65 research outputs found

    Tetrairon and Haxairon Hydroxo/Acetato clusters stabilized by multiple polyoxometalate scaffolds, structures, magnetic properties, and chemistry of a dimer and a trimer

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    Investigation of the catalytically relevant gamma-diiron(III) Keggin complexes in aqueous acetate buffer leads to a dimeric C(2v)-symmetric polyanion, [{Fe(OH)(OAc)}(4)(gamma-SiW(10)O(36))(2)](12-) (3) and a trimeric C(2)-symmetric polyanion, [{Fe(6)(OH)(9)(H(2)O)(2)(OAc)(2)}(gamma-SiW(10)O(36))(3)](17-) (4). Polyanion 3 incorporates a hydroxo/acetato-bridged tetrairon(III) core, while 4 incorporates a trigonal prismatic hydroxo/acetato-bridged hexairon(III) core. The monomeric building unit of 3 and 4, {gamma-SiW(10)Fe(2)}, adopts the "out-of-pocket" structural motif (with two corner-sharing FeO(6) coordination polyhedra no longer connected to the internal SiO(4) tetrahedron of the Keggin unit) also observed in the {gamma-SiW(10)Fe(2)}(-)type structures isolated from nonbuffered aqueous solutions. Following hydrolysis, 3 is converted to 4 as confirmed by (29)Si NMR. Magnetic measurements establish that in both 3 and 4 all exchange interactions are antiferromagnetic

    Polyoxometalate-directed assembly of water-soluble AgCl nanocubes

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    "Out-of-pocket" association of Ag(+) to the tetradentate defect site of mono-vacant Keggin and Wells-Dawson polyoxometalate (POM) cluster-anions is used to direct the formation of water-soluble AgCl nanocubes

    Removing compositional boundaries in mixed-linker Keplerate clusters

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    The formation of a self-assembled multi-heterometal Keplerate polyoxomolybdate demonstrates compositional control of linker groups in spherical clusters. The resulting partially reduced {(Mo72Fe20V8Mo2V)-Fe-V/VI-V-III-Mo-IV}-type cluster exhibits intramolecular ferrimagnetic ordering characteristic of such mixed-spin Keplerate systems. ((C) Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2009

    Drawing small cations into highly charged porous nanocontainers reveals "Water" assembly and related interaction problems

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    Müller A, Krickemeyer E, Bögge H, Schmidtmann M, Botar B, Talismanova MO. Drawing small cations into highly charged porous nanocontainers reveals "Water" assembly and related interaction problems. ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION. 2003;42(18):2085-2090

    Quantitative Shear-Wave US Elastography of the Supraspinatus Muscle: Reliability of the Method and Relation to Tendon Integrity and Muscle Quality

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    Purpose To evaluate the reliability of ultrasonographic (US) elastography of the supraspinatus (SSP) muscle, define normal shear-wave velocity (SWV) values, and correlate findings with tendon integrity and muscle quality. Materials and Methods The study was approved by the local ethics committee, and written informed consent was obtained from all patients. SSP SWV (in meters per second) was prospectively assessed twice in 22 asymptomatic volunteers (mean age ± standard deviation, 53.8 years ± 15.3; 11 women and 11 men) by two independent examiners by using shear-wave elastography. Forty-four patients (mean age, 51.9 years ± 15.0; 22 women and 22 men) were prospectively included. SWV findings were compared with tendon integrity, tendon retraction (Patte classification), fatty muscle infiltration (Goutallier stages 0-IV), and muscle volume atrophy (tangent sign) on magnetic resonance (MR) images. Descriptive statistics, Spearman correlation, analysis of variance, two-sample t test, and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) were used. Results Test-retest reliability for mean total SWV (MTSWV) was good for examiner 1 (ICC = 0.70; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.30, 0.87; P = .003) and excellent for examiner 2 (ICC = 0.80; 95% CI: 0.53, 0.92; P < .001). Interexaminer reliability was excellent (ICC = 0.89; 95% CI: 0.64, 0.96; P < .001). MTSWV in volunteers (3.0 m/sec ± 0.5) was significantly higher than that in patients (2.5 m/sec ± 0.5; P = .001). For tendon integrity, no significant difference in MTSWV was found. For tendon retraction, MTSWV varies significantly between patients with different degrees of retraction (P = .047). No significant differences were found for Goutallier subgroups. MTSWV was significantly lower with a positive tangent sign (P = .015; n = 10). Conclusion Shear-wave elastography is reproducible for assessment of the SSP muscle. Mean normal SSP SWV is 3.0 m/sec ± 0.5. SWV decreases with increasing fat content (Goutallier stage 0-III) and increases in the final stage of fatty infiltration (Goutallier stage IV). (©) RSNA, 2015
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