Search results for "techniques"

showing 10 items of 4426 documents

Scalable manufacturing of fibrous nanocomposites for multifunctional liquid sensing

2021

This research is supported by the Advanced Manufacturing Program (No. 1927623) from the National Science Foundation and by the McIntire-Stennis Cooperative Forestry Research Program (No. 1020630) from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture. The authors also thank WestRock Paper Company for donated the wood pulp used in this research. Open access funding is enabled and organized by CERN. Cellulose-based paper electronics is an attractive technology to meet the growing demands for naturally abundant, biocompatible, biodegradable, flexible, inexpensive, lightweight and highly miniaturizable sensory materials. The price reduction of industrial carbon nanotube (CNT) grades offers op…

Materials scienceNanocompositeOrders of magnitude (temperature)Biomedical EngineeringPharmaceutical ScienceNanoparticleForming processesBioengineeringNanotechnologyLiquid SensingCarbon nanotubelaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundCellulose NanofibrilschemistrylawLeak DetectionEquivalent circuitCarbon NanotubesGeneral Materials ScienceElectronicsDetectors and Experimental TechniquesCellulosePaper-Based ElectronicsBiotechnologyNano Today
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Comparative performance of electrospun collagen nanofibers cross-linked by means of different methods.

2009

[EN] Collagen, as the major structural protein of the extracellular matrix in animals, is a versatile biomaterial of great interest in various engineering applications. Electrospun nanofibers of collagen are regarded as very promising materials for tissue engineering applications because they can reproduce the morphology of the natural bone but have as a drawback a poor structural consistency in wet conditions. In this paper, a comparative study between the performance of different cross-linking methods such as a milder enzymatic treatment procedure using transglutaminase, the use of N-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]-N¿-ethylcarbodiimide hydrochloride/ N-hydroxysuccinimide, and genipin, and the u…

Materials scienceNanofibersExtracellular matrixBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundBiopolymersTissue engineeringCell Line TumorUltraviolet lightmedicineHumansNanotechnologyGeneral Materials ScienceComposite materialAminesNucleic acid structureCell ProliferationOsteoblastsTransglutaminasesTissue EngineeringTemperatureBiomaterialOsteoblastElectrochemical TechniquesElectrospinningFibersmedicine.anatomical_structureCross-Linking ReagentschemistryChemical engineeringNanofiberBone SubstitutesGenipinMicroscopy Electron ScanningCollagenACS applied materialsinterfaces
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Expanding Two-Photon Intravital Microscopy to the Infrared by Means of Optical Parametric Oscillator

2010

Chronic inflammation in various organs, such as the brain, implies that different subpopulations of immune cells interact with the cells of the target organ. To monitor this cellular communication both morphologically and functionally, the ability to visualize more than two colors in deep tissue is indispensable. Here, we demonstrate the pronounced power of optical parametric oscillator (OPO)-based two-photon laser scanning microscopy for dynamic intravital imaging in hardly accessible organs of the central nervous and of the immune system, with particular relevance for long-term investigations of pathological mechanisms (e.g., chronic neuroinflammation) necessitating the use of fluorescent…

Materials scienceOptical PhenomenaInfrared RaysInfraredGreen Fluorescent ProteinsSpectroscopy Imaging and Other TechniquesBiophysicsColorCell Linelaw.inventionMiceOpticsTwo-photon excitation microscopylawAluminum OxideAnimalsTitaniumMicroscopyPhotonsPhotobleachingbusiness.industryLasersLaserPhotobleachingFluorescenceMolecular ImagingLuminescent ProteinsBiophysicsOptical parametric oscillatorbusinessExcitationIntravital microscopyBiophysical Journal
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Overview of radiation induced point defects in silica-based optical fibers

