6 research outputs found

    Fungi Media: A Post-Internet Performance of Bodily Mutations as an Enactment of Alternative Sexualities

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    This theory-practice PhD project investigates post-Internet performance art, i.e. art which is visually inspired by mutations of human bodies on the Internet, to stage a form of bodily decomposition in real-life spaces. As a framing device for my thesis, I propose the concept of ‘fungi media’. This concept builds on the vital role of fungi in the decomposition of individual organisms’ bodies to highlight the role of media, including the Internet, in breaking down and reassembling human and nonhuman bodies into complex ecologies. Body performance that engages with fungi on a visual and material level is used in this project to explore the possibility of enacting alternative sexualities and non-normative lifestyles within the present-day context of the decomposing world. Those alternative sexualities are described in the thesis as ‘fungosexual’. This formulation repositions queer sexualities in the context of the original meaning of the term ‘queer’, which is ‘rot’, and which stands for a fungiinduced process of decomposition. With this, I explore the foundational importance of rot for both breaking down and sustaining bodies, relationships and life as such. Using the mutability of fungal life as a model, I also look at life’s mutation beyond sexual reproduction and beyond binary gender roles. In line with its theory-practice aspect, the PhD has a dual methodology. On the one hand, it uses a humanities framework (drawn from philosophies of posthumanism and new materialism, media theory, and theories of sexuality and the body) to engage, critically and creatively, with bioscience research into microbes and fungi. On the other, it mobilises the concept of ‘fungi media’ for my own performance art and curatorial work. The performance space used for my research, which is a London squat inhabited by both artists and fungi, serves as an important actor in these performances. My overall aim with this thesis is to position bodily mutation unfolding on and off the Internet as a performative form of dark vitalism. This philosophical-artistic approach offers strategies for urban dwelling, which transcend normative family and sexual life to embrace a hybrid fungosexuality

    GaN Single Crystalline Substrates by Ammonothermal and HVPE Methods for Electronic Devices

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    Recent results of GaN bulk growth performed in Poland are presented. Two technologies are described in detail: halide vapor phase epitaxy and basic ammonothermal. The processes and their results (crystals and substrates) are demonstrated. Some information about wafering procedures, thus, the way from as-grown crystal to an epi-ready wafer, are shown. Results of other groups in the world are briefly presented as the background for our work

    Impact of Surface Chemistry on Copper Deposition in Mesoporous Silicon

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    CAPLUS AN 2016:1100917(Journal; Online Computer File)An easy, efficient, and safe process is developed to metalize mesoporous Si (PSi) with Cu from the decompn. of a soln. of mesitylcopper (CuMes) in an imidazolium-based ionic liq. (IL), [C1C4Im][NTf2]. The impregnation of a soln. of CuMes in IL affords the deposition of metallic islands not only on the surface but also deep within the pores of a mesoporous Si layer with small pores <10 nm. Therefore, this process is well suited to efficiently and completely metalize PSi layers. An in-depth mechanistic study shows that metal deposition is due to the redn. of CuMes by surface silane groups rather than by Si oxidn. as obsd. in aq. or H2O-contg. media. This could open a new route to the chem. metalization of PSi by less-noble metals difficult to attain by a conventional displacement reaction. [on SciFinder(R)
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