23 research outputs found

    Assessing polymer-surface adhesion with a polymer collection

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    Polymer modification plays an important role in the construction of devices, but the lack of fundamental understanding on polymer-surface adhesion limits the development of miniaturized devices. In this work, a thermoplastic polymer collection was established using the combinatorial laser-induced forward transfer technique as a research platform, to assess the adhesion of polymers to substrates of different wettability. Furthermore, it also revealed the influence of adhesion on dewetting phenomena during the laser transfer and relaxation process, resulting in polymer spots of various morphologies. This gives a general insight into polymer-surface adhesion and connects it with the generation of defined polymer microstructures, which can be a valuable reference for the rational use of polymers

    Training of the Danube River Channel

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    High-Resolution Ultrasound Including Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound (CEUS) for the Detection of Gas Formation during Aspergillus Fumigatus Infection in Mice

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    Purpose: A. fumigatus infections represent a major threat for patients with a suppressed immune system. Early diagnosis is of importance for a favorable outcome but appears to be difficult due to limited diagnostic procedures. Here we investigated the sensitivity of high-resolution ultrasound (HRU) for the detection of A. fumigatus infection in the liver. Materials and Methods: BALB/c mice were intravenously infected with A. fumigatus and monitored by HRU, Doppler sonography (CCDS), contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS), and real-time strain color-coded elastography (CCE) using a multi-frequency probe (6 - 15 MHz). Contrast media bolus injection of sulfur-hexafluoride micro-bubbles was applied and digital cine-loops from the arterial phase, as well as the portal venous phase up to the late phase of the whole liver were analyzed. All data were correlated to the histopathological findings. Results: Using HRU and CEUS, a sonic shadow was detected in all infected animals. All Aspergillus-infected nodes from 3 -6mm in the liver showed a shadow with rim enhancement and no intranodal enhancement when using CEUS. A. fumigatus infection was confirmed by CFU assessment and histopathological analysis. Granulomas were not associated with shadowing on B-mode. In contrast, granulomas with a diameter above 5mm and a higher stiffness in CCE generated particularly an arterial rim enhancement and portal venous washout without contrast media uptake in the late phase. In addition, CEUS was able to define dynamic capillary microvascularization of infected liver areas. Conclusion: Liver lesions associated with A. fumigatus infection can be detected in mice when combined with CEUS and CCE in vivo

    Sequence-controlled molecular layers on surfaces by thiol–ene chemistry: synthesis and multitechnique characterization

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    Silicon surfaces were functionalized by thiol–ene chemistry using sequential reactions of different α,ω-dienes and α,ω-dithiols bearing marker moieties.</p
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