chemical means, can perform asymmetric linear and rotary motions that are inherently related to their asymmetric shapes. Here, we describe silver-organic micro-complexes of random shapes that exhibit macroscopic unidirectional rotation on water surface through the asymmetric release of cinchonine or cinchonidine chiral molecules from their crystallites asymmetrically adsorbed on the complex surfaces. Computational modeling indicates that the motor rotation is driven by a pH-controlled asymmetric jet-like Coulombic ejection of chiral molecules upon their protonation in water. The motor is capable of towing very large cargo, and its rotation can be accelerated by adding reducing agents to the water.
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- 2023
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18. Enhancement of Creep Lifetime of Aluminum through Severe Plastic Deformation
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Petr Král, Jiří Dvořák, Marie Kvapilová, Andrej G. Kadomtsev, and Václav Sklenička
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creep behavior ,microstructure ,aluminum ,severe plastic deformation ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
This work investigates the creep behavior of severely deformed commercial aluminum. The commercial aluminum was processed by helical rolling (HR) and equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP) at room temperature. During these processes, the equivalent strain up to about 4 was imposed into the as-received material. The creep testing at 200 °C revealed that HR and ECAP significantly increased the time to fracture compared to the as-received material. The stress dependences showed that the value of stress exponent n decreased with the value of the imposed strain. The stress-change tests showed that as-received and severely deformed states exhibited different recovery rates after unloading. The microstructure analysis showed that creep behavior was influenced by the microstructure formed during severe plastic deformation. The relationships between creep behavior and microstructure in the investigated states are discussed.
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- 2024
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19. Six genetically linked mutations in the CD36 gene significantly delay the onset of Alzheimer's disease
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Omar Šerý, Tomáš Zeman, Kateřina Sheardová, Martin Vyhnálek, Hana Marková, Jan Laczó, Jan Lochman, Petr Kralik, Kamila Vrzalová, Radka Dziedzinska, Vladimir J. Balcar, and Jakub Hort
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has a strong genetic component, also in the case of late-onset AD (LOAD). Attempts to sequence whole genome in large populations of subjects have identified only a few mutations common to most of the patients with AD. Targeting smaller well-characterized groups of subjects where specific genetic variations in selected genes could be related to precisely defined psychological traits typical of dementia is needed to better understand the heritability of AD. More than one thousand participants, categorized according to cognitive deficits, were assessed using 14 psychometric tests evaluating performance in five cognitive domains (attention/working memory, memory, language, executive functions, visuospatial functions). CD36 was selected as a gene previously shown to be implicated in the etiology of AD. A total of 174 polymorphisms were tested for associations with cognition-related traits and other AD-relevant data using the next generation sequencing. Several associations between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP’s) and the cognitive deficits have been found (rs12667404 with language performance, rs3211827 and rs41272372 with executive functions, rs137984792 with visuospatial performance). The most prominent association was found between a group of genotypes in six genetically linked and the age at which the AD patients presented with, or developed, a full-blown dementia. The identified alleles appear to be associated with a delay in the onset of LOAD. In silico studies suggested that the SNP’s alter the expression of CD36 thus potentially affecting CD36-related neuroinflammation and other molecular and cellular mechanisms known to be involved in the neuronal loss leading to AD. The main outcome of the study is an identification of a set of six new mutations apparently conferring a distinct protection against AD and delaying the onset by about 8 years. Additional mutations in CD36 associated with certain traits characteristic of the cognitive decline in AD have also been found.
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- 2022
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20. Nanomaterials by severe plastic deformation: review of historical developments and recent advances
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Kaveh Edalati, Andrea Bachmaier, Victor A. Beloshenko, Yan Beygelzimer, Vladimir D. Blank, Walter J. Botta, Krzysztof Bryła, Jakub Čížek, Sergiy Divinski, Nariman A. Enikeev, Yuri Estrin, Ghader Faraji, Roberto B. Figueiredo, Masayoshi Fuji, Tadahiko Furuta, Thierry Grosdidier, Jenő Gubicza, Anton Hohenwarter, Zenji Horita, Jacques Huot, Yoshifumi Ikoma, Miloš Janeček, Megumi Kawasaki, Petr Král, Shigeru Kuramoto, Terence G. Langdon, Daniel R. Leiva, Valery I. Levitas, Andrey Mazilkin, Masaki Mito, Hiroyuki Miyamoto, Terukazu Nishizaki, Reinhard Pippan, Vladimir V. Popov, Elena N. Popova, Gencaga Purcek, Oliver Renk, Ádám Révész, Xavier Sauvage, Vaclav Sklenicka, Werner Skrotzki, Boris B. Straumal, Satyam Suwas, Laszlo S. Toth, Nobuhiro Tsuji, Ruslan Z. Valiev, Gerhard Wilde, Michael J. Zehetbauer, and Xinkun Zhu
