Academic literature on the topic 'Virginia State Line Regiment'

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Journal articles on the topic "Virginia State Line Regiment"

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Kuryshev, Andrei V. "История Волжского казачьего войска." Canadian-American Slavic Studies 49, no. 4 (2015): 421–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22102396-04904003.

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The author examines the formation of the Volga Cossack Host, its ethnic and social structure, its economic set-up and administration, and state service of the Cossacks. Contrary to interpretations entrenched in historiography, Volga Host Cossacks were generally well-off rather than poor. The cause of their resettlement to the Terek River was not their participation in the Pugachev rebellion. Instead, it was the establishment of the Azov-Mozdok fortified line. The Volga Cossack Host and the Khopyor Cossack Regiment were the main sources of manpower for colonization and protection of newly acquired border territory. Land-poor peasants (from monastic or church lands) from central regions were settled on abandoned lands of the Volga Host, and Cossacks who remained on the Volga were transferred to the Astrakhan Cossack Regiment.
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Longacre, Glenn. "The Seventh West Virginia Infantry: An Embattled Union Regiment from the Civil War's Most Divided State by David W. Mellott and Mark A. Snell." West Virginia History: A Journal of Regional Studies 13, no. 2 (2019): 78–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/wvh.2019.0018.

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Keating, Ryan W. "The Seventh West Virginia Infantry: An Embattled Union Regiment from the Civil War’s Most Divided State by David W. Mellott and Mark A. Snell." Journal of Southern History 86, no. 2 (2020): 480–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/soh.2020.0118.

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Luria, Sarah. "Secret Histories of the Virginia–North Carolina State Line: A Template for Literary Interventions into Property." GeoHumanities 3, no. 2 (July 3, 2017): 489–509. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2373566x.2017.1338528.

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Dunn, Michael W., and S. Noelle On. "Improving Unpaved Roads in Virginia: Case Study." Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 1819, no. 1 (January 2003): 149–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.3141/1819a-22.

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Minimizing costs and streamlining the construction of low-volume roads offers an opportunity for transportation agencies to effectively meet the needs of rural citizens. The Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) maintains approximately 56,941 mi of the state’s roads, including Interstate, primary, and secondary facilities. Between 1987 and 1994, VDOT paved nearly 1,900 mi of unpaved roads. In rural parts of the state, many miles of state-maintained roads still have gravel and dirt surfaces. Each year the local transportation residency offices, in conjunction with local elected officials, contractors, and area citizens, strive to improve and pave as many miles of gravel and dirt roads as possible. The Hillsville Residency of VDOT, located in rural Carroll and Floyd Counties, has developed an efficient and cost-effective method for improving low-volume gravel and dirt roads. This process relies heavily on cooperative efforts by VDOT, contractors, elected officials, and especially citizens. Land donations from citizens represent the cornerstone of this process, signifying that citizen cooperation is the key factor in a project’s success. Because most of the decisions in the improvement process are at the local residency level, trusting relationships and frequent communication can be established, small-scale and local contractors are given more business opportunities, and local VDOT personnel can better understand citizen concerns and perform road improvements accordingly. In addition, the time line for the road improvement process is based on seasons—the most appropriate weather conditions are considered for the work being performed. This program enables more roads to be paved each year, improving the level of service and quality of life for local citizens.
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Kunk, Paul, B. Gail Macik, and Jacqueline Brown. "Non-Warfarin Oral Anticoagulants in Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia." Blood 126, no. 23 (December 3, 2015): 3547. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v126.23.3547.3547.

