59 research outputs found

    Electrochemical study of platinum deposited by electron beam evaporation for application as fuel cell electrodes

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    Platinum is the most used catalyst in electrodes for fuel cells due to its high catalytic activity. Polymer electrolyte and direct methanol fuel cells usually include Pt as catalyst in their electrodes. In order to diminish the cost of such electrodes, different Pt deposition methods that permit lowering the metal load whilst maintaining their electroactivity, are being investigated. In this work, the behaviour of electron beam Pt (e-beam Pt) deposited electrodes for fuel cells is studied. Three different Pt loadings have been investigated. The electrochemical behaviour by cyclic voltammetry in H2SO4, HClO4 and in HClO4+MeOH before and after the Pt deposition on carbon cloth has been analysed. The Pt improves the electrochemical properties of the carbon support used. The electrochemical performance of e-beam Pt deposited electrodes was finally studied in a single direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) and the obtained results indicate that this is a promising and adequate method to prepare fuel cell electrodes

    Electrochemical study of platinum deposited by electron beam evaporation for application as fuel cell electrodes

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    Platinum is the most used catalyst in electrodes for fuel cells due to its high catalytic activity. Polymer electrolyte and direct methanol fuel cells usually include Pt as catalyst in their electrodes. In order to diminish the cost of such electrodes, different Pt deposition methods that permit lowering the metal load whilst maintaining their electroactivity, are being investigated. In this work, the behaviour of electron beam Pt (e-beam Pt) deposited electrodes for fuel cells is studied. Three different Pt loadings have been investigated. The electrochemical behaviour by cyclic voltammetry in H2SO4, HClO4 and in HClO4+MeOH before and after the Pt deposition on carbon cloth has been analysed. The Pt improves the electrochemical properties of the carbon support used. The electrochemical performance of e-beam Pt deposited electrodes was finally studied in a single direct methanol fuel cell (DMFC) and the obtained results indicate that this is a promising and adequate method to prepare fuel cell electrodes

    Comportamiento electroquímico y en pila de combustible de cátodos fabricados mediante evaporacion electrónica de Pt frente a electrodos comerciales

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    (SPA) Con el objetivo de disminuir el coste de los electrodos utilizados en las pilas de combustible de membrana polimérica se ha llevado a cabo un estudio de la influencia sobre la respuesta electroquímica y en ensayos en monocelda de pila de combustible de alcohol directo, de la deposición por evaporación electrónica de platino sobre tela de carbón. Se han estudiado en las mismas condiciones dos electrodos comerciales con distinta carga de catalizador y dos electrodos preparados por evaporación electrónica de platino. Se encuentra que la evaporación electrónica de platino sobre tela de carbón ahorra carga de catalizador, aumenta la superficie electroactiva y permite alcanzar rendimientos comparables a los de los electrodos comerciales, mejorando mucho la potencia obtenida por unidad de masa de material catalítico. (ENG) In order to diminish the cost of the electrodes used in polymer membrane fuel cells a study of the influence on the electrochemical response and essays in a single direct methanol fuel cell of the deposition by electronic evaporation of Platinum on carbon cloth has been carried out. Two commercial electrodes with different catalyst loading and two electrodes prepared by electronic evaporation of Platinum have been studied in the same conditions. It can be concluded that electronic evaporation of Platinum on carbon cloth saves catalyst load, increases the electroactive surface area and reaches fuel cell performances comparable with those obtained using commercial electrodes, improving clearly the power obtained per unit mass of catalytic material

    Structural and magnetic characterization of oleic acid and oleylamine-capped gold nanoparticles

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    In this work the study of oleic acid and oleylamine-capped gold nanoparticles is presented. The structural characterization of the sample shows 6.7 nm gold nanoparticles with a narrow size distribution. The experimental optical absorption spectrum has a maximum at 2.35 eV. The calculated optical absorption spectrum is shifted and narrower than the experimental one, indicating that the oleic acid and oleylamine do not merely passivate the metallic nanoparticles but modify its electronic structure. These gold nanoparticles show in addition a kind of magnetic order similar to other organic passivated gold nanoparticles as thiol-capped gold nanoparticles. Although the magnetic interactions seem to be weaker than in thiol-capped ones, the magnetic behavior looks similar to that, i.e., an invariant temperature dependence of the magnetization from 5 to 300 K and a noticeable coercive field. We analyze the influence of the organic layer bonding the nanoparticles on the magnetic behavior. © 2006 American Institute of Physics.Financial support from the Spanish MCyT under Project No. MAT2002–04246-c05–05 and CAM under Project No. S-0505/MAT/0194 are acknowledged.Peer Reviewe