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severe plastic deformation (spd) ,surface severe plastic deformation ,ultrafine-grained (ufg) materials ,mechanical properties ,functional properties ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Severe plastic deformation (SPD) is effective in producing bulk ultrafine-grained and nanostructured materials with large densities of lattice defects. This field, also known as NanoSPD, experienced a significant progress within the past two decades. Beside classic SPD methods such as high-pressure torsion, equal-channel angular pressing, accumulative roll-bonding, twist extrusion, and multi-directional forging, various continuous techniques were introduced to produce upscaled samples. Moreover, numerous alloys, glasses, semiconductors, ceramics, polymers, and their composites were processed. The SPD methods were used to synthesize new materials or to stabilize metastable phases with advanced mechanical and functional properties. High strength combined with high ductility, low/room-temperature superplasticity, creep resistance, hydrogen storage, photocatalytic hydrogen production, photocatalytic CO2 conversion, superconductivity, thermoelectric performance, radiation resistance, corrosion resistance, and biocompatibility are some highlighted properties of SPD-processed materials. This article reviews recent advances in the NanoSPD field and provides a brief history regarding its progress from the ancient times to modernity. Abbreviations: ARB: Accumulative Roll-Bonding; BCC: Body-Centered Cubic; DAC: Diamond Anvil Cell; EBSD: Electron Backscatter Diffraction; ECAP: Equal-Channel Angular Pressing (Extrusion); FCC: Face-Centered Cubic; FEM: Finite Element Method; FSP: Friction Stir Processing; HCP: Hexagonal Close-Packed; HPT: High-Pressure Torsion; HPTT: High-Pressure Tube Twisting; MDF: Multi-Directional (-Axial) Forging; NanoSPD: Nanomaterials by Severe Plastic Deformation; SDAC: Shear (Rotational) Diamond Anvil Cell; SEM: Scanning Electron Microscopy; SMAT: Surface Mechanical Attrition Treatment; SPD: Severe Plastic Deformation; TE: Twist Extrusion; TEM: Transmission Electron Microscopy; UFG: Ultrafine Grained
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- 2022
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21. A viability assay combining palladium compound treatment with quantitative PCR to detect viable Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis cells
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Martina Cechova, Monika Beinhauerova, Vladimir Babak, and Petr Kralik
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) is a pathogenic bacterium causing the paratuberculosis, chronic and infectious disease common particularly in wild and domestic ruminants. Currently, culture techniques to detect viable MAP are still used most commonly, although these require a long incubation period. Consequently, a faster molecular method for assessing MAP cell viability based on cell membrane integrity was introduced consisting of sample treatment with the intercalation dye propidium monoazide (PMA) followed by quantitative PCR (qPCR). However, the PMA-qPCR assay is complicated by demanding procedures involving work in a darkroom and on ice. In this study, we therefore optimized a viability assay combining sample treatment with palladium (Pd) compounds as an alternative viability marker to PMA, which does not require such laborious procedures, with subsequent qPCR. The optimized Pd-qPCR conditions consisting of 90 min exposure to 30 µM bis(benzonitrile)dichloropalladium(II) or 30 µM palladium(II)acetate at 5 °C and using ultrapure water as a resuspension medium resulted in differences in quantification cycle (Cq) values between treated live and dead MAP cells of 8.5 and 7.9, respectively, corresponding to approximately 2.5 log units. In addition, Pd-qPCR proved to be superior to PMA-qPCR in distinguishing between live and dead MAP cells. The Pd-qPCR viability assay thus has the potential to replace time-consuming culture methods and demanding PMA-qPCR in the detection and quantification of viable MAP cells with possible application in food, feed, clinical and environmental samples.
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- 2022
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22. In Search of the Essence of Place
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Petr Kral and Petr Kral
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- Authors, Czech--Biography
- Abstract
Armed only with his poetic sensibility, Petr Král sets out to explore our relationship with the places that we inhabit, and with the apparently unremarkable everyday objects which often inform and enrich our lives.Král bears witness to Flaubert's observation that'in order for something to become interesting, we simply have to look at it for a long time'. He reveals, not only the inner life-the very essence-of mundane objects and places, but also simple yet profound truths about ourselves.
- Published
- 2012
23. Development of a reference standard for the detection and quantification of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis by quantitative PCR
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Monika Beinhauerova, Martina Beinhauerova, Sarah McCallum, Eric Sellal, Matteo Ricchi, Rory O’Brien, Beatrice Blanchard, Iva Slana, Vladimir Babak, and Petr Kralik
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Quantitative PCR (qPCR) has become a frequently employed direct method for the detection and quantification of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP). The quantity of MAP determined by qPCR, however, may be affected by the type of qPCR quantification standard used (PCR product, plasmid, genomic DNA) and the way in which standard DNA quantity is determined (absorbance, fluorescence). In practice, this can be reflected in the inability to properly compare quantitative data from the same qPCR assays in different laboratories. Thus, the aim of this study was to prepare a prototype of an international MAP reference standard, which could be used to calibrate routinely used qPCR quantification standards in various laboratories to promote clinical data comparability. Considering stability, storage and shipment issues, a lyophilised fecal suspension artificially contaminated with a MAP reference strain was chosen as the most suitable form of the standard. The effect of five types of lyophilisation matrices on standard stability was monitored on 2-weeks interval basis for 4 months by F57 qPCR. The lyophilisation matrix with 10% skimmed milk provided the best recovery and stability in time and was thus selected for subsequent comparative testing of the standard involving six diagnostic and research laboratories, where DNA isolation and qPCR assay procedures were performed with the parallel use of the identical supplied genomic DNA solution. Furthermore, the effect of storage conditions on the standard stability was tested for at least 6 months. The storage at room temperature in the dark and under light, at + 4 °C, − 20 °C and − 80 °C showed no significant changes in the stability, and also no substantial changes in MAP viability were found using phage amplification assay. The prepared MAP quantification standard provided homogeneous and reproducible results demonstrating its suitability for utilisation as an international reference qPCR standard.