2019

International audience; Silica-based optical fibers, fiber-based devices and optical fiber sensors are today integrated in a variety of harsh environments associated with radiation constraints. Under irradiation, the macroscopic properties of the optical fibers are modified through three main basic mechanisms: the radiation induced attenuation, the radiation induced emission and the radiation induced refractive index change. Depending on the fiber profile of use, these phenomena differently contribute to the degradation of the fiber performances and then have to be either mitigated for radiation tolerant systems or exploited to design radiation detectors and dosimeters. Considering the stro…

Materials scienceOptical fiberGeneral Physics and AstronomyPhysics::Optics01 natural sciencesParticle detectorlaw.inventionradiation induced attenuationlawoptical fber0103 physical sciencesIrradiation[PHYS.COND]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]Detectors and Experimental Techniques010306 general physicsDosimeterDopant010308 nuclear & particles physicsbusiness.industryAttenuationpoint defectSettore FIS/01 - Fisica SperimentaleCladding (fiber optics)lcsh:QC1-999optical propertie13. Climate actionsilicaOptoelectronicsbusinessRefractive indexfiber dopinglcsh:Physics
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Gd 3+ -doped sol-gel silica glass for remote ionizing radiation dosimetry

2019

Gadolinium-doped silica glass was prepared, using the sol-gel route, for ionizing radiation dosimetry applications. Such a glassy rod was drawn to a cane at a temperature of 2000 °C. The structural and optical properties of the obtained material were studied using Raman, optical absorption, and photoluminescence spectroscopies. Thereafter, a small piece of this Gd-doped scintillating cane was spliced to a transport passive optical fiber, allowing the remote monitoring of the X-ray dose rate through a radioluminescence (RL) signal. The sample exhibited a linear RL intensity response versus the dose rate from 125 µGy(SiO2)/s up to 12.25 Gy/s. These results confirm the potentialities of this m…

Materials scienceOptical fiberPhotoluminescenceAnalytical chemistry02 engineering and technology01 natural scienceslaw.inventionIonizing radiationsymbols.namesakelaw0103 physical sciencesDosimetryElectrical and Electronic EngineeringDetectors and Experimental TechniquesAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSSol-gel010302 applied physics[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-OPTICS]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Optics [physics.optics]ta114Radioluminescence021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsElectronic Optical and Magnetic Materialsgadolinium-doped silica glasssymbols0210 nano-technologyRaman spectroscopy
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Amoxicillin-loaded polyethylcyanoacrylate nanoparticles: influence of PEG coating on the particle size, drug release rate and phagocytic uptake.

2001

Polyethyleneglycol (PEG)-coated polyethylcyanoacrylate (PECA) nanoparticles loaded with amoxicillin were prepared and the influence of the PEG coating on the particle size, zeta potential, drug release rate and phagocytic uptake by murine macrophages was studied. Experimental results show that this colloidal drug delivery system could be useful for intravenous or oral administration. The profile of amoxicillin release from PECA nanoparticles system was studied under various conditions similar to those of some corporeal fluids. In all these experiments, amoxicillin release in the free form was studied by HPLC analysis. Experimental results showed that at pH 7.4 drug release rises when molecu…

Materials sciencePhagocytosisBiophysicsNanoparticleBioengineeringBiocompatible MaterialsIn Vitro TechniquesPolyethylene GlycolsBiomaterialsMiceDrug Delivery SystemsDrug StabilityPhagocytosisOral administrationPEG ratioZeta potentialAnimalsHumansCyanoacrylatesParticle SizeChromatographyMacrophagesAmoxicillinHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationUreaseMicrospheresBioavailabilityBiochemistryMechanics of MaterialsDrug deliveryCeramics and CompositesParticle sizeBiomaterials
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A Design of Scintillator Tiles Read Out by Surface-Mounted SiPMs for a Future Hadron Calorimeter

