143 research outputs found

    Effective Passivation of Black Phosphorus under Ambient Conditions

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    Two-dimensional (2D) materials have been studied widely owing to their outstanding properties since monolayer graphene was isolated in 2004. Especially, among 2D materials, phosphorene, a single atomic layer of black phosphorus (BP), has been highlighted for its electrical properties. This material can serve as a substitute for graphene, which has been revealed as a ???semi-metal???, in next-generation semiconductors. However, few-layer BP is prone to degradation under ambient conditions owing to its reactivity with oxygen and water, which results in the condensation of water droplets on the surface of the BP flakes. This causes charge transfer from the phosphorus atom to oxygen, resulting in the formation of phosphoric acid (oxide) and degrades the various properties of BP. Therefore, it is necessary to find passivation methods to prevent BP flakes from being degraded under ambient conditions. This review article deals with recent studies on passivation methods for BP and their performance against oxygen and water, effects on the electrical properties of BP, and the extent to how they protect BP

    SUBJECT-SPECIFIC MULTICHANNEL BLIND SYSTEM IDENTIFICATION OF HUMAN ARTERIAL TREE VIA CUFF OSCILLATION MEASUREMENTS

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    We developed and evaluated a mathematical model-based method to monitor cardiovascular health and estimate risk predictors from two peripheral cuff oscillation measurements. The model structure was established by studying tube-load models individually augmented with a gain, Voigt model, and standard linear solid model to best capture the relationship between carotid tonometry and cuff waveforms at the upper arm and ankle. The arm-cuff interface was better modeled with increasing viscoelasticity but not as much for the ankle-cuff interface. Next, model-estimated ankle blood pressure waveforms were used to formulate a matrix equation for estimating wave reflection. Subsequently derived risk predictors were adequately correlated with those from reference methods. Finally, subject-specific central blood pressure waveforms were estimated from two cuff oscillation signals via multichannel blind system identification. The model estimated central arterial blood pressure waveforms with good accuracy with a median RMSE of 3.08 mmHg and IQR of 1.71 mmHg

    Nearly 100% Horizontal Dipole Orientation and Upconversion Efficiency in Blue Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescent Emitters

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    The relationship between anisotropic orientation and molecular structure of thermally activated delayed fluorescent (TADF)‐based organic light emitting devices (OLEDs) is studied using TADF emitters with carbazole, biscarbazole, and triscarbazole donor units. The bicarbazole and triscarbazole donors are more effective than the carbazole donor in driving the anisotropic orientation of the TADF molecules. A near‐perfect in‐plane orientation of the TADF dipole moment is demonstrated using the triscarbazole donor. In addition, the triscarbazole donor based OLED shows high photoluminescence quantum yield and an upconversion efficiency close to 100%. As a consequence, an external quantum efficiency >30% is obtained.A systematic study correlating donor structure with horizontal dipole orientation of blue triscarbazole thermally activated delayed fluorescent (TADF) emitters shows an exceptionally high horizontal dipole orientation of 95%. The dipole orientation and high photoluminescence quantum yield result in an external quantum efficiency >30% in organic light‐emitting diodes employing these TADF emitters.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145231/1/adom201701340.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145231/2/adom201701340_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145231/3/adom201701340-sup-0001-S1.pd

    Clinical outcomes of FOLFIRINOX in locally advanced pancreatic cancer: A single center experience

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    Systemic chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy is the initial primary option for patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC). This study analyzed the effect of FOLFIRINOX and assessed the factors influencing conversion to surgical resectability for LAPC.Sixty-four patients with LAPC who received FOLFIRINOX as initial chemotherapy were enrolled retrospectively. Demographic characteristics, tumor status, interval/dosage/cumulative relative dose intensity (cRDI) of FOLFIRINOX, conversion to resection, and clinical outcomes were reviewed and factors associated with conversion to resectability after FOLFIRINOX were analyzed.After administration of FOLFIRINOX (median 9 cycles, 70% of cRDI), the median patient overall survival (OS) was 17.0 months. Fifteen of 64 patients underwent surgery and R0 resection was achieved in 11 patients. During a median follow-up time of 9.4 months after resection, cumulative recurrence rate was 28.5% at 18 months after resection. The estimated median OS was significantly longer for the resected group (>40 months vs 13 months). There were no statistical differences between the resected and non-resected groups in terms of baseline characteristics, tumor status and hematologic adverse effects. The patients who received standard dose of FOLFIRINOX had higher probability of subsequent resection compared with patients who received reduced dose, although cRDIs did not differ between groups.FOLFIRINOX is an active regimen in patients with LAPC, given acceptable resection rates and promising R0 resection rates. Additionally, our data demonstrate it is advantageous for obtaining resectability to administer FOLFIRINOX without dose reduction
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