    Understanding HAT1: A Comprehensive Review of Noncanonical Roles and Connection with Disease

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    Histone acetylation plays a vital role in organizing chromatin, regulating gene expression and controlling the cell cycle. The first histone acetyltransferase to be identified was histone acetyltransferase 1 (HAT1), but it remains one of the least understood acetyltransferases. HAT1 catalyzes the acetylation of newly synthesized H4 and, to a lesser extent, H2A in the cytoplasm. However, 20 min after assembly, histones lose acetylation marks. Moreover, new noncanonical functions have been described for HAT1, revealing its complexity and complicating the understanding of its functions. Recently discovered roles include facilitating the translocation of the H3H4 dimer into the nucleus, increasing the stability of the DNA replication fork, replication-coupled chromatin assembly, coordination of histone production, DNA damage repair, telomeric silencing, epigenetic regulation of nuclear lamina-associated heterochromatin, regulation of the NF-kappa B response, succinyl transferase activity and mitochondrial protein acetylation. In addition, the functions and expression levels of HAT1 have been linked to many diseases, such as many types of cancer, viral infections (hepatitis B virus, human immunodeficiency virus and viperin synthesis) and inflammatory diseases (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, atherosclerosis and ischemic stroke). The collective data reveal that HAT1 is a promising therapeutic target, and novel therapeutic approaches, such as RNA interference and the use of aptamers, bisubstrate inhibitors and small-molecule inhibitors, are being evaluated at the preclinical level

    Biological significance of monoallelic and biallelic BIRC3 loss in del(11q) chronic lymphocytic leukemia progression

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    Article number: 127[EN]BIRC3 is monoallelically deleted in up to 80% of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cases harboring del(11q). In addition, truncating mutations in the remaining allele of this gene can lead to BIRC3 biallelic inactivation, which has been shown to be a marker for reduced survival in CLL. Nevertheless, the biological mechanisms by which these lesions could contribute to del(11q) CLL pathogenesis and progression are partially unexplored. We implemented the CRISPR/Cas9-editing system to generate isogenic CLL cell lines harboring del(11q) and/or BIRC3 mutations, modeling monoallelic and biallelic BIRC3 loss. Our results reveal that monoallelic BIRC3 deletion in del(11q) cells promotes non-canonical NF-κB signaling activation via RelB-p52 nuclear translocation, being these effects allelic dose-dependent and therefore further enhanced in del(11q) cells with biallelic BIRC3 loss. Moreover, we demonstrate ex vivo in primary cells that del(11q) cases including BIRC3 within their deleted region show evidence of non-canonical NF-κB activation which correlates with high BCL2 levels and enhanced sensitivity to venetoclax. Furthermore, our results show that BIRC3 mutations in del(11q) cells promote clonal advantage in vitro and accelerate leukemic progression in an in vivo xenograft model. Altogether, this work highlights the biological bases underlying disease progression of del(11q) CLL patients harboring BIRC3 deletion and mutation

    Biological significance of monoallelic and biallelic BIRC3 loss in del(11q) chronic lymphocytic leukemia progression