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- 2021
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24. Hierarchically Multivalent Peptide–Nanoparticle Architectures: A Systematic Approach to Engineer Surface Adhesion
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Woo‐jin Jeong, Jiyoon Bu, Roya Jafari, Pavel Rehak, Luke J. Kubiatowicz, Adam J. Drelich, Randall H. Owen, Ashita Nair, Piper A. Rawding, Michael J. Poellmann, Caroline M. Hopkins, Petr Král, and Seungpyo Hong
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binding avidity ,dendrimer–peptide conjugate ,hierarchically multivalent architectures ,multivalent binding ,peptide engineering ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The multivalent binding effect has been the subject of extensive studies to modulate adhesion behaviors of various biological and engineered systems. However, precise control over the strong avidity‐based binding remains a significant challenge. Here, a set of engineering strategies are developed and tested to systematically enhance the multivalent binding of peptides in a stepwise manner. Poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers are employed to increase local peptide densities on a substrate, resulting in hierarchically multivalent architectures (HMAs) that display multivalent dendrimer–peptide conjugates (DPCs) with various configurations. To control binding behaviors, effects of the three major components of the HMAs are investigated: i) poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) linkers as spacers between conjugated peptides; ii) multiple peptides on the DPCs; and iii) various surface arrangements of HMAs (i.e., a mixture of DPCs each containing different peptides vs DPCs cofunctionalized with multiple peptides). The optimized HMA configuration enables significantly enhanced target cell binding with high selectivity compared to the control surfaces directly conjugated with peptides. The engineering approaches presented herein can be applied individually or in combination, providing guidelines for the effective utilization of biomolecular multivalent interactions using DPC‐based HMAs.
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- 2022
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25. Occurrence of SARS-CoV-2 in Indoor Environments With Increased Circulation and Gathering of People
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Radka Dziedzinska, Petr Kralik, and Omar Šerý
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SARS-CoV-2 ,indoor ,RT-qPCR ,surface contamination ,fomites ,air ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
At the time of sampling (2020/2021), the number of new cases of SARS-CoV-2-positive individuals in the Czech Republic significantly exceeded the numbers in neighboring countries and in the EU. In terms of the number of deaths, the country ranked near the top of the list. Legislative orders required wearing masks indoors, disinfecting surfaces in public places, and limiting the number of people per sales area in commercial spaces. Due to an situation, most schools and shops were closed. The entire country anticipated a total lockdown. To assess the risk to public health regarding SARS-CoV-2 transmission, air and surfaces were sampled in two public places: a post office and a shopping center. Samples were also collected at the COVID-19 unit at the local hospital. Neither air nor surface samples were positive for SARS-CoV-2 virus particles in the post office or shopping center. Positive results were found in the hospital ward, with floors being the most and highest contaminated surface. Based on our results, we believe that public places do not pose a risk in relation to SARS-CoV-2 transmission, especially when epidemiological measures to reduce transmission are followed, such as wearing masks, using disinfectant or limiting the number of customers per retail establishment.
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- 2021
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26. A Novel Approach to the Viability Determination of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis Using Platinum Compounds in Combination With Quantitative PCR
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Martina Cechova, Monika Beinhauerova, Vladimir Babak, Iva Slana, and Petr Kralik
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viability ,qPCR ,live-dead discrimination ,platinum ,mycobacteria ,Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) represents a slow-growing bacterium causing paratuberculosis, especially in domestic and wild ruminants. Until recently, the assessment of MAP viability relied mainly on cultivation, which is very time consuming and is unable to detect viable but non-culturable cells. Subsequently, viability PCR, a method combining sample treatment with the DNA-modifying agent ethidium monoazide (EMA) or propidium monoazide (PMA) and quantitative PCR (qPCR), was developed, enabling the selective detection of MAP cells with an intact cell membrane. However, this technology requires a laborious procedure involving the need to work in the dark and on ice. In our study, a method based on a combination of platinum compound treatment and qPCR, which does not require such a demanding procedure, was investigated to determine mycobacterial cell viability. The conditions of platinum compound treatment were optimized for the fast-growing mycobacterium M. smegmatis using live and heat-killed cells. The optimal conditions consisting of a single treatment with 100 μM cis-dichlorodiammine platinum(II) for 60 min at 5°C resulted in a difference in quantification cycle (Cq) values between live and dead membrane-compromised mycobacterial cells of about 6 Cq corresponding to about 2 log10 units. This optimized viability assay was eventually applied to MAP cells and demonstrated a better ability to distinguish between live and heat-killed mycobacteria as compared to PMA. The viability assay combining the Pt treatment with qPCR thereby proved to be a promising method for the enumeration of viable MAP cells in foodstuffs, environmental, and clinical samples which could replace the time-consuming cultivation or laborious procedures required when using PMA.
