Publications Repository - Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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41421 Publications

Multi beam computed tomography scanner design for industrial multi-phase flow investigations

Bieberle, A.; Döß, A.; Löschau, M.; Schleicher, E.; Hampel, U.

We present a multi beam gamma ray computed tomography (CT) scanner design for multi-phase flow investigations in industrial apparatuses. It mainly comprises a collimated 137Cs isotopic source and an in-house developed detector arc with overall 16 scintillation detectors offering a quantum efficiency of approximately 75% and an active area of 10×10 mm² each. The detectors are operated in pulse counting mode to enable gamma photon energy discrimination. A key element for highest flexible application of the proposed CT scanner is the elaborated detector design that is concerted with a sophisticated scanning procedure that allows for multi beam projection acquisition. Thus, scanning times can be adopted to various object sizes to save measuring times while the arrangement of source and detector arc remains identical.

Keywords: gamma ray computed tomography; detector technology

  • Contribution to proceedings
    World Congress on Industrial Process Tomography, 06.-08.09.2023, Mexico City, Mexico
  • Lecture (Conference)
    World Congress on Industrial Process Tomography, 06.-08.09.2023, Mexico City, Mexico

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37216
Publ.-Id: 37216


Simulation code (PIConGPU) and setup for: Reduction of the electron beam divergence of laser wakefield-accelerators by integrated plasma lenses

Pausch, R.; Chang, Y.-Y.

This repository contains the exact PIConGPU version used for all simulations in the paper "Reduction of the electron beam divergence of laser wakefield-accelerators by integrated plasma lenses" and both setups for the case with and without plasma lens.

Here, only the authors of the setup are listed. PIConGPU has many more authors that can be found under: https://github.com/ComputationalRadiationPhysics/picongpu or (latest stable release: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5795557)

Keywords: PIConGPU; LWFA; plasma lens

Downloads

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37215
Publ.-Id: 37215


Simulation analysis for: Reduction of the electron beam divergence of laser wakefield-accelerators by integrated plasma lenses

Pausch, R.; Chang, Y.-Y.

This is a jupyter notebook used to analyze the LWFA plasma lens simulations ran at summit ORNL.

Keywords: PIConGPU; LWFA; plasma lense

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37214
Publ.-Id: 37214


Adsorption of Ferritin at Nanofaceted Al2O3 Surfaces

Pothineni, B. K.; Kollmann, S.; Li, X.; Grundmeier, G.; Erb, D.; Keller, A.

The influence of nanoscale surface topography on protein adsorption is of large importance for numerous applications in medicine and technology. Herein, the adsorption of ferritin at flat and nanofaceted Al2O3 surfaces is investigated by atomic force microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The nanofaceted surfaces are generated by thermal annealing at temperature above 1000 °C, which leads to the formation of faceted saw-tooth-like surface topographies with perio-dicities of about 160 nm and amplitudes of about 15 nm. Ferritin adsorption at these nanofaceted surfaces is notably suppressed at a concentration of 10 mg/ml, which is attributed to lower ad-sorption affinities of the newly formed facets. Consequently, ferritin adsorption is restricted mostly to the grooves of the saw-tooth patterns, where the proteins can maximize their contact area with the surface. However, this effect depends on the applied protein concentration, with an inverse trend being observed at 30 mg/ml. Furthermore, different ferritin adsorption behavior is observed at topographically similar nanofacet patterns fabricated at different annealing temper-atures and attributed to different step and kink densities. These results demonstrate that while protein adsorption at solid surfaces can be notably affected by nanofacet patterns, fine-tuning protein adsorption in this way requires precise control of facet properties.

Keywords: protein adsorption; ferritin; nanopatterning; self-organization; X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy; atomic force microscopy; sapphire

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37213
Publ.-Id: 37213


Metallic Nanowires Self-Assembled in quasi-circular Nanomolds Templated by DNA Origami

Ruiz Arce, D. D.; Jazavandi Ghamsari, S.; Erbe, A.; Samano, E. C.

The self-assembly of conducting nanostructures is currently investigated intensively in order to evaluate the feasibility of creating novel nanoelectronic devices and circuits using such pathways. In particular, methods based on so-called DNA Origami nanostructures have shown great potential in the formation of metallic nanowires. The main challenge in this method is the reproducible generation of very well-connected metallic nanostructures which may be used as interconntects in future devices. Here we use a novel design of nanowires with a quasi-circular cross-section as opposed to rectangular or uncontrolled cross-sections in earlier studies. We find indications that the reliability of the fabrication scheme is enhanced and the overall resistance of the wires is comparable to metallic nanostructures generated by electrochemistry or top-down methods. In addition, we observe that some of the nanowires are annealed when passing a current through them, which leads to a clear enhancement for the conductance. We envision that these nanowires are providing further steps towards the succesful generation of nanoelectronics using self-assembly.

Keywords: DNA nanotechnology; nanoelectronics; self-assembly; nanomaterials

Related publications

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37212
Publ.-Id: 37212


CD98 heavy chain as a prognostic biomarker and target for cancer treatment

Xia, P.; Dubrovska, A.

The SLC3A2 gene encodes for a cell-surface transmembrane protein CD98hc (4F2hc). Together with the light subunits (L-type amino acid transporters) LAT1 (SLC7A5), LAT2 (SLC7A8), and xCT (SLC7A11), CD98hc constitutes heterodimeric transmembrane amino acid transporters. It interacts with other surface molecules such as extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer CD147 (EMMPRIN) and integrins. Thus, CD98hc plays an essential role within a protein complex critical for tumor energy metabolism, proliferation, and migration and serves as a vital regulator of the stress response and tumor growth in different types of tumors. The elevated expression levels of CD98hc have been confirmed in various tumor entities, including head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), glioma, colon adenocarcinoma, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and others. Furthermore, a high expression of CD98hc has been linked to prognosis and response to chemo- and radiotherapy. In this mini-review, we discuss the physiological functions of CD98hc, its role in the regulation of tumor stemness, metastasis, and therapy resistance, and the clinical significance of CD98hc as a tumor marker and therapeutic target.

Keywords: CD98hc; SLC3A2; LAT1; LAT2; cancer stem cells; biomarker; therapy resistance; xCT

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37211
Publ.-Id: 37211


AlCl3-NaCl-ZnCl2 Secondary Electrolyte in Next-Generation ZEBRA (Na-ZnCl2) battery

Kumar, S.; Ding, W.; Hoffmann, R.; Sieuw, L.; Heinz, M. V. F.; Weber, N.; Bonk, A.

Increasing demand to store intermittent renewable electricity from, e.g., photovoltaic and wind energy has led to much research and development in large-scale energy storage, for example, ZEBRA batteries (Na-NiCl2 solid electrolyte batteries). Replacing Ni with abundant and low-cost Zn makes the ZEBRA battery more cost-effective. However, few studies were done on this next-generation ZEBRA (Na-ZnCl2) battery system, particularly on its AlCl3-NaCl-ZnCl2 secondary electrolyte. Its properties like phase diagrams and vapor pressures are vital for the cell design and optimization. In our previous work, a simulation-assisted method for molten salt electrolyte selection has shown its successful application in molten salt batteries. The same method is used here to in-depth study the AlCl3-NaCl-ZnCl2 salt electrolyte in terms of its phase diagrams and vapor pressures via FactSage and thermo-analytical techniques (Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) and OptiMelt), and their effects on battery performance like operation safety and charging/discharging reaction mechanism. The DSC and OptiMelt results show that the experimental data such as melting temperatures and phase changes agree well with the simulated phase diagrams. Moreover, the FactSage simulation shows that the salt vapor pressure increases significantly with increasing temperature and molar fraction of AlCl3. The obtained phase diagrams and vapor pressures will be used in the secondary electrolyte selection, cell design and battery operation.

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37209
Publ.-Id: 37209


Estimation of Turbulence Parameters in Pool Scrubbing Conditions

Erol, B.; Li, S.; Liao, Y.

Abstract: Pool scrubbing is a widely used technique for retaining aerosol particles. It is characterized by high gas injection flow rates and substantial topological changes in different zones within the scrubber. The scrubbing process is generally divided into injection and swarm zones based on the evolution of the gas-liquid interface topology, and different mechanisms prevail in each zone. The disintegration of large globules in the injection zone forms a swarm of stable bubbles that significantly affect the retention efficiency since scrubbing largely depends on bubble size and velocity. However, the characteristics of the pool scrubbing process, such as high momentum, a wide range of bubble sizes, and complex interactions, make numerical simulations difficult. Turbulence is a key factor affecting bubble breakup, and estimating turbulence parameters properly is essential. In bubble columns, the effect of bubble-induced turbulence is dominant compared to turbulent pipe flows. However, the contribution of shear-induced turbulence is also significant due to circulation and strong oscillation formed in the pool by high-velocity gas injection. Modeling turbulence considering both shear and bubble-induced turbulence is still challenging in multiphase simulations. In this work, two turbulence models (mixtureKEpsilon and k-omega SST) that include the bubble-induced effects in OpenFOAM are evaluated for a pool scrubbing experiment from the literature. Using the two-equation models for turbulence is the widely accepted method in numerical simulations, making the accurate estimation of the turbulence boundary conditions critical. However, most of the correlations developed to estimate the turbulence boundary conditions are for fully developed pipe flow, making it harder to use them for bubble column simulations. Therefore, special attention is paid to characterizing turbulence intensity in a bubble column and estimating inlet boundary conditions for turbulence parameters such as turbulent kinetic energy and energy dissipation. The key parameter in estimating accurate turbulence parameters at the inlet is the turbulent viscosity. It is found that the classical definition of turbulence intensity, as the ratio between fluctuation and mean velocity, leads to an unreasonably large value for bubble column simulations because the mean velocity in the pool is extremely low, consequently, inaccurate estimation of inlet turbulence boundary conditions may result. Therefore, an approach is proposed to estimate the inlet turbulence boundary conditions that satisfy a condition revealed by the sensitivity tests in the current study. According to the results, the turbulent intensity can be estimated by constraining the turbulent viscosity value to be in the range of the molecular viscosity at the inlet if the inlet Reynolds number is in the range of laminar or transitional. Thus, too high or too low values for turbulent viscosity at the inlet may lead to numerical instabilities, considering that both the liquid and gas are quasi-laminar at the inlet.

Keywords: Pool Scrubbing; Inlet Turbulence Parameter; Turbulence Modeling; Molecular Viscosity Approach; OpenFOAM

  • Open Access Logo Poster
    19th Multiphase Flow Conference and Short Course, 19.-23.06.2023, HZDR, Germany

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37208
Publ.-Id: 37208


Interaction between the transferrin protein and plutonium (and thorium), what’s new?

Zurita, C.; Tsushima, S.; Lorenzo Solari, P.; Menut, D.; Dourdain, S.; Jeanson, A.; Creff, G.; Den Auwer, C.

Transferrin (Tf) is a glycoprotein that transports iron from the serum to the various organs. Several studies have highlighted that Tf can interact with metals other than Fe(III), including actinides that are chemical and radiological toxics. We propose here to report on the behavior of Th(IV) and Pu(IV) in comparison with Fe(III) upon Tf complexation. We first considered UV-Vis and IR data of the M2Tf complex (M = Fe, Th, Pu) and combined experimental EXAFS data with MD models in order to better describe the metallic coordination site. EXAFS data of the first M-O coordination sphere are consistent with the MD model considering 1 synergistic carbonate. Further EXAFS data analysis strongly suggests that contamination by Th/Pu colloids seems to occur upon Tf complexation, but this contamination seems limited. SAXS data have also been recorded for all complexes and also after the addition of DFOB in the medium. The Rg values are very close for apoTf, ThTf and PuTf, but slightly larger than for holoTf. Data suggest that the structure of the protein is more ellipsoidal than spherical, with a flattened oblate form. From this data, the following order of conformation size might be considered : holoTf < M2Tf (M = Th, Pu) < apoTf < M2Tf-DFOB (M = Fe, Th, Pu).

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37207
Publ.-Id: 37207


Determination of Association Constants of Macropa-based Chelators for the Stable Complexation of Barium-131 and Lanthanum-133

Blei, M. K.; Drobot, B.; Kretzschmar, J.; Pietzsch, H.-J.; Kopka, K.; Reissig, F.; Mamat, C.

Objectives
Theranostic concepts and the usage of alpha-particle emitting radionuclides belong to the emerging fields of radiopharmaceutical sciences. Especially and due to its excellent complexation properties, the chelator macropa (mcp)[1,2] was reported to be a suitable complexing agent for 225Ac conjugates[3] and as macrocycle a highly promising starting point for the development of 223/224Ra chelators as well. To follow the theranostic approaches with these alpha emitters, due to their chemical similarities 131Ba[4] for SPECT and 133La[5] for PET are available as diagnostic radionuclide surrogates of radium and actinium, respectively. In our recent study, we aim to establish a new workflow to evaluate and predict the complex stability of new chelating systems by obtaining both protonation constants for respective ligands and association constants for their metal complexes starting with mcp.

Methods
As a prerequisite for the calculation of stability constants (log(K)), the protonation constants (pKa) of mcp were determined by pH‑dependent 1H NMR studies in the first step. Based on these obtained data, the europium-mcp-complex was examined using time-resolved, laser-induced luminescence spectroscopy (TRLFS) and the log(K) was calculated as reference stability constant. Additionally, Eu-TRLFS was used to determine the Eu-mcp species during titration and pH-dependency of the complexation. The method of isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) was used to measure the complex stability constants of La-, Ba-mcp-complex, as well as Eu-mcp-complex to value the results in comparison with TRLFS data. The evaluation and calculation of the log(K) values were carried out by parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC).

Results
Depending on the protonation ability of the functional groups found in mcp (amines and carboxylates), pKa values were obtained as well as the log(K) values for the respective mcp-complexes with Ba, Eu and La and are shown in Table 1.

Conclusion
By combining 1H-NMR, TRLFS and ITC we demonstrated a new approach to fully characterize the ligand, determine metal complex speciation, pKa values for the mcp chelator and log(K) values of the mcp complexes and agree with previous works by potentiometric titration. Furthermore, this method can be transferred to functionalized and improved chelators and their complexes with a wide variety of metal ions of radionuclides used in nuclear medicine, especially the heavy alkaline earth metal ions Ba2+ and Ra2+. Ultimately, this allows a reliable comparison of the individual affinities of the different chelators to the metal ions and thus a predictability of the complex stabilities for future radiopharmaceuticals.

Keywords: macropa; Radium-223; Actinium-225; NMR; TRLFS; ITC

  • Poster
    25th International Symposium on Radiopharmaceutical Sciences, 22.-26.05.2023, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37206
Publ.-Id: 37206


Rigidified 18-membered hexaaza macrocycle, H4pyta (18-py2N4Ac4), as an efficient chelator for large metal radionuclides

Faltejsek, J.; Reissig, F.; Kubíček, V.; Mamat, C.; Hermann, P.

Complexes of macrocyclic ligands are commonly utilized in many medicinal applications, such as MRI contrast agents and radiopharmaceuticals. Due to their thermodynamic stability and kinetic inertness, they overcome toxicity of free heavy metal ions and, thus, enable their use in vivo. However, there is no “general” ligand suitable for any metal ion in the periodic table and, thus, useful chelator should be specially designed for each metal ion. Among metal radionuclides, there is an increasing interest in those of large elements (i.e. large metal ions) to be used for both, radiotherapy and imaging. The 18-memberred macrocycles are suitable scaffolds for the utilizations.
This contribution deals with chemistry and radiochemistry of H4pyta (18-py2N4Ac4), a parent rigidified macrocycle suitable for large metal ions. Although the ligand was synthesized in mid-nineties, there are almost no data focused on its possible utilization in radiopharmaceutical context.[2] The ligand forms thermodynamically stable complexes with Ln(III) ions. Its ten donor atoms completely wrap the large Ln(III) ions but one pendant arm is not coordinated for small Ln(III) ions. Thus, the early Ln(III) ions form more stable complexes. The Ln(III)-H4pyta complexes are 2–3 orders of magnitude more kinetically inert than those of H4dota and, thus, they will be fully stable in vivo.
Radiolabeling of H4pyta with 133La and 177Lu is, at different pH’s and temperatures, comparable with that of H4dota. Challenging experiments showed that these radiolabeled H4pyta complexes are fully resistant to transmetallation and transchelation, and show very high stability in human blood serum stability. For larger 133La, the results are much better if compared with data obtained for H4dota and macropa in the parallel experiments. For smaller 177Lu, the results are also more promising compared to those of H4dota and its analogues.
This ligand shows that the H4pyta (18-py2N4Ac4) scaffold offers new possibilities for design of chelators for radioisotopes of large metal ions from the bottom of the Periodic Table, e.g. 225Ac, and the data are promising for future conjugations and in vivo applications.

Keywords: Alpha therapy; theranostic concept; Actinium-225; Lanthanum-133

  • Lecture (Conference)
    World Molecular Imaging Congress (WMIC), 05.-09.09.2023, Prag, Tschechische Republik

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37205
Publ.-Id: 37205


Bestimmung von logK-Werten macropa-basierter Chelatoren für die stabile Komplexierung von 131Ba, 223/224Ra und 133La

Blei, M. K.; Drobot, B.; Kretzschmar, J.; Pietzsch, H.-J.; Kopka, K.; Mamat, C.

