Search results for "Microscope"

showing 10 items of 1412 documents

Elasticity and yield strength of pentagonal silver nanowires: In situ bending tests

2014

This paper reports in situ mechanical characterization of silver nanowires (Ag NWs) inside a scanning electron microscope using a cantilevered beam bending technique. Measurements consisted in controlled bending of a cantilevered NW by the tip of an atomic force microscope glued to the force sensor. Relatively high degree of elasticity followed by either plastic deformation or fracture was observed in bending experiments. Experimental data were numerically fitted into the model based on the elastic beam theory and values of Young modulus and yield strength were extracted. Measurements were performed on twenty Ag NWs with diameters from 76 nm to 211 nm. Average Young modulus and yield streng…

In situCantileverMaterials scienceAtomic force microscopyScanning electron microscopeYoung's modulusSilver nanowiresCondensed Matter Physicslaw.inventionsymbols.namesakelawsymbolsGeneral Materials ScienceElectron microscopeElasticity (economics)Composite materialMaterials Chemistry and Physics
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Incorporation of membrane proteins into lipid surface monolayers: Characterization by fluorescence and electron microscopies

2007

The preparation of oriented protein samples is an attractive goal, e.g., to gain more detailed information from spectroscopic experiments. Our approach towards this aim was to prepare monolayers of phospholipids at the air-water interface and to incorporate the proteins into these ordered structures. Subsequently, we used the Langmuir-Boldgett (LB) transfer technique to obtain samples of oriented proteins on solid supports. — Incorporation was achieved by spreading the proteins from a detergent solution onto a prespread lipid monolayer on the water surface. We characterized successful incorporation by in situ fluoresence microscopy and by electron microscopy, and investigated the topology o…

In situCrystallographyMembrane proteinlawChemistryPhase (matter)MonolayerMicroscopyFluorescence microscopeBiophysicsElectron microscopeFluorescencelaw.invention
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In situ structural analysis of SARS-CoV-2 spike reveals flexibility mediated by three hinges

2020

Flexible spikes The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) spike protein enables viral entry into host cells by binding to the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptor and is a major target for neutralizing antibodies. About 20 to 40 spikes decorate the surface of virions. Turoňová et al. now show that the spike is flexibly connected to the viral surface by three hinges that are well protected by glycosylation sites. The flexibility imparted by these hinges may explain how multiple spikes act in concert to engage onto the flat surface of a host cell. Science, this issue p. 203

In situElectron Microscope TomographyGlycanGlycosylationFlexibility (anatomy)virusesProtein domainPneumonia ViralHingeMolecular Dynamics SimulationBiologylaw.inventionBetacoronavirusProtein DomainslawTarget identificationmedicineHumansPandemicsResearch ArticlesHost cell surfaceMultidisciplinarySARS-CoV-2R-ArticlesCryoelectron MicroscopyBiochemCOVID-19MicrobioResearch HighlightCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureSpike Glycoprotein Coronavirusbiology.proteinRecombinant DNASpike (software development)Protein MultimerizationStructural biologyCoronavirus InfectionsResearch ArticleScience (New York, N.y.)
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In situ study of the sintering of a lead phosphovanadate in an Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope

2011

cited By 3; International audience; The in situ sintering of a powder of Pb3(VO4) 1.6(PO4)0.4 composition was performed in an Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope. The electric current induced by the electron beam was found to reduce the effective temperature of sintering as well as to accelerate the kinetics of shrinkage of a cluster composed of sub-micrometric grains of material. The presence of the residual current flow in the cluster during observation for in situ experiments helps to reduce the apparent sintering temperatures from 50 to 150 °C compared to conventional heating conditions without current. © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

In situIn-situ experimentsMaterials scienceKineticsCurrent[ SPI.MAT ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/MaterialsAnalytical chemistryElectron microscopesSintering02 engineering and technologyEnvironmental scanning electron microscopes01 natural sciences[SPI.MAT]Engineering Sciences [physics]/MaterialsEffective temperatureSintering0103 physical sciencesGeneral Materials ScienceElectron beam-induced depositionComposite materialEnvironmental scanning electron microscopeShrinkage010302 applied physicsConventional heatingIn-situElectron beamsGeneral ChemistryResidual currentSintering temperatures021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter PhysicsESEMIn-Situ StudyCathode rayElectric current0210 nano-technologyScanning electron microscopy
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Tribological Aspects of In Situ Manipulation of Nanostructures Inside Scanning Electron Microscope

2014

This chapter is dedicated to manipulation of nanostructures inside a scanning electron (SEM) microscope employed for real-time tribological measurements. Different approaches to force registration and calculation of static and kinetic friction are described. Application of the considered methodology to Au and Ag nanoparticles, as well as ZnO and CuO nanowires, is demonstrated. Advantages and limitations of the methodology in comparison to traditional AFM-based manipulation techniques are discussed.

In situKinetic frictionMaterials scienceNanostructureMicroscopeScanning electron microscopeAtomic force microscopylawNanowireNanotechnologyTribologylaw.invention
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In-situ electron irradiation studies of metal-carbon nanostructures

2008

The properties and the behaviour of nanoparticles are subjects of highest current importance. Experiments on individual clusters are generally difficult but can be carried out by the techniques of modern in-situ electron microscopy. The electron beam can be used as a tool to induce structural changes on an almost atomic scale [1].