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- 2021
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27. Control of paratuberculosis: who, why and how. A review of 48 countries
- Author
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Richard Whittington, Karsten Donat, Maarten F. Weber, David Kelton, Søren Saxmose Nielsen, Suzanne Eisenberg, Norma Arrigoni, Ramon Juste, Jose Luis Sáez, Navneet Dhand, Annalisa Santi, Anita Michel, Herman Barkema, Petr Kralik, Polychronis Kostoulas, Lorna Citer, Frank Griffin, Rob Barwell, Maria Aparecida Scatamburlo Moreira, Iva Slana, Heike Koehler, Shoor Vir Singh, Han Sang Yoo, Gilberto Chávez-Gris, Amador Goodridge, Matjaz Ocepek, Joseba Garrido, Karen Stevenson, Mike Collins, Bernardo Alonso, Karina Cirone, Fernando Paolicchi, Lawrence Gavey, Md Tanvir Rahman, Emmanuelle de Marchin, Willem Van Praet, Cathy Bauman, Gilles Fecteau, Shawn McKenna, Miguel Salgado, Jorge Fernández-Silva, Radka Dziedzinska, Gustavo Echeverría, Jaana Seppänen, Virginie Thibault, Vala Fridriksdottir, Abdolah Derakhshandeh, Masoud Haghkhah, Luigi Ruocco, Satoko Kawaji, Eiichi Momotani, Cord Heuer, Solis Norton, Simeon Cadmus, Angelika Agdestein, Annette Kampen, Joanna Szteyn, Jenny Frössling, Ebba Schwan, George Caldow, Sam Strain, Mike Carter, Scott Wells, Musso Munyeme, Robert Wolf, Ratna Gurung, Cristobal Verdugo, Christine Fourichon, Takehisa Yamamoto, Sharada Thapaliya, Elena Di Labio, Monaya Ekgatat, Andres Gil, Alvaro Nuñez Alesandre, José Piaggio, Alejandra Suanes, and Jacobus H. de Waard
- Subjects
Paratuberculosis ,Control ,Review ,Prevalence ,Cattle ,Sheep ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Abstract Paratuberculosis, a chronic disease affecting ruminant livestock, is caused by Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP). It has direct and indirect economic costs, impacts animal welfare and arouses public health concerns. In a survey of 48 countries we found paratuberculosis to be very common in livestock. In about half the countries more than 20% of herds and flocks were infected with MAP. Most countries had large ruminant populations (millions), several types of farmed ruminants, multiple husbandry systems and tens of thousands of individual farms, creating challenges for disease control. In addition, numerous species of free-living wildlife were infected. Paratuberculosis was notifiable in most countries, but formal control programs were present in only 22 countries. Generally, these were the more highly developed countries with advanced veterinary services. Of the countries without a formal control program for paratuberculosis, 76% were in South and Central America, Asia and Africa while 20% were in Europe. Control programs were justified most commonly on animal health grounds, but protecting market access and public health were other factors. Prevalence reduction was the major objective in most countries, but Norway and Sweden aimed to eradicate the disease, so surveillance and response were their major objectives. Government funding was involved in about two thirds of countries, but operations tended to be funded by farmers and their organizations and not by government alone. The majority of countries (60%) had voluntary control programs. Generally, programs were supported by incentives for joining, financial compensation and/or penalties for non-participation. Performance indicators, structure, leadership, practices and tools used in control programs are also presented. Securing funding for long-term control activities was a widespread problem. Control programs were reported to be successful in 16 (73%) of the 22 countries. Recommendations are made for future control programs, including a primary goal of establishing an international code for paratuberculosis, leading to universal acknowledgment of the principles and methods of control in relation to endemic and transboundary disease. An holistic approach across all ruminant livestock industries and long-term commitment is required for control of paratuberculosis.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. (Invited) Molecular Transport in Carboneous Nanochannels: Drag, Electro-Osmosis, Switches, Sieves
- Author
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Petr Kral, Boyang Wang, Alexey Titov, Elizabeth Vokac, Lela Vukovic, and Kyaw Sint
- Abstract
not Available.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Oscillatory Dynamics in Infectivity and Death Rates of COVID-19
- Author
-
Tomáš Pavlíček, Pavel Rehak, and Petr Král
- Subjects
SARS-HCoV-2 ,computer modeling ,infectivity ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT The analysis of systematically collected data for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infectivity and death rates has revealed, in many countries around the world, a typical oscillatory pattern with a 7-day (circaseptan) period. Additionally, in some countries, 3.5-day (hemicircaseptan) and 14-day periodicities have also been observed. Interestingly, the 7-day infectivity and death rate oscillations are almost in phase, showing local maxima on Thursdays/Fridays and local minima on Sundays/Mondays. These observations are in stark contrast to a known pattern correlating the death rate with the reduced medical staff in hospitals on the weekends. While we cannot exclude the possibility that a significant portion of the observed oscillations is associated with the reporting of the individual cases, other reasons might contribute at least partly to these data. One possible hypothesis addressing these observations is that they reflect gradually increasing stress with the progressing week, which can trigger the higher death rates on Thursdays/Fridays. Moreover, assuming the weekends provide the likely time for new infections, the maximum number of new cases might fall, again, on Thursdays/Fridays. These observations deserve further study to provide a better understanding of COVID-19 dynamics. IMPORTANCE The infectivity and death rates for COVID-19 have been observed in many countries around the world as well as in the collective data of the whole world. These oscillations show distinct circaseptan periodicity, which could be associated with numerous biological reasons as well as with improper reporting of the data collected. Since very different results are observed in different countries and even continents, such as Sweden (very significant oscillations) or India (almost no oscillations), these data provide a very important message about different conditions under which the disease is spread or is reported, which, in turn, could serve as guidance tools in future epidemics. It is necessary that follow-up studies track the observed differences and fully reliably address their origins.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Utilization of Digital PCR in Quantity Verification of Plasmid Standards Used in Quantitative PCR