225Ac-Radiotracer werden mit macropa (mcp) als Chelator bereits in präklinischen Studien für die zielgerichtete Alpha-Therapie verwendet. [1] Mit dem β+-Emitter 133La bildet 225Ac ein „Matched Pair“ gemäß des theranostischen Konzeptes. [2] Ein weiteres „Matched Pair“ bilden der γ-Strahler 131Ba mit 223/224Ra. Obwohl der [131Ba]Ba-mcp-Komplex in vivo eine zu geringe Stabilität aufweist und sich freies Ba2+ in den Knochen einlagert,[3] eignet sich der Ba-mcp-Komplex als Referenz für die Entwicklung verbesserter, mcp-basierter Chelatoren. Assoziationskonstanten, ausgedrückt als logK-Werte, sind ein Maß für die Komplexstabilität. Für deren Bestimmung wurde eigens eine neue Methode entwickelt und sowohl auf mcp als Referenz als auch auf die neuen Chelatoren angewendet.

Methodik/Methods:

Die pKs-Werte der Chelatoren wurden mittels NMR-Spektroskopie bestimmt, da diese zur Berechnung der logK-Werte essentiell sind. Mithilfe der Laser-induzierten Lumineszenzspektroskopie an Europium als Fluorophor (Eu-TRLFS) wurde dann die Bildung des Eu-mcp-Komplexes untersucht, sowie die logK-Werte der mcp-Komplexe mit Ba2+ und La3+ bestimmt. Ergänzend wurde die isotherme Titrationskalorimetrie (ITC) für die Chelatisierung von La, Eu und Ba durchgeführt. Die Berechnung der logK-Werte erfolgte durch parallele Faktoranalyse.

Ergebnisse/Results:

Die pKs-Werte von macropa wurden reproduziert und lieferten logK-Werte der Ba-, Eu- und La-mcp-Komplexe von 10.2, 14.2 bzw. 14.6.

Schlussfolgerungen/Conclusions:

Der neue methodische Ansatz, eine Kombination aus NMR, TRLFS und ITC, wurde erfolgreich etabliert und ermöglicht eine präzise Vorhersagbarkeit der Komplexstabilitäten der modifizierten mcp-Liganden für zukünftige radiopharmazeutische Anwendungen in vivo.

Keywords: Komplexstabilität; Radium-223; macropa; TRLFS; ITC; NMR

  • Lecture (Conference)
    61. DGN-Jahrestagung, 19.-22.04.2023, Leipzig, Deutschland
  • Abstract in refereed journal
    Nuklearmedizin 62(2023), 149

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37204
Publ.-Id: 37204


Entwicklung alternativer Verbindungen für die PSMA-Therapie mit Actinium-225

Reissig, F.; Zarschler, K.; Novy, Z.; Petrik, M.; Pietzsch, H.-J.; Kopka, K.; Mamat, C.

Ziel/Aim:

Der Einsatz von Actinium-225 mit dem DOTA-Konjugat PSMA-617 befindet sich in der klinischen Entwicklung. DOTA ist jedoch nicht ideal, da hohe Temperaturen für die Markierung benötigt werden und der Komplex in vivo nicht stabil genug ist. Ziel ist es, einen besseren, macropa-basierten Chelator zu finden und mit von PSMA-617 abgeleiteten Bindungsvektoren zu verknüpfen.

Methodik/Methods:

Es wurden 4 verschiedene Konjugate hergestellt, welche sich hinsichtlich der Anzahl der Bindungsmotive sowie ihrer Fähigkeit, an Albumin zu binden, unterscheiden. Die Stabilität der markierten Komplexe wurde über 10 Tage in Puffer und Serum untersucht. Weiterhin wurden Bindungsaffinitäten und Koloniebildungsassays an PSMA-positiven LNCaP-Zellen durchgeführt. Alle Konjugate wurden hinsichtlich ihrer Organverteilung in LNCaP-Tumor-tragenden SCID-Mäusen untersucht.

Ergebnisse/Results:

Alle 4 Konjugate wurden unter milden Bedingungen radiomarkiert und zeigen bei Zugabe von Gentisinsäure die höchste Stabilität über 10 Tagen. Die Bindungsaffinitäten der Konjugate wurden als KD-Werte bestimmt und liegen zwischen (10-40) nM. Die Untersuchungen zum Zellüberleben zeigen einen therapeutischen Vorteil der bivalenten gegenüber den monovalenten Konjugaten. Alle vier Konjugate erreichten in unterschiedlichen Zeitspannen (bis 5 d p.i.) Tumoranreicherungen von (12-85) %ID/g. Unerwünschte Anreicherungen traten v. a. bei dem dimeren, albuminbindenden Konjugat in Form von Akkumulationen (Leber, Milz, Nieren) auf.

Schlussfolgerungen/Conclusions:

Die Verwendung von macropa-basierten Konjugaten für die Therapie mit Actinium‑225 oder die zukünftige Bildgebung mit Lanthan‑133 ist vorteilhaft, da die gebildeten Komplexe stabiler sind und damit eine Anreicherung der Aktivität in off-Target-Regionen verringert werden kann. Weiterhin ergibt sich ein Vorteil im Handling, da die Reaktionen schnell und bei Raumtemperatur durchgeführt werden können, was die spätere Umsetzung in eine GMP-gerechte Herstellung erleichtert.

Keywords: zielgerichtete Alphatherapie; Lanthan-133; macropa; PSMA

  • Open Access Logo Lecture (Conference)
    61. DGN-Jahrestagung, 19.-22.04.2023, Leipzig, Deutschland
  • Abstract in refereed journal
    Nuklearmedizin 62(2023), 147

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37203
Publ.-Id: 37203


Radiotheranostika gegen Prostatakrebs: Actinium-225-Radiokonjugate für eine verbesserte Therapie

Mamat, C.; Reissig, F.; Novy, Z.; Petrik, M.; Pietzsch, H.-J.; Kopka, K.

Das prostataspezifische Membranantigen (PSMA) ist ein hoch attraktives biologisches Target für die molekulare Bildgebung und für die zielgerichtete Radionuklidtherapie bei kastrationsresistentem Prostatakrebs (mCRPC), da es in allen Phasen der Erkrankung bei den Tumorzellen expremiert ist. Somit bieten hoch affine, PSMA-bindende Biomoleküle eine exzellente Basis zur Entwicklung von Radiokonjugaten für die Therapie mit Alphastrahlern.
Aufgrund seiner hervorragenden kernphysikalischen Eigenschaften wird zunehmend Actinium-225 für diese Zwecke in der Nuklearmedizin verwendet. Das dreiwertige Kation Ac3+ muss dazu in einem Chelator hoch stabil komplexiert werden. Um das zu realisieren, wird der Chelator macropa verwendet, welcher eine sehr hohe In-vivo-Stabilität zeigt und Radiomarkierungen unter sehr milden Bedingungen zulässt. Dieser wird mit einer bzw. zwei PSMA-bindenden Einheiten modifiziert, um den 225Ac-Komplex zu den Tumorzellen zu bringen.
Zunächst wurden zwei Actinium-225-Radiokonjugate entwickelt und deren pharmakologische Eigenschaften, z. B. die Bindung an Tumorzellen, Anreicherung im Tumor (ca. 10%ID/g für beide Konjugate) und in anderen Organen überprüft. Hier wurde ein ähnliches Verhalten festgestellt, vergleichbar mit dem Standardkonjugat 225Ac-PSMA-617. Die beiden 225Ac-Radiokonjugate wurden weiterentwickelt und mit einem Albumin-Binder (4-Iodphenylbutyrat) versehen. Dadurch wurde eine längere Blutverweilzeit, kombiniert mit einer höheren Aufnahme in den Tumor, erreicht (bis 50%ID/g Monomer, bis 120 %ID/g Dimer), um die Effektivität der Radiotherapie zu erhöhen.

Keywords: Actinium-225; zielgerichtete Alphatherapie; Albuminbinder; PSMA; macropa

  • Lecture (Conference)
    Chemiedozententagung, 13.-15.03.2023, Dresden, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37202
Publ.-Id: 37202


Equilibrium Thermodynamics of Macropa Complexes with Selected Metal Isotopes of Radiopharmaceutical Interest

Blei, M. K.; Waurick, L.; Reissig, F.; Kopka, K.; Stumpf, T.; Drobot, B.; Kretzschmar, J.; Mamat, C.

To follow the design of in vivo stable chelating systems for radiometals, a concise and straightforward method toolbox was developed combining NMR, ITC, and Eu-TRLFS. For this purpose, the macropa chelator was chosen and Lu3+, La3+, Pb2+, Ra2+, and Ba2+ as radiopharmaceutically relevant metal ions. They differ in charge (+2, +3) and coordination properties (main group vs. lanthanides). 1H NMR was used to determine four pKa values (carboxylate functions: 2.40 and 3.13; amine functions: 6.80 and 7.73). Eu-TRLFS was used to validate the exclusive existence of the Mn+:ligand 1:1 complex in the chosen pH range. ITC measurements were accomplished to determine the resulting stability constants of the desired complexes with log K values ranging from 18.5 for the Pb-mcp complex to 7.3 for the Lu-mcp complex. DFT-calculated structures nicely mirror the complexes’ order of stabilities by bonding features. Radiolabeling with macropa using ligand concentrations from 10–3 M to 10–6 M pointed out the complex stability (133La > 131Ba > 177Lu).

Keywords: Macropa; radiolabeling; theranostic concept; protonation constant; NMR; ITC; TRLFS

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37201
Publ.-Id: 37201


Extension of the X2 VVER-1000 benchmark by a control rod cluster ejection exercise

Bilodid, Y.; Fischer, M.; Zilly, M.; Aures, A.; Henry, R.; Kilger, R.; Kliem, S.

This paper proposes a new benchmark for VVER-1000 control rod ejection transient. The benchmark is designed for code-to-code comparison and its purpose is testing and verifications of time-dependent solvers, core models and cross section generation methodology. Four solutions obtained using different combinations of three lattice transport, two nodal neutronics, and two thermo-hydraulic codes are analyzed, demonstrating good agreement in predicting transient reactivity and power peaks and highlighting the impact of gas gap modeling and DNBR correlation on simulation results.

Keywords: X2 VVER-1000; Control Rod Ejection; DYN3D; PARCS; ATHLET

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37199
Publ.-Id: 37199


Solving the puzzle of hierarchical martensitic microstructures in NiTi by (111)-oriented epitaxial films

Lünser, K.; Undisz, A.; Wagner, M. F.-X.; Nielsch, K.; Fähler, S.

The martensitic microstructure decides on the functional properties of shape memory alloys. However, for the most commonly used alloy, NiTi, it is still unclear how its microstructure is built up because the analysis is hampered by grain boundaries of polycrystalline samples. Here, we eliminate grain boundaries by using epitaxially grown films in (111)B2 orientation. By combining scale-bridging microscopy with integral inverse pole figures, we solve the puzzle of the hierarchical martensitic microstructure. We identify two martensite clusters as building blocks and three kinds of twin boundaries. Nesting them at different length scales explains why habit plane variants with 〈011〉B19' twin boundaries and {942} habit planes are dominant; but also some incompatible interfaces occur. Though the observed hierarchical microstructure agrees with the phenomenological theory of martensite, the transformation path decides which microstructure forms. The combination of local and global measurements with theory allows solving the scale bridging 3D puzzle of the martensitic microstructure in NiTi exemplarily for epitaxial films.

Keywords: NiTi; martensitic microstructure; epitaxial film

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37198
Publ.-Id: 37198


Bringt uns Programmieren bei

Schmidt, P.; Erxleben, F.

Fredo Erxleben vom Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf erzählt uns, wie er und seine KollegInnen WissenschaftlerInnen, DoktorantInnen und Postdocs Programmieren beibringt. Der Bedarf an Training ist riesig. Der Bedarf an Ausbildern auch.
In dieser Folge schauen wir ein wenig hinter die Kulissen und Fredo erzählt welche Herausforderungen es bei den Trainingsprogrammen gibt.

Keywords: Podcast; RSE; Research Software Engineering; Education; HIFIS; Programming; Programmierung; Lehre; Fortbildung

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37197
Publ.-Id: 37197


Cosmological Perturbations Engendered by Discrete Relativistic Species

Brilenkov, M.; Yilmaz, E.; Eingorn, M.

Within the extension of the ΛCDM model, allowing for the presence of neutrinos or warm dark matter, we develop the analytical cosmological perturbation theory. It covers all spatial scales where the weak gravitational field regime represents a valid approximation. Discrete particles -- the sources of the inhomogeneous gravitational field -- may be relativistic. Similarly to the previously investigated case of nonrelativistic matter, the Yukawa interaction range is naturally incorporated into the first-order scalar metric corrections.

Keywords: inhomogeneous Universe; cosmological perturbations; cosmic screening; warm dark matter; neutrinos

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37196
Publ.-Id: 37196


Fragment molecular orbital method as a tool to study actinide / lanthanide-protein interaction

Tsushima, S.

In this seminar talk, I will introduce applications of fragment molecular orbital method to study the interactions between protein and lanthanide/actinide.

  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    Seminar talk at the Theoretical Chemistry Institute of the University of Köln, 28.06.2023, Köln, Germany

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37195
Publ.-Id: 37195


Simulation of droplet entrainment in annular flow with a morphology adaptive two-fluid model

Wang, L.; Krull, B.; Meller, R.; Schlegel, F.; Tekavcic, M.; Lucas, D.; Xua, J.-Y.

The CFD modelling of annular flow is a challenge since it should take into account the continuous liquid film, the continuous gas core, and the dispersed droplets simultaneously. Recently, the CFD department in Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf (HZDR) are developing a morphology adaptive multifield two-fluid model that has great potential to simulate the three structures in a single computational domain. To complete the annular flow simulation in the morphology adaptive framework, a new droplet entrainment model is proposed in this work, which describes the mass transfer from the continuous liquid film to the dispersed droplets. The new entrainment model is developed based on the shear-off mechanism on the interfacial wave, implying that the entrainment behavior is dominated by the shear force and surface tension on the gas and liquid interface. Contrarily to previous entrainment models, the new model is correlated to the local flow parameters on the interface, so that it is suitable for the CFD framework. The properties of the new model are discussed and the model performance is verified by laboratory experiments. Qualitatively, the proposed model can simulate the generation of the interfacial wave from the inlet to the downstream. The droplets are mainly entrained at the front tip of the disturbance wave, where the shear force effect is remarkable. These phenomena are identical to the physical understanding of the droplet entrainment. Quantitatively, the characteristics of the droplet fraction matches the experimental results. The liquid film fraction obtained with the new model is analyzed and compared with the experiment. It turns out that the statistical parameters of film fraction's average value, standard deviation, possibility density function, and power spectral density match well with the experiment. Finally, the model comparisons show that the new model outperforms previous models with regard to droplet generation.

  • Physics of Fluids 35(2023)10, 103312-1-103312-16
    Online First (2023) DOI: 10.1063/5.0169288

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37194
Publ.-Id: 37194


Long-term operation of photocathodes in HZDR SRF Gun-II

Xiang, R.; Schaber, J.; Arnold, A.; Gatzmaga, S.; Hoffmann, A.; Michel, P.; Murcek, P.; Ryzhov, A.; Teichert, J.

As an excellent demonstration of SRF gun technology, HZDR's SRF Gun-II has been rountinely operated as an electron gun for the ELBE THz radiation and the ELBE neutron source since 2018, delivering CW beams with bunch charges of up to 300 pC at 50-100 kHz.

As is well known, the quality of the photocathodes is crucial for the stability and reliability of the gun operation. Different cathodes have been used in the HZDR SRF gun and the cathodes have been replaced three to four times per year. In the last five years, the quality of the superconducting cavity has remained almost stable, but some characteristics of the gun have been observed related to the cathodes. In this contribution, we will introduce the operational aspect of the photocathodes in HZDR SRF gun, look back at the achievements and discuss open issues and possible improvements for future application.

Keywords: SRF gun; photocathode; Cs2Te; high bunch charge

  • Poster
    The 21st International Conference on Radio-Frequency Superconductivity (SRF 2023), 25.-30.06.2023, Grand Rapids, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37193
Publ.-Id: 37193


Design of a cathode insertion and transfer system for LCLS-II-HE SRF Gun

Xiang, R.; Arnold, A.; Gatzmaga, S.; Hoffmann, A.; Murcek, P.; Steinbrück, R.; Teichert, J.; Xu, T.; Hartung, W.; Kim, S.-H.; Konomi, T.; Miller, S. J.; Popielarski, L.; Saito, K.; Smedley, J.; Adolphsen, C.; Kelly, M.; Petersen, T.; Lewellen, J. W.