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Abstract Introduction: Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an antibody-mediated reaction where exposure to heparin products (unfractionated and, less commonly, low molecular weight heparins) leads to a paradoxical prothrombotic state. Current treatment guidelines recommend immediate cessation of all heparin products and initiation of a non-heparin anticoagulant. This is typically accomplished with argatroban and then transitioning to a vitamin K antagonist once platelets have recovered. An attractive alternative is the use of the non-warfarin oral anticoagulants (NOACs) in the treatment of HIT, namely the direct Xa inhibitors apixaban and rivaroxaban which have already proven safe and effective for the treatment of venous thromboembolism. Methods: We designed a retrospective analysis of all patients at the University of Virginia with a positive serotonin release assay (for a definitive diagnosis of HIT) that were treated with either apixaban or rivaroxaban since September 2011. Results from heparin induced platelet antibody testing were also recorded. Patients were reviewed for recurrent thrombi, severe bleeding or other complications that led to changes in their management. Results: Eleven patients were identified based on the inclusion criteria. All patients had a positive serotonin release assay despite 4/11 (36%) testing negative for heparin induced platelet antibody. All patients received intravenous argatroban or bivalirudin at the time of diagnosis and were transitioned to an oral anticoagulant at time of hospital discharge. 9/11 (81%) were treated with apixaban and 2/11 (19%) were treated with rivaroxaban. Zero patients developed recurrent thrombi (summarized in Table 1). One patient in each group developed major bleeding leading to discontinuation of anticoagulation. Of these, both had additional risk factors for bleeding prior to initiation of anticoagulation (one with concurrent clopidogrel use after coronary artery bypass grafting and prior bleeding from gastric varices; the other with previously diagnosed metastatic squamous cell lung cancer). Of the remaining 9 patients, safe and effective anticoagulation with a NOAC was noted for up to18 months without adverse effects. Conclusion: Apixaban and rivaroxaban, along with all forms of anticoagulation, should be used with caution in patients with risk factors for severe bleeding. These medications, however, showed to be a safe and effective first line outpatient regimen for patients with HIT. Further prospective studies are needed before their use should be accepted as standard of care. Table 1. Patients with Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia Treated with Non-Warfarin Oral Anticoagulant Patient Heparin Induced Platelet Antibody (%) Serotonin Release Assay (%) Anticoagulant Length of Therapy (in months) Bleeding Complications Thrombotic Complications Current Plan 1 - + (93) Apixaban 8 No No Continue 2 + (110) + (100) Apixaban 2* No No Continue 3 + (81) + (53) Apixaban 13 No No Continue 4 - + (91) Apixaban 9 No No Continue 5 + (108) + (100) Apixaban 16 No No Continue 6 - + (92) Apixaban 6 No No Continue 7 + (126) + (100) Apixaban 2† Gastrointestinal No Off since bleed 8 - + (30) Rivaroxaban 1‡ Hemoptysis No Off since bleed 9 + (107) + ( 77) Apixaban 10 No No Continue 10 + (89) + (44) Apixaban 6 No No Continue 11 + (106) + (67) Rivaroxaban 18 No No Continue *No evidence of thrombosis at diagnosis, only thrombocytopenia †severe bleeding from known gastric varices; also on clopidogrel for CAD ‡moderate hemoptysis secondary to known squamous cell lung cancer Disclosures Off Label Use: Apixaban and rivaroxaban use in patients with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia.
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Lyons, Robert E., and Timothy W. Rhodus. "Development of a National, On-line, Interactive Database of Internship Opportunities for Students of Horticultural Science." HortScience 31, no. 4 (August 1996): 589d—589. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.31.4.589d.

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Internships are becoming an increasingly used mechanism of providing undergraduates with experience in their chosen profession before job placement, and potential employers view internships favorably in making hiring decisions. Many horticulture programs require internships as part of their curricula, while others are considering the option. Because internship opportunities in horticulture have been compiled in a wide variety of discipline-specific resources with no central, inclusive “clearinghouse,” students often overlook potential opportunities, particularly those outside of their home state, leaving some industry members without interns. The internet-based database of internships developed jointly by Virginia Tech and Ohio State will be discussed within the context of being a resource for all horticulture programs. Other schools will be shown how to contribute to and to use the database so its national scope can be fully used and expanded.
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Schaefer, Paul W., RogerW Fuester, Philip B. Taylor, Susan E. Barth, Edward E. Simons, E. Michael Blumenthal, Elizabeth M. Handley, Thomas B. Finn, and Ernest W. Elliott. "Current Distribution and Historical Range Expansion of Calosoma sycophanta (L.) (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in North America." Journal of Entomological Science 34, no. 3 (July 1, 1999): 339–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.18474/0749-8004-34.3.339.

