Search results for "scanning"

showing 10 items of 1808 documents

A new cystidicolid nematode from Mullus surmuletus (Perciformes: Mullidae) from the western Mediterranean.

2005

Ascarophis valentina n. sp. is described from Mullus surmuletus off the Valencian coast of Spain on the basis of both light and scanning electron microscopy. It can be distinguished from the other members of the genus by the length of the left (long) spicule of the males and by egg morphology. An updated grouping of the species of Ascarophis considered valid is provided with respect to these characters. The new species resembles Ascarophis capelanus, belonging to the group of species possessing eggs with a single polar knob with filaments, but is distinguished by the size of the body, the length of the esophagus (especially in relation to body length), the position of the vulva, and the siz…

Mediterranean climateMaleSpiculeMullus surmuletusbiologyEcologyZoologySpirurida Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationPerciformesPerciformesFish DiseasesNematodeMediterranean seaGenusSpainMediterranean SeaMicroscopy Electron ScanningAnimalsParasitologyFemaleAscarophisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSpiruroideaThe Journal of parasitology
researchProduct

A new species of Empruthotrema (Monogenea: Monocotylidae) from Pteromylaeus bovinus (Myliobatidae) from the Western Mediterranean.

2010

Empruthotrema chisholmae n. sp. is described from specimens recovered from a bull ray Pteromylaeus bovinus (Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1817) at the Oceanogràfic Aquarium in Valencia, Spain. The bull ray was caught in the Spanish Mediterranean (Puerto de Mazarrón, Murcia). The new species resembles 4 others of the same genus ( Empruthotrema dasyatidis Whittington and Kearn, 1992, Empruthotrema kearni Whittington, 1990, Empruthotrema stenophallus Chisholm and Whittington, 2005, and Empruthotrema tasmaniensis Chisholm and Whittington, 1999) in having a haptor with 13 marginal loculi, the posteriormost loculus single and medial. The new species can be distinguished from these other species of the …

Mediterranean climateMalebiologyZoologyTrematode Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationChondrichthyesEmpruthotremaFish DiseasesMediterranean seaPlatyhelminthsSpainPteromylaeusHaptorMediterranean SeaMicroscopy Electron ScanningAnimalsParasitologyTaxonomy (biology)FemaleSkates FishEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMonogeneaThe Journal of parasitology
researchProduct

A comparison of 3 H-cocaine binding on melanin granules and human hair in vitro

1997

The in vitro experiments on the interaction of 3H-cocaine and melanin from Sepia officinalis confirmed the existence of drug binding sites on melanin granules. The results suggested that the binding of 3H-cocaine to melanin could be analyzed by assuming that the binding to the surface of pigment granules is analogous to the adsorption of a drug on a solid and follows Langmuir adsorption isotherm type I. Scatchard analysis indicated heterogeneity of binding sites. Structural and chemical alterations caused by isolation of the melanoproteins, which are heterogeneous in nature and show different physico-chemical properties, are considered to be most crucial. The studies on hair samples confirm…

Melaninsintegumentary systemLangmuir adsorption modelBiologyIn vitroPathology and Forensic MedicineMelaninsymbols.namesakePigmentAdsorptionCocaineBiochemistryMolluscavisual_artMicroscopy Electron Scanningsymbolsvisual_art.visual_art_mediumAnimalsHumanssense organsSepiaBinding siteHair ColorHairCocaine bindingInternational Journal of Legal Medicine
researchProduct

Phase coexistence in a triolein-phosphatidylcholine system. Implications for lysosomal membrane properties.

2010

The effects of tri- and monoglycerides on phospholipid (POPC) membranes were studied using spectroscopical methods. Triolein was found to form two types of POPC-rich membranes, both with POPC or as a three-component system with monopalmitin. These two membrane types were determined as co-existing phases based on their spontaneous and stable separation and named heavy and light phase according to their sedimentation behaviour. Marked differences were seen in the physical properties of these phases, even though only minor compositional variation was detected. The light, less polar phase was found to be less ordered and more fluid and seemed to allow significantly lower amount of water penetra…

Membrane FluidityLipid BilayersPhospholipidCalorimetryBiochemistryPhase TransitionGlycerideschemistry.chemical_compoundPhosphatidylcholineMembrane fluidityTransition TemperatureTrioleinMolecular BiologyPOPCChromatographyCalorimetry Differential ScanningOrganic ChemistryElectron Spin Resonance SpectroscopyWaterCell BiologyPenetration (firestop)MembranechemistryBiophysicsPhosphatidylcholineslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)LysosomesTrioleinChemistry and physics of lipids
researchProduct

Temperature and pressure dependence of quercetin-3-O-palmitate interaction with a model phospholipid membrane: film balance and scanning probe micros…

2004

The molecular interaction of quercetin-3-O-palmitate (QP) with dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) has been studied. Film balance measurements of the average molecular area vs QP molar fraction in DMPC/QP mixed monolayers showed that relevant positive deviations from ideality, i.e., a less dense monolayer packing, occurred for a temperature of 10 degrees C, below the critical melting transition temperature of DMPC monolayers T c m approximately equal 20 degrees C), while ideal behavior was observed at 37 degrees C, above this phase transition temperature. The positive deviation observed at low temperatures in the average molecular area increased with the surface pressure. Scanning probe m…