Superconducting radio frequency photo injectors (SRF gun) offer advantages for operating in continuous wave (CW) mode and generating high-brightness and high-current beams. A new SRF gun is designed as a low emittance photo injector for LCLS-II-HE and a prototype gun is currently being developed under collaboration between SLAC, FRIB, HZDR and ANL. The aim is to demonstrate stable CW operation at a cathode gradient of 30 MV/m.
One of the crucial components for successful SRF gun operation is the photocathode system. The new SRF gun will adopt the HZDR-type cathode, which includes a cathode holder fixture (cathode stalk) developed by FRIB and a cathode exchange system designed by HZDR. This innovative cathode insertion system ensures accurate, particle-free and warm cathode exchanges. A novel alignment process targets the cathode to the stalk axis without touching cathode plug itself.
To commission the prototype gun, metallic cathodes will be used. A specifically designed vacuum system ensures vacuum pressure of 10-9 mbar for transport of a single cathode from the cleanroom to the gun.

Keywords: SRF gun; CW mode; photocathode; particle free; vacuum

  • Open Access Logo Contribution to proceedings
    The 21st International Conference on Radio-Frequency Superconductivity (SRF 2023), 25.-30.06.2023, Grand Rapids, USA
    DOI: 10.18429/JACoW-SRF2023-MOPMB067
  • Open Access Logo Poster
    The 21st International Conference on Radio-Frequency Superconductivity (SRF 2023), 25.-30.06.2023, Grand Rapids, USA

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37192
Publ.-Id: 37192


Lysyl oxidases as targets for cancer therapy and diagnostic imaging

Löser, R.; Kuchar, M.; Wodtke, R.; Neuber, C.; Belter, B.; Kopka, K.; Santhanam, L.; Pietzsch, J.

The understanding of the contribution of the tumour microenvironment to cancer progression and metastasis, in particular the interplay between tumour cells, fibroblasts and the extracellular matrix has grown tremendously over the last years. Lysyl oxidases are increasingly recognised as key players in this context, in addition to their function as drivers of fibrotic diseases. These insights have considerably stimulated drug discovery efforts towards lysyl oxidases as targets over the last decade.
This review article summarises the biochemical and structural properties of theses enzymes. Their involvement in tumour progression and metastasis is highlighted from a biochemical point of view, taking into consideration both the extracellular and intracellular action of lysyl oxidases. More recently reported inhibitor compounds are discussed with an emphasis on their discovery, structure-activity relationships and the results of their biological characterisation. Molecular probes developed for imaging of lysyl oxidase activity are reviewed from the perspective of their detection principles, performance and biomedical applications.

Keywords: enzyme inhibitors; extracellular matrix; posttranslational modification; quinoproteins; radiotracers

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37191
Publ.-Id: 37191


Exceptionally high-temperature in-air stability of transparent conductive oxide tantalum-doped tin dioxide

Krause, M.; Hoppe, M.; Romero-Muñiz, C.; Mendez, A.; Munnik, F.; Garcia Valenzuela, A.; Schimpf, C.; Rafaja, D.; Escobar-Galindo, R.

The compositional, optical and structural stability of transparent conductive oxide SnO2:Ta (1.25 at.% Ta) thin films at 650 °C and 800 °C in air was studied under isothermal conditions. After the high-temperature treatment, the element composition and the optical spectra of the material were unchanged. The X-ray diffraction confirmed the conservation of a single rutile-type phase. Two strong Raman lines located out of the SnO2 phonon range indicated point defects in the material, which were identified as Sn vacancies and O interstitials by theoretical calculations. These point defects were partially healed out during the high-temperature treatment, without affecting the transmittance and reflectance of the material. Our study demonstrates an exceptional high in-air stability of Ta-doped SnO2 and encourages it for applications in fields, where transparent conductive oxides with high-temperature and oxidation stability are required. These are, e.g., selective transmitters for concentrated solar power or electrodes for dye-sensitized solar cells and dynamic random-access memories.

Keywords: High-temperature materials; Transparent conductive oxides; Ta-doped tin oxide; Point defects; Raman spectroscopy; Density functional theory calculations

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37190
Publ.-Id: 37190


Screening approach to address relativistic species as sources of cosmological perturbations

Yilmaz, E.; Eingorn, M.; Brilenkov, M.

Assuming nonnegligible relativistic component densities alongside the cold dark matter of the ΛCDM model, we reformulate cosmological perturbations within the framework of the cosmic screening approach. The scheme addresses all spatial scales, provided that gravitational interactions may be studied in the weak field limit to a good approximation. As a novel feature of the formulation, delta-shaped sources responsible for the inhomogeneous gravitational field are now allowed to be relativistic so that neutrinos or warm dark matter may also be incorporated into the extended model. Analytical expressions obtained for the first-order scalar potentials reveal that, like in the case of purely nonrelativistic matter studied previously, gravitational interactions of this wider class of components are also characterized by the time-dependent screening length, associated with the exponential cutoff introduced at large distances. (arXiv:2206.13495 [gr-qc])

Keywords: inhomogeneous Universe; cosmological perturbations; cosmic screening; warm dark matter; neutrinos

  • Open Access Logo Lecture (Conference)
    Progress on Old and New Themes in cosmology (PONT) 2023, 02.-05.05.2023, Palais des Papes, Avignon, France

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37189
Publ.-Id: 37189


Incipient stress-induced phase transformation of a Ni-Mn-Ga Heusler alloy: A small-scale design challenge

Fareed, A.; Rosalie, J.; Kumar, S.; Kar, S.; Hickel, T.; Fähler, S.; Maaß, R.

NiMnGa shape-memory alloys are promising candidates for large strain actuation or magnetocaloric cooling devices. In view of potential small-scale applications, we probe here nanomechanically the stress-induced austenite-martensite transition in single crystalline austenitic thin films as a function of temperature. In 0.5 µm thin films, a marked incipient phase transformation to martensite is observed during nanoindentation, leaving behind pockets of residual martensite after unloading. These nanomechanical instabilities occur irrespective of deformation rate and temperature, are Weibull distributed, and reveal large spatial variations in transformation stress. In contrast, at a larger film thickness of 2 m fully reversible transformations occur, and mechanical loading remains entirely smooth. Ab-initio simulations demonstrate how an in-plane constraint can considerably increase the martensitic transformation stress, explaining the thickness-dependent nanomechanical behavior. These findings give insights into how reduced dimensions and constraints can lead to unexpectedly large transformation stresses in the studied shape-memory Heusler alloy.

Keywords: Ni2MnGa; Nanoindentation; Epitaxial Film

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37187
Publ.-Id: 37187


Integration of Multifunctional Epitaxial (Magnetic) Shape Memory Films in Silicon Microtechnology

Fink, L.; Kar, S.; Lünser, K.; Nielsch, K.; Reith, H.; Fähler, S.

Magnetic shape memory alloys exhibit various multifunctional properties, which range from high stroke actuation and magnetocaloric refrigeration to thermomagnetic energy harvesting. Most of these applications benefit from miniaturization and a single crystalline state. Epitaxial film growth is so far only possible on some oxidic substrates, but they are expensive and incompatible with standard microsystem technologies. Here, we demonstrate epitaxial growth of Ni-Mn-based Heusler alloys with single crystal-like properties on silicon substrates by using a SrTiO3 buffer. We show that this allows using standard microfabrication technologies to prepare partly freestanding patterns. Our approach is versatile, as we demonstrate its applicability for the NiTi shape memory alloy and discuss for spintronic and thermoelectric Heusler alloys. This paves the way for integrating additional multifunctional effects into state-of-the-art microelectronic and micromechanical technology, which is based on silicon.

Keywords: Magnetic shape memory alloys; Silicon microtechnology; Ni2MnGa; NiTi; Epitaxial film growth

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37186
Publ.-Id: 37186


Dictionary-free handling of all-scale cosmological perturbations

Yilmaz, E.; Eingorn, M.; Brilenkov, M.

Gravitational clustering of cold dark matter, as predicted by concordance cosmology, is often studied via N-body simulations based on Newtonian dynamics. Though efficient in tracking nonlinear growth of fluctuations at small scales, outcomes of such simulations cannot be linked to observables immediately, and a certain effort is required to obtain relativistic interpretations of variables by employing convenient gauges and dictionaries. Based on a weak-field expansion of general relativity, a fully-relativistic N-body code has been introduced in the past decade (Adamek, J., Daverio, D., Durrer, R., Kunz, M., JCAP 07, 053 (2016)), capable of evolving all metric variables in the Poisson gauge which is the conventional choice in formulating cosmological perturbations. However, spatial and temporal derivates are assigned different orders of smallness and field equations, containing admixtures of higher-order terms, acquire a rather complex form. In this talk we will explore an alternative formulation of perturbations, still based on a weak-field expansion, and expressed in the Poisson gauge, which however treats all derivates on equal footing and hence a clear distinction exists between first and second order contributions in the expansion (Eingorn, M., ApJ 825, 84 (2016), Canay, E., Eingorn, M., PDU 29, 100565 (2020), arXiv:2206.13495 [gr-qc]). We will show that it is possible to obtain analytical solutions for the scalar and vector potentials in this scheme and that they hint at some exciting characteristics of gravitational interactions at large-enough cosmological scales.

Keywords: inhomogeneous Universe; cosmological perturbations; cosmic screening; large-scale structure; gravitational potential; Yukawa interaction

  • Open Access Logo Lecture (Conference)
    (Fifth) Annual Workshop on High Energy Physics, Astrophysics and Cosmology - YEFAK 2023, 27.05.-03.06.2023, Istanbul University, Istanbul, Turkiye

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37185
Publ.-Id: 37185


Thermodynamics of quark matter with multi-quark clusters

Blaschke, D.; Cierniak, M.; Ivanytskyi, O.; Röpke, G.

We describe multi-quark clusters in quark matter within a Beth-Uhlenbeck approach in a background gluon field coupled to the underlying chiral quark dynamics using the Polyakov gauge. An effective potential for the traced Polyakov loop is used to establish the property of color SU(3) center symmetry as an aspect of confinement.
A higher multi-quark cluster of size $a$ is described as a binary composite of smaller subclusters a1 and a2 (where a1+a2=a) with a bound state and a scattering state spectrum. For the corresponding cluster-cluster phase shifts we use simple ansätze that capture the Mott dissociation of clusters as a function of temperature and chemical potential. We compare the simple "step-up-step-down" model that ignores continuum correlations with an improved model that includes them in a generic form.
In order to explain the model, we restrict ourselves here to the cases where the largest cluster contains six quarks.
One striking result is the suppression of the abundance of colored multi-quark clusters at low temperatures by the coupling to the Polyakov loop. This is understood in close analogy to the suppression of free quark abundances by the same mechanism. We derive here the corresponding Polyakov-generalized distribution functions of b -quark clusters. Another new result is the effective suppression of free quarks by a large (> 600 MeV) constituent quark mass generated by dynamical breaking of the approximate chiral symmetry in the quark sector and its sudden restoration at the Mott temperature, where all hadronic bound states become dissociated into the multi-quark continuum.
Within our approach we calculate thermodynamic properties such as baryon density and entropy. A comparison with lattice calculations shows that our model is able to give a unified, systematic approach to describe properties of the quark-gluon-hadron system.

Keywords: multi-quark clusters; Beth-Uhlenbeck approach; Mott dissociation; Polyakov-loop; quark matter thermodynamics

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37184
Publ.-Id: 37184


Magnetoelectronics and 
Magnetic composites

Makarov, D.

This is a talk for students of RTG 2767 “Supracolloidal structures” running at the TUD. I will discuss current developments in magnetic composite-based actuators and sensor devices.

Keywords: flexible magnetic field sensors; shapeable magnetoelectronics; printed magnetoelectronics; soft magnetic composites; magnetic soft robots

Related publications

  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    summer school of the RTG 2767 “Supracolloidal structures”, 26.-28.06.2023, Chemnitz, Germany

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37183
Publ.-Id: 37183


Density functional approach to neutron star astrophysics

Blaschke, D.

Density functional methods have been successfully applied to describe properties of atomic nuclei and infinite nuclear matter. A particularly successful approach for applications in simulations of neutron stars, their mergers and supernova explosions is the relativistic mean field theory with density dependent couplings (DD2). For densities exceeding twice the nuclear saturation density, i.e. for neutron stars heavier than about 1.4 solar masses, the excitation of hyperons and heavy baryons leads to a softening of the nuclear equation of state and a limitation of the maximum neutron star mass to about 2 solar masses (“Berlin wall” constraint, formerly known as the hyperon puzzle), a tension with recent mass measurements.
I will review recent progress to overcome the Berlin wall constraint with quark deconfinement in neutron star interiors, where the dense quark matter equation of state is obtained from a relativistic density functional approach that allows to model quark confinement at low densities as well as color superconductivity and the transition to the conformal symmetric phase at high densities.
On the basis of this new density functional approach to quark matter a supernova explosion mechanism for massive blue supergiant stars has been suggested and a signal of quark deconfinement in the pattern of gravitational waves from binary neutron star mergers.
I shall give an outlook to the development of a unified description of quark-nuclear matter in the form of a density functional approach.

Keywords: relativistic density functional; infinite nuclear matter; neutron stars; supernova explosions; hyperon puzzle; quark deconfinement; dense quark matter

  • Lecture (others)
    Institute seminar, 09.05.2023, CASUS, Germany

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37182
Publ.-Id: 37182


A simple method of purifying authigenic 10Be from sediments for AMS-analysis

Loftfield, J.; Lachner, J.; Maylin, M.; Stübner, K.; Adolphi, F.

The cosmogenic radionuclide 10Be is used for a variety of applications, its analysis however requires laborious purification methods. We developed a simple purification protocol for Be from sediment samples that works without strongly hazardous chemicals or time consuming and expensive ion exchange columns. The combination of hydroxide precipitations and precipitation in NaHCO3 was compared to an established protocol of hydroxide precipitations and ion exchange columns. The new method has a slightly lower Be-yield and purity of the resulting samples. However, this does not have a significant influence on performance during AMS-measurement where both methods performed equally well. The avoidance of column chromatography reduces sample preparation costs and space requirements in the lab allowing for more samples to be prepared simultaneously.

Keywords: beryllium; sample preparation; marine sediments; authigenic 10Be/9Be ratios; cosmogenic radionuclides

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37181
Publ.-Id: 37181


Using an Adaptor CAR System to Target Fibroblast Activation Protein for Diagnostic and Therapeutic Purposes

Hoffmann, L.; Rodrigues Loureiro, L. R.; Neuber, C.; Rupp, L.; Kubeil, M.; Hagemeyer, C.; Schmitz, M.; Feldmann, A.; Bachmann, M.

T-cells genetically modified to express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) are playing a more and more
important role in targeted cancer immunotherapy. However, these living drugs can also cause lifethreatening
side effects. To overcome such limitations and improve the safety of CAR T-cell therapy,
adaptor CAR platforms such as the universal CAR (UniCAR) have been developed. This platform consists
of the UniCAR T-cell and a target module (TM) cross-linkage effector and tumor cells. Here, we have
established a novel UniCAR system targeting Fibroblast Activation Protein (FAP) that is highly expressed
in the tumor microenvironment of epithelial cancers and a marker for cancer-associated fibroblasts. For
that, we constructed two novel FAP-directed TMs possessing different sizes and pharmacokinetic
properties, in which one is based on a single-chain variable fragment (scFv), and the other is based on an
IgG4 backbone. We have shown that both TMs were able to bind to FAP-expressing cells and redirect
UniCAR T-cells in vitro to monolayer and spheroid target cells inducing effective killing. Furthermore, we
could show infiltration and activation of T-cells in the spheroid setting. Using in vivo models, the TMs were
proven to be suitable to be used for PET imaging showing FAP-specific accumulation at the tumor site.
Moreover, the immunotherapeutic effect of UniCAR T-cells in combination with FAP TMs was
demonstrated using mouse models. In conclusion, in this work, we could show that the two novel anti-
FAP TMs prove to hold great theranostic potential for diagnostic imaging and immunotherapy.

  • Poster
    4th International Conference on Lymphocyte Engineering, 12.-14.09.2023, München, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37180
Publ.-Id: 37180


Turning an Immunosuppressive Marker Into a T-Cell Activating Signal: Using the RevCAR System to Target Immune Checkpoints

Crespo, E.; Rodrigues Loureiro, L. R.; Arndt, C.; Schmitz, M.; Bachmann, M.; Feldmann, A.

Immunotherapy based on chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells has demonstrated remarkable therapeutic effects, particularly against some hematological cancers. A versatile adaptor CAR system called RevCAR, consisting of RevCAR T-cells and a bispecific target module (RevTM) has been developed to overcome severe side effects associated with conventional CAR T-cell therapy. As the activity of RevCAR T-cells can be steered based on the availability of RevTM, working as an on/off switch, the system can be immediately turned off if side effects occur. Furthermore, the RevCAR system is highly flexible, since the same RevCAR T-cell can be directed towards different tumor-associated antigens (TAA) simply by adding RevTMs with different specificities. However, the effectiveness of CAR T-cells against solid tumors remains limited particularly due to their immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). To overcome these hurdles, we have established a novel RevCAR system targeting immune checkpoint molecules such as PD-L1, which are frequently overexpressed by cancer cells to suppress immune responses. We have constructed novel RevTMs that can redirect RevCAR T-cells to kill tumor cells that express such immune checkpoint molecules. Furthermore, true AND gate tumor targeting was achieved by targeting a TAA in addition to PD-L1 in a combinatorial manner using our Dual-RevCAR system. In this way, targeting PD-L1 not only results in Dual-RevCAR T-cell activation but simultaneously blocks the immunosuppressive PD-L1/PD-1 axis. Altogether, we have turned an immunosuppressive marker into an immune-activating signal that might modulate the TME in a beneficial manner, showing promise for the development of an effective immunotherapy against solid tumors.