- Author
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Martina Beinhauerova, Vladimir Babak, Barbara Bertasi, Maria Beatrice Boniotti, and Petr Kralik
- Subjects
digital PCR ,absolute quantification ,quantity verification ,quantification plasmid standard ,qPCR ,real time PCR ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Quantitative PCR (qPCR) is a widely used method for nucleic acid quantification of various pathogenic microorganisms. For absolute quantification of microbial load by qPCR, it is essential to create a calibration curve from accurately quantified quantification standards, from which the number of pathogens in a sample is derived. Spectrophotometric measurement of absorbance is a routine method for estimating nucleic acid concentration, however, it may be affected by presence of other potentially contaminating nucleic acids or proteins and salts. Therefore, absorbance measurement is not reliable for estimating the concentration of stock solutions of quantification standards, based on which they are subsequently diluted. In this study, we utilized digital PCR (dPCR) for absolute quantification of qPCR plasmid standards and thus detecting possible discrepancies in the determination of the plasmid DNA number of standards derived from UV spectrophotometry. The concept of dPCR utilization for quantification of standards was applied on 45 qPCR assays using droplet-based and chip-based dPCR platforms. Using dPCR, we found that spectrophotometry overestimated the concentrations of standard stock solutions in the majority of cases. Furthermore, batch-to-batch variation in standard quantity was revealed, as well as quantitative changes in standards over time. Finally, it was demonstrated that droplet-based dPCR is a suitable tool for achieving defined quantity of quantification plasmid standards and ensuring the quantity over time, which is crucial for acquiring homogenous, reproducible and comparable quantitative data by qPCR.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Characterization of innovative rotary swaged Cu-Al clad composite wire conductors
- Author
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Radim Kocich, Lenka Kunčická, Petr Král, and Pavel Strunz
- Subjects
Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Cu/Al composites are perspective for applications in a wide range of industrial and commercial branches, from transportation to elecatrotechnics. This study focuses on Cu/Al clad composite wires with 5 mm in diameter featuring unique sequencing produced via the technology of rotary swaging at the processing temperatures of 20 °C and 250 °C. During the swaging process, we continuously acquired samples for investigations and used our own KOMAFU S600 system for dynamic detection of swaging forces. The composite wires subjected to electrical resistivity measurement were further analysed via electron microscopy, neutron diffraction, and mechanical testing. The results showed that both the total imposed strain (swaging degree) and swaging temperature influenced the investigated parameters non-negligibly. The samples subjected to high reduction ratios (swaging degree > 3) at the temperature of 250 °C exhibited formation of intermetallics at the interfaces, which deteriorated the electric conductivity. However, the conductivity was also affected by structural phenomena, such as work hardening, texture development, dislocations density, and recrystallization. All the final 5 mm samples exhibited sufficient bonding of both the components and recrystallized ultra-fine grained structures providing them with the ultimate tensile strength of >200 MPa. Keywords: Clad composite, Rotary swaging, Electrical resistivity, Scanning electron microscopy, Interfaces, Mechanical properties
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Nanoparticles Self-Assembly within Lipid Bilayers
- Author
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Henry Chan and Petr Král
- Subjects
Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Role of International Cooperation in the Development of the Czech Armed Forces Medical Capabilities
- Author
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Petr Král and Antonín Novotný
- Subjects
Interoperability ,Modularity ,Armed Forces Capabilities ,Standardization ,Military Medical Service. ,Military Science - Abstract
The article deals with the use and future prospects of the international cooperation for the development some of Czech Armed Forces capabilities in the field of military medicine. It has no ambition to address this issue in its entirety, but only contains an analysis of some of the current formats and initiatives of international cooperation in the field of military medicine, with the justification of their origins and a brief evaluation of their contribution. Part of the article is also a proposal for possible measures to improve the development of medical capabilities in the framework of international cooperation.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Reversible chromism of spiropyran in the cavity of a flexible coordination cage
- Author
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Dipak Samanta, Daria Galaktionova, Julius Gemen, Linda J. W. Shimon, Yael Diskin-Posner, Liat Avram, Petr Král, and Rafal Klajn
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Under confinement, molecular switches lose the conformational freedom often needed to isomerize. Here, the authors show that a flexible coordination cage can adapt its shape to guide the photoisomerization of encapsulated spiropyrans, rendering them reversibly photochromic even within the confines of the cavity.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Successive Grinding and Polishing Effect on the Retained Austenite in the Surface of 42CrMo4 Steel
- Author
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Jiří Pechoušek, Ernö Kuzmann, René Vondrášek, Anna Olina, Vlastimil Vrba, Lukáš Kouřil, Tomáš Ingr, Petr Král, and Miroslav Mashlan
- Subjects
steel microstructure ,grinding ,polishing ,austenite ,Mössbauer spectroscopy ,42CrMo4 ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