In situMaterials scienceNanoparticlechemistry.chemical_element02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesAtomic units3. Good healthlaw.inventionMetalchemistryChemical engineeringlawvisual_art0103 physical sciencesvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCathode rayElectron beam processingElectron microscope010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyCarbon
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An AC-assisted single-nanowire electromechanical switch

2013

A unique two-source controlled nanoelectromechanical switch has been assembled from individual, single-clamped Ge nanowires. The switching behaviour was achieved by superimposing the control signals of specific frequencies to the electrostatic potential of the output terminals, eliminating the need for an additional gate electrode. Using an in situ manipulation technique inside a scanning electron microscope, we demonstrate that the pull-out force required to overcome adhesion at the contact can be significantly reduced by exciting mechanical resonant modes within the nanowire.

In situMaterials scienceNanowiresGermaniumElectrostatic potentialsScanning electron microscopeNanowirechemistry.chemical_elementNanotechnologyGermaniumGeneral ChemistryAdhesionControl signalSpecific frequenciesManipulation techniqueschemistryElectromechanical devicesPull-out forceNanoelectromechanical switchesGate electrodesElectrodeMaterials ChemistryControl signalScanning electron microscopyElectromechanical switchesJournal of Materials Chemistry C
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Ultrastructure of the Interlamellar Membranes of the Nacre of the Bivalve Pteria hirundo, Determined by Immunolabelling.

2015

The current model for the ultrastructure of the interlamellar membranes of molluscan nacre imply that they consist of a core of aligned chitin fibers surrounded on both sides by acidic proteins. This model was based on observations taken on previously demineralized shells, where the original structure had disappeared. Despite other earlier claims, no direct observations exist in which the different components can be unequivocally discriminated. We have applied different labeling protocols on non-demineralized nacreous shells of the bivalve Pteria. With this method, we have revealed the disposition and nature of the different fibers of the interlamellar membranes that can be observed on the …

In situPlateletsBivalvesScanning electron microscopeShell (structure)Mineralogylcsh:MedicineChitinMatrix (biology)chemistry.chemical_compoundChitinAnimal ShellsMembrane proteinsAnimalsFiberlcsh:ScienceNacreFluorescence microscopyMultidisciplinaryMicroscopy Confocallcsh:RfungiProteasesMolluscs[ SDV.IB.BIO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Bioengineering/BiomaterialsBivalviaMembraneAragonitechemistryBiophysicsUltrastructureMicroscopy Electron Scanninglcsh:QResearch ArticlePloS one
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Coordination polymer flexibility leads to polymorphism and enables a crystalline solid-vapour reaction: a multi-technique mechanistic study.

2015

Despite an absence of conventional porosity, the 1D coordination polymer [Ag4 (O2 C(CF2 )2 CF3 )4 (TMP)3 ] (1; TMP=tetramethylpyrazine) can absorb small alcohols from the vapour phase, which insert into AgO bonds to yield coordination polymers [Ag4 (O2 C(CF2 )2 CF3 )4 (TMP)3 (ROH)2 ] (1-ROH; R=Me, Et, iPr). The reactions are reversible single-crystal-to-single-crystal transformations. Vapour-solid equilibria have been examined by gas-phase IR spectroscopy (K=5.68(9)×10(-5) (MeOH), 9.5(3)×10(-6) (EtOH), 6.14(5)×10(-5) (iPrOH) at 295 K, 1 bar). Thermal analyses (TGA, DSC) have enabled quantitative comparison of two-step reactions 1-ROH→1→2, in which 2 is the 2D coordination polymer [Ag4 (O2 …

In situporosityin situ diffractionCoordination polymerStereochemistrygas-phase spectroscopyInfrared spectroscopyCatalysislaw.inventionpolymorphismchemistry.chemical_compoundOptical microscopelawQDThermal analysisTP155chemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryOrganic ChemistryGeneral ChemistryPolymerCoordination PolymersFull PapersCrystallographyPolymorphism (materials science)microscopysolid-state reactionsPowder diffractionthermal analysisChemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany)
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Ergastoplasmic paracrystalline inclusion bodies in the adipose gonadal envelope and fat body of the glow worm, Lampyris noctiluca (Insecta, Coleopter…

2001

Abstract The gonads of glow worm larvae are enveloped by adipose tissue which represents a specialized fat body. The adipose gonadal envelope, and also to a lesser extent the fat body cells, contain tubular paracrystalline inclusion bodies (PIBs). Cells of other tissues are devoid of such inclusions. The PIBs form in the cisternae of rough ER. In young larvae PIB formation is sparse, but at advanced larval stages PIBs often occur as bundles in stacks of ergastoplasm. Typically, a PIB within a cisterna consists of four to seven parallel tubules. The outer diameter of a tubule is ca 28.8 nm and the width of the tubule lumen ca 12.2 nm. The “wall” of a tubule contains globular protein subunits…

Inclusion BodiesEndoplasmic reticulumFat BodyGeneral Physics and AstronomyAdipose tissueCell BiologyAnatomyBiologyParacrystallineCisternabiology.organism_classificationInclusion bodieslaw.inventionCell biologyColeopteraTubuleAdipose TissueStructural BiologylawLampyris noctilucaAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceElectron microscopeGonadsMicron (Oxford, England : 1993)
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