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Since the intentional introduction, release, and establishment of the lymantriid predator, Calosoma sycophanta (L.), in 1906–07 in the vicinity of Boston, MA, its range has continued to expand. Compilation of collection localities, all intentional releases in North America, and museum collection records permitted documentation of spread over time and a crude straight line estimate of the rate of dispersion, calculated at 6 km/year. Trapping and other collection records in recent years permitted an approximation of the current distribution, which now extends from southern Maine and all New England states south into Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia. During 15 years of trapping at one New Jersey site and in the mid-Atlantic states, we collectively placed 3,792 traps in 253 locations. We captured 12,117 C. sycophanta, most of which were immediately released on location. Of those that were sexed (4,160), 74.3% were males. We recorded new state records for Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia. Other species trapped include C. scrutator (200 specimens, most in New Jersey), C. wilcoxi (12, most in Delaware), C. frigidum (896, most in Pennsylvania) and C. calidum (22, most in Virginia).
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Manning, Susan. "Industry and Idleness in Colonial Virginia: A New Approach to William Byrd II." Journal of American Studies 28, no. 2 (August 1994): 169–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875800025445.

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The inception of American regionalism is routinely identified by scholars in either Robert Beverley or William Byrd II, both native Virginians who wrote intensely local works (The History and Present State of Virginia, 1705 ; The History of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and North Carolina, Run in the Year of Our Lord 1728) which are amongst the enduring literary products of colonial America. The regional base of both works is immediately apparent in their subjects and setting; but to stop here is to leave critical questions unanswered, questions which have in recent years begun to be addressed by ethnographers and historians such as David Bertelson, Michael Zuckerman and Kenneth Lockridge. In particular, Lockridge's study, meshing biography, history and social psychology, has proposed an illuminating “reconstruction of Byrd's personality” from his writings, an account which stresses Byrd's cultural predicament as a provincial Virginian who strove to be an English gentleman. My purpose in this paper is not to challenge such an interpretation, nor to propose an alternative historical viewpoint, but rather to add the perspective of literary criticism to our reading of Byrd's prose itself. I shall argue that the “ southernness” of Byrd's writing is a characteristic less of his subject matter — his Virginian material — or of his biographical limitations, than of his style, and that the History of the Dividing Line charts enduring preoccupations of Byrd's writing career which reached perfectly self-conscious apotheosis in this, his most carefully composed and corrected work.
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Gray, Thomas. "The Influence of Legislative Reappointment on State Supreme Court Decision-Making." State Politics & Policy Quarterly 17, no. 3 (April 4, 2017): 275–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1532440017699973.

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Most state supreme court justices have time-bound terms that require them to be reappointed or reelected after a certain amount of time. In three American states, South Carolina, Vermont, and Virginia, the legislature has the sole power to retain justices. Legislatures, and their specialized judiciary committees, are well positioned to monitor judicial behavior and can reject retention for justices who are unacceptable. This turns the legislature’s oversight authority into influence over policy making by justices who still need to be reappointed to additional terms. But some justices (co-partisans) are insulated from this influence by their connections to the majority party, which substantially increases the likelihood of their retention. I show that, between 1995 and 2014, justices appointed by the minority party who were eligible for a new term voted more in line with the preferences of their legislature than those who were no longer eligible for a new term due to mandatory or voluntary retirement. No similar effect is found among appointees of the majority party. To support my argument that it is the legislature’s reappointment authority that gives them this power, I conduct a placebo test to show that governors in these states enjoy no comparable influence on reappointment-seeking justices. This legislative influence represents a substantial limitation on judicial independence.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Virginia State Line Regiment"

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Lucas, D. Pulane. "Disruptive Transformations in Health Care: Technological Innovation and the Acute Care General Hospital." VCU Scholars Compass, 2013. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/2996.