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    © The Author(s) 2021.BIRC3 is monoallelically deleted in up to 80% of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cases harboring del(11q). In addition, truncating mutations in the remaining allele of this gene can lead to BIRC3 biallelic inactivation, which has been shown to be a marker for reduced survival in CLL. Nevertheless, the biological mechanisms by which these lesions could contribute to del(11q) CLL pathogenesis and progression are partially unexplored. We implemented the CRISPR/Cas9-editing system to generate isogenic CLL cell lines harboring del(11q) and/or BIRC3 mutations, modeling monoallelic and biallelic BIRC3 loss. Our results reveal that monoallelic BIRC3 deletion in del(11q) cells promotes non-canonical NF-κB signaling activation via RelB-p52 nuclear translocation, being these effects allelic dose-dependent and therefore further enhanced in del(11q) cells with biallelic BIRC3 loss. Moreover, we demonstrate ex vivo in primary cells that del(11q) cases including BIRC3 within their deleted region show evidence of non-canonical NF-κB activation which correlates with high BCL2 levels and enhanced sensitivity to venetoclax. Furthermore, our results show that BIRC3 mutations in del(11q) cells promote clonal advantage in vitro and accelerate leukemic progression in an in vivo xenograft model. Altogether, this work highlights the biological bases underlying disease progression of del(11q) CLL patients harboring BIRC3 deletion and mutation.This work was supported by grants from the Spanish Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias PI15/01471, PI18/01500, Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) “Una manera de hacer Europa”, “Consejería de Educación, Junta de Castilla y León” (SA271P18), “Proyectos de Investigación del SACYL”, Spain GRS 2062/A/19, GRS 1847/A/18, GRS1653/A17,“Fundación Memoria Don Samuel Solórzano Barruso” (FS/23-2018), by grants (RD12/0036/0069) from Red Temática de Investigación Cooperativa en Cáncer (RTICC), Universidad de Salamanca (Programa XIII), Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Cáncer (CIBERONC CB16/12/00233) and SYNtherapy “Synthetic Lethality for Personalized Therapy-based Stratification In Acute Leukemia” (ERAPERMED2018-275); ISCIII (AC18/00093), co-funded by ERDF/ESF, “Investing in your future”. M.Q.Á. and A.E.R.V. are supported with a research grant by FEHH (“Fundación Española de Hematología y Hemoterapia”); M.H.S. holds a Sara Borrell postdoctoral contract (CD19/00222) from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII). C.P.C. was supported by an “Ayuda predoctoral en Oncología” (AECC) and is a recipient of a PFIS grant (FI19/00191) from Instituto de Salud Carlos III; PFIS grant and Sara Borrell postdoctoral contrat are co-founded by Fondo Social Europeo (FSE) “El Fondo Social Europeo invierte en tu futuro”; J.L.O. and R.B.S. are supported by a grant from the University of Salamanca (“Contrato postdoctoral programa II”)

    Extended and localized surface plasmons in annealed Au films on glass substrates

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    We present here a study on the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) in Au films deposited onto glass substrates and annealed in air at different temperatures. The initial Au films exhibit the resonant absorption of extended surface plasmons which depends on the film thickness. Thermal treatments promote the modification of the continuous films toward the formation of Au isolated islands. The morphological features of the islands depend on the film initial thickness and annealing temperature. The optical properties of the films are qualitatively modified as a consequence of the morphological changes. For films with initial thickness below 30 nm, the islands exhibit localized SPR while thicker films lead to islands large enough to hold extended SPR. © 2010 American Institute of Physics.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Education through the Project No. FIS-2008-06249.Peer Reviewe

    XAS study of Mn, Fe and Cu as indicators of historical glass decay

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    We present here a study of historic glass decay by means of X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS). Transition metal cations incorporated in the glass as choromophores exhibit modifications of their oxidising state and chemical environment as the glass suffers a decay process. These modifications can be monitored by measuring X-ray absorption near edge structure, XANES, and extended X-ray absorption fine structure, EXAFS, spectra at the selected atomic species. We apply the technique here to glasses from different periods ranging from 1st century BC to 18th century, demonstrating that XAS provides an advanced tool for qualitative analysis of glass decay. In particular we have found that it is possible to establish a relationship between the oxidation state of Fe and Cu cations with the decay suffered by the glass. In contrast, our results indicate that the Mn oxidizing state is not directly involved in the glass decay of the studied samples.The Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas are acknowledged for the financial support. This work has been supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness through the projects FIS-2008-06249, S2009-MAT-1629 (Geo-materials Program) and MAT2011-27573-C04-04, and by the Comunidad de Madrid NANOBIOMAGNET project and by the Aragón DGA NETOSHIMA grant. NC acknowledges the financial support of the FSE-MEC Ramón y Cajal program ref. RYC-2007-01715. MA and AS acknowledge the UCM Campus of International Excellence (PICATA Program) and the CSIC (JAE Program) respectively, for pre-doctoral fellowships.Peer Reviewe
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