  • Poster
    4th International Conference on Lymphocyte Engineering, 12.-14.09.2023, Munich, Germany
  • Abstract in refereed journal
    Human Gene Therapy 54(2023)
    Online First (2023) DOI: 10.1089/hum.2023.29252.abstracts

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37179
Publ.-Id: 37179


Therapeutic targeting and diagnostic imaging of Fibroblast Activation Protein expressing cancers using the UniCAR system

Hoffmann, L.; Rodrigues Loureiro, L. R.; Neuber, C.; Rupp, L.; Kubeil, M.; Schmitz, M.; Feldmann, A.; Bachmann, M.

Engineered T cells that express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) show a big potential in cancer immunological research. They are synthetic receptors that can target antigens independently from the MHC complex. However, most tumor associated antigens are not only expressed on the tumor site but also on healthy tissues. To switch off CAR T cells in case of on-target/off-tumor effects occur, an adaptor CAR platform, called the universal CAR (UniCAR), was developed. In contrast to conventional CAR systems this platform consists of the engineered T cells and a linker molecule, called target module (TM), that is both binding to the target antigen and recognized by the UniCAR T cell. With this approach there is the possibility to switch the system on and off when needed.
Fibroblast activation protein (FAP) is a protein of high interest in cancer research as it is upregulated in most of epithelial cancers but shows a comparably low expression in healthy tissues. It is shown to be expressed on cancer associated fibroblasts and therefore plays an important role in the tumor microenvironment where it has pro-tumorigenic activity both in the FAP positive and surrounding cells. Given this, the goal of this work was to develop new TMs against FAP.
To achieve such aim, we cloned two TM formats, either based on a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) or an IgG4 based backbone. The difference in the size of the backbones translates into different half-lifes and kinetics. These different TM formats can be used to customize UniCAR therapy according to the given circumstances. We were able to purify and perform various experiments with the mentioned TMs. We could show binding to the target cells using flow cytometry. We could also show that the TMs could be used to induce specific lysis in vitro on monolayer cells and spheroids. We were also able to show UniCAR T cell infiltration into the spheroids and their consequent activation. Moreover, in mouse models the TMs could be used for PET imaging, showing specific accumulation at FAP-expressing tumor cells, as well as for killing of such tumors using redirected UniCAR T cells.
By that we could show that the anti-FAP scFv and IgG4 based TMs have high theragnostic potential as they can be used for both immunotherapy and diagnostic imaging.

  • Lecture (Conference)
    Tumor Immunology Meets Oncology (TIMO) XVII Halle 2023, 20.-22.04.2023, Halle, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37178
Publ.-Id: 37178


Synthesis and characterization of trivalent lanthanide and actinide complexes with benzamidinate ligand

Hong, B.; März, J.; Kaden, P.; Gericke, R.; Bode, T.; Näder, A.; Patzschke, M.; Schmidt, M.; Stumpf, T.

The recent flourishing of research on non-aqueous actinide coordination chemistry has facilitated a deeper understanding of actinide metal-ligand interactions. In particular, studies utilizing ligands with soft donor atoms (N, S) have highlighted the subtle chemical differences between trivalent actinide (An) and lanthanide (Ln) ions. They provide not only theoretical and experimental insights but also the foundation for practical applications e.g. minor actinides separation. As part of our efforts to elucidate these differences, typically attributed to an increased covalency in the actinide compounds, we conducted research using N,N’-diisopropylbenzamidinate (iPr2BA) as a model N-donor ligand.

In this work, a series of trivalent lanthanide (La, Nd, Sm, Eu) and actinide (U, Np) tris-iPr2BA complexes [M(iPr2BA)3] were successfully synthesized and characterized in solid state to gain a comprehensive understanding of the bonding situation between f-block elements and N-donor ligands. Intensive paramagnetic NMR studies in solution have been carried out and the Bleaney method was applied to separate hyperfine shift contributions (Fermi contact and Pseudocontact contributions). Furthermore, quantum chemical calculations have been performed in order to evaluate the intramolecular bonding trends and electronic structures.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This study was supported by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) under the project No. 02NUK059B (f-Char).

Keywords: actinides; lanthanides; coordination chemistry; SC-XRD; NMR; amidinate; N-donor ligands

  • Poster
    Actinides 2023, 04.-08.06.2023, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37175
Publ.-Id: 37175


Mono- and Bimetallic Alkoxides of Neptunium(IV) and Iron(III)

Grödler, D.; Gericke, R.; Kaden, P.; Patzschke, M.; Lichtenberg, A.; Sperling, J. M.; Rotermund, B. M.; Scheibe, B.; Beck, N. B.; Albrecht-Schönzart, T. E.; Mathur, S.

Although the chemistry of uranium alkoxides has been widely studied, not much attention has been paid to alkoxide chemistry of transuranic elements. In 1967, Samulski and Karraker were able to isolate a few examples of transuranic alkoxides. However, these complexes were only characterized using elemental analysis and absorption spectra. These compounds were never structurally characterized.
Based on recent achievements in synthesizing novel transuranic starting materials, we were able to isolate four mono- and bimetallic tert-butoxides with Np(IV). [Np₃O(OtBu)₁₀] and [K₄Np₂O(OtBu)₁₀] were synthesized using the ligand substitution between neptunium(IV) silylamides and HOtBu, whereas the salt metathesis between [NpCl₄(DME)₂] (DME = dimethoxyethane) and various amounts of LiOtBu resulted in the formation of the oxo-free alkoxides [Np(OtBu)₄(py)₂] (py = pyridine) and [Li(THF)]₂[Np(OtBu)₆]. To the best of our knowledge, these compounds represent the first structurally characterized Np(IV) alkoxides using single crystal X-ray diffraction and solid-state UV-vis-NIR spectroscopy. Furthermore, treatment of [Np(OtBu)₄(py)₂] with [Fe(OtBu)₃]₂ results in the formation of a heterobimetallic complex [NpFe(OtBu)₇(py)]. A solvent dependent coordination motif on both metal sides was observed, leading to the formation of [NpFe(OtBu)₇].

Keywords: Actinides; single crystal X-ray diffraction; NMR spectroscopy; paramagnetism; alkoxides

  • Lecture (Conference)
    Actinides 2023, 05.-08.06.2023, Colorado, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37173
Publ.-Id: 37173


Data publication: Solving the puzzle of hierarchical martensitic microstructures in NiTi by (111)-oriented epitaxial films

Lünser, K.; Undisz, A.; Wagner, M.; Nielsch, K.; Fähler, S.

This dataset belongs to the paper "Solving the puzzle of hierarchical martensitic microstructures in NiTi by (111)-oriented epitaxial films" and contains all raw data used for the paper. It includes SEM, TEM, Texture measurements and inverse polfigures. It also contains the MATLAB code for calculating variant orientations, twin boundary and habit plane orientations, and inverse pole figures. Information about sample, measurement techniques and further data description can be found in README.txt.

Keywords: NiTi; martensitic microstructure; epitaxial film

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37172
Publ.-Id: 37172


Bonding trends in early actinide (Th-Pu) complex series

März, J.

Actinides (An) play an important role in chemical engineering and environmental science related to the nuclear industry or nuclear waste disposal. In contrast to the strongly shielded 4f electrons of the lanthanides, 5f electrons of particularly the early An are found to participate in bonding, e.g. to organic ligands. Another characteristic of the An is their huge variety of possible oxidation states, typically ranging from +II to +VII for early actinides, making their chemistry complex but interesting.
A suitable approach to explore fundamental physico-chemical properties of the actinides is to study series of isostructural An compounds in which the An is in the same oxidation state. Observed changes in e.g. the binding situation or magnetic effects among the An series may deliver insight into their unique electronic properties mainly originating from the f electrons. A question still remaining in the field of An chemistry is the degree of “covalency” in compounds across the actinide series, which may be addressed by systematic studies on series of An compounds, including transuranium elements.
We investigate the coordination chemistry of low-valent actinides using organic N-, O-, and S-donor ligands. Information on trends in covalency as well as mutual ligand influences can be obtained by the analysis of solid-state structures derived by SC-XRD in combination with quantum chemical calculations. Additional insight can be gained from high-energy-resolution fluorescence detection X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy. In solution, NMR spectroscopy permits to draw conclusions about the complex speciation in solution, the intrinsic magnetic properties of the actinides, or subtle changes in covalency in the ligand-actinide bonding.

Keywords: actinides; coordination chemistry; covalency; transuranium; bonding analyses

Related publications

  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    Actinides 2023, 04.-08.06.2023, Golden, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37171
Publ.-Id: 37171


Insights into hybrid functional parameters from the XC kernel

Moldabekov, Z.

Often the bulk properties of materials like the lattice constant (interparticle distance and/or separation), stress tensor, etc., at high pressures and temperatures differ significantly from those under ambient conditions. The situation is particularly unsatisfactory for warm dense matter (WDM), where basic atomic properties like an atomization energy become ill defined and where bulk properties such as bulk moduli cannot be accurately measured due to extreme conditions. This calls for an approach that allows the non-empirical choice of the parameters of hybrid functionals without employing properties limited to ambient conditions. At the same time, it is preferable that such an approach have some connection to properties that are well defined and measurable in experiments across temperature and pressure regimes. We report that the static XC kernel can serve as a theoretical device for constructing hybrid functionals that are non-empirical and that apply for both solid-state systems and WDM [1-3].

[1] Zhandos A. Moldabekov, Mani Lokamani, Jan Vorberger, Attila Cangi, and Tobias Dornheim, Non-empirical Mixing Coefficient for Hybrid XC Functionals from Analysis of the XC Kernel, The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 14, 1326–1333 (2023), https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.2c03670

[2] Zhandos Moldabekov, Maximilian Boeme, Jan Vorberger, David Blaschke, and Tobias Dornheim, Ab initio Static Exchange-Correlation Kernel across Jacob’s Ladder without functional derivatives, Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation 19, 1286–1299 (2023), https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.2c01180

[3] Zhandos A. Moldabekov, Mani Lokamani, Jan Vorberger, Attila Cangi, Tobias Dornheim, Assessing the accuracy of hybrid exchange-correlation functionals for the density response of warm dense electrons, J. Chem. Phys. 158, 094105 (2023)
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0135729

Keywords: hybrid functionals; XC kernel; KS-DFT; warm dense matter

  • Poster
    CECAM Flagship Workshop: Accelerating Improvements in Density Functional Theory, 21.-25.08.2023, Lausanne, Switzerland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37170
Publ.-Id: 37170


The Mu2e-II experiment at Fermilab

Müller, S.

Invited talk at CLFV23 conference, June 20 - 23, 2023.

Keywords: Mu2e-II; CLFV; FNAL

  • Open Access Logo Invited lecture (Conferences)
    4th International Conference on Charged Lepton Flavor Violation, 20.-23.06.2023, Heidelberg, Germany

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37169
Publ.-Id: 37169


Data publication: Europium(III) as luminescence probe for interactions of a sulfate-reducing microorganism with potentially toxic metals

Hilpmann, S.; Moll, H.; Drobot, B.; Vogel, M.; Hübner, R.; Stumpf, T.; Cherkouk, A.

The stored data sets represent both the raw data and the evaluated data that were used for the publication about interactions of a sulfate-reducing bacterium with europium(III).

Keywords: Europium(III) luminescence; Sulfate-reducing bacteria; Europium(III) bioprecipitation; Opalinus Clay pore water

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37168
Publ.-Id: 37168


Linear-response TDDFT of warm dense matter with static exchange-correlation kernel across Jacob’s ladder and temperature regimes

Moldabekov, Z.

We presetnt a method to compute a static exchange-correlation (XC) kernel across temperature regimes using KS-DFT for any XC functional available in Libxc [1]. We show the results of the static exchange-correlation kernel analysis using various XC functionals for dense electron gas and warm dense hydrogen. The results allow to better understund the effect of thermal excitations and density inhomogeneity on the XC kernel. Based on a comparison of KS-DFT data with high-precision Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) data for both high temperatures and the ground state, we present the results of the analysis of the accuracy of the commonly used XC functionals for warm dense matter simulations [1-4]. As an application of the static XC kernel, we discuss linear-response time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) approach to warm dense matter with adiabatic exchange--correlation kernels [5].

Keywords: KS-DFT; XC functional; static exchange-correlation kernel; warm dense matter

  • Lecture (Conference)
    The IEEE International Conference on Plasma Science (ICOPS) 2023, 21.05.2023, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37167
Publ.-Id: 37167


Static Exchange-Correlation Kernel Across Jacob’s Ladder and Temperature Regimes for Linear Response TDDFT of warm dense matter

Moldabekov, Z.

The exchange correlation kernel (XC) naturally arises within the framework of linear response theory as a key quantity for describing correlated systems of many particles. Particularly, the XC kernel is needed in linear response TDDFT (LR-TDDFT), which is a powerful ab initio method that
allows one to describe dynamical and transport properties of equilibrium quantum-many body systems. A standard approach of the calculation of the XC kernel in LR-TDDFT is based on the computation of the second order functional derivative of a XC functional with respect to density. For extended systems, this approach is limited to simple static (adiabatic) LDA and GGA (such as PBE ) level XC functionals due to mathematical and computational challenges of computing functional derivatives of meta-GGA and hybrid level functionals. In fact, only adiabatic LDA (ALDA) is available in commonly used open source DFT codes. We have overcome these limitations by developing a new method of the calculation of the XC kernel [1], which utilizes the method of a direct harmonic perturbation. The essence of the developed approach is to compute a static density response function of a system by measuring the density perturbation induced by an external static harmonic field; with density being extracted from an equilibrium KS-DFT simulation. An alternative and equivalent definition of the XC kernel as a difference between the inverse values of the density response functions of systems with non-zero and zero XC functionals allows us to access the XC kernel without explicitly computing functional derivatives. This allows one to compute the XC kernel using available XC functionals through the ranks of Jacob's ladder and for any temperature. We demonstrated the utility of this method by analyzing the XC kernel beyond GGA level including meta-GGA and hybrid XC functionals [1-3]. In addition, we have presented a workflow for using the static XC kernel from the direct perturbation approach in the
LR-TDDFT of warm dense matter [4].

[1] Zhandos Moldabekov, Maximilian Böhme, Jan Vorberger, David Blaschke, and Tobias
Dornheim, Ab Initio Static Exchange–Correlation Kernel across Jacob’s Ladder without Functional
Derivatives, Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation 19 (4), 1286-1299 (2023 )
[2] Zhandos A. Moldabekov, Mani Lokamani, Jan Vorberger, Attila Cangi, Tobias Dornheim,
Assessing the accuracy of hybrid exchange-correlation functionals for the density response of warm
dense electrons. J. Chem. Phys. 158 (9), 094105 (2023).
[3] Zhandos A. Moldabekov, Mani Lokamani, Jan Vorberger, Attila Cangi, and Tobias Dornheim,
Non-empirical Mixing Coefficient for Hybrid XC Functionals from Analysis of the XC Kernel, The
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 14 (5), 1326-1333 (2023)
[4] Zhandos A. Moldabekov, Michele Pavanello, Maximilian P. Böhme, Jan Vorberger, and Tobias
Dornheim, Linear-response time-dependent density functional theory approach to warm dense
matter with adiabatic exchange-correlation kernels, Phys. Rev. Research 5, 023089 (2023)

Keywords: exchange correlation kernel; linear response theory; LR-TDDFT; warm dense matter

  • Lecture (others)
    Warm Dense Matter Theory Seminar at Los Alamos National Laboratory, 30.05.2023, Los Alamos, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37166
Publ.-Id: 37166


Droplet-based real-time detection of the amylase in patients undergoing pancreatic surgery

Zhao, X.; Kolbinger, F. R.; Distler, M.; Weitz, J.; Makarov, D.; Bachmann, M.; Baraban, L.

To improve postoperative monitoring of patients undergoing pancreatic surgery, we propose a bedside, droplet-based millifluidic device that facilitates near real-time accurate and rapid determination of drain amylase activity. Drain liquid is co-encapsulated with a starch substrate in multiple nanoliter-sized reactors to track the fluorescence intensity released upon reaction with amylase. Comparing the amylase levels of 32 patient samples, 31 out of 32 millifluidic system results (96.9%) matched the clinical data within the 95% confidence interval. Importantly, the new millifluidic strategy significantly reduces the amylase assay time from several hours to approximately 3-4 minutes and offers a ca. 10 times lower limit of detection of 0.007 µmol/sL compared to that of current clinical techniques. Finally, we for the first time demonstrate the possibility of dynamic monitoring of amylase levels in the patient samples. Thus, the proposed droplet-based instant assay system could augment state-of-the-art clinical methods and significantly improve diagnosis of postoperative complications in patients after pancreatic surgery via near-real-time bedside monitoring.