Low-alloy 42CrMo4 steels were studied by 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy (MS), X-ray diffractometry (XRD), and Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDS) measurements. The investigations were performed on metallographic samples, which were subjected to a series of successive grinding and polishing with a progressively finer grit. Conversion X-ray Mössbauer spectroscopy (CXMS) was used to determine the occurrence of austenite in steel samples. It is a unique method detecting the austenite content very sensitively. Six samples with different surface preparation were investigated, starting with 4.8% of austenite on an as-cut sample, and a large decrease in the retained austenite to 2.6% was observed after the first grinding of a hardened cut sample. Additionally, an unexpectedly large decrease in the austenite content to 2.3% was found due to the final polishing. A second time applied successive grinding and polishing of all samples resulted in identical austenite content determined by CXMS of approx. 5%, which proved the applicability of the CXMS method. Generally, the result calls attention to the importance of preparation of metallurgical samples by grinding and polishing where the results can vary significantly on the level of surface processing.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Antecedents of Accelerated Internationalisation of Polish and Czech Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises
- Author
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Izabela Kowalik, Lidia Danik, Petr Král, and Hana Řezanková
- Subjects
internationalization antecedents, Born global model, two-country study, Czech Republic, Poland, SME ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Objective: The study goal was the investigation of relationships between accelerated internationalisation descriptors and antecedent firm- and entrepreneur-related factors in Polish and Czech SMEs. Research Design & Methods: In order to compare Polish and Czech companies, the data collected in two independent studies were used. The study of 233 Polish companies was conducted with the use of CATI method in 2014; 108 Czech companies were surveyed in 2013/2014 with the use of CAWI method. In both samples half of the surveyed SME-exporters were conforming to the accelerated internationalisation criteria. Findings: In both samples the “global vision” elements and company internationalisation scale and speed were interrelated. In the Polish companies this relationship was moderated by company size. There was the lack of strong positive relationships between innovativeness and internationalisation speed and scale in both samples. Implications & Recommendations:The managerial mindset has a decisive role for accelerated internationalisation in both Czech and Polish SMEs. The innovativeness of offering is not indispensable for fast foreign expansion. Larger companies may expand abroad faster if they have internationally oriented managers. Contribution & Value Added:This work addresses a research gap concerning idiosyncrasies of internationalisation antecedents in Polish and Czech enterprises. As the results show, there is no common internationalisation pattern for Polish and Czech SMEs.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Inverse identification of the material parameters of a nonlinear concrete constitutive model based on the triaxial compression strength testing
- Author
-
Petr Král, Petr Hradil, and Jiří Kala
- Subjects
Inverse analysis ,Optimization ,Objective function ,Numerical simulation ,Nonlinear concrete material model ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 ,Structural engineering (General) ,TA630-695 - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to perform the inverse identification of the material parameters of a nonlinear constitutive model intended for the modeling of concrete which is known as the Karagozian & Case Concrete model. At present, inverse analysis is frequently used because it allows us to find the optimum parameter values of nonlinear material models. When applying such parameters, the resulting response of the structure obtained from a computer simulation is very similar to the real response of the structure based on the related experimental measurement. This condition then undoubtedly constitutes one of the progressive steps to refine the current numerical approaches. For the purposes of the inverse analysis performed in this paper the experimental data was obtained from the triaxial compression strength tests carried out on the concrete cylinders.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Development and Inter-Laboratory Validation of Diagnostics Panel for Detection of Biothreat Bacteria Based on MOL-PCR Assay
- Author
-
Pavlina Jelinkova, Jakub Hrdy, Jirina Markova, Jiri Dresler, Petr Pajer, Oto Pavlis, Pavel Branich, Gabriela Borilova, Marketa Reichelova, Vladimir Babak, Nikol Reslova, and Petr Kralik
- Subjects
MOL-PCR ,biothreat bacteria ,magnetic bead ,bioterrorism ,detection panel ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Early detection of biohazardous bacteria that can be misused as biological weapons is one of the most important measures to prevent the spread and outbreak of biological warfare. For this reason, many instrument platforms need to be introduced into operation in the field of biological warfare detection. Therefore the purpose of this study is to establish a new detection panel for biothreat bacteria (Bacillus anthracis, Yersinia pestis, Francisella tularensis, and Brucella spp.) and confirm it by collaborative validation by using a multiplex oligonucleotide ligation followed by polymerase chain reaction and hybridization to microspheres by MagPix detection platform (MOL-PCR). Appropriate specific sequences in bacterial DNA were selected and tested to assemble the detection panel, and MOLigo probes (short specific oligonucleotides) were designed to show no cross-reactivity when tested between bacteria and to decrease the background signal measurement on the MagPix platform. During testing, sensitivity was assessed for all target bacteria using serially diluted DNA and was determined to be at least 0.5 ng/µL. For use as a diagnostic kit and easier handling, the storage stability of ligation premixes (MOLigo probe mixes) was tested. This highly multiplex method can be used for rapid screening to prevent outbreaks arising from the use of bacterial strains for bioterrorism, because time of analysis take under 4 h.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Impact of the Antimicrobial Compounds Produced by Lactic Acid Bacteria on the Growth Performance of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis
- Author
-
Petr Kralik, Vladimir Babak, and Radka Dziedzinska
- Subjects
