495 research outputs found
Short-term Treatment with Dabigatran Alters Protein Expression Patterns in a Late-Stage Tau-Based Alzheimer\u27s Disease Mouse Model
Proteins that regulate the coagulation cascade, including thrombin, are elevated in the brains of Alzheimer\u27s disease (AD) patients. While studies using amyloid-based AD transgenic mouse models have implicated thrombin as a protein of interest, the role of thrombin in tau-based animal models has not been explored. The current study aims to determine how inhibiting thrombin could alter oxidative stress, inflammation, and AD-related proteins in a tau-based mouse model, the Tg4510. Aged Tg4510 mice were treated with the direct thrombin inhibitor dabigatran or vehicle for 7 days, brains collected, and western blot and data-independent proteomics using mass spectrometry with SWATH-MS acquisition performed to evaluate proteins related to oxidative stress, intracellular signaling, inflammation, and AD pathology. Dabigatran reduced iNOS, NOX4, and phosphorylation of tau (S396, S416). Additionally, dabigatran treatment increased expression of several signaling proteins related to cell survival and synaptic function. Increasing evidence supports a chronic procoagulant state in AD, highlighting a possible pathogenic role for thrombin. Our data demonstrate that inhibiting thrombin produces alterations in the expression of proteins involved in oxidative stress, inflammation, and AD-related pathology, suggesting that thrombin-mediated signaling affects multiple AD-related pathways providing a potential future therapeutic target
Changes in soil microbial communities as a result of growing Brassicaceae crops
The study was conducted in 2006 - 2008 at the Production and Experimental Station of the University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, located in BaĹcyny (NE Poland). The objective of this study was to determine the microbial quality of soil after Brassicaceae grown as forecrops for winter wheat. A field experiment was established on grey-brown podsolic soil, and it involved the following forecrops: winter rapeseed, spring rapeseed, white mustard, Chinese mustard, and winter wheat as control. Soil samples for microbiological analyses were collected in the spring, before the sowing of forecrops, and in the autumn, after the harvest of Brassicaceae and ploughing-in crop residues. Bacterial and fungal communities isolated from soil sown with Brassicaceae as forecrops were generally more abundant and diverse. These communities exerted an inhibitory effect on the growth of soil pathogens. Forecrops with the greatest microbiological potential were white mustard and winter rapeseed
Beyond the 'Grid-Lock' in Electricity Interconnectors: The Case of Germany and Poland
The common European electricity market requires both market integration and transmission grid expansion, including trans-border interconnectors. Although the benefits of increased interconnectivity are widely acknowledged, expansion of interconnectors is often very slow. This paper gathers insights on the reasons behind this grid-lock drawing on the study of the German-Polish border. Although two interconnectors already exist, the trade is blocked by unplanned electricity loop flows. A third interconnector has been discussed for years, but saw little progress in spite of declarations of support on both sides. Drawing on the existing literature on the topic of grid expansion we identify four hypotheses for the grid-lock: inadequate financing; diverging interests; governance and administration problems; and different actors' motivations, trust and security perceptions. We evaluate them using the empirical material gathered through document analysis and stakeholder interviews conducted in Germany and Poland. None of the hypotheses on its own can explain the gridlock. However, while financing has not been a major obstacle, divergent interests had an impact on the project delay, administrative and governance problems are a great hindrance on the technical level, while motivations influence interstate political relations and policy shaping. EU support and closer bilateral cooperation provide opportunities to address these challenges
Ultrafast Charge Separation in Bilayer WS2/Graphene Heterostructure Revealed by Time- and Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy
Efficient light harvesting devices need to combine strong absorption in the visible spectral range with efficient ultrafast charge separation. These features commonly occur in novel ultimately thin van der Waals heterostructures with type II band alignment. Recently, ultrafast charge separation was also observed in monolayer WS2/graphene heterostructures with type I band alignment. Here we use time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to show that ultrafast charge separation also occurs at the interface between bilayer WS2 and graphene indicating that the indirect band gap of bilayer WS2 does not affect the charge transfer to the graphene layer. The microscopic insights gained in the present study will turn out to be useful for the design of novel optoelectronic devices
Recommended from our members
Dialectic tensions in the financial markets: a longitudinal study of pre- and post-crisis regulatory technology
This article presents the findings from a longitudinal research study on regulatory technology in the UK financial services industry. The financial crisis with serious corporate and mutual fund scandals raised the profile of
compliance as governmental bodies, institutional and private investors introduced a âtsunamiâ of financial regulations. Adopting a multi-level analysis, this study examines how regulatory technology was used by financial firms to meet their compliance obligations, pre- and post-crisis. Empirical data collected over 12 years examine the deployment of
an investment management system in eight financial firms. Interviews with public regulatory bodies, financial
institutions and technology providers reveal a culture of compliance with increased transparency, surveillance and
accountability. Findings show that dialectic tensions arise as the pursuit of transparency, surveillance and
accountability in compliance mandates is simultaneously rationalized, facilitated and obscured by regulatory
technology. Responding to these challenges, regulatory bodies continue to impose revised compliance mandates on
financial firms to force them to adapt their financial technologies in an ever-changing multi-jurisdictional regulatory landscape
Momentum-resolved linear dichroism in bilayer MoS2
In solid state photoemission experiments it is possible to extract information about the symmetry and orbital character of the electronic wave functions via the photoemission selection rules that shape the measured intensity. This approach can be expanded in a pump-probe experiment where the intensity contains additional information about interband excitations induced by an ultrafast laser pulse with tunable polarization. Here, we find an unexpected strong linear dichroism effect (up to 42.4%) in the conduction band of bilayer MoS2, when measuring energy- A nd momentum-resolved snapshots of excited electrons by time- A nd angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We model the polarization-dependent photoemission intensity in the transiently populated conduction band using the semiconductor Bloch equations. Our theoretical analysis reveals a strongly anisotropic momentum dependence of the optical excitations due to intralayer single-particle hopping, which explains the observed linear dichroism
Programming moir\'e patterns in 2D materials by bending
Moir\'e superlattices in twisted two-dimensional materials have generated
tremendous excitement as a platform for achieving quantum properties on demand.
However, the moir\'e pattern is highly sensitive to the interlayer atomic
registry, and current assembly techniques suffer from imprecise control of the
average twist angle, spatial inhomogeneity in the local twist angle, and
distortions due to random strain. Here, we demonstrate a new way to manipulate
the moir\'e patterns in hetero- and homo-bilayers through in-plane bending of
monolayer ribbons, using the tip of an atomic force microscope. This technique
achieves continuous variation of twist angles with improved twist-angle
homogeneity and reduced random strain, resulting in moir\'e patterns with
highly tunable wavelength and ultra-low disorder. Our results pave the way for
detailed studies of ultra-low disorder moir\'e systems and the realization of
precise strain-engineered devices
Mineralogical evolution of cement pastes at early ages based on thermogravimetric analysis (TGA)
[EN] Ordinary thermogravimetric analysis (TG) and high-resolution TG tests were carried out on three different Portland cement pastes to study the phases present during the first day of hydration. Tests were run at 1, 6, 12 and 24 h of hydration, in order