  • Open Access Logo Poster
    Biosensors 2023 33rd Anniversary World Congress on Biosensors, 05.-08.06.2023, Busan, South Korea

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37164
Publ.-Id: 37164


FET-based Multiplexed Sensing Towards Clinical Applications in Cancer Immunotherapy

Nguyen Le, T. A.; Janićijević, Ž.; Zhao, X.; Feldmann, A.; Bachmann, M.; Baraban, L.

Oncology research has been an exciting area for the application of electrical biosensors over the last few decades. Extremely high sensitivity of field-effect transistor-based (FET) biosensors directed the interest of scientists mostly to early cancer detection applications. However, the potential of electrical biosensors should not be limited to cancer diagnosis. With immunotherapy on the way to become the fourth pillar of cancer treatment, there will be an increasing demand for immunoassay testing before, during, and after the conduction of therapeutic treatment. Our previous results have demonstrated the usefulness of FET-based biosensors in the research and development of a safer engineered chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells-based therapy. In this work, we continue to explore the practicality of electrical biosensors in the potential therapeutic setting of immunotherapy. Here, we present a complete stand-alone FET-based biosensing system relying on the extended gate (EG) concept. Our platform has an independent readout which is portable, compatible with multiplexed measurement, and self-sufficient for point-of-care sensing purposes. The extended gate sensing chip is disposable and can be tailored for the specific sensing application. Compared to the traditional ion-sensitive FET setup, EG FET provides improved flexibility, cost-effectiveness, and adaptiveness to individual needs making it a promising candidate for clinical application. During a universal CAR T-cells (UniCAR) therapy, “switch” molecules are injected into the patient’s bloodstream to activate the T-cell processes for attacking tumors. Therefore, it is crucial to monitor the level of CAR T-cells and switch molecules for better control and decision-making related to personalized treatment. Here, we demonstrate the application of our EG FET platform in testing the therapeutic components of this treatment and discuss the related outlook for FET-based biosensors in immunotherapy. Our work endeavors to bridge the gap between clinical needs in immunotherapy and available sensing technology by broadening the application area for electrical biosensors.

Keywords: Extended gate field-effect transistor; Biosensor; Multiplexed sensing; Immunotherapy; CAR T-cell therapy; UniCAR therapy

  • Open Access Logo Poster
    Biosensors 2023 33rd Anniversary World Congress on Biosensors, 05.-08.06.2023, Busan, Korea

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37163
Publ.-Id: 37163


Europium(III) as luminescence probe for interactions of a sulfate-reducing microorganism with potentially toxic metals

Hilpmann, S.; Moll, H.; Drobot, B.; Vogel, M.; Hübner, R.; Stumpf, T.; Cherkouk, A.

Microorganisms show a high affinity for trivalent actinides and lanthanides, which play an important role in the safe disposal of high-level radioactive waste as well as in the mining of various rare earth elements. The interaction of the lanthanide Eu(III) with the sulfate-reducing microorganism Desulfosporosinus hippei DSM 8344T, a representative of the genus Desulfosporosinus that naturally occurs in clay rock and bentonite, was in-vestigated. Eu(III) is often used as a non-radioactive analogue for the trivalent actinides Pu(III), Am(III), and Cm(III), which contribute to a major part of the radiotoxicity of the nuclear waste. D. hippei DSM 8344T showed a weak interaction with Eu(III), most likely due to a complexation with lactate in artificial Opalinus Clay pore water. Hence, a low removal of the lanthanide from the supernatant was observed. Scanning transmission electron microscopy coupled with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy revealed a bioprecipitation of Eu(III) with phosphates potentially excreted from the cells. This demonstrates that the ongoing interaction mechanisms are more complex than a sim-ple biosorption process. The bioprecipitation was also verified by luminescence spec-troscopy, which showed that the formation of the Eu(III) phosphate compounds starts almost immediately after the addition of the cells. Moreover, chemical microscopy pro-vided information on the local distribution of the different Eu(III) species in the formed cell aggregates. These results provide first insights into the interaction mechanisms of Eu(III) with sulfate-reducing bacteria and contribute to a comprehensive safety concept for a high-level radioactive waste repository, as well as to a better understanding of the fate of heavy metals (especially rare earth elements) in the environment.

Keywords: Europium(III) luminescence; Sulfate-reducing bacteria; Europium(III) bioprecipitation; Opalinus Clay pore water

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37162
Publ.-Id: 37162


Influence of engineered roughness microstructures on adhesion and turbulent resuspension of microparticles

Banari, A.; Graebe, K.; Rudolph, M.; Mohseni, E.; Lorenz, P.; Zimmer, K.; Hübner, R.; Henry, C.; Bossy, M.; Hampel, U.; Lecrivain, G.

From microplastics resuspending into the atmosphere to earth particles left behind during extraterrestrial explorations, the resuspension of microparticles by a turbulent gas flow occurs in many natural and industrial systems. Wall surfaces, onto which particles initially adhere, are rarely smooth and this surface roughness affects their resuspension. Available experimental data on particle resuspension have been obtained with substrates, whose surfaces are either unaltered or manually abraded with, for instance, sand blasting. In these experiments, the roughness elements span a wide size range and are in-homogeneously distributed in space. Surface functionalization is a modern technique allowing the precise fabrication of a wall surface with well-characterized microstructures, hence reducing the asperity randomness associated with conventional abrasion techniques. Taking advantage of surface functionalization, we present here a new set of reference data, where the wall asperities are represented by a structured arrangement of micropillars and microcubes. Adhesion force measurements and particle remaining fraction against gas velocity, at Reynolds number up to 8000, are reported for one reference and two artificially roughened substrates. Laboratory measurements show that the microasperities have little to moderate effect on the mean adhesion force and the threshold velocity, at which half of the 100-µm particles resuspend. The standard deviations are, however, significantly affected. The presented results will primary contribute to the improvement of resuspension models, which until now rely on a simplified representation of the surface roughness elements. The presented measurements are highly compatible with such models, which involve elementary roughness features, such as hemispherical asperities superimposed with a flat plate.

Keywords: Particle resuspension; Adhesion force measurement; Turbulent gas flow; Surface functionalization; Surface roughness

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37161
Publ.-Id: 37161


Effect of mesonic off-shell correlations in the PNJL equation of state

Maslov, K.; Blaschke, D.

We study the meson contribution to the equation of state of the 2-flavor Polyakov-loop Nambu–Jona-Lasinio model, including the full momentum dependence of the meson polarization loops. Within the Beth-Uhlenbeck approach, we demonstrate that the contribution from the quark-antiquark continuum excitations in the spacelike region ω^2 − q^2 < 0, i.e., the Landau damping, leads to an increase of the pressure for temperatures ≳0.8T^χ_c and a significant meson momentum cutoff dependence in the mesonic pressure and the QCD trace anomaly. We investigate the dependence of the results on the choice of the Polyakov-loop potential parameter T_0. From the dependence of the mesonic pressure on the current quark mass, by means of the Feynman-Hellmann theorem, we evaluate the contribution of the pion quasiparticle
gas and Landau damping to the chiral condensate.

Keywords: Polyakov-loop Nambu–Jona-Lasinio model; Beth-Uhlenbeck approach; chiral condensate; Landau damping; mesonic pressure; equation of state

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37160
Publ.-Id: 37160


Ultrafast Dynamics of Spin-Density Wave Order in BaFe2As2 under High Pressures

Pashkin, O.

We utilize pump-probe spectroscopy to measure the quasiparticle relaxation dynamics of BaFe2As2 in a diamond anvil cell at pressures up to 4.4 GPa and temperatures down to 8 K. Tracing the amplitude of the relaxation process results in an electronic phase diagram that illustrates the variation of the spin-density wave (SDW) order across the whole range of the applied pressures and temperatures. We observe a slowing down of the SDW relaxation dynamics in the vicinity of the phase transition boundary. However, its character depends on the trajectory in the phase diagram: the slowing down occurs gradually for the pressure-induced transition at low temperatures and abruptly for the thermally-driven transition. Our results suggest that the pressure-induced quantum phase transition in BaFe2As2 is related to the gradual worsening of the Fermi-surface nesting conditions.

  • Poster
    Dynamical Control of Quantum Materials, 22.-26.05.2023, Dresden, Germany

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37159
Publ.-Id: 37159


COVID19 Model Based Projection Visualizer

Vyskocil, J.; Senapati, A.

Modifications done by the CASUS team to the visualization website for MATSim/EpiSim software, originally developed by TU Berlin at https://github.com/matsim-vsp/covid-sim, as used on the Where2Test website https://www.where2test.de/covidsim. Snapshot of the version used on the Where2Test website as of the project end by 26.06.2023 published here to fulfill the obligations of the AGPL license.

Keywords: COVID19

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37158
Publ.-Id: 37158


Forecasting methods for the datasets of Covid 19 for Sachsen and Czechia

Abdussalam, W.

This project consists of forecasting methods for the datasets of Covid 19 for Sachsen and Czechia, and the associated data. In a live setting it is automatically updated via a CI/CD pipeline (e.g. GitLab), and uploaded to a database that can be then accessed by a webserver backend, or a similar data consumer. This dataset has served as a basis for Where2Test website forecast dashboards for Sachsen and Czechia.

Keywords: COVID19

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37157
Publ.-Id: 37157


Automatic deployment scripts for Covidsim/Episim web visualizer

Vyskocil, J.

These scripts perform post-processing tasks of data produced by the Episim simulation framework on a HPC cluster, and facilitate automated upload of the post-processed data to a webserver running the Covidsim visualizer. Authentication is based on SSH keys, and the upload itself can be triggered either via a cronjob on the webserver, or via a git hook initiated by an external CI/CD pipeline (e.g. GitLab).

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37156
Publ.-Id: 37156


Where2Test Website Frontend

Mertel, A.

Frontend of the main Where2Test website. It presents information collected by the backend, and performs client-side calculations for mini-apps that need these. All apps displayed by the frontend are:

  • Retirement Home Testing Optmizer
  • Risk Calculator
  • Workplace Occupancy Optimizer
  • Forecast Dashboards

The frontend is written in the REACT.js framework.

Keywords: COVID19

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37155
Publ.-Id: 37155


Where2Test Website Backend

Mertel, A.; Vyskocil, J.; Davoodi Monfared, M.; Abdussalam, W.

Source code for the backend of the Where2Test website. The backend connects to a database and scrapes online information needed to run the following mini-applications that make up the Where2Test COVID research project website:

  • Retirement Home Testing Optimizer
  • COVID-19 Workplace Occupancy Optimizer
  • Saxony Wastewater Forecast Dashboard
  • Regional Forecast Dashboards

The backend is written in the Python programming language using the Flask web application framework.

Keywords: COVID19

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37154
Publ.-Id: 37154


MRI-based parameter inference for cerebral perfusion modelling in health and ischaemic stroke

Jósza, T.; Petr, J.; Payne, S. J.; Mutsaerts, H.-J.

To date, perfusion simulations in the human brain have been limited to a relatively small number of patient-specific cases. Here, a
pipeline relying on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is proposed to overcome this limitation. The computational geometry is
adjusted using T1-weighted MRI, whereas the perfusion model parameters are tuned based on arterial spin labeling perfusion MRI. A
cohort of 75 patients is considered to demonstrate that the pipeline is suitable to generate virtual patients with statistically realistic
cerebral blood flow maps. In the future, in silico clinical trials will be conducted using similar virtual cohorts to improve ischaemic
stroke interventions.

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37153
Publ.-Id: 37153


Data publication: Pattern recognition in reciprocal space with a magnon-scattering reservoir

Körber, L.; Heins, C.; Hula, T.; Kim, J.-V.; Thlang, S.; Schultheiß, H.; Schultheiß, K.

This data publication contains the data for our publication "Pattern recognition in reciprocal space with a magnon-scattering reservoir" published in Nature Communications. The dataset is structured in folders corresponding to the different figures in the paper. Folder Fig2 and Fig2 contain the experimental data measured with Brillouin-light-scattering microscopy. The files contain the data integrated for the measurement positions described in the methods section in a csv format. Forlder Fig4 contains the evaluated numerical data presented in the corresponding figure. The raw data generated with micromagnetic simulations is too large for this dataset and is available upon request by the authors.

Keywords: spin wave; magnon; vortex; Brillouin-light scattering; BLS; reservoir computing; neuromorphic computing; nonlinear; three-magnon scattering; micromagnetic simulations

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37152
Publ.-Id: 37152


Data publication: Comparative saturation binding analysis of ⁶⁴Cu-labeled somatostatin analogs using cell homogenates and intact cells

Ullrich, M.; Brandt, F.; Löser, R.; Pietzsch, J.; Wodtke, R.

Saturation binding data

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37151
Publ.-Id: 37151


Indirect evidence for elemental hydrogen in laser-compressed hydrocarbons

Kraus, D.; Vorberger, J.; Hartley, N. J.; Lütgert, J.; Rödel, M.; Chekrygina, D.; Döppner, T.; van Driel, T.; Falcone, R. W.; Fletcher, L. B.; Frydrych, S.; Galtier, E.; Gericke, D. O.; Glenzer, S. H.; Granados, E.; Inubushi, Y.; Kamimura, N.; Katagiri, K.; Macdonald, M. J.; Mackinnon, A. J.; Matsuoka, T.; Miyanishi, K.; McBride, E. E.; Nam, I.; Neumayer, P.; Ozaki, N.; Pak, A.; Ravasio, A.; Saunders, A. M.; Schuster, A. K.; Stevenson, M. G.; Sueda, K.; Sun, P.; Togashi, T.; Voigt, K.; Yabashi, M.; Yabuuchi, T.

We demonstrate a significantly simplified experimental approach for investigating liquid metallic hydrogen, which is crucial to
understand the internal structure and evolution of giant planets. Plastic samples were shockcompressed and then probed by
short pulses of X-rays generated by free electron lasers. By comparison with ab initio simulations, we provide indirect
evidence for the creation of elemental hydrogen in shock-compressed plastics at ∼150GPa and ∼5,000K and thus in a
regime where hydrogen is predicted to be metallic. Being the most common form of condensed matter in our solar system,
and ostensibly the simplest of all elements, hydrogen is the model case for many theoretical studies and we provide a new
possibility to benchmark models for conditions with extreme pressures and temperatures. Moreover, this approach will also
allow to probe the chemical behavior of metallic hydrogen in mixture with other elements, which, besides its importance for
planetary physics, may open up promising pathways for the synthesis of new materials.

Keywords: hydrogen; metallic hydrogen; warm dense matter; x-ray diffraction; x-ray free electron laser

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37150
Publ.-Id: 37150


Actinide(IV) Complexes Containing 2-Mercaptopyridyl

Balas, J.; Urbank, C.; Kaden, P.; März, J.; Gericke, R.

Actinides (An) play an important role in chemical research and environmental science related to the nuclear industry or nuclear waste repositories. Investigating their coordination chemistry can function as a tool to obtain fundamental understanding of actinide binding. Due to the radiotoxicity of actinide complexes, special care in handling those material is needed in form of working in a controlled area lab. Therefore, the understanding of complexation properties of the actinides, in particular the transuranium (TRU) elements, is lacking behind those of the d- or 4f-elements.
For the early actinides possible oxidation states typically range from +II to +VII. A suitable approach to explore fundamental physico-chemical properties of the actinides is to study series of isostructural An compounds in which the An is in the same oxidation state. Therefore, our investigations are directed towards the synthesis of actinide complexes (An = Th, U, Np, and Pu) with the f-element in the oxidation state IV, the dominant oxidation state particularly under anoxic conditions. Observed changes in e.g. the binding situation or magnetic effects along such series deliver insight into the elements’ unique electronic properties mainly originating from the f-electrons. One important question in the field of An chemistry is the degree of “covalency” in compounds across the An series, which may be addressed by systematic studies on series of An compounds, including transuranium (TRU) elements.
An complexes using ambidentate ligand systems can give valuable information on covalency differences between soft and hard donor atoms in one complex system. We therefore chose the 2-mercaptopyridyl ligand system (PyS) as monoanionic ambidentate S,N-moiety. Due to possible resonance structures in the ligand backbone, the negative charge can be distributed over both donor atoms. This leaves sufficient flexibility for PyS to coordinate to the actinide atom in a S- or N-monodentate or S,N-chelating manner. We synthesized a series of PyS-containing Th, U, Np, and Pu complexes and compare their structural and spectroscopic characteristics along the early actinides. These results are used as a basis to further analyze bonding trends along the actinide series by means of quantum chemical calculations.
From the results, trendlines along the actinides were obtained, which shed some light in the ongoing debate of covalency in actinide bonding.