2015

Precision calorimetry using highly granular sampling calorimeters is being developed based on the particle flow concept within the CALICE collaboration. One design option of a hadron calorimeter is based on silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) to detect photons generated in plastic scintillator tiles. Driven by the need of automated mass assembly of around ten million channels stringently required by the high granularity, we developed a design of scintillator tiles directly coupled with surface-mounted SiPMs. A cavity is created in the center of the bottom surface of each tile to provide enough room for the whole SiPM package and to improve collection of the light produced by incident particles…

Materials sciencePhotonPhysics - Instrumentation and Detectorsbusiness.industryDynamic rangePhysics::Instrumentation and DetectorsFOS: Physical sciencesCosmic rayInstrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det)ScintillatorOpticsSilicon photomultiplierSampling (signal processing)visual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumTilePhotonicsDetectors and Experimental Techniquesbusinessphysics.ins-det
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Routine preparation of air-dried negatively stained and unstained specimens on holey carbon support films: a review of applications.

2002

Several representative examples are given of the successful application of negative staining across the holes of holey carbon support films using 5% (w/v) ammonium molybdate solution containing trehalose. The inclusion of 0.1% (w/v) trehalose is considered to be most satisfactory, although good data have also been obtained in the presence of 0.01 and 1.0% (w/v) trehalose. The examples given fall into the following groups: protein molecules in the absence of polyethylene glycol (PEG), protein molecules in the presence of PEG (Mr 1000), lipoproteins, lipids and membranes, filaments and tubules, viruses in the absence of PEG, viruses in the presence of PEG, aqueous polymer solutions, and final…

Materials sciencePolymersLipoproteinsGeneral Physics and AstronomyPolyethylene glycolPolyethylene Glycolschemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyPEG ratioAnimalsHumansGeneral Materials ScienceAmmoniumAmmonium molybdateOrganellesAqueous solutionStaining and LabelingHistological TechniquesProteinsTrehaloseCell BiologyNegative stainTrehaloseLipidsCarbonCrystallographyMicroscopy ElectronMembranechemistryHemocyaninsVirusesNuclear chemistryMicron (Oxford, England : 1993)
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Preparation of Catalysts and Photocatalysts Used for Similar Processes

2019

Abstract This chapter reports the main techniques used to synthesize powders and films of heterogeneous catalysts and photocatalysts, often used for similar processes. Traditional preparation processes of bulky (photo)catalysts including precipitation, sol–gel technique, hydrothermal or solvothermal method, solid-state reactions, and flame syntheses were briefly described. The sonochemical method and microwave irradiation technique were also considered. The syntheses of supported catalysts by different techniques, including deposition–precipitation, impregnation, and wet coating technologies were also described. Moreover, a survey is reported of methods to deposit thin films of catalysts on…

Materials sciencePrecipitation (chemistry)Bulk and supported catalystFlame syntheseengineering.materialChemical and physical vapor depositionHydrothermal circulationCatalysisPreparation of heterogeneous (photo)catalystChemical engineeringCoatingWet chemical techniquesPhysical vapor depositionMicrowave irradiationengineeringThin filmSolid-state reaction
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Novel biosensoric devices based on molecular protein hetero-multilayer films

1997

We have developed a novel concept for the modification of technical surfaces with molecularly well-organized layers of bioorganic components. A molecular construction set has been used to implement this concept which is based on molecularly stratified polyelectrolyte films as a structure decoupling protein layers from solid substrates. Utilizing this technology, one can start from a number of different substrates to obtain the same surface structures, on which protein hetero-multilayer films can be prepared to functionalize the interface for (potentially very different) purposes. We have demonstrated the viability of this concept by constructing a biosensor surface that was characterized by…

Materials scienceProtein ConformationBiophysicsProteinsNanotechnologyBiosensing TechniquesOrders of magnitude (numbers)BiochemistryPolyelectrolyteModels StructuralElectrolytesSpectrometry FluorescenceEnergy TransferMonolayerIndicators and ReagentsReactivity (chemistry)AdsorptionLayer (electronics)BiosensorStoichiometryFluorescent DyesProtein BindingAdvances in Biophysics
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