138 research outputs found
Macroscopic self standing SWCNT fibers as efficient electron emitters with very high emission current for robust cold cathodes
A novel of self-standing nanotube-based cold cathode is described. The electron emitter is
a single macroscopic fibre spun from neat single wall carbon nanotubes and consists of an
ensemble of nanotube bundles held together by van der Waals forces. Field emission measurements
carried out using two different types of apparatus demonstrated the long working
life of the realised cathode. The system is able to emit at very high current densities, up
to 13 A/cm2, and shows very low values of both turn on and threshold field, 0.12 V/lm and
0.21 V/lm, respectively. Such easy to handle self-standing electron sources assure good
performances and represent an enabling technology for a scalable production of cold
cathodes.
2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
Due to a unique combination of properties, including high
electrical and thermal conductivity, and high mechanical/
chemical/thermal stability, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have
been recognised as ideal candidate materials for application
in microelectronics [1]. Moreover, the high aspect ratio characterising
this intriguing material makes possible to significantly
strengthen electric fields into the vicinity of
nanotubes tips
A thin film approach for SiC-derived graphene as an on-chip electrode for supercapacitors
Β© 2015 IOP Publishing Ltd. We designed a nickel-assisted process to obtain graphene with sheet resistance as low as 80 Ξ© square-1 from silicon carbide films on Si wafers with highly enhanced surface area. The silicon carbide film acts as both a template and source of graphitic carbon, while, simultaneously, the nickel induces porosity on the surface of the film by forming silicides during the annealing process which are subsequently removed. As stand-alone electrodes in supercapacitors, these transfer-free graphene-on-chip samples show a typical double-layer supercapacitive behaviour with gravimetric capacitance of up to 65 F g-1. This work is the first attempt to produce graphene with high surface area from silicon carbide thin films for energy storage at the wafer-level and may open numerous opportunities for on-chip integrated energy storage applications
Transport mechanism in granular Ni deposited on carbon nanotubes fibers
We investigate the transport properties of granular nickel electrodeposited on carbon nanotube fibers by
measuring the electrical resistance and the current voltage characteristics as a function of the temperature.
The bare fiber is governed by a three-dimensional variable range hopping transport mechanism, however, a
semiconducting to metallic transition is observed after the Ni deposition as a consequence of the evolution from
weak to strong coupling between the deposited nickel grains. The experimental results indicate that the charge
transport in the Ni-coated fiber develops from hopping governed by the Coulomb blockade in the case of small
grains dimensions to a metallic electron phonon interaction mechanism for large grains dimensions. Tunneling
enhanced by thermal fluctuation is responsible for the transport in the intermediate conductivity range. The role
of the fiber and the effects due to the magnetic nature of the nickel grains are also discussed
Radioembolisation using yttrium 90 (Y-90) in patients affected by unresectable hepatic metastases.
This study was done to evaluate the effectiveness of radioembolisation of liver metastases with yttrium 90 (Y-90) in patients with no response to chemotherapy. From February 2005 to January 2008, we treated 110 patients affected by liver metastatic disease from colorectal, breast, gastric, pancreatic, pulmonary, oesophageal and pharyngeal cancers and from cholangiocarcinoma and melanoma. We excluded patients with bilirubin level >1.8 mg/dl and pulmonary shunt >20% but not patients with minor extrahepatic metastases. We obtained a complete /partial response in 45 patients, stable disease in 42 patients and progressive disease in 23 patients. In 90 cases, we obtained a decrease in specific tumour marker level. The technical success rate was 96%, and technical effectiveness estimated at 3 months after treatment was 83.6%. Side effects were grade 4 hepatic failure in one case, grade 2 gastritis in six cases and grade 2 cholecystitis in two cases. The median survival and progression-free survival calculated by Kaplan-Meier analysis were 323 days and 245 days, respectively. According to our 3-year experience, Y-90 radioembolisation (SIR-spheres) is a feasible and safe method to treat liver metastases with an acceptable level of complications and a good response rate
Perinatal paracetamol exposure in mice does not affect the development of allergic airways disease in early life
Background Current data concerning maternal paracetamol intake during pregnancy, or intake during infancy and risk of wheezing or asthma in childhood is inconclusive based on epidemiological studies. We have investigated whether there is a causal link between maternal paracetamol intake during pregnancy and lactation and the development of house dust mite (HDM) induced allergic airways disease (AAD) in offspring using a neonatal mouse model.
Methods Pregnant mice were administered paracetamol or saline by oral gavage from the day of mating throughout pregnancy and/or lactation. Subsequently, their pups were exposed to intranasal HDM or saline from day 3 of life for up to 6β
weeks. Assessments of airway hyper-responsiveness, inflammation and remodelling were made at weaning (3β
weeks) and 6β
weeks of age.
Results Maternal paracetamol exposure either during pregnancy and/or lactation did not affect development of AAD in offspring at weaning or at 6β
weeks. There were no effects of maternal paracetamol at any time point on airway remodelling or IgE levels.