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Advances in medical technology have altered the need for certain types of surgery to be performed in traditional inpatient hospital settings. Less invasive surgical procedures allow a growing number of medical treatments to take place on an outpatient basis. Hospitals face growing competition from ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs). The competitive threats posed by ASCs are important, given that inpatient surgery has been the cornerstone of hospital services for over a century. Additional research is needed to understand how surgical volume shifts between and within acute care general hospitals (ACGHs) and ASCs. This study investigates how medical technology within the hospital industry is changing medical services delivery. The main purposes of this study are to (1) test Clayton M. Christensen’s theory of disruptive innovation in health care, and (2) examine the effects of disruptive innovation on appendectomy, cholecystectomy, and bariatric surgery (ACBS) utilization. Disruptive innovation theory contends that advanced technology combined with innovative business models—located outside of traditional product markets or delivery systems—will produce simplified, quality products and services at lower costs with broader accessibility. Consequently, new markets will emerge, and conventional industry leaders will experience a loss of market share to “non-traditional” new entrants into the marketplace. The underlying assumption of this work is that ASCs (innovative business models) have adopted laparoscopy (innovative technology) and their unification has initiated disruptive innovation within the hospital industry. The disruptive effects have spawned shifts in surgical volumes from open to laparoscopic procedures, from inpatient to ambulatory settings, and from hospitals to ASCs. The research hypothesizes that: (1) there will be larger increases in the percentage of laparoscopic ACBS performed than open ACBS procedures; (2) ambulatory ACBS will experience larger percent increases than inpatient ACBS procedures; and (3) ASCs will experience larger percent increases than ACGHs. The study tracks the utilization of open, laparoscopic, inpatient and ambulatory ACBS. The research questions that guide the inquiry are: 1. How has ACBS utilization changed over this time? 2. Do ACGHs and ASCs differ in the utilization of ACBS? 3. How do states differ in the utilization of ACBS? 4. Do study findings support disruptive innovation theory in the hospital industry? The quantitative study employs a panel design using hospital discharge data from 2004 and 2009. The unit of analysis is the facility. The sampling frame is comprised of ACGHs and ASCs in Florida and Wisconsin. The study employs exploratory and confirmatory data analysis. This work finds that disruptive innovation theory is an effective model for assessing the hospital industry. The model provides a useful framework for analyzing the interplay between ACGHs and ASCs. While study findings did not support the stated hypotheses, the impact of government interventions into the competitive marketplace supports the claims of disruptive innovation theory. Regulations that intervened in the hospital industry facilitated interactions between ASCs and ACGHs, reducing the number of ASCs performing ACBS and altering the trajectory of ACBS volume by shifting surgeries from ASCs to ACGHs.
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Books on the topic "Virginia State Line Regiment"

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Schildt, John W. The long line of splendor, 1742-1992. Chewsville, Md: Antietam Publications, 1993.

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Marauder: The life and times of Nathaniel McClure Menefee. Paintsville, [Kentucky]: East Kentucky Press, Inc., 2014.

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With the old Confeds: Actual experiences of a captain in the line. 3rd ed. Staunton, VA: Lots Wife Pub., 2007.

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Corder, Claude A. James Corder, Virginia state line. Knoxville, Tenn: Tennessee Valley Pub., 1991.

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Athy, Lawrence F. The descendants of Corporal John Athy of the 8th Company, 3rd Virginia Regiment of Foot, Continental Line. Houston, TX (3824 Overbrook Ln., Houston 77027-4038): L.F. Athy, 1997.

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Fluharty, Linda Cunningham. Major George C. Trimble, 11th West Virginia Infantry: A soldier's life revisited. Baton Rouge, LA: Linda Cunningham Fluharty, 2006.

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United States. Federal Highway Administration. I-81 improvement project from the West Virginia state line to the Pennsylvania state line: Administrative action : environmental assessment/section 4 (f) evaluation, Washington County, Maryland. Baltimore, MD]: Maryland Dept. of Transportation, State Highway Administration, 2004.

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United States. Federal Highway Administration. I-81 improvement project from the West Virginia state line to the Pennsylvania state line, Washington County, Maryland: Finding of no significant impact / section 4 (f) evaluation. Baltimore, MD]: Maryland Dept. of Transportation, State Highway Administration, 2010.

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Eric, Ward, ed. Army life in Virginia: The Civil War letters of George G. Benedict ; edited by Eric Ward. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 2002.

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Lee's Miserables: Life in the Army of Northern Virginia from the Wilderness to Appomattox. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Virginia State Line Regiment"

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Greene, A. Wilson. "We Have Done All That It Is Possible for Men to Do and Must Be Resigned to the Result." In Campaign of Giants--The Battle for Petersburg, 170–212. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469638577.003.0005.

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This chapter details the heavy fighting that occurred on June 18, 1864 near Petersburg. General Beauregard had withdrawn a second time during the night of June 17-18 and created a new defensive position styled the Harris Line, named after the engineer officer who developed it. Union commander George G. Meade attempted unsuccessfully to orchestrate a coordinated attack against the Harris Line. As during the previous two days, individual corps and divisions assaulted, leading to another series of frustrating and bloody failures. The 1st Maine Heavy Artillery suffered the largest single loss sustained by any regiment during the entire war during one of those attacks and the well-known Colonel Joshua Chamberlain sustained a serious wound during another charge. Robert E. Lee, at last aware of the presence of Grant’s entire force at Petersburg, rapidly shifted the Army of Northern Virginia to reinforce Beauregard. At the end of the day, the Union Ninth Corps came close to breaching the Confederate line, but by sunset the First Petersburg Offensive concluded with the Confederates still in possession of Petersburg.
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Potts, Gwynne Tuell. "End of Glory." In George Rogers Clark and William Croghan, 120–35. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178677.003.0010.

