970 research outputs found

    Controlled self-assembly of ito nanoparticles into aggregate wire structures in pmma-ito nanocomposites

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    For polymer-matrix composites (PMCs) that contain insulating matrices and conducting fillers, the electrical properties of the PMCs are especially sensitive to the local concentration of the fillers in the matrix. For PMCs that have phase-segregated microstructures, better prediction of the properties is possible since enhanced control over the distribution of the filler in the matrix can be achieved. In this research, PMMA-ITO nanocomposites were chosen as the composite system in which to explore alternative microstructures, specifically highly phase-segregated microstructures. The microstructures were primarily controlled by varying the ITO particle size and concentration, and the fabrication parameters used to form the nanocomposites. The motivation for this research was to develop correlations between the microstructure and non-destructive measurements in order to improve the predictability of properties in percolating PMCs. As a result of this work, a novel phase-segregated microstructure was discovered, where ITO aggregate-wire structures self-assembled during the composite forming process. Structural analysis of the specimens was conducted primarily using transmission optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Impedance spectroscopy and optical spectroscopy were the primary NDE characterization tools used for analyzing the variations among the specimens. Ultra-small angle x-ray scattering (USAXS) and stereological techniques were also used to describe the dimensions of the ITO aggregate-wire structures that self-assembled in the PMMA-ITO nanocomposites.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Gerhardt, Rosario; Engineering: Dr. Arun M. Gokhale; Engineering: Dr. Preet Singh; Engineering: Dr. Mohan Srinivasarao; Engineering: Dr. Meisha Shofne

    Relationship Problems: Pendent Personal Jurisdiction after \u3ci\u3eBristol-Myers Squibb\u3c/i\u3e

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    The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court of California provides an opportunity to reexamine pendent personal jurisdiction in the federal courts. There are two types of pendent personal jurisdiction. The first form, embraced by federal courts since 1957, is pendent claim personal jurisdiction: when a court has personal jurisdiction over a defendant as to one anchor claim, it can exercise personal jurisdiction with respect to related claims that it could not adjudicate in the anchor claim’s absence. This type is especially common where courts have personal jurisdiction over the defendant because of a statute with a nationwide service of process provision, like the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The second type is new. After Bristol-Myers, some courts have maintained pendent party personal jurisdiction: where a court has specific personal jurisdiction over the defendant as to a particular claim by one plaintiff, it can exercise personal jurisdiction as to similar claims brought by different plaintiffs. This Article offers an analytical framework to evaluate the legitimacy of pendent personal jurisdiction. First, it examines the doctrine’s history and evolution, ultimately criticizing the federal courts for expanding their own jurisdiction without articulating a valid legal warrant. Second, it considers the potential sources of authority for federal courts to wield pendent personal jurisdiction, concluding that all current federal court assertions of pendent personal jurisdiction depend on state long-arm statutes, as limited by the Fourteenth Amendment. In the process, this Article seeks to clarify how the federal courts issue service of process and exercise personal jurisdiction. This Article then assesses whether pendent personal jurisdiction passes muster under the Court’s personal jurisdiction cases. The Court’s decision in Bristol-Myers, justified by interstate federalism principles, casts doubt on pendent personal jurisdiction because it forbids a court from adjudicating claims unconnected to the forum it sits in. Pendent personal jurisdiction often allows courts to breach that rule. Therefore, this Article argues that both pendent party and pendent claim personal jurisdiction are forbidden. This Article also provides broader insights into personal jurisdiction’s relatedness element and interstate federalism’s role in limiting the adjudicative reach of the nation’s courts within a system of multiple sovereigns

    Lateral stress evolution in chromium sulfide cermets with varying excess chromium

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    The shock response of chromium sulfide-chromium, a cermet of potential interest as a matrix material for ballistic applications, has been investigated at two molar ratios. Using a combustion synthesis technique allowed for control of the molar ratio of the material, which was investigated under near-stoichiometric (cermet) and excess chromium (interpenetrating composite) conditions, representing chromium:sulfur molar ratios of 1.15:1 and 4:1, respectively. The compacts were investigated via the plate-impact technique, which allowed the material to be loaded under a onedimensional state of strain. Embedded manganin stress gauges were employed to monitor the temporal evolution of longitudinal and lateral components of stress in both materials. Comparison of these two components has allowed assessment of the variation of material shear strength both with impact pressure/strain-rate and time for the two molar ratio conditions. The two materials exhibited identical material strength despite variations in their excess chromium content

    The Past and Future of the Major Questions Doctrine

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    Gaze following in multiagent contexts: Evidence for a quorum-like principle

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    Research shows that humans spontaneously follow another individual’s gaze. However, little remains known on how they respond when multiple gaze cues diverge across members of a social group. To address this question, we presented participants with displays depicting three (Experiment 1) or five (Experiment 2) agents showing diverging social cues. In a three-person group, one individual looking at the target (33% of the group) was sufficient to elicit gaze-facilitated target responses. With a five-person group, however, three individuals looking at the target (60% of the group) were necessary to produce the same effect. Gaze following in small groups therefore appears to be based on a quorum-like principle, whereby the critical level of social information needed for gaze following is determined by a proportion of consistent social cues scaled as a function of group size. As group size grows, greater agreement is needed to evoke joint attention