Keywords: 2-Mercaptopyridyl; actinides; chemical bonding; synthesis; single crystal X-ray diffraction; NMR spectroscopy

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  • Lecture (Conference)
    Actinides 2023, 05.-08.06.2023, Colorado, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37149
Publ.-Id: 37149


Data for publication in Nature Communications: Search for 22Na in novae supported by a novel method for measuring femtosecond nuclear lifetimes

Fougères, C.; de Oliveira Santos, F.; José, J.; Michelagnoli, C.; Clément, E.; Kim, Y. H.; Lemasson, A.; Guimarães, V.; Barrientos, D.; Bemmerer, D.; Benzoni, G.; Boston, A. J.; Böttger, R.; Boulay, F.; Bracco, A.; Celikovic, I.; Cederwall, B.; Ciemala, M.; Delafosse, C.; Domingo-Pardo, C.; Dudouet, J.; Eberth, J.; Fülöp, Z.; González, V.; Gottardo, A.; Goupil, J.; Hess, H.; Jungclaus, A.; Kaskas, A.; Korichi, A.; Lenzi, S. M.; Leoni, S.; Li, H.; Ljungvall, J.; Lopez-Martens, A.; Menegazzo, R.; Mengoni, D.; Million, B.; Mrazek, J.; Napoli, D. R.; Navin, A.; Nyberg, J.; Podolyak, Z.; Pullia, A.; Quintana, B.; Ralet, D.; Redon, N.; Reiter, P.; Rezynkina, K.; Saillant, F.; Salsac, M. D.; Sánchez-Benítez, A. M.; Sanchis, E.; Senyigit, M.; Siciliano, M.; Smirnova, N. A.; Sohler, D.; Stanoiu, M.; Theisen, C.; Valiente-Dobón, J. J.; Ujic, P.; Zielinska, M.

https://u.ganil-spiral2.eu/10.26143/GANIL-2016-E710.html

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37148
Publ.-Id: 37148


Strömungsbeeinflussung durch Lorentzkräfte

Nash, W.; Weier, T.

Im Zusammenspiel magnetischer und elektrischer Felder entstehen
elektromagnetische Kräfte. Deren praktische Anwendung z. B. in Elektromotoren ist aus unserem Alltag nicht mehr wegzudenken.
Elektromagnetische Kräfte sind aber auch in der Lage, leitfähige Flüssigkeiten, wie Elektrolyte und Metallschmelzen, kontaktlos zu beeinflussen.
Die Vielfalt an Strömungskonfigurationen, die mit einfachen Permanentmagneten in einer Elektrolysezelle einstellbar sind, wird im Experiment
demonstriert.

Keywords: Lorentz force; flow control; PIV

  • Poster
    Lange Nacht der Wissenschaften, 30.06.2023, Dresden, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37147
Publ.-Id: 37147


Energielandschaft und Speicher im Wandel der Zeiten

Weier, T.

Energie ist auf vielfltige Weise mit dem Leben verknüpft. Im Laufe der Geschichte dominierten unterschiedliche Energieträger. Der Vortrag nimmt sie unter die Lupe und zeigt den Wandel ihrer Nutzung und die damit verbundenen Konsequenzen. Ein Schwerpunkt ist die im Horizon 2020 Projekt SOLSTICE entwickelte Speichertechnologie.

Keywords: liquid metal battery; SOLSTICE; ZEBRA; deforestation; prime movers; power density; material demand

  • Lecture (Conference)
    Lange Nacht der Wissenschaften, 30.06.2023, Dresden, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37146
Publ.-Id: 37146


Flüssigmetallbatterien als Pufferspeicher für grüne Energie

Weier, T.

Die geplante Umstellung des Energiesystems auf fluktuierende Erzeuger zieht einen immensen Bedarf an Speichern nach sich, um Angebot und Nachfrage auszugleichen. Der Vortrag stellt verschiedene Arten von Flüssigmetallbatterien vor, die derzeit mit dem Ziel einer ökonomischen stationären Energiespeicherung entwickelt werden.

Keywords: liquid metal battery; ZEBRA; SOLSTICE

  • Lecture (Conference)
    Matchmaking Energie, 30.06.2023, Dresden, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37145
Publ.-Id: 37145


Pufferspeicher für „grüne“ Energie - Potential der Flüssigmetallbatterie

Weier, T.

Die geplante Umstellung des Energiesystems auf fluktuierende Erzeuger zieht einen immensen Bedarf an Speichern nach sich, um Angebot und Nachfrage auszugleichen. Der Vortrag stellt verschiedene Arten von Flüssigmetallbatterien vor, die derzeit mit dem Ziel einer ökonomischen stationären Energiespeicherung entwickelt werden.

Keywords: liquid metal battery; ZEBRA; SOLSTICE

  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    Energy Saxony Summit 2023, 22.06.2023, Freiberg, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37144
Publ.-Id: 37144


Search for 22Na in novae supported by a novel method for measuring femtosecond nuclear lifetimes

Fougères, C.; de Oliveira Santos, F.; José, J.; Michelagnoli, C.; Clément, E.; Kim, Y. H.; Lemasson, A.; Guimarães, V.; Barrientos, D.; Bemmerer, D.; Benzoni, G.; Boston, A. J.; Böttger, R.; Boulay, F.; Bracco, A.; Celikovic, I.; Cederwall, B.; Ciemala, M.; Delafosse, C.; Domingo-Pardo, C.; Dudouet, J.; Eberth, J.; Fülöp, Z.; González, V.; Gottardo, A.; Goupil, J.; Hess, H.; Jungclaus, A.; Kaskas, A.; Korichi, A.; Lenzi, S. M.; Leoni, S.; Li, H.; Ljungvall, J.; Lopez-Martens, A.; Menegazzo, R.; Mengoni, D.; Million, B.; Mrazek, J.; Napoli, D. R.; Navin, A.; Nyberg, J.; Podolyak, Z.; Pullia, A.; Quintana, B.; Ralet, D.; Redon, N.; Reiter, P.; Rezynkina, K.; Saillant, F.; Salsac, M. D.; Sánchez-Benítez, A. M.; Sanchis, E.; Senyigit, M.; Siciliano, M.; Smirnova, N. A.; Sohler, D.; Stanoiu, M.; Theisen, C.; Valiente-Dobón, J. J.; Ujic, P.; Zielinska, M.

Classical novae are thermonuclear explosions in stellar binary sys- tems, and important sources of 26Al and 22Na. While γ rays from the decay of the former radioisotope have been observed throughout the Galaxy, 22Na remains untraceable. Its half-life (2.6 yr) would allow the observation of its 1.275 MeV γ-ray line from a cosmic source. However, the prediction of such an observation requires good knowl- edge of its nucleosynthesis. The 22Na(p,γ)23Mg reaction remains the only source of large uncertainty about the amount of 22Na ejected. Its rate is dominated by a single resonance on the short-lived state at 7785.0(7) keV in 23Mg. Here, a combined analysis of particle-particle correlations and velocity-difference profiles is proposed to measure femtosecond nuclear lifetimes. The application of this method to the study of the 23Mg states, places strong limits on the amount of 22Na produced in novae and constrains its detectability with future space-borne observatories.

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37142
Publ.-Id: 37142


Improving susceptibility of neuroendocrine tumors to radionuclide therapies: personalized approaches towards complementary treatments

Richter, S.; Steenblock, C.; Lemm, S.; Ziegler, C. G.; Bechmann, N.; Nölting, S.; Pietzsch, J.; Ullrich, M.

Radionuclide therapies are an important tool for the management of patients with neuroendocrine tumors (NETs). Especially [131I]MIBG and [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-TATE are routinely used for the treatment of a subset of NETs, including phechromocytomas, paragangliomas and gastroenteropancreatic tumors. Some patients suffering from other forms of NETs, such as medullary thyroid carcinoma or neuroblastoma, were shown to respond to radionuclide therapy; however, no general recommendations exist. Although [131I]MIBG and [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-TATE can delay disease progression and improve quality of life, complete remissions are achieved rarely. Hence, better individually tailored combination regimes are required. This review summarizes currently applied radionuclide therapies in the context of NETs and informs about recent advances in the development of theranostic agents that might enable targeting subgroups of NETs that previously did not respond to [131I]MIBG or [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-TATE. Moreover, molecular pathways involved in NET tumorigenesis and progression that mediate features of radioresistance and are particularly related to the stemness of cancer cells are discussed. Pharmacological inhibition of such pathways might result in radiosensitization or general complementary antitumor effects in patients with certain genetic, transcriptomic, or metabolic characteristics. Finally, we provide an overview of approved targeted agents that might be beneficial in combination with radionuclide therapies in the context of a personalized molecular profiling approach.

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37141
Publ.-Id: 37141


First HELIPORT Workshop 2023 - Book of Abstracts

Kessler, A.; Ponomaryov, A.; Mistry, A. K.; Barty, A.; Irman, A.; Schneidewind, A.; Schuller, B.; Gou, B.; Edward Marre, B.; Murphy, B.; Becker, C.; Hundt, C.; Lee, C.-L.; Gutt, C.; Schneide, C.; Engelhardt, C.; Pape, D.; Rau, F.; Maas, F.; Schreiber, F.; Bethke, F.; Guenther, G.; Juckeland, G.; Pruß, G.; Schlenvoigt, H.-P.; Deinert, J.-C.; Grunwaldt, J.-D.; Kelling, J.; Hein, J.; Sperling, J.; Schwarz, K.; Tippey, K. E.; Steinmeier, L.; Amelung, L.; Christoph Kaluza, M.; Lokamani, M.; Hanisch, M.; Voigt, M.; Bussmann, M.; Kurzweil, M.; Hoffmann, N.; Wagner, N.; Knodel, O.; Mannix, O.; Ufer, P.; Baumgärtel, P.; Müller-Pfefferkorn, R.; Baunack, S.; Busch, S.; Sachse, S.; Starke, S.; Kovalev, S.; Vadilonga, S.; Bock, S.; Müller, S.; Schoebel, S.; Gruber, T.; Kluge, T.; Unruh, T.; Lohstroh, W.; Horn, W.

In our HELIPORT workshop, we provided insights into our project and share our results. In addition, we would like to provide a platform for the presentation of similar projects, as well as extensions or integrations from the surrounding research areas. The overall goal of the workshop is bringing together different institutions with similar challenges and establishing a community around our HELIPORT project.
We therefore encouraged our community to submit an abstract for a talk or poster. The submissions are dedicated to four thematic points:

  • HELIPORTuse-cases,
  • Scientificprojectandmetadatamanagement, • Experiment-specificandoverallmetadataand • Scientificworkflows.
HELIPORT (Helmholtz ScIentific Project WORkflow PlaTform) itself is a project funded by the Helmholtz Metadata Collaboration, and runs from July 2021 until June 2023. HELIPORT aims to make the entire life cycle of a scientific project findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable according to the FAIR principles. In particular, our data management solution deals with the areas from the generation of the data to the publication of primary research data, the workflows carried out and the actual research results. For this purpose, a concept was developed which shows the various essential components and their connections.

Keywords: Data Management; Metadata Management; Heliport; Helmholtz Metadata Collaboration; Computational Workflow

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37140
Publ.-Id: 37140


Data publication: Ultrafast Relaxation Dynamics of Spin-Density Wave Order in BaFe2As2 under High Pressures

Fotev, I.; Winnerl, S.; Aswartham, S.; Wurmehl, S.; Büchner, B.; Schneider, H.; Helm, M.; Pashkin, O.

Raw pump-probe data for two Ba-122 DAC fillings used in the paper, photos of the samples inside the DAC, Matlab script for constructing the p-T plot of the SDW order

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37139
Publ.-Id: 37139


Understanding electronic correlations in warm dense quantum plasmas

Dornheim, T.

Warm dense matter (WDM)---an extreme state that is characterized by extreme densities and temperatures---has emerged as one of the most active frontiers in plasma physics and material science. In nature, WDM occurs in astrophysical objects such as giant planet interiors and brown dwarfs. In addition, WDM is highly important for cutting-edge technological applications such as inertial confinement fusion and the discovery of novel materials. In the laboratory, WDM is studied experimentally in large facilities around the globe, and new techniques have facilitated unprecedented insights. Yet, the interpretation of these experiments requires a reliable diagnostics based on accurate theoretical modeling, which is a notoriously difficult task [1]. In this work, I will give an overview of how we can use exact ab-initio path integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) simulations [2] together with thermal density functional theory (DFT) calculations to get new insights into the behavior of WDM. Moreover, I will show how switching to the imaginary time representation allows us to significantly improve the interpretation of X-ray Thomson scattering (XRTS) experiments, which are a key diagnostic for WDM [3]. Specifically, I will present a model-free temperature diagnostic [4] based on the well-known principle of detailed balance, but available for all wave numbers, and a new idea to directly extract the electron— electron static structure factor from an XRTS measurement [5]. As an outlook, I will show how new PIMC capabilities will allow to give us novel insights into electronic correlations in warm dense quantum plasmas, leading to unprecedented agreement between experiments [6] and theory.

[1] M. Bonitz et al., Physics of Plasmas 27, 042710 (2020)

[2] M. Böhme et al., Physical Review Letters 129, 066402 (2022)

[3] S. Glenzer and R. Redmer, Reviews of Modern Physics 81, 1625 (2009)

[4] T. Dornheim et al., Nature Communications 13, 7911 (2022)

[5] T. Dornheim et al., arXiv:2305.15305 (submitted)

[6] T. Döppner et al., Nature 618, 270-275 (2023)

  • Lecture (others)
    High Energy Density Science Center Seminars, 22.06.2023, Livermore, California, USA

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37138
Publ.-Id: 37138


First-principles modeling of electronic transport properties and physics-informed machine learning for electron dynamics

Cangi, A.

In this talk, I will present our research on the application of time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) to model observables induced in matter under extreme conditions. Specifically, I will discuss the electron loss function in scattering experiments with X-ray free electron lasers [1] and the electrical conductivity in metals [2, 3]. Additionally, I will explore the potential of physics-informed neural networks for solving the time-dependent Kohn-Sham equations, which describe electron dynamics in response to incident electromagnetic waves [4].

[1] Z. Moldabekov, T. Dornheim, A. Cangi, Sci. Rep. 12, 1093 (2022).
[2] K. Ramakrishna, M. Lokamani, A. Baczewski, J. Vorberger, A. Cangi, Phys. Rev. B 107, 115131 (2023).
[3] K. Ramakrishna, M. Lokamani, A. Baczewski, J. Vorberger, A. Cangi, arXiv:2210.10132 (2022).
[4] K. Shah, P. Stiller, N. Hoffmann, A. Cangi, NeurIPS Machine Learning and the Physical Sciences, arXiv:2210.12522 (2022).

Keywords: materials science; atomic physics; density functional theory; transport properties; neural networks; electron dynamics

  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    2023 TDDFT School & Workshop: Excited states and dynamics, 05.-08.07.2023, 195 University Ave, Newark, NJ 07102, United States

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37137
Publ.-Id: 37137


First-principles modeling of electronic transport properties and the prospects of machine learning the electronic structure of matter at scale

Cangi, A.

In this talk, I will present two lines of our research. In the first part, I will discuss the application of time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) in modeling observables induced in matter under extreme conditions, such as the electron loss function relevant to scattering experiments with X-ray free electron lasers [1] and the electrical conductivity in metals [2]. In the second part, I will highlight our recent progress in leveraging Artificial Intelligence (AI) to enhance the efficiency of electronic structure calculations [3]. Specifically, I will focus on our efforts to accelerate Kohn-Sham density functional theory calculations at finite temperatures by integrating deep neural networks into the Materials Learning Algorithms framework [4,5]. Our results demonstrate significant improvements in calculation speed for metals up to their melting point. Additionally, our implementation of automated machine learning has led to substantial savings in computational resources for identifying optimal neural network architectures, paving the way for large-scale AI-driven investigations [6]. Lastly, I will present our latest breakthrough, showcasing the capability of neural-network-driven electronic structure calculations for systems containing over 100,000 atoms [7].

[1] Z. Moldabekov, T. Dornheim, A. Cangi, Sci. Rep. 12, 1093 (2022).
[2] K. Ramakrishna, M. Lokamani, A. Baczewski, J. Vorberger, A. Cangi, Phys. Rev. B 107, 115131 (2023).
[3] L. Fiedler, K. Shah, M. Bussmann, A. Cangi, Phys. Rev. Materials 6, 040301, (2022).
[4] A. Cangi, J. A. Ellis, L. Fiedler, D. Kotik, N. A. Modine, V. Oles, G. A. Popoola, S. Rajamanickam, S. Schmerler, J. A. Stephens, A. P. Thompson, MALA, https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5557254 (2021).
[5] J. A. Ellis, L. Fiedler, G. A. Popoola, N. A. Modine, J. A. Stephens, A. P. Thompson, A. Cangi, Phys. Rev. B 104, 035120 (2021).
[6] L. Fiedler, N. Hoffmann, P. Mohammed, G. A. Popoola, T. Yovell, V. Oles, J. A. Ellis, S. Rajamanickam, A. Cangi, Mach. Learn.: Sci. Technol. 3, 045008 (2022).
[7] L. Fiedler, N. A. Modine, S. Schmerler, D. J. Vogel, G. A. Popoola, A. P. Thompson, S. Rajamanickam, A. Cangi, Npj Comput. Mater., accepted (2023).