bacteriocin ,cell-free supernatant ,paratuberculosis ,pH ,lactic acid ,viability ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Cell-free supernatants (CFSs) extracted from various lactic acid bacteria (LAB) cultures were applied to Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) cells to determine their effect on MAP viability. In addition, 5% lactic acid (LA; pH 3) and commercially synthetized nisin bacteriocin were also tested. This procedure was chosen in order to mimic the influence of LAB compounds during the production and storage of fermented milk products, which can be contaminated by MAP. Its presence in milk and milk products is of public concern due to the possible ingestion of MAP by consumers and the discussed role of MAP in Crohn’s disease. Propidium monoazide real-time PCR (PMA qPCR) was used for viability determination. Although all CFS showed significant effects on MAP viability, two distinct groups of CFS – effective and less effective – could be distinguished. The effective CFSs were extracted from various lactobacilli cultures, their pH values were mostly lower than 4.5, and their application resulted in >2 log10 reductions in MAP viability. The group of less effective CFS were filtered from Lactococcus and enterococci cultures, their pH values were higher than 4.5, and their effect on MAP viability was
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Publisher Correction: Reversible chromism of spiropyran in the cavity of a flexible coordination cage
- Author
-
Dipak Samanta, Daria Galaktionova, Julius Gemen, Linda J. W. Shimon, Yael Diskin-Posner, Liat Avram, Petr Král, and Rafal Klajn
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
The original version of this Article contained an error in Fig. 4c, in which the right-most chemical structure included an ‘N+’ rather than an ‘N’. This has been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Texture Evolution in Biocompatible Mg-Y-Re Alloy After Friction Stir Processing
- Author
-
Lenka Kunčická, Petr Král, Jiří Dvořák, and Radim Kocich
- Subjects
magnesium alloys ,grains and interfaces ,microstructure ,texture ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
The presented study deals with the investigation of biocompatible WE 43 Mg-based alloy processed via the combination of rotary swaging (RS) and friction stir processing (FSP) at three different rotational speeds of 400 RPM, 800 RPM, and 1200 RPM. The structure observations primarily focused on texture development and characterizations of grain sizes and grain boundaries. The results showed that swaging plus processing at 400 RPM and 1200 RPM lead to substantial recrystallization and grain refinement. The fractions of low angle grain boundaries within the 400 RPM and 1200 RPM samples were approximately 11%, while for the 800 RPM sample exhibiting secondary recrystallization it was about 22%. The grains were also the finest in the 1200 RPM sample (average grain diameter of 1.8 µm). The processed structures exhibited a slight tendency to form the {10-10} preferential fiber texture (especially the 800 RPM sample). Tensile testing showed the FSP to have positive influence on the ultimate tensile stress, as well as ductility of all the samples; the mechanical properties improved with increasing FSP rate.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Strain Rate Contribution due to Dynamic Recovery of Ultrafine-Grained Cu–Zr as Evidenced by Load Reductions during Quasi-Stationary Deformation at 0.5 Tm
- Author
-
Wolfgang Blum, Jiři Dvořák, Petr Král, Philip Eisenlohr, and Vaclav Sklenička
- Subjects
cu–zr ,ecap ,ultrafine-grained material ,deformation ,dynamic recovery ,transient ,load change tests ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
During quasi-stationary tensile deformation of ultrafine-grained Cu-0.2 mass%Zr at 673 K and a deformation rate of about 10−4 s−1 load changes were performed. Reductions of relative load by more than about 25% initiate anelastic back flow. Subsequently, the creep rate turns positive again and goes through a relative maximum. This is interpreted by a strain rate component ϵ ˙ − associated with dynamic recovery of dislocations. Back extrapolation indicates that ϵ ˙ − contributes the same fraction of ( 20 ± 10 ) % to the quasi-stationary strain rate that has been reported for coarse-grained materials with high fraction of low-angle boundaries; this suggests that dynamic recovery of dislocations is generally mediated by boundaries. The influence of anelastic back flow on ϵ ˙ − is discussed. Comparison of ϵ ˙ − to the quasi-stationary rate points to enhancement of dynamic recovery by internal stresses. Subtraction of ϵ ˙ − from the total rate yields the rate component ϵ ˙ + related with generation and storage of dislocations; its activation volume is in the order expected from the classical theory of thermal glide.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Quasi-Stationary Strength of ECAP-Processed Cu-Zr at 0.5 Tm
- Author
-
Wolfgang Blum, Jiři Dvořák, Petr Král, Philip Eisenlohr, and Vaclav Sklenička
- Subjects
cu-zr ,ecap ,deformation ,quasi-stationary ,subgrains ,grains ,coarsening ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
The influence of the grain structure on the tensile deformation strength is studied for precipitation-strengthened Cu-0.2%Zr at 673K. Subgrains and grains are formed by equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) and annealing. The fraction of high-angle boundaries increases with prestrain. Subgrains and grains coarsen during deformation. This leads to softening in the quasi-stationary state. The initial quasi-stationary state of severely predeformed, ultrafine-grained material exhibits relatively high rate-sensitivity at relatively high stresses. This is interpreted as a result of the stress dependences of the quasi-stationary subgrain size and the volume fraction of subgrain-free grains.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Author Correction: A novel perspective on MOL-PCR optimization and MAGPIX analysis of in-house multiplex foodborne pathogens detection assay
- Author
-
Nikol Reslova, Veronika Huvarova, Jakub Hrdy, Martin Kasny, and petr Kralik
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has not been fixed in the paper.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. QUANTITATIVE CHARACTERIZATION OF MICROSTRUCTURE OF PURE COPPER PROCESSED BY ECAP
- Author
-
Ondřej Šedivý, Viktor Beneš, Petr Ponížil, Petr Král, and Václav Sklenička
- Subjects
electron backscattered diffraction ,equal-channel angular pressing ,random marked sets ,second-order analysis ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
Orientation imaging microscopy (OIM) allows to measure crystallic orientations at the surface of the material. Digitalized data representing the orientations are processed to recognize the grain structure and they are visualized in crystal orientation maps. Analysis of the data firstly consists in recognition of grain boundaries followed by identification of grains themselves. Knowing the grain morphology it is possible to characterize the homogeneity of the structure and estimate structural parameters related to the physical properties of the material. The paper describes methods of imaging and quantitative characterization of the grain boundary structure in metals based on data from electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD).
