32,351 research outputs found
SERS-Based Detection of Calcein Blue Using Nanoparticle-Modified Silica Sol-Gels
Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) has gained interest recently due to its compatibility with aqueous solutions and unique spectra for all molecules. These qualities make SERS an ideal technique for sensing applications; however, an appropriate substrate is needed for effective measurements. Silica sol-gels containing silver nanoparticles may be able to act as SERS substrates, given their porosity and high surface area, and may be able to act as sensors if modified with additional small molecules. In this study, the SERS activity of silica sol-gels containing silver nanoparticles and calcein blue (CB) was investigated to determine their suitability as metal ion sensors. Sol-gels were prepared via the base-catalyzed hydrolysis of tetramethyl orthosilicate (TMOS) in the presence of aqueous CB and silver nanoparticles. SERS measurements of synthesized sol-gels were obtained using a home built Raman spectrometer; obtained spectra indicate that sol-gels containing silver nanoparticles are viable substrates for the SERS of CB and thus may be viable as metal ion sensors
Metal Ion Detection Using Silica Sol-gels Containing Silver Nanoparticles and Calcein Blue (CB)
Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is a spectroscopic technique which relies on the inelastic scattering of photons from a target molecule. SERS is both sensitive and specific; the technique produces a unique spectrum for all molecules while offering up to single molecule detection with proper conditions. However, acquisition of SERS spectra requires the presence of a suitable substrate, such as noble metal nanoparticles or roughened metal electrodes. Silica sol-gels are porous, amorphous silica matrices formed by the hydrolysis of a silicon containing precursor molecule. As a result of their unique structure, these compounds have a variety of unique properties, such as high surface area and low thermal conductivity. They can be easily modified, and metal-colloid-modified silica sol-gels represent a relatively unknown class of compounds which can function as substrates for SERS measurements. In this study, the fluorescent dye calcein blue (CB) was chosen as a target molecule due to its ability to interact with various metal ions. As a result, it has found use as an indicator in EDTA titrations and has potential applications in metal ion sensing devices. Thus, detection of calcein blue within modified sol-gels could lead to the development of new techniques for the detection of metal ions. Such techniques could have applications in fields such as water quality analysis or other environmental assays
A New Nearctic Triclistus (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae)
[excerpt] When Townes and Townes (1959) revised the genus Triclistus along with the rest of the Nearctic Metopiinae, they decided not to describe what was thought likely to be an additional new species, because only one male specimen was known. More recently, additional specimens, both males and females, were collected. From the females, which are even more distinctive than the males, it was easily seen that the species described below is indeed a new one
Numerical computation of real or complex elliptic integrals
Algorithms for numerical computation of symmetric elliptic integrals of all
three kinds are improved in several ways and extended to complex values of the
variables (with some restrictions in the case of the integral of the third
kind). Numerical check values, consistency checks, and relations to Legendre's
integrals and Bulirsch's integrals are included
Infinitesimal Variations of Hodge Structure at Infinity
By analyzing the local and infinitesimal behavior of degenerating polarized
variations of Hodge structure the notion of infinitesimal variation of Hodge
structure at infinity is introduced. It is shown that all such structures can
be integrated to polarized variations of Hodge structure and that, conversely,
all are limits of infinitesimal variations of Hodge structure (IVHS) at finite
points. As an illustration of the rich information encoded in this new
structure, some instances of the maximal dimension problem for this type of
infinitesimal variation are presented and contrasted with the "classical" case
of IVHS at finite points
User's guide for atmospheric carbon monoxide transport model
In the winter months of Fairbanks, Alaska, a highly stable air temperature
inversion creates high levels of carbon monoxide (CO) concentrations. As an aid
to understanding this problem, a CO transport computer model has been created
which provides a useful tool when used in conjunction with other measurement and
analytic studies of traffic, meteorology, emissions control, zoning, and parking
management. The model is completely documented and illustrated with several
examples. Named ACOSP (Atmospheric CO Simulation Program), it predicts expected
CO concentrations within a specific geographic area for a defined set of CO
sources. At the present time, the model is programmed to consider automobile
emissions as the major CO source and may include estimates of stationary sources.
The model is coded for computer solution in the FORTRAN programming language and
uses the finite-element method of numerical solution of the basic convective-diffusion
equations. Although it has a potential for real-time analysis and control,
at the present time the model will be most valuable for investigating and understanding
the physical processes which are responsible for high CO levels and for
testing remedial control measures at high speed and low cost
An investigation of particle mixing in a gas-fluidized bed
Mechanism for particle movement in gas-fluidized beds was studied both from the theoretical and experimental points of view. In a two-dimensional fluidized bed particle trajectories were photographed when a bubble passed through
Critical import supply elasticities and the ‘imports-as-market-discipline’ hypothesis
This paper formally examines the factors underlying how responsive imports must be to domestic prices (the ‘import supply elasticity’) in order to thwart an anticompetitive domestic price increase stemming from a merger––an issue that frequently arises in many antitrust reviews. Domestic firms face a fringe comprised of foreign firms who import their products into the domestic market. In the eyes of domestic consumers, these imports are viewed as imperfect substitutes in demand to the output produced by the domestic firms. The model is solved in terms of the ‘critical’ import supply elasticity that can then be used evaluate the ability of imports to constrain an anticompetitive price increase post-merger. Both general and linear demand specifications are considered. Numerical simulations are conducted to consider the magnitude of perturbations in the model’s exogenous parameters. Potential empirical extensions of the model are also considered.
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