6 research outputs found
PRESA DE LOS MOLINOS [Material gráfico]
Copia digital. Madrid : Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte. Subdirección General de Coordinación Bibliotecaria, 201
A gallium-based magnetocaloric liquid metal ferrofluid
We demonstrate a magnetocaloric ferrofluid based on a gadolinium saturated liquid metal matrix, using a gallium-based liquid metal alloy as the solvent and suspension medium. The material is liquid at room temperature, while exhibiting spontaneous magnetization and a large magnetocaloric effect. The magnetic properties were attributed to the formation of gadolinium nanoparticles suspended within the liquid gallium alloy, which acts as a reaction solvent during the nanoparticle synthesis. High nanoparticle weight fractions exceeding 2% could be suspended within the liquid metal matrix. The liquid metal ferrofluid shows promise for magnetocaloric cooling due to its high thermal conductivity and its liquid nature. Magnetic and thermoanalytic characterizations reveal that the developed material remains liquid within the temperature window required for domestic refrigeration purposes, which enables future fluidic magnetocaloric devices. Additionally, the observed formation of nanometer-sized metallic particles within the supersaturated liquid metal solution has general implications for chemical synthesis and provides a new synthetic pathway toward metallic nanoparticles based on highly reactive rare earth metals
A population genetic analysis of the Critically Endangered Madagascar big-headed turtle, Erymnochelys madagascariensis across captive and wild populations
Erymnochelys madagascariensis is a Critically Endangered turtle endemic to Madagascar. Anthropogenic activity has depleted the wild population by 70% in the last century, and effective conservation management is essential to ensuring its persistence. Captive breeding was implemented to augment depleted populations in the southern part of Ankarafantsika National Park (ANP), when no genetic data were available for E. madagascariensis. It is unknown how much of the natural population’s diversity is encapsulated in captivity. We used eight microsatellite loci and fragments of two mitochondrial genes to identify the genetic structure of E. madagascariensis in the wild. Captive bred turtles were compared with wild populations in order to assess the representativeness of this ex situ conservation strategy for ANP. Six microsatellite clusters, ten cytochrome b, and nine COI haplotypes were identified across wild populations, with high genetic divergence found between populations in two groups of watersheds. Captive bred individuals represent three out of six sampled microsatellite clusters found in the wild and just one mitochondrial haplotype, possibly due to genetic drift. To improve genetic representation, the strategy of frequent interchange between captive and wild breeders within ANP should be revitalised and, as originally planned, hatchlings or juveniles should not be released beyond ANP
Degenerately hydrogen doped molybdenum oxide nanodisks for ultrasensitive plasmonic biosensing
Plasmonic biosensors based on noble metals generally suffer from low sensitivities if the perturbation of refractive-index in the ambient is not significant. By contrast, the features of degenerately doped semiconductors offer new dimensions for plasmonic biosensing, by allowing charge-based detection. Here, this concept is demonstrated in plasmonic hydrogen doped molybdenum oxides (HxMoO3), with the morphology of 2D nanodisks, using a representative enzymatic glucose sensing model. Based on the ultrahigh capacity of the molybdenum oxide nanodisks for accommodating H+, the plasmon resonance wavelengths of HxMoO3 are shifted into visible-near-infrared wavelengths. These plasmonic features alter significantly as a function of the intercalated H+ concentration. The facile H+ deintercalation out of HxMoO3 provides an exceptional sensitivity and fast kinetics to charge perturbations during enzymatic oxidation. The optimum sensing response is found at H1.55MoO3, achieving a detection limit of 2 Ã 10−9m at 410 nm, even when the biosensing platform is adapted into a light-emitting diode-photodetector setup. The performance is superior in comparison to all previously reported plasmonic enzymatic glucose sensors, providing a great opportunity in developing high performance biosensors
A Gallium-Based Magnetocaloric Liquid Metal Ferrofluid
We
demonstrate a magnetocaloric ferrofluid based on a gadolinium
saturated liquid metal matrix, using a gallium-based liquid metal
alloy as the solvent and suspension medium. The material is liquid
at room temperature, while exhibiting spontaneous magnetization and
a large magnetocaloric effect. The magnetic properties were attributed
to the formation of gadolinium nanoparticles suspended within the
liquid gallium alloy, which acts as a reaction solvent during the
nanoparticle synthesis. High nanoparticle weight fractions exceeding
2% could be suspended within the liquid metal matrix. The liquid metal
ferrofluid shows promise for magnetocaloric cooling due to its high
thermal conductivity and its liquid nature. Magnetic and thermoanalytic
characterizations reveal that the developed material remains liquid
within the temperature window required for domestic refrigeration
purposes, which enables future fluidic magnetocaloric devices. Additionally,
the observed formation of nanometer-sized metallic particles within
the supersaturated liquid metal solution has general implications
for chemical synthesis and provides a new synthetic pathway toward
metallic nanoparticles based on highly reactive rare earth metals