    On-line tracking of the human gut microbial metabolism: high-throughput screening during colonic in-vitro fermentation

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    The human gut encloses a large community of bacteria producing a wide range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) when fermenting undigestible substrates. This study aims to provide a high throughput method to study in real-time the gut microbial volatilome when the microbiota process undigestible dietary substrates. Background: Small metabolites from the human gut microbiota are recognized as the intermediates of the microbiome-host cross-talk [1]. The research on the human gut metabolome is mainly based on discrete sampling representing discontinuous ‘snapshot’ of these complex biological systems [2]. The aim of this research work is to enhance the current understanding of the dynamics of the gut microbiota by integrating non-invasive and continuous analytical methods with in-vitro gut simulators, to monitor in real-time, the progression of small molecules released into the headspace [2,3] Methodology: Automated Head space-Solid Phase Micro Extraction coupled with Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (HS-SPME-GC-MS) and Static Headspace- Proton Transfer Reaction-Time of Flight-Mass Spectrometry (SHS-PTR-ToF-MS) are used for the purpose of this investigation. The objective is to screen and monitor a specific set of masses of interest, to gain system level mechanistic insights on primary metabolism of the gut microbial consortia. Results: This methodology enabled the continuous monitoring of multiple metabolites in time, including short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs) derived from 24h oat bran fermentation. A mixture of -odd and -even chain acids were co-released into the culture headspace after 4 hours of fermentation and their relative abundance increased in time over 24 hours. The production of multiple MCFAs from the substrate is most likely a community optimization strategy to maximize ATP production from oat degradation by means of reverse beta-oxidation which involves the utilization of fermentation intermediates, such as propanol and acetate. Furthermore, the untargeted screening allowed the detection of low abundant sulfur metabolites, thiophenes, which, to our knowledge, were never investigated before as gut microbial metabolites (GMMs). Conclusion: By integrating non-invasive and continuous analytical methods with an in-vitro gut simulator, it was possible to monitor in real-time the progression of two important class of small molecules released by the microbial consortia into the headspace. The collected information can be jointly integrated to shed light on the dynamics of bacterial foraging of complex undigestible substrates (e.g. bran from cereals). Overall, these results confirm the idea to consider the bacterial headspace as a highly dynamic chemical system that contains information on microbial community behavio

    Mechanical properties of MWPECVD diamond coatings on Si substrate via nanoindentation

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    The mechanical properties of polycrystalline diamond coatings with thickness varying from 0.92 to 44.65 μm have been analysed. The tested samples have been grown on silicon substrates via microwave plasma enhanced chemical vapour deposition from highly diluted gas mixtures CH4–H2 (1% CH4 in H2). Reliable hardness and elastic modulus values have been assessed on lightly polished surface of polycrystalline diamond films. The effect of the coating thickness on mechanical, morphological and chemical-structural properties is presented and discussed. In particular, the hardness increases from a value of about 52 to 95 GPa and the elastic modulus from 438 to 768 GPa by varying the coating thickness from 0.92 to 4.85 μm, while the values closer to those of natural diamond (H=103 GPa and E=1200 GPa) are reached for thicker films (N5 μm). Additionally, the different thickness of the diamond coatings permits to select the significance of results and to highlight when the soft silicon substrate may affect the measured mechanical data. Thus, the nanoindentation experiments were made within the range from 0.65% to 10% of the film thickness by varying the maximum load from 3 to 80 mN. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserve

    The Role of Randomly Distributed Well Widths in Disordered GaAs/AlGaAs Superlattices

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    Numerical and experimental results on the effect of randomness in GaAs/Al0.3Ga0.7As superlattices having a small number of randomly distributed well widths are reported. The numerical results indicate the splitting of the extended state miniband into sub-minibands of localized states having a disorder-induced fine structure. The comparison between the experimental results for low-temperature absorption spectra and the computed joint density of states of the investigated samples confirms the predicted features. The high-temperature photoluminescence intensity of random superlattices is observed to be enhanced with respect to the ordered case

    Mobile health use in low- and high-income countries: an overview of the peer-reviewed literature.

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    The evolution of mobile phone technology has introduced new possibilities to the field of medicine. Combining technological advances with medical expertise has led to the use of mobile phones in all healthcare areas including diagnostics, telemedicine, research, reference libraries and interventions. This article provides an overview of the peer-reviewed literature, published between 1 August 2006 and 1 August 2011, for the application of mobile/cell phones (from basic text-messaging systems to smartphones) in healthcare in both resource-poor and high-income countries. Smartphone use is paving the way in high-income countries, while basic text-messaging systems of standard mobile phones are proving to be of value in low- and middle-income countries. Ranging from infection outbreak reporting, anti-HIV therapy adherence to gait analysis, resuscitation training and radiological imaging, the current uses and future possibilities of mobile phone technology in healthcare are endless. Multiple mobile phone based applications are available for healthcare workers and healthcare consumers; however, the absolute majority lack an evidence base. Therefore, more rigorous research is required to ensure that healthcare is not flooded with non-evidence based applications and is maximized for patient benefit
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