to determine the phases at these ages. High-resolution TG tests were used to separate decompositions presented in the 100Âż200 C interval. The non-evaporable water determined by TG was used to determine hydration degree for the different ages. The effect of particle size distribution (PSD) on mineralogical evolution was established, as well as the addition of calcite as mineralogical filler. Finer PSD and calcite addition accelerate the hydration process, increasing the hydration degree on the first day of eaction between water and cement. According to high-resolution TG results, it was demonstrated that ettringite was the only decomposed phase in the 100Âż200 C interval during the first 6 h of hydration for all studied cements. C-S-H phase starts to appear in all cements after 12 h of hydration.Funding was provided by Colciencias (Grant No. Convocatoria 567-2012).Gaviria, X.; Borrachero Rosado, MV.; Paya Bernabeu, JJ.; MonzĂł Balbuena, JM.; TobĂłn, J. (2018). Mineralogical evolution of cement pastes at early ages based on thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry. 132(1):39-46. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10973-017-6905-0S39461321Benboudjema F, Meftah JM, Torernti F. Interaction between drying, shrinkage, creep and cracking phenomena in concrete. Eng Struct. 2005;27:239â50.Holt E. Contribution of mixture design to chemical and autogenous shrinkage of concrete at early ages. Cem Concr Res. 2005;35:464â72.Darquennes A, Staquet S, Delplancke-Ogletree MP, Espion B. Effect of autogenous deformation on the cracking risk of slag cement concretes. Cem Concr Compos. 2011;33:368â79.Slowik V, Schmidt M, Fritzsch R. Capillary pressure in fresh cement-based materials and identification of the air entry value. Cem Concr Compos. 2008;30(7):557â65.Evju C, Hansen S. Expansive properties of ettringite in a mixture of calcium aluminate cement, Portland cement and Ă-calcium sulfate hemihydrates. Cem Concr Res. 2001;31:257â61.Bentz DP, Jensen OM, Hansen KK. Olesen, Stang, H. Haecker, C.J. Influence of cement particle-size distribution on early age autogenous strain and stresses in cement-based materials. J Am Ceram Soc. 2001;84(1):129â35.Barcelo L, Moranville M, Clavaud B. Autogenous shrinkage of concrete: a balance between autogenous swelling and self-desiccation. Cem Concr Res. 2005;35(1):177â83.Bouasker M, Mounanga P, Turcry P, Loukili A, Khelidj A. Chemical shrinkage of cement pastes and mortars at very early age: effect of limestone filler and granular inclusions. Cem Concr Compos. 2008;30(1):13â22.Bentz DP. A review of early-age properties of cement-based materials. Cem Concr Res. 2008;38(2):196â204.Ozawa T. Controlled rate thermogravimetry. New usefulness of controlled rate thermogravimetry revealed by decomposition of polyimide. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2000;59:375â84.Ramachandran VS, Paroli RM, Beaudoin JJ, Delgado AH. Thermal analysis of construction materials. Building materials series. New York: Noyes Publications; 2003.Zanier A. High-resolution TG for the characterization of diesel fuel additives. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2001;64:377â84.TobĂłn JI, PayĂĄ J, Borrachero MV, Restrepo OJ. Mineralogical evolution of Portland cement blended with silica nanoparticles and its effect on mechanical strength. Constr Build Mater. 2012;36:736â42.Singh M, Waghmare S, Kumar V. Characterization of lime plasters used in 16th century Mughal Monument. J Archeol Sci. 2014;42:430â4.Majchrzak-Kuçeba I. Thermogravimetry applied to characterization of fly ash-based MCM-41 mesoporous materials. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2012;107:911â21.Silva ACM, GĂĄlico DA, Guerra RB, Legendre AO, Rinaldo D, Galhiane MS, Bannach G. Study of some volatile compounds evolved from the thermal decomposition of atenolol. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2014;115:2517â20.Rios-Fachal M, Gracia-FernĂĄndez C, LĂłpez-Beceiro J, GĂłmez-Barreiro S, TarrĂo-Saavedra J, Ponton A, Artiaga R. Effect of nanotubes on the thermal stability of polystyrene. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2013;113:481â7.Yamarte L, Paxman D, Begum S, Sarkar P, Chambers A. TG measurement of reactivity of candidate oxygen carrier materials. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2014;116:1301â7.Borrachero MV, PayĂĄ J, Bonilla M, MonzĂł J. The use of thermogravimetric analysis technique for the characterization of construction materials. The gypsum case. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2008;91(2):503â9.TobĂłn JI, PayĂĄ J, Borrachero MV, Soriano L, Restrepo OJ. Determination of the optimum parameters in the high resolution thermogravimetric analysis (HRTG) for cementitious materials. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2012;107:233â9.Kuzielova E, Ĺ˝emliÄka M, MĂĄsilko, J, Palou, M.T. Effect of additives on the performance of Dyckerhoff cement, Class G, submitted to simulated hydrothermal curing. J Therm Anal Calorim. Accepted 29 Oct 2017Genc M, Genc ZK. Microencapsulated myristic acidâfly ash with TiO2 shell as a novel phase change material for building application. J Therm Anal Calorim. Accepted 24 Oct 2017.Singh M, Kumar SV, Waghmare SA. The composition and technology of the 3â4th century CE decorative earthen plaster of Pithalkhora caves, India. J Archeol Sci. 2016;7:224â37.Liu L, Liu Q, Cao Y, Pan WP. The isothermal studies of char-CO2 gasification using the high-pressure thermo-gravimetric method. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2015;120:1877â82.Majchrzak-Kuce I, Bukalak-Gaik D. Regeneration performance of metalâorganic frameworks TG-vacuum tests. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2016;125:1461â6.Ion RM, Radovici C, Fierascu RC, Fierascu I. Thermal and mineralogical investigations of iron archaeological Materials. J Therm Anal Calorim. 2015;121:1247â53.Rupasinghe M, San Nicolas R, Mendis P, Sofi M, Ngo T. Investigation of strength and hydration characteristics in nano-silica incorporated cement paste. Cem Concr Compos. 2017;80:17â30.Esteves PL. On the hydration of water-entrained cementâsilica systems: combined SEM, XRD and thermal analysis in cement pastes. Thermochim Acta. 2011;518:27â35.Riesen R. Adjustment of heating rate for maximum resolution in TG and TMA (MaxRes). J Therm Anal. 1998;53:365â74.Lim S, Mondal P. Micro- and nano-scale characterization to study the thermal degradation of cement-based materials. Mater Charact. 2014;92:15â25.Gill PS, Sauerbrunn SR, Crowe BS. High resolution thermogravimetry. J Therm Anal. 1992;38:255â66.Mounanga P, Khelidj A, Loukili A, Baroghel-Bouny V. Predicting Ca(OH)2 content and chemical shrinkage of hydrating cement pastes using analytical approach. Cem Concr Res. 2004;34:255â65.Zeng Q, Li K, Fen-chong T, Dangla P. Determination of cement hydration and pozzolanic reaction extents for fly-ash cement pastes. Constr Build Mater. 2012;27:560â9.Parrott LP, Geiker M, Gutteridge WA, Killoh D. Monitoring Portland cement hydration: Comparison of methods. Cem Concr Res. 1990;20:919â26.Hewlett PC. Leaâs chemistry of cement and concrete. 4th ed. Oxford: Elsevier Science & Technology Books; 2004.ASTM C305 Standard practice for mechanical mixing of hydraulic cement pastes and mortars of plastic consistency. ASTM International, West Conshohocken, PA; 2012.Taylor HF. Cement chemistry. 2nd ed. Westminster: Thomas Telford; 1997.Nadelman EI, Freas DJ, Kurtis KE. Nano- and microstructural characterization of Portland limestone cement paste. In: Nanotechnology in construction. Proceedings of NICOM 5. 2015. p. 87â92
Spectroscopic view of ultrafast charge carrier dynamics in single- and bilayer transition metal dichalcogenide semiconductors
Funding: We gratefully acknowledge funding from VILLUM FONDEN through the Young Investigator Program (Grant. No. 15375) and the Centre of Excellence for Dirac Materials (Grant.No. 11744), the Danish Council for Independent Research, Natural Sciences under the Sapere Aude program (Grant Nos. DFF-9064-00057B and DFF-6108-00409). Access to the Artemis Facility was funded by STFC. I.M. acknowledges financial support by the International Max Planck Research School for Chemistry and Physics of Quantum Materials (IMPRS-CPQM). The authors also acknowledge The Royal Society and The Leverhulme Trust.The quasiparticle spectra of atomically thin semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) and their response to an ultrafast optical excitation critically depend on interactions with the underlying substrate. Here, we present a comparative time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (TR-ARPES) study of the transient electronic structure and ultrafast carrier dynamics in the single- and bilayer TMDCs MoS2 and WS2 on three different substrates: Au(111), Ag(111) and graphene/SiC. The photoexcited quasiparticle bandgaps are observed to vary over the range of 1.9-2.3 eV between our systems. The transient conduction band signals decay on a sub-100 fs timescale on the metals, signifying an efficient removal of photoinduced carriers into the bulk metallic states. On graphene, we instead observe two timescales on the order of 200 fs and 50 ps, respectively, for the conduction band decay in MoS2. These multiple timescales are explained by Auger recombination involving MoS2 and in-gap defect states. In bilayer TMDCs on metals we observe a complex redistribution of excited holes along the valence band that is substantially affected by interactions with the continuum of bulk metallic states.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
- âŚ