Search results for "electron microscopy"

showing 10 items of 706 documents

Carbon nanotube bags: catalytic formation, physical properties, two-dimensional alignment and geometric structuring of densely filled carbon tubes.

2001

The catalytic CVD synthesis, using propyne as carbon precursor and Fe(NO3)3 as catalyst precursor inside porous alumina, gives carbon nanotube (CNT) bags in a well-arranged two-dimensional order. The tubes have the morphology of bags or fibers, since they are completely filled with smaller helicoidal CNTs. This morphology has so far not been reported for CNTs. Owing to the dense filling of the outer mother CNTs with small helicoidal CNTs, the resulting CNT fibers appear to be stiff and show no sign of inflation, as sometimes observed with hollow CNTs. The fiber morphology was observed by raster electron microscopy (REM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and atomic force microscopy (A…

NanotubeNanostructureChemistryOrganic ChemistryChemiechemistry.chemical_elementNanotechnologyGeneral ChemistryCarbon nanotubeCatalysislaw.inventionsymbols.namesakeField electron emissionChemical engineeringTransmission electron microscopylawsymbolsCarbon nanotube supported catalystRaman spectroscopyCarbonChemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany)
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Chemical Mimicry: Hierarchical 1D TiO2@ZrO2 Core−Shell Structures Reminiscent of Sponge Spicules by the Synergistic Effect of Silicatein-α and Silint…

2011

In nature, mineralization of hard tissues occurs due to the synergistic effect of components present in the organic matrix of these tissues, with templating and catalytic effects. In Suberites domuncula, a well-studied example of the class of demosponges, silica formation is mediated and templated by an axial proteinaceous filament with silicatein-α, one of the main components. But so far, the effect of other organic constituents from the proteinaceous filament on the catalytic effect of silicatein-α has not been studied in detail. Here we describe the synthesis of core-shell TiO(2)@SiO(2) and TiO(2)@ZrO(2) nanofibers via grafting of silicatein-α onto a TiO(2) nanowire backbone followed by …

NanowireGlutamic AcidNanotechnologyProtein filamentBiomimetic MaterialsMicroscopyElectrochemistryAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceHigh-resolution transmission electron microscopySpectroscopyTitaniumbiologyNanowiresChemistryBiomaterialSurfaces and InterfacesEnzymes ImmobilizedCondensed Matter Physicsbiology.organism_classificationCathepsinsSuberites domunculaChemical engineeringTransmission electron microscopyNanofiberZirconiumSuberitesLangmuir
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Gluing the ‘unwettable’: soil-dwelling harvestmen use viscoelastic fluids for capturing springtails

2014

Gluing can be a highly efficient mechanism of prey capture, as it should require less complex sensory–muscular feedback. Whereas it is well known in insects, this mechanism is much less studied in arachnids, except spiders. Soil-dwelling harvestmen (Opiliones, Nemastomatidae) bear drumstick-like glandular hairs (clavate setae) at their pedipalps, which were previously hypothesized to be sticky and used in prey capture. However, clear evidence for this was lacking to date. Using high-speed videography, we found that the harvestman Mitostoma chrysomelas was able to capture fast-moving springtails (Collembola) just by a slight touch of the pedipalp. Adhesion of single clavate setae increased p…

NemastomatidaePhysiologyVideo RecordingZoologyOpilionesAquatic ScienceBiologyPredationLepidoptera genitaliaAdhesivesArachnidaAnimalsArthropodsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCuticle (hair)SpiderViscosityEcologyCryoelectron MicroscopySetabiology.organism_classificationBiomechanical PhenomenaBody FluidsPredatory BehaviorInsect ScienceAnimal Science and ZoologyPedipalpJournal of Experimental Biology
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Transmission electron microscopy investigation of oxidation of (110)NiAl single crystal with wedge-shaped profile

2016

Abstract Low energy electron diffraction (LEED), high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX), and electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) investigations of oxidation processes in (110)NiAl single crystal of wedge like shape, i.e., on the sample’s areas of different thickness, were carried out. It was found that in the result of several cycles of ion etching, annealing and oxidation the upper layer of (110)NiAl is enriched with Ni. With the increase of Ni concentration from 50 to 100 at. %, the stoichiometry of the near surface area changes and the new phases of Ni3Al and Ni with Al doping are formed one after another. Up to Ni content of 75 at. %…

NialMaterials scienceLow-energy electron diffractionAnnealing (metallurgy)Electron energy loss spectroscopyGeneral EngineeringOxideGeneral Physics and Astronomy02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryTransmission electron microscopy0103 physical sciences010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyHigh-resolution transmission electron microscopySingle crystalcomputercomputer.programming_languageJapanese Journal of Applied Physics
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Photocleavable core cross-linked polymeric micelles of polypept(o)ides and ruthenium(II) complexes

2021

Core cross-linking of polymeric micelles has been demonstrated to contribute to enhanced stability that can improve the therapeutic efficacy. Photochemistry has the potential to provide spatial resolution and on-demand drug release. In this study, light-sensitive polypyridyl-ruthenium(II) complexes were combined with polypept(o)ides for photocleavable core cross-linked polymeric micelles. Block copolymers of polysarcosine-block-poly(glutamic acid) were synthesized by ring-opening N-carboxyanhydride polymerization and modified with aromatic nitrile-groups on the glutamic acid side chain. The modified copolymers self-assembled into micelles and were cross-linked by cis-diaquabis(2,2'-bipyridi…