Keywords: density functional theory; electrical conductivity; machine learning; transport properties; neural networks; materials science; computational physics

  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    High energy density science seminar series, 29.06.2023, 7000 East Ave, Livermore, CA 94550, United States

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37136
Publ.-Id: 37136


Definition of the neutronics benchmark of the NuScale-like core

Fridman, E.; Bilodid, Y.; Valtavirta, V.

This paper defines a 3D full core neutronics benchmark which is based on the NuScale small modular reactor (SMR) concept. The paper provides a detailed description of the NuScale-like core, a list of expected outputs, and a reference solution to the benchmark exercises obtained with the Monte Carlo code Serpent.

The benchmark was developed in the framework of the Euratom McSAFER project and can be used for verification of computational chains dedicated to 3D full-core neutronics simulations of water cooled SMRs.

The paper is supplemented with a digital data set to ease the modeling process.

Keywords: NuScale; SMR; Serpent; Monte Carlo; benchmark

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37135
Publ.-Id: 37135


Ultrafast Relaxation Dynamics of Spin-Density Wave Order in BaFe2As2 under High Pressures

Fotev, I.; Winnerl, S.; Aswartham, S.; Wurmehl, S.; Büchner, B.; Schneider, H.; Helm, M.; Pashkin, O.

BaFe2As2 is the parent compound for a family of iron-based high-temperature superconductors as well as a prototypical example of the spin-density wave (SDW) system. In this study, we perform an optical pump-probe study of this compound to systematically investigate the SDW order across the pressure-temperature phase diagram. The suppression of the SDW order by pressure manifests itself by the increase of relaxation time together with the decrease of the pump-probe signal and the pump energy necessary for complete vaporization of the SDW condensate. We have found that the pressure-driven suppression of the SDW order at low temperature occurs gradually in contrast to the thermally-induced SDW transition. Our results suggest that the pressure-driven quantum phase transition in BaFe2As2 (and probably other iron pnictides) is continuous and it is caused by the gradual worsening of the Fermi-surface nesting conditions.

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37134
Publ.-Id: 37134


Data publication: Equilibrium Taylor bubble in a narrow vertical tube with constriction

Maestri, R.; Radhakrishnakumar, S.; Bürkle, F.; Ding, W.; Büttner, L.; Czarske, J.; Hampel, U.; Lecrivain, G.

Data used in the article Equilibrium Taylor bubble in a narrow vertical tube with constriction.

Compressed in the 7Z File:

Data: Values used for bubble velocity in Fig. 4 and values extracted from the wall shape in the different tubes;

Figures: All figures used in the publication;

Videos: Videos in mp4 or avi.

Keywords: Bubble dynamics; Interfacial flows; Deformation; Multiphase flows; Taylor bubbles.

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37133
Publ.-Id: 37133


Automatic Tuning of the Spectral Shape of an Ultra-High-Intensity Laser system

Bethke, F.

In laser wakefield acceleration, a laser pulse interacts with plasma to accelerate electrons.
These novel small-scale accelerators require an ultra-short, high-intensity laser system. The
intensity and its temporal distribution can be described by the spectrum of the laser. Initially,
this spectrum has the characteristics of a time-varying Gaussian-like shape with several smaller
peaks and fluctuations. Before the laser can be used in experiments, it must be amplified to
the desired intensities. If the initial spectrum is amplified, the uneven intensity distribution of
the Gaussian-like shape can lead to high intensities at the wavelengths at the corresponding
peak positions. These high intensities form a potential threat due to the amount of energy
present over a short period, which could lead to the loss and destruction of laboratory equip-
ment. Consequently, the spectrum must be equalized in gain. To achieve gain equalization,
the shape of the spectrum must be changed accordingly, subject to the time-varying unmodi-
fied initial spectrum.
One option for performing the spectral shaping is the ”Mazzler” device developed and con-
structed by the French companies, Fastlite and Amplitude technologies. This device can modify
an optical input beam in a flexible manner and be adjusted to complex settings. However, this
is currently performed by an proprietary feedback loop shipped with the device. Consequently,
the details and inner workings of this software are inaccessible. The feedback loop has only a
single mode of operation, which is the purposing of a single predefined spectral target. This
target is the equalization of the spectral gain, in which the intensities of the spectrum are
more evenly distributed, thereby allowing for better amplification. While this modification of
the spectrum is achieved by the feedback loop to a reliable and sufficient degree, multiple iter-
ations of the underlying algorithm are needed to reach the desired state. Since the execution
of each of these steps requires manual interaction, the question of a faster solution arises.
Approaching this task in a data-driven manner is a promising direction for achieving this, since
the corresponding methods allow utilization of already existing experience in the form of data,
gained by modifying spectra in the past. Unlike the current feedback loop, this would imply that
prior executions in previous optimization procedures were not forgotten, but used to build a
model capable of reaching the desired goal more quickly. Furthermore, a method capable of
this could potentially also be used to perform other modifications to the spectra, demonstrat-
ing promising features important for specific use cases such as laser wakefield acceleration.
The generation and optimization of settings for the Mazzler device with neural networks is
the major task introduced in this thesis. An actor-critic model with multiple adaptations of the
algorithm and the underlying models is presented and proposed as an novel approach to this
problem. These models are capable of optimizing in a large, continuous domain through the
exploration-based generation of data, enabling to reach states not present in any available
data. This makes them especially suitable for the optimization of Mazzler settings to modify
spectra in an unprecedented manner. Furthermore, extensive data-related processing to re-
strict the state and action-space of the method are investigated to enable stable operation
and improved efficiency of the hardware in the laboratory. Corresponding results gathered
over multiple days in the DRACO laser laboratory of HZDR are presented with the proposed
method controlling the Mazzler device. Additionally, since execution of these experiments re-
quires hardware interaction, an implementation of this functionality is presented.

Keywords: Machine Learning; Deep Learning; Reinforcement Learning; DRACO; Mazzler

  • Master thesis
    TU Dresden, 2023

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37132
Publ.-Id: 37132


Numerical study of flashing pipe flow using a TFM-PBM coupled method:Effect of interfacial heat transfer and bubble coalescence and breakup

Li, J.; Liao, Y.; Zhou, P.; Lucas, D.; Li, Q.

In the present work, the two-fluid model (TFM) is coupled with the population balance model (PBM) to trace the spatial and temporal change of bubble size and interfacial area concentration (IAC) in flashing flows. The model is first validated for bubble growing in stagnant superheated liquid, and satisfactory predictions of the bubble size under low and moderate superheat are obtained. It is then applied to flashing pipe flows, which are characterized by low superheat and high turbulence intensities. The results show that in these cases, coalescence and breakup are important phenomena changing the bubble size distribution in addition to growth. The neglect of their contribution leads to a significant under-prediction of the bubble size and consequently over-prediction of IAC. In addition, choosing an appropriate closure for interfacial heat transfer coefficient (HTC) is another key point in flashing simulation. In high-Reynolds cases (e.g. Re > 10^6), the enhancement due to turbulence is nonnegligible.

Keywords: Flashing flow; Interfacial area concentration; Interfacial heat transfer; Two-fluid model; Population balance model

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  • Secondary publication expected from 19.06.2024

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37130
Publ.-Id: 37130


Nonlinear large-scale flow transition in a precessing cylinder and its potential for hydromagnetic dynamo action

Gundrum, T.; Kumar, V.; Pizzi, F.; Giesecke, A.; Stefani, F.; Eckert, S.

n this paper, we present an experimental investigation that centers on exploring the fluid dynamics within a
precessing cylinder. Our research is part of the DRESDYN project at Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf,
specifically focusing on the precession dynamo experiment. The primary objective of our study is to examine how
different rotation configurations influence the dominant flow modes inside the precessing cylinder, specifically
considering the prograde and retrograde rotations. Our main focus lies on two significant flow modes: the directly
forced mode (m1, k1) and the non-geostrophic axisymmetric mode (m0, k2). These modes hold substantial potential
for precession-driven dynamo action. By analyzing the outcomes between the prograde and retrograde
configurations, we gain valuable insights into the prevailing flow patterns within the precessing cylinder.

Keywords: Precession; DRESDYN; modes; dynamo

  • Contribution to proceedings
    14th International Symposium on Ultrasonic Doppler Methods for Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Engineering (ISUD 2023), 23.-25.10.2023, Kobe, Japan
    Proceedings of the 14th International Symposium on Ultrasonic Doppler Methods for Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Engineering (ISUD 2023)

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37129
Publ.-Id: 37129


Formation constant of the double salt CsCl·2NaCl·2H₂O(cr)

Bok, F.

In the ternary system CsCl – NaCl – H₂O, at a temperature of 298.15 K, a double salt with the stoichiometric formula CsCl∙2NaCl∙2H₂O(cr) is known to be formed. This double salt and the anhydrous CsCl(cr) are the end-members of a solid solution. For the pure double salt, the solubility constant was determined. The obtained value were applied to calculate the solubility diagram also of the quaternary system CsCl – NaCl – KCl – H₂O and the quaternary-reciprocal system Cs⁺, Na⁺ || Cl⁻, SO₄²⁻ – H₂O. The solubility constant together with a solid solution between CsCl∙2NaCl∙2H₂O(cr) and CsCl(cr) were implemented in THEREDA, which extends the applicability of the existing cesium dataset.

Keywords: THEREDA; cesium chloride; sodium chloride; double salt; thermodynamic data; solubility; solid-solution

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37128
Publ.-Id: 37128


The ELBE THz Sources - Tunable Coherent THz for Driving Nonequilibrium and Nonlinear Dynamics

Klopf, J. M.

This presentation will provide an overview of the coherent THz sources and the user activities at the ELBE Radiation Source. Ideas for new types of measurements and materials to study will be discussed, followed by a look toward DALI, the concept for a new facility at HZDR for advanced accelerator-based THz sources.

Keywords: FEL; THz; IR; Ultrafast Dynamics; Nonlinear Optics; s-SNOM; DALI

Related publications

  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    2023 HFML-FELIX User Meeting, 13.-15.06.2023, Nijmegen, Netherlands

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37127
Publ.-Id: 37127


Mild catalytic transfer hydrogenolysis of lignin for efficient monophenol production over lignin-coordinated N-doped ultrafine Ni nanocluster catalyst

Zhenglong, X.; Guanhua, W.; Parvez, A. M.

Lignin hydrogenolysis into monophenols presents a promising route for lignin-based chemical and fuel production but still suffers from harsh reaction conditions (e.g. high temperature and high external H2 pressure). Herein, we report an ultrafine Ni nanocluster anchored on N-doped carbon nanosheets (Ni/LNC) for efficient catalytic transfer hydrogenolysis of poplar organosolv lignin. The catalyst was fabricated through a simple pyrolysis process of lignin‑nickel complex mixed with melamine, in which the lignin coordination greatly improved the Ni dispersion and the strong Nisingle bondN interaction inhibited the Ni nanocluster growth, resulting in the ultrafine particle size (1–2 nm). Under mild conditions (160 °C, 1 h), 22.08% of monophenol yield was obtained over the catalyst, which was significantly higher than those over the two reference catalysts (Ni/AC and Ni/LC) as well as other previously reported Ni-based catalysts. The excellent catalytic activity can be attributed to both the substantial increase in catalytic active sites and the enhancement in H transfer from methanol resulted from the electron-rich N-doped nanosheet support. Finally, magnetically recycled Ni/LNC showed excellent recycling stability. Consequently, this work presents a facile and low-cost approach for the synthesis of N-doped carbon nanosheet supported ultrafine Ni nanocluster and further demonstrates its superior applicability in lignin hydrogenolysis.

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  • Secondary publication expected from 23.05.2024

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37125
Publ.-Id: 37125


The status and improvement opportunities towards carbon neutrality of a university campus in China: A case study on energy transition and innovation perspective

Wang, C.; Wu, T.; Parvez, A. M.

In response to China's commitment to meet carbon peaking and carbon neutrality targets, universities are seeking to assess and minimize their greenhouse gas emissions. In this study, a new methodology based on LEAP and LCA was developed to assess the carbon footprint of a medium-sized university campus in eastern China. The emission sources consider six areas: electricity, fuel, transportation, water, waste, and consumption of other materials. The results showed that the campus emitted about 13,877 tonnes of CO2-eq in 2020. In particular, electricity consumption contributed about 77% of the total CO2-eq emissions on campus, while green cover and material recycling resulted in a negative emission of 404.4 tonnes of CO2-eq. In addition, seven common mitigation strategies were proposed to reduce the campus carbon footprint, and budgets would influence the implementation time. It was found that the seven proposed carbon reduction measures could reduce emissions by 97% in 2060, with decarbonisation of electricity being the largest contributor, leading to an emissions reduction of 64.7%. In addition, carbon offsetting is needed to achieve a carbon-neutral campus by 2060.

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  • Secondary publication expected from 30.05.2024

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37124
Publ.-Id: 37124


Equilibrium Taylor bubble in a narrow vertical tube with constriction

Maestri, R.; Radhakrishnakumar, S.; Bürkle, F.; Ding, W.; Büttner, L.; Czarske, J.; Hampel, U.; Lecrivain, G.

Air Taylor bubbles in a millichannel filled with water are characterized by an elongated shape, a bullet-shaped nose and a comparatively flat tail. Many experimental and numerical investigations have been performed in the past. Yet, most of them consider Taylor bubbles in a straight channel with constant cross-section. The effect of a local change in the channel geometry on both the bubble shape and the flow fields on each side of the gas-liquid interface is, however, difficult to predict. In this work, we present experimental data obtained in a vertical millichannel, where the flow is moderately obstructed by a constriction, whose ratio ranges from 10 to 36 %. \rhandrey{We find that the Taylor bubble takes an equilibrium position for downward liquid flow with 264.36 < Re < 529.67 and 264.36 < Re < 728.29 for 10.17 % and 18.06 % constriction ratios, respectively}. In this area, an empirical correlation characterizing the bubble head is provided. Other flow regimes, such as bubble breakup, co- and counter-current configurations are identified and shown in the form of a regime map. The results, besides their relevance in process engineering, exhibit high reproducibility and will serve as reference for future interface resolving two-phase flow simulations.

Keywords: Bubble dynamics; Interfacial flows; Deformation; Multiphase flows; Taylor bubbles

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37123
Publ.-Id: 37123


Roles and Structures in Institutional Research Data Management Systems

Steinmeier, L.; Rau, F.; Schaller, T.

A dataset is considered complete if, in addition to the pure data (e.g. measured values), further information, such as origin and license for use, is also available. This requires not only the complete collection of data and metadata, but also assistance or instructions for collection and use, as well as an infrastructure for storage, publication and unique identification. Such a "value chain" is made up of various processes that should be handled by people in defined roles.

In this context, it is also necessary to provide a technical infrastructure which, on the one hand, generates a precise input mask for the user's specific case, but which, on the other hand, must direct general search queries in a targeted manner to the correct data records. And of course, this entire construct cannot be controlled without rules and documentation, and must be equipped with an adapted training offering and an intuitive user interface. The training offer is also aimed at people with roles or assigned tasks in the data management system to ensure that the roles are performed with the necessary quality by defining the necessary qualifications. A plausibility check, which takes into account the expected flexibility of the system, guarantees the consistency of the data records. In one of the highest levels of sophistication, the plausibility check is followed by a kind of self-healing mechanism that suggests a data set to the user according to the specifications or makes the user's re-intervention obsolete altogether.

In this contribution, the focus will be on the roles and on the interaction with the data management system. All necessary qualifications and tasks are assigned to the roles. The advantage of the subdivision into roles is that it remains open whether the additional tasks are covered by existing or new personnel or whether one person holds several roles. This means that the specific personnel approach can be adapted to the institution's own needs.

Keywords: research data management; FAIR data

  • Open Access Logo Poster
    4. SaxFDM-Tagung 2023, 19.10.2023, Chemnitz, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37122
Publ.-Id: 37122


Active Sites of Te-hyperdoped Silicon by Hard X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy

Hoesch, M.; Fedchenko, O.; Wang, M.; Schlueter, C.; Potorochin, D.; Medjanik, K.; Babenkov, S.; Ciobanu, A. S.; Winkelmann, A.; Elmers, H.-J.; Zhou, S.; Helm, M.; Schönhense, G.

Multiple dopant configurations of Te impurities in close vicinity in silicon are investigated using photoelec- tron spectroscopy, photoelectron diffraction, and Bloch wave calculations. The samples are prepared by ion implantation followed by pulsed laser annealing. The dopant concentration is variable and high above the solubility limit of Te in silicon. The configurations in question are distinguished from isolated Te impurities by a strong chemical core level shift. While Te clusters are found to form only in very small concentrations, multi-Te configurations of type dimer or up to four Te ions surrounding a vacancy are clearly identified. For these configurations a substitutional site location of Te is found to match the data best in all cases. For isolated Te ions this matches the expectations. For multi-Te configurations the results contribute to understanding the exceptional activation of free charge carriers in hyperdoping of chalcogens in silicon.