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Preparation of MS2 phage-like particles and their use as potential process control viruses for detection and quantification of enteric RNA viruses in different matrices
- Author
-
Pavel Mikel, Petra Vasickova, Radek Tesarik, Hana Malenovska, Pavel Kulich, Tomas Vesely, and Petr Kralik
- Subjects
detection ,quantification ,RT-qPCR ,Isolation ,RNA virus ,MS2 phage-like particle ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
The detection and quantification of enteric RNA viruses is based on isolation of viral RNA from the sample followed by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). To control the whole process of analysis and in order to guarantee the validity and reliability of results, process control viruses (PCV) are used. The present article describes the process of preparation and use of such PCV– MS2 phage-like particles (MS2 PLP) – in RT-qPCR detection and quantification of enteric RNA viruses. The MS2 PLP were derived from bacteriophage MS2 carrying a unique and specific de novo-constructed RNA target sequence originating from the DNA of two extinct species. The amount of prepared MS2 particles was quantified using four independent methods - UV spectrophotometry, fluorimetry, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and a specifically developed duplex RT-qPCR. To evaluate the usefulness of MS2 PLP in routine diagnostics different matrices known to harbor enteric RNA viruses (swab samples, liver tissue, serum, feces, and vegetables) were artificially contaminated with specific amounts of MS2 PLP. The extraction efficiencies were calculated for each individual matrix. The prepared particles fulfill all requirements for PCV – they are very stable, non-infectious, and are genetically distinct from the target RNA viruses. Due to these properties they represent a good morphological and physiochemical model. The use of MS2 PLP as a PCV in detection and quantification of enteric RNA viruses was evaluated in different types of matrices.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Inverse identification of the material parameters of a nonlinear concrete constitutive model based on the triaxial compression strength testing
- Author
-
Petr Král, Petr Hradil, and Ji?í Kala
- Subjects
Inverse analysis ,Optimization ,Objective function ,Numerical simulation ,Nonlinear concrete material model ,Experimental data ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 ,Structural engineering (General) ,TA630-695 - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to perform the inverse identification of the material parameters of a nonlinear constitutive model intended for the modeling of concrete which is known as the Karagozian & Case Concrete model. At present, inverse analysis is frequently used because it allows us to find the optimum parameter values of nonlinear material models. When applying such parameters, the resulting response of the structure obtained from a computer simulation is very similar to the real response of the structure based on the related experimental measurement. This condition then undoubtedly constitutes one of the progressive steps to refine the current numerical approaches. For the purposes of the inverse analysis performed in this paper the experimental data was obtained from the triaxial compression strength tests carried out on the concrete cylinders.
- Published
- 2016
48. Hepatitis E Virus in Pork Production Chain in Czech Republic, Italy, and Spain, 2010
- Author
-
Ilaria Di Bartolo, Marta Diez-Valcarce, Petra Vasickova, Petr Kralik, Marta Hernandez, Giorgia Angeloni, Fabio Ostanello, Martijn Bouwknegt, David Rodríguez-Lázaro, Ivo Pavlik, and Franco Maria Ruggeri
- Subjects
Hepatitis E virus ,swine ,pork food chain ,molecular detection ,reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction ,zoonoses ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We evaluated the prevalence of hepatitis E virus (HEV) in the pork production chain in Czech Republic, Italy, and Spain during 2010. A total of 337 fecal, liver, and meat samples from animals at slaughterhouses were tested for HEV by real-time quantitative PCR. Overall, HEV was higher in Italy (53%) and Spain (39%) than in Czech Republic (7.5%). HEV was detected most frequently in feces in Italy (41%) and Spain (39%) and in liver (5%) and meat (2.5%) in Czech Republic. Of 313 sausages sampled at processing and point of sale, HEV was detected only in Spain (6%). HEV sequencing confirmed only g3 HEV strains. Indicator virus (porcine adenovirus) was ubiquitous in fecal samples and absent in liver samples and was detected in 1 slaughterhouse meat sample. At point of sale, we found porcine adenovirus in sausages (1%–2%). The possible dissemination of HEV and other fecal viruses through pork production demands containment measures.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Survival of Mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis in homemade smoked pork sausages
- Author
-
Petr Králík, Hana Přikrylová Vondrušková, Iva Slaná, Monika Morávková, and Ivo Pavlík
- Subjects
is1245 ,pork meat ,food safety ,zoonosis ,heat treatmentantibiotic resistance of enterococcus species isolated from raw foods of animal origin in south west part of slovakia ,Agriculture - Abstract
We assessed the survival of Mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis (MAH) in artificially contaminated homemade smoked sausages prepared from pork meat according to traditional recipes, the effect of storage of such sausages at -20°C for three months on MAH viability and to compare assessment of MAH viability/presence by culture and qPCR. Three isolates of MAH were inoculated into the sausage mixture at concentrations of 106 CFU per gram of meat and cold smoked at 40°C for 12 h or hot smoked at 70°C for 6 hours. MAH survived the cold smoking procedure without any significant decrease in viable MAH CFU counts; no viable MAH were detected in the hot smoked sausages. The storage of sausages at -20°C caused a decrease in viable MAH counts of about 1 to 3 log10. Absolute MAH counts determined by qPCR were not significantly reduced by the storage or smoking. The presence of viable MAH in sausages after the cold smoking should be considered as a risk for immunodeficient individuals and children.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. STRUCTURE OF ECAP ALUMINIUM AFTER DIFFERENT NUMBER OF PASSES
- Author
-
Lucia Ilucová, Ivan Saxl, Milan Svoboda, Václav Sklenička, and Petr Král
- Subjects
anisotropy ,equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) ,non-homogeneity ,orientation imaging microscopy (OIM) ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
The structure of high purity (99.99%) aluminium processed by equal channel angular pressing in the as pressed state after different number of passes was examined using various stereological methods. An extreme inhomogeneity and complicated anisotropy was observed along the body of rod-like specimens.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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