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George Rogers Clark’s job as Virginia’s commander came to a close in July 1783, but he and William Croghan were appointed principal and deputy Virginia State Line surveyors at the conclusion of the Revolution. Their future brother-in-law, Richard Clough Anderson, became the state’s continental line surveyor. The position required their presence at the Falls of the Ohio, near where the bulk of Virginia’s unclaimed lands would be patented as payment for the state’s soldiers. Clark’s work was interrupted by his assignment as a federal Indian Commissioner, sending him to the capital in New York and on to the Ohio River, where he announced a meeting with territorial native leaders. Throughout it all, local merchants made demands for payments associated with Clark’s western campaigns, and Virginia’s governors refused reimbursement, initiating the general’s long downward spiral.
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Levy, Sharon. "The United States of Vanished Wetlands." In The Marsh Builders. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190246402.003.0011.

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Before he became a revolutionary general and the nation’s first president, George Washington was a destroyer of wetlands. In 1763, he surveyed the edges of a million-acre expanse of wet forest that lay along the Virginia–North Carolina state line. He described the Great Dismal Swamp as a “glorious paradise” full of wildfowl and game. Still, he seemed to have no qualms about dismantling Eden. In 1764 he applied with five partners for a charter to create a business called “Adventurers for draining the great Dismal Swamp.” Their goal was to chop down and sell the timber from majestic cypress and cedar trees, then to plow the land for crops. The brutal work of digging drainage ditches and canals was done by slaves. By the time of the Revolutionary War, the Adventurers Company was producing 8 million shingles a year for sale—valuable slivers of wood cut from the swamp’s enormous bald cypress trees. There was profit in undoing wetlands. Draining a wetland also seemed to make a place healthier. People who colonized swampy land were plagued by a dreadful illness, one that often killed, and left survivors with recurring bouts of a bonerattling fever. Malaria—the name itself means “bad air”—was believed to be triggered by poisonous vapors rising from still waters. The drainage and destruction of wetlands was an unwritten founding principle of the US. The pattern began with some of the earliest European settlers. Well before the colonies won their independence, the loss of wetlands had led to pollution that changed the ecology of rivers and bays. Over the centuries, wetlands loss and water pollution have accelerated in tandem, driven by the need for farmland, the urge for profit, and the fear of disease. The history of these interwoven changes on land and underwater begins in the Chesapeake Bay, the site of the first permanent British colony in America. In the summer of 1608, Captain John Smith and the colonists of Jamestown were starving.
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Conference papers on the topic "Virginia State Line Regiment"

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Lauerova, Dana, Vladislav Pistora, Milan Brumovsky, and Milos Kytka. "Warm Pre-Stressing Tests for WWER 440 Reactor Pressure Vessel Material." In ASME 2009 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2009-77287.

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During years 2006 – 2008, warm pre-stressing tests on small (Charpy size) and 1T CT specimens were performed at NRI Rez. The specimens were made from WWER 440 reactor pressure vessel material in as-received, thermally treated (artificially aged) and irradiated conditions, the last two conditions simulating the end of life state of the RPV. In this paper, only results of tests performed for this material in as-received and irradiated conditions are presented. Evaluation of WPS tests was performed with using Chell and Wallin predictive models. The attention was paid to 5% probability level fracture predictions, since this level of probability is important for WPS application in pressurized thermal shock evaluation performed within the RPV integrity assessment. From point of view of this 5% probability fracture prediction, both Chell and Wallin models appeared not to be sufficiently conservative for LCF regime (prediction of “Case 2”); for other regimes (LUCF, LPUCF, LTUF and LPTUF) they appeared to be sufficiently conservative (in almost all cases). Based on the results of the tests, Wallin model was selected for implementation into the RPV integrity evaluation procedure, but simultaneously a decision was adopted to decrease its predictions when the “Case 2” is predicted: instead of predicting some surplus (15% of virgin KIC) above the value of KWPS, only value of KWPS (without any surplus) is predicted. This measure enhances conservativeness of the Wallin model to a sufficient level: the performed WPS experiments then well confirm the Wallin model predictions decreased in this manner. Taking 90% of the value of KWPS represents an additional margin implemented currently in the WPS methodology.
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