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37121
Publ.-Id: 37121


Two-field excitation for contactless inductive flow tomography

Sieger, M.; Gudat, K.; Mitra, R.; Sonntag, S.; Eckert, S.; Wondrak, T.

Contactless Inductive Flow Tomography (CIFT) is a flow measurement technique allowing for visualizing the global flow in electrically conducting fluids. The method is based on the precise measurement of very weak induced magnetic fields arising from the fluid motion under the influence of one or several primary excitation magnetic field(s). The simultaneous use of more than one excitation magnetic field is necessary to fully reconstruct three-dimensional liquid metal flows, yet is not trivial as the scalar values of induced magnetic field at the sensors need to be disentangled for each contribution of the excitation fields. Another approach is to multiplex the excitation fields. Here the temporal resolution of the measurement needs to be kept as high as possible. We apply two trapezoidal-shaped excitation magnetic fields with perpendicular direction to each other to a mechanically driven liquid metal flow. The consecutive application by multiplexing enables to determine the flow structure in the liquid with a temporal resolution down to 3 s with the existing equipment.

Keywords: flow measurements; inductive measurements; inverse problem; liquid metal; magnetohydrodynamics

  • Contribution to proceedings
    11th World conference on industrial process tomography (WCIPT), 06.-08.09.2023, Mexico City, Mexiko
    Proceedings of the 11th World conference on industrial process tomography
  • Lecture (Conference)
    11th World congress on industrial process tomography (WCIPT), 06.-08.09.2023, Mexico City, Mexiko

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37120
Publ.-Id: 37120


Parametric study on H2 evolution on porous electrodes

Rox, H.; Bashkatov, A.; Yang, X.; Mutschke, G.; Gerbeth, G.; Eckert, K.

Alkaline water electrolysis is a mature and cost-effective technology for hydrogen production. By using wind or solar derived energy, the hydrogen produced is a promising approach to replace fossil fuels and establish a net-zero-emission-industry [1]. However, by blocking electrocatalytic sites the generated bubbles cause significant losses in terms of increased overpotential and ohmic resistance losses [2,3]. Therefore, the study of bubble dynamics on porous electrodes commonly used in industrial electrolyzers is essential to improve the overall efficiency of alkaline electrolysis.

In the present study, a novel three electrode cell is introduced to perform parametric studies of H2 evolution on porous electrodes [4]. For this purpose, electrochemical methods are combined with high-speed optical measurements to characterize the electrodes in terms of electrochemical active surface areas (ECSA), bubble size distribution and electrode coverage. The performance of the electrode can then be derived as a function of current density and applied electrolyte flow rate.

References
[1] L. Lüke and A. Zschocke, Alkaline Water Electrolysis: Efficient Bridge to CO2 -Emission-Free Economy, Chem. Ing. Tech., 92 (2020) 70–73.
[2] A. Angulo et al., Influence of Bubbles on the Energy Conversion Efficiency of Electrochemical Reactors, Joule 4 (2020) 555-579.
[3] J.R. Lake et al., Impact of Bubbles on Electrochemically Active Surface Area of Microtextured Gas-Evolving Electrodes, Langmuir 38 (2022) 3276-3283.
[4] H. Rox et al., Bubble size distribution and electrode coverage at porous nickel electrodes in a novel 3-electrode flow-through cell, Int. J. Hydrog. Energy 48 (2023) 2892-2905.

Keywords: bubble dynamics; alkaline electrolysis; porous electrodes; membraneless electrolyzer

  • Lecture (Conference)
    9th Bubble and Drop Conference, 11.-16.06.2023, Lublin, Poland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37119
Publ.-Id: 37119


CFD Modeling of Phase Change during the Flashing-Induced Instability in a Natural Circulation Circuit

Liao, Y.; Lucas, D.

Flashing-induced instability (FII) has a significant impact on the safe operation of a natural cir-culation circuit, a phenomenon frequently encountered in the cooling systems of advanced light water reactors. While one-dimensional system codes are commonly used for engineering design and safety analysis of FII, there is a strong academic interest in understanding the underlying physical mechanisms. To address this, high-resolution computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations serve as a valuable tool. However, the current state of CFD modeling for phase change two-phase flows, particularly high transient fluctuating flashing flows, is still in its early stages of development. In this study, we establish a CFD model that focuses on interphase heat transfer to analyze FII. By incorporating experimental data from the literature, we investigate the transient flow field and thermodynamic behavior in the riser of the GENEVA test facility. The study provides valuable insights into the non-equilibrium and interfacial transfer phenom-ena during the phase change as well as the effect of high-frequency fluctuation. Additionally, we discuss in detail the challenges associated with FII modeling and the limitations of the current model. We also provide suggestions for potential improvements in future numerical studies.

Keywords: flashing-induced instability; thermal phase change model; thermal and mechanical non-equilibrium; CFD-modelling

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37118
Publ.-Id: 37118


Biostimulation of Indigenous Microbes for Uranium Bioremediation in Former U Mine Water: Multidisciplinary approach assessment

Newman Portela, A.; Krawczyk-Bärsch, E.; Lopez Fernandez, M.; Bok, F.; Kassahun, A.; Drobot, B.; Steudtner, R.; Stumpf, T.; Raff, J.; Merroun, M. L.

Characterizing the physicochemistry and microbial diversity of U mine water is a key prerequisite for understanding the biogeochemical processes occurring in these water mass and for the design of an efficient bioremediation strategy. This study has collected and analysed in reference date measurements water samples from two former U-mines (Schlema-Alberoda and Pöhla, Wismut GmbH) in East Germany. The samples from both mines are pH-circumneutral (7.3 and 6.6) and show reducing conditions (EH: +139 and –91 mV). Interestingly, the U and sulphate concentrations of Schlema-Alberoda mine water (U: 1 mg/L; SO4 2−: 335 mg/L) are 2 and 3 order of magnitude higher than those of the Pöhla samples (U: 0.01 mg/L; SO4 2−: 0.5 mg/L), respectively. U, SO4 2− and Fe seem to shape the differential microbial diversity of the water from both mines. Microbial diversity analysis revealed the distribution of bacteria with U(VI)-reducing capacity and the ability to maintain the stability of reduced U-species (e.g., Desulfurivibrio, Gallionella and Sulfuricurvum). In addition, water from the mines harbour wood-degrading fungal communities (e.g., composed of Cadophora and Acremonium) providing potential electron donors which promote the growth of U-reducing bacteria. For the design of a bioremediation strategy, we conducted a preliminary U-bioreduction experiment to screen for suitable electron donors (glycerol, vanillic acid and gluconic acid). We also observed that high levels of soluble U (initially present as Ca2UO2(CO3)3(aq) and UO2(CO3) 3 4−), Fe and SO4 2− were removed by 98, 95 and 53%, respectively from the mine water by using glycerol as electron donor. The remaining U concentrations after bioreduction meet regulatory standards for beneficial reuse of U mine water. As a whole, the results reveal the chemical factors influencing the microbial community in U mine water and may contribute to the design of bioremediation strategies based on the biostimulation of U-reducing bacteria for low U concentrations in contaminated water.

Keywords: bioremediation; bioreduction; mine water; uranium; bacterial; fungal

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37116
Publ.-Id: 37116


Bimetallic Pt-Hg Aerogels for Electrocatalytic Upgrading of Ethanol to Acetate

Zhang, X.; Wang, T.; Wang, C.; Hübner, R.; Eychmüller, A.; Zhan, J.; Cai, B.

Electrochemical upgrading of ethanol to acetic acid provides a promising strategy to couple with the current hydrogen production from water electrolysis. This work reports the design of a series of bimetallic Pt-Hg aerogels, where the PtHg aerogel exhibits a 10.5-times higher mass activity than that of commercial Pt/C toward ethanol oxidation. More impressively, the PtHg aerogel demonstrates nearly 100% selectivity toward the production of acetic acid. The operando infrared spectroscopic studies and nuclear magnetic resonance analysis verify the preferable C2 pathway mechanism during the reaction. This work opens an avenue for the electrochemical synthesis of acetic acid via ethanol electrolysis.

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37115
Publ.-Id: 37115


Revisiting the selenium interactions with pyrite: from adsorption to coprecipitation

Guida, C.; Ramothe, V.; Chappaz, A.; Simonnin, P.; Rosso, K. M.; Gilbert, B.; Ding, R.-R.; Prieur, D.; Scheinost, A.; Charlet, L.

Interactions of selenium (Se), a trace element bio-essential at low concentrations but highly toxic at high concentrations, with the most abundant mineral in the Earth's crust, namely pyrite, was investigated over a wide range of time scales. At the nanosecond scale, selenate Se(VI)O42– adsorption onto the net pyrite surface is shown by ab-initio computations to proceed via the formation of a chemical bond between an oxyanion oxygen atom and a surface Fe atom, weakening the other Se-O bonds and reducing Se atom oxidation state. At the hour-to-day scale, adsorption and coprecipitation of selenate and selenite, Se(IV)O32–, were investigated through wet chemical batch experiments at various pH values at different sulfide concentrations. Selenium removal from solution is slower and weaker for selenate than for selenite. After 24h, only 10% of selenate, against 60% for selenite (or even 100% in the presence of sulfide), is removed by the pyrite surface. Independently of its original oxidation state, adsorbed Se is completely reduced to elemental selenium via adsorption or coprecipitation, as shown by XANES spectroscopy. Our EXAFS results, compared to published data on Se-rich pyrite, show a Se to S substitution within the pyrite structure. The reductive coprecipitation mechanism of selenium with pyrite represents valuable new insights for improving our understanding of modern and ancient biogeochemical cycles involving Se. In addition, several industries can benefit from direct applications of our findings, such as water treatment, green technologies and sustainable mining.

Keywords: Selenium; Pyrite; Redox; EXAFS; XANES

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37114
Publ.-Id: 37114


No evidence for absence of solar dynamo synchronization

Stefani, F.; Beer, J.; Weier, T.

The old question of whether the solar dynamo is synchronized by the tidal forces of the orbiting planets has recently received renewed interest, both from the viewpoint of historical data analysis and in terms of theoretical and numerical modeling. We aim to contribute to the solution of this longstanding puzzle by analyzing cosmogenic radionuclide data from the last millennium. We reconsider a recent time-series of ¹⁴C-inferred sunspot data and compare the resulting cycle minima and maxima with the corresponding conventional series down to 1610 A.D., enhanced by Schove's data before that time. We fnd that, despite recent claims to the contrary, the ¹⁴C-inferred sunspot data are well compatible with a synchronized solar dynamo, exhibiting a relatively phase stable period of 11.07 years, which points to a synchronizing role of the spring tides of the Venus-Earth-Jupiter system.

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37113
Publ.-Id: 37113


A synchronized two-dimensional α–Ω model of the solar dynamo

Klevs, M.; Stefani, F.; Jouve, L.

We consider a conventional α–Ω-dynamo model with meridional circulation that exhibits typical features of the solar dynamo, including a Hale-cycle period of around 20 years and a reasonable shape of the butterfly diagram. With regard to recent ideas of a tidal synchronization of the solar cycle, we complement this model by an additional time-periodic α-term that is localized in the tachocline region. It is shown that amplitudes of some decimeters per second are sufficient for this α-term to become capable of entraining the underlying dynamo. We argue that such amplitudes of α may indeed be realistic, since velocities in the range of m/s are reachable, e.g. for tidally excited magneto–Rossby waves.

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37112
Publ.-Id: 37112


Machine learning the electronic structure of matter across temperatures

Fiedler, L.; Modine, N. A.; Miller, K. D.; Cangi, A.

We introduce machine learning (ML) models that predict the electronic structure of materials across a wide temperature range. Our models employ neural networks and are trained on density functional theory (DFT) data. Unlike other ML models that use DFT data, our models directly predict the local density of states (LDOS) of the electronic structure. This provides several advantages, including access to multiple observables such as the electronic density and electronic total free energy. Moreover, our models account for both the electronic and ionic temperatures independently, making them ideal for applications like laser-heating of matter. We validate the efficacy of our LDOS-based models on a metallic test system. They accurately capture energetic effects induced by variations in ionic and electronic temperatures over a broad temperature range, even when trained on a subset of these temperatures. These findings open up exciting opportunities for investigating the electronic structure of materials under both ambient and extreme conditions.

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37111
Publ.-Id: 37111


Keeping the HELIPORT Code Base Maintainable: Our Tools and Approaches

Pape, D.; Voigt, M.; Knodel, O.

In this talk, different approaches to keeping the HELIPORT code base maintainable will be presented. The talk will discuss both the tools used to automate various aspects of development and operation of HELIPORT, as well as how certain aspects of development are approached and how the choice of libraries and tooling helps these aspects.

Keywords: Research Software Engineering; Maintainability; Continuous Integration; Metadata

  • Open Access Logo Lecture (others)
    HELIPORT Workshop 2023, 12.-14.06.2023, Dresden, Deutschland

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37110
Publ.-Id: 37110


Machine Protection System Upgrade for a new Timing System at ELBE

Justus, M.; Kuntzsch, M.; Schwarz, A.; Zenker, K.; Oven, Z.; Perusko, L.; Krmpotic, L.; Legat, U.; Rojec, U.

Running a C.W. electron accelerator as a user facility for more than two decades necessitates upgrades or even complete redesign of subsystems at some point. At ELBE, the outdated timing system needed a replacement due to obsolete components and functional limitations. Starting in 2019, with Cosylab as contractor and using hardware by Micro Research Finland, the new timing system has been developed and tested and is about to become operational. Besides the ability to generate a broader variety of beam patterns from single pulse mode to 26 MHz C.W. beams for the two electron sources, one of the benefits of the new system is improved machine safety. The ELBE control systems is mainly based on PLCs and industrial SCADA tools. This contribution depicts how the timing system implementation to the existing machine entailed extensions and modifications of the ELBE machine protection system, i.e. a new core MPS PLC, and how they are being realized.

Keywords: ELBE; MPS; Machine Protection System; Timing System; MRF; Control System

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  • Poster
    ICALEPCS 2023, 09.-13.10.2023, Cape Town, South Africa

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37109
Publ.-Id: 37109


SCADA Support & Maintenance für den ELBE Beschleuniger

Justus, M.; Steinbrück, R.

Für den Betrieb des Elektronen-Linearbeschleunigers am ELBE - Zentrum für Hochleistungsstrahlenquellen arbeiten wir im Bereich SCADA-System seit 2019 mit Kontron AIS GmbH im Rahmen eines Dienstleistungsvertrags zusammen. Wir stellen in der Präsentation den Beschleuniger vor, beschreiben die einzelnen Support- und Projektthemen und die damit verbundenen Vorteile für Betriebssicherheit und Nutzerfreundlichkeit und Wieterentwicklung unseres WinCC Leitsystems.

Keywords: ELBE; SCADA; WinCC

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  • Invited lecture (Conferences)
    Kontron AIS - 22. User Conference 2023, 15.06.2023, Dresden, Deutschland

Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37108
Publ.-Id: 37108


Dry release of MEMS origami using thin Al2O3 films for facet-based device integration

Zhang, J.; Reif, J.; Strobel, C.; Chava, P.; Erbe, A.; Voigt, A.; Mikolajick, T.; Kirchner, R.

In recent years, more and more research was conducted to explore smaller and smaller systems that become similar to an
actual micro/nano-robot. The major roadblock regarding their real world implementation is the highly restricted available
volume. In this paper, we introduce folding – hence an origami technology using Al2O3 as building material, which is
compatible with current Si technology. High quality 50 nm thin Al2O3 film is grown by atomic layer desposition, patterned,
thinned and then released from the Si subtrate using SF6 plasma etching. The realized free standing Al2O3 structure would
fold itself at predefined regions due to the stress in the as deposited films. We believe such technology could offer a new
possibility to tackle the problem of efficiently using the volume. Al2O3 could act as both the structural origami material and
the functional gate dielectric material for electronics. This approach enables the feasibility of patterning devices and circuits
on every Al2O3 facet of a 3D object, while the inside volume of this object is still available for 3D bulk device components.
We demonstrate the optimized etching process as well as an emperical improvement of the folding hinges and of the overall
structural stability.

Keywords: 3D; Dielectric; EMS/NEMS; Etching; Integration; Origami; Self assembly

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37107
Publ.-Id: 37107


Interactive workflows and data provenance with HELIPORT

Kelling, J.; Pape, D.; Starke, S.; Lokamani, M.; Knodel, O.

Data processing or analysis workflows are generally understood as processes running without any user intervention where usually only a small set of parameters being provided upon workflow submission, adjustment of which is also limited by low turnaround rates of workflow runs due to scheduling alone. Many types of experimental data analyses require manual experimentation with parameters to succeed, necessitating interactivity and fast iteration. In this talk we present examples of interactive workflow applications at HZDR, from data analysis and simulation; discuss challenges arising from differences to completely automated workflows and lay-out the related data-provenance and project-resource management features we envision for the HELIPORT workflow platform.

Keywords: workflows; data management; data provenance; project management

  • Open Access Logo Lecture (others)
    HELIPORT Workshop 2023, 12.-14.06.2023, Dresden, Deutschland

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-37106
Publ.-Id: 37106


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