NitrileCell SurvivalPolymersBiomedical Engineeringchemistry.chemical_elementMicelleChorioallantoic MembraneGel permeation chromatographychemistry.chemical_compoundMicroscopy Electron TransmissionCell Line TumorPolymer chemistrySide chainCopolymerAnimalsHumansGeneral Materials ScienceMicellesPhotolysisCryoelectron MicroscopyGeneral ChemistryGeneral MedicineRutheniumchemistryPolymerizationRuthenium CompoundsPeptidesChickensLinker
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Epicuticular wax content and morphology as related to ethylene and storage perfomance of 'Navelate' orange fruit

2010

8 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. -- Available online 15 September 2009.

Non-chilling peel pittingEthyleneCuticleTurgor pressureWater and turgor potentialsBOTANICAOrange (colour)HorticulturePenicillium digitatumElectron Microscopy Service of the UPVEpicuticular waxchemistry.chemical_compoundEthyleneDiseaseBIOLOGIA VEGETALPenicillium digitatumWaxbiologyfood and beveragesEpicuticular waxbiology.organism_classificationOsmoticHorticulturechemistryCitrus fruit peel collapsevisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumAgronomy and Crop ScienceCitrus × sinensisFood Science
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Characterisation of beam focus quality in biomedical nuclear microscopy: A Fourier optics approach

2009

Abstract The central peak widths of the 2D-autocorrelation function have been investigated as a Figure of Merit (FoM) of focus quality in nuclear microscopy using a quadrupole triplet lens system. The beam focus could be reliably characterised for direct scanning transmission ion microscopy (direct-STIM) images obtained with fluences as small as 5.8 × 10 9 ions cm - 2 which colocalisation tests showed did not introduce significant beam-induced changes in the cells.

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsChemistrybusiness.industryFourier opticsScanning confocal electron microscopyTriplet lensIonOpticsQuadrupoleFigure of meritFocus (optics)businessInstrumentationBeam (structure)Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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Annealing reactions in lead implanted copper

2002

Abstract The terminal solubility of Pb in Cu is extremely low and does not exceed 0.09 at.% at 875 K. Ion implantation of lead ions at 100 keV into Cu single crystals produces metastable solutions. Annealing of the samples causes redistribution of the implanted atoms to equilibrium or near-equilibrium aggregate states which may be reflected in a change in the type of impurity lattice location in the host matrix. We have studied the effect of annealing on single crystalline Cu implanted at temperatures around 375 K with Pb to a concentration of a 1–2 at.%. Rutherford backscattering/channeling analysis and transmission electron microscopy of the as-implanted samples have shown that the implan…

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsMaterials scienceAnnealing (metallurgy)Analytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementCopperIonCrystallographyIon implantationchemistryTransmission electron microscopyImpurityRedistribution (chemistry)SolubilityInstrumentationNuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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Formation of cobalt silicide from filter metal vacuum arc deposited films

2006

The thermal reaction of Co film deposited on Si(111) surfaces by a high current filter metal vacuum arc (FMEVAD) system has been studied. After deposition the films were annealed over the 400-900 degrees C temperature range for 30 min. Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS) was used to characterize the elemental depth distributions in the films subjected to different annealing temperatures. Ordered chemical phases were determined by glancing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD) and the morphology was determined by cross section transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results show that the phases formed are Co2Si at 400 degrees C, CoSi + Coo at 500 degrees C, CoSi + CoSi2 at 600 deg…

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsMaterials scienceAnnealing (metallurgy)Analytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementVacuum arcRutherford backscattering spectrometryAmorphous solidCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryTransmission electron microscopySilicideInstrumentationCobaltCobalt oxideNuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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Investigation of precipitate in an austenitic ODS steel containing a carbon-rich process control agent

2018

This work has been carried out within the framework of the German Helmholtz Association and has received funding from the topic “Materials Research for the Future Energy Supply”. The work of M. Parish and Rainer Ziegler is gratefully acknowledged. Thanks are also due to the team of the chemical laboratory at the KIT for performing the chemical analysis. The help of the beamline staff at ELETTRA (project 20140052 ) synchrotron radiation facility is acknowledged. We acknowledge support by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and Open Access Publishing Fund of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology.

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsMaterials scienceYield (engineering)Materials Science (miscellaneous)Oxidechemistry.chemical_elementProcess control agent02 engineering and technology01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasCarbidechemistry.chemical_compound0103 physical sciences:NATURAL SCIENCES:Physics [Research Subject Categories]Process controlAusteniteMetallurgytechnology industry and agricultureX-ray absorption spectroscopy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologylcsh:TK9001-9401Oxide dispersion strengthened steelNuclear Energy and Engineeringchemistry8. Economic growthlcsh:Nuclear engineering. Atomic powerAustenitic steelMechanical alloying0210 nano-technologyDispersion (chemistry)CarbonTransmission electron microscopyTitaniumNuclear Materials and Energy
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