Membrane FluiditySurface PropertiesLipid BilayersAnalytical chemistryPhospholipidPalmitic AcidPhase separationPalmitic AcidsSurface pressureMole fractionMicroscopy Atomic ForcePhase TransitionBiomaterialsScanning probe microscopychemistry.chemical_compoundMembrane LipidsColloid and Surface ChemistryMonolayerLangmuir-Blodgett monolayersMolecular StructureTransition temperatureTemperatureQuercetin palmitateSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsLangmuir–Blodgett monolayerMembranechemistryAluminum SilicatesQuercetinMicaStress MechanicalDimyristoylphosphatidylcholineAlgorithmsScanning force microscopy
researchProduct

ChemInform Abstract: Scanning Force Microscopy of Artificial Membranes

2010

Visualization of biological membranes by scanning force microscopy (SFM) has tremendously improved the current understanding of protein ‐ lipid interactions under physiological conditions. SFM is the only tool to directly image processes on surfaces in aqueous solution at molecular resolution. Besides being a supportive means to confirm results on lipid phases and domains obtained from fluorescence spectroscopy, calorimetry, and X-ray crystallography, SFM has contributed distinct aspects on the formation of 2D crystals of various membrane-confined proteins and morphological changes of membranes due to the interaction of peptides and proteins. This review will focus on recent results in SFM …

MembraneAqueous solutionChemistryPhase (matter)BiophysicsBiological membraneGeneral MedicineCalorimetryScanning Force MicroscopyMolecular resolutionFluorescence spectroscopyChemInform
researchProduct

Spatially resolved photonic transfer through mesoscopic heterowires

2002

We report spatially resolved observations of light wave propagation along high refraction index dielectric heterowires lying on a transparent substrate. The heterowires are made of linear chains of closely packed mesoscopic particles. The optical excitation of these heterowires is performed through channel waveguides featuring submicrometer transverse cross sections. Both numerical simulations and near-field optical images, recorded with a photon scanning tunneling microscope, agree to show that, at visible frequencies, tuning the periodicity of the heterowires controls the propagation length within a range of several micrometers.

Mesoscopic physicsMaterials sciencePhotonbusiness.industryNear-field opticsPhysics::OpticsDielectriclaw.inventionOpticslawScanning tunneling microscopePhotonicsbusinessRefractive indexExcitationPhysical Review E
researchProduct

ChemInform Abstract: Scanning Probe Microscopy Study of the Metal-Rich Layered Chalcogenides TaM2Te2 (M: Co, Ni).

2010

MetalScanning probe microscopyChemistryvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumNanotechnologyGeneral MedicineChemInform
researchProduct

Effects of Metal-Organic Chemical Vapour Deposition grown seed layer on the fabrication of well aligned ZnO nanorods by Chemical Bath Deposition

2011

Well aligned, long and uniform ZnO nanorods have been reproducibly fabricated adopting a two-steps Metal-Organic Chemical Vapour Deposition (MOCVD) and Chemical Bath Deposition (CBD) fabrication approaches. Thin (<100 nm) ZnO buffer layers have been seeded on silicon substrates by MOCVD and ZnO layers have been subsequently grown, in form of well textured nanorods, using CBD. It has been found that the structure and thickness of the seed layer strongly influence the final morphology and the crystal texturing of ZnO nanorods as well as the CBD growth rate. There is, in addition, a strong correlation between morphologies of CBD grown ZnO nanorods and those of the seed layer underneath. Thus, …

Metal-Organic Chemical Vapour Deposition; Chemical Bath Deposition; Zinc oxideMetal-Organic Chemical Vapour Deposition; Chemical Bath Deposition; Zinc oxide; Nanorods; Scanning Electron MicroscopyMaterials scienceFabricationScanning electron microscopeChemical Bath DepositionMetals and Alloyschemistry.chemical_elementNanotechnologySurfaces and InterfacesChemical vapor depositionZincNanorodSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialschemistryZinc oxideMaterials ChemistryNanorodMetalorganic vapour phase epitaxyScanning Electron MicroscopyLayer (electronics)Metal-Organic Chemical Vapour DepositionChemical bath deposition
researchProduct

Synthesis and antibacterial activity of iron-hexacyanocobaltate nanoparticles.

2018

This paper deals with the synthesis and characterization of iron-hexacyanocobaltate (FeHCC) and its antibacterial properties. The nanoparticles were prepared by a facile co-precipitation technique. Crystal structure, particle morphology, and elemental composition were determined using X-ray Powder Diffraction, X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy, Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), and Infrared Spectroscopy (IR). The antibacterial activity of the FeHCC nanoparticles was tested against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus as models for Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, respectively, by bacterial counting method and microscopic visualization (TEM, FEG-SEM, and fluorescence micro…

Metal-hexacyanoferrateStaphylococcus aureusIronColony Count MicrobialInfrared spectroscopyNanoparticleMetal Nanoparticles02 engineering and technologyMicrobial Sensitivity TestsBacterial growth010402 general chemistrymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesBiochemistryFluorescence spectroscopyInorganic ChemistryMicroscopy Electron TransmissionmedicineFluorescence microscopeEscherichia coliEscherichia coliCyanidesChemistryIron-hexacyanocobaltateCobalt021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesAnti-Bacterial AgentsSpectrometry FluorescenceStaphylococcus aureuMicroscopy Electron ScanningAntibacterial activity0210 nano-technologyAntibacterial activityReactive Oxygen SpeciesNuclear chemistryMacromoleculeJournal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry
researchProduct