Conclusions Maternal paracetamol did not enhance HDM induced AAD in offspring. Our mechanistic data do not support the hypothesis that prenatal paracetamol exposure increases the risk of childhood asthma
FGF4 Independent Derivation of Trophoblast Stem Cells from the Common Vole
The derivation of stable multipotent trophoblast stem (TS) cell lines from preimplantation, and early postimplantation mouse embryos has been reported previously. FGF4, and its receptor FGFR2, have been identified as embryonic signaling factors responsible for the maintenance of the undifferentiated state of multipotent TS cells. Here we report the derivation of stable TS-like cell lines from the vole M. rossiaemeridionalis, in the absence of FGF4 and heparin. Vole TS-like cells are similar to murine TS cells with respect to their morphology, transcription factor gene expression and differentiation in vitro into derivatives of the trophectoderm lineage, and with respect to their ability to invade and erode host tissues, forming haemorrhagic tumours after subcutaneous injection into nude mice. Moreover, vole TS-like cells carry an inactive paternal X chromosome, indicating that they have undergone imprinted X inactivation, which is characteristic of the trophoblast lineage. Our results indicate that an alternative signaling pathway may be responsible for the establishment and stable proliferation of vole TS-like cells
Reprogramming of Sheep Fibroblasts into Pluripotency under a Drug-Inducible Expression of Mouse-Derived Defined Factors
Animal embryonic stem cells (ESCs) provide powerful tool for studies of early embryonic development, gene targeting, cloning, and regenerative medicine. However, the majority of attempts to establish ESC lines from large animals, especially ungulate mammals have failed. Recently, another type of pluripotent stem cells, known as induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), have been successfully generated from mouse, human, monkey, rat and pig. In this study we show sheep fibroblasts can be reprogrammed to pluripotency by defined factors using a drug-inducible system. Sheep iPSCs derived in this fashion have a normal karyotype, exhibit morphological features similar to those of human ESCs and express AP, Oct4, Sox2, Nanog and the cell surface marker SSEA-4. Pluripotency of these cells was further confirmed by embryoid body (EB) and teratoma formation assays which generated derivatives of all three germ layers. Our results also show that the substitution of knockout serum replacement (KSR) with fetal bovine serum in culture improves the reprogramming efficiency of sheep iPSCs. Generation of sheep iPSCs places sheep on the front lines of large animal preclinical trials and experiments involving modification of animal genomes
Isolation of Oct4-Expressing Extraembryonic Endoderm Precursor Cell Lines
BACKGROUND:The extraembryonic endoderm (ExEn) defines the yolk sac, a set of membranes that provide essential support for mammalian embryos. Recent findings suggest that the committed ExEn precursor is present already in the embryonic Inner Cell Mass (ICM) as a group of cells that intermingles with the closely related epiblast precursor. All ICM cells contain Oct4, a key transcription factor that is first expressed at the morula stage. In vitro, the epiblast precursor is most closely represented by the well-characterized embryonic stem (ES) cell lines that maintain the expression of Oct4, but analogous ExEn precursor cell lines are not known and it is unclear if they would express Oct4. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Here we report the isolation and characterization of permanently proliferating Oct4-expressing rat cell lines ("XEN-P cell lines"), which closely resemble the ExEn precursor. We isolated the XEN-P cell lines from blastocysts and characterized them by plating and gene expression assays as well as by injection into embryos. Like ES cells, the XEN-P cells express Oct4 and SSEA1 at high levels and their growth is stimulated by leukemia inhibitory factor, but instead of the epiblast determinant Nanog, they express the ExEn determinants Gata6 and Gata4. Further, they lack markers characteristic of the more differentiated primitive/visceral and parietal ExEn stages, but exclusively differentiate into these stages in vitro and contribute to them in vivo. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Our findings (i) suggest strongly that the ExEn precursor is a self-renewable entity, (ii) indicate that active Oct4 gene expression (transcription plus translation) is part of its molecular identity, and (iii) provide an in vitro model of early ExEn differentiation
Computation of metallic nanofluid natural convection in a two-dimensional solar enclosure with radiative heat transfer, aspect ratio and volume fraction effects
As a model of nanofluid direct absorber solar collectors (nano-DASCs), the present article describes
recent numerical simulations of steady-state nanofluid natural convection in a two-dimensional
enclosure. Incompressible laminar Newtonian viscous flow is considered with radiative heat transfer.
The ANSYS FLUENT finite volume code (version 19.1) is employed. The enclosure has two adiabatic
walls, one hot (solar receiving) and one colder wall. The Tiwari-Das volume fraction nanofluid model
is used and three different nanoparticles are studied (Copper (Cu), Silver (Ag) and Titanium Oxide
(TiO2)) with water as the base fluid. The solar radiative heat transfer is simulated with the P1 flux and
Rosseland diffusion models. The influence of geometrical aspect ratio and solid volume fraction for
nanofluids is also studied and a wider range is considered than in other studies. Mesh-independence
tests are conducted. Validation with published studies from the literature is included for the copperwater nanofluid case. The P1 model is shown to more accurately predict the actual influence of solar
radiative flux on thermal fluid behaviour compared with Rosseland radiative model. With increasing
Rayleigh number (natural convection i.e. buoyancy effect), significant modification in the thermal flow
characteristics is induced with emergence of a dual structure to the circulation. With increasing aspect
ratio (wider base relative to height of the solar collector geometry) there is a greater thermal convection
pattern around the whole geometry, higher temperatures and the elimination of the cold upper zone
associated with lower aspect ratio. Titanium Oxide nano-particles achieve slightly higher Nusselt
number at the hot wall compared with Silver nano-particles. Thermal performance can be optimized
with careful selection of aspect ratio and nano-particles and this is very beneficial to solar collector
designers
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