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Manipulating nanoscale structure to control functionality in printed organic photovoltaic, transistor and bioelectronic devices.
Printed electronics is simultaneously one of the most intensely studied emerging research areas in science and technology and one of the fastest growing commercial markets in the world today. For the past decade the potential for organic electronic (OE) materials to revolutionize this printed electronics space has been widely promoted. Such conviction in the potential of these carbon-based semiconducting materials arises from their ability to be dissolved in solution, and thus the exciting possibility of simply printing a range of multifunctional devices onto flexible substrates at high speeds for very low cost using standard roll-to-roll printing techniques. However, the transition from promising laboratory innovations to large scale prototypes requires precise control of nanoscale material and device structure across large areas during printing fabrication. Maintaining this nanoscale material control during printing presents a significant new challenge that demands the coupling of OE materials and devices with clever nanoscience fabrication approaches that are adapted to the limited thermodynamic levers available. In this review we present an update on the strategies and capabilities that are required in order to manipulate the nanoscale structure of large area printed organic photovoltaic (OPV), transistor and bioelectronics devices in order to control their device functionality. This discussion covers a range of efforts to manipulate the electroactive ink materials and their nanostructured assembly into devices, and also device processing strategies to tune the nanoscale material properties and assembly routes through printing fabrication. The review finishes by highlighting progress in printed OE devices that provide a feedback loop between laboratory nanoscience innovations and their feasibility in adapting to large scale printing fabrication. The ability to control material properties on the nanoscale whilst simultaneously printing functional devices on the square metre scale is prompting innovative developments in the targeted nanoscience required for OPV, transistor and biofunctional devices
Super-Earths: A New Class of Planetary Bodies
Super-Earths, a class of planetary bodies with masses ranging from a few
Earth-masses to slightly smaller than Uranus, have recently found a special
place in the exoplanetary science. Being slightly larger than a typical
terrestrial planet, super-Earths may have physical and dynamical
characteristics similar to those of Earth whereas unlike terrestrial planets,
they are relatively easier to detect. Because of their sizes, super-Earths can
maintain moderate atmospheres and possibly dynamic interiors with plate
tectonics. They also seem to be more common around low-mass stars where the
habitable zone is in closer distances. This article presents a review of the
current state of research on super-Earths, and discusses the models of the
formation, dynamical evolution, and possible habitability of these objects.
Given the recent advances in detection techniques, the detectability of
super-Earths is also discussed, and a review of the prospects of their
detection in the habitable zones of low-mass stars is presented.Comment: A (non-technical) review of the literature on the current state
ofresearch on super-Earths. The topics include observation, formation,
dynamical evolution, habitability, composition, interior dynamics, magnetic
field, atmosphere, and propsect of detection. The article has 44 pages, 27
figures, and 203 references. It has been accepted for publication in the
journal Contemporary Physics (2011
MAC and baseband processors for RF-MIMO WLAN
The article describes hardware solutions for the IEEE 802.11 medium access control (MAC) layer and IEEE 802.11a digital baseband in an RF-MIMO WLAN transceiver that performs the signal combining in the analogue domain. Architecture and implementation details of the MAC processor including a hardware accelerator and a 16-bit MACphysical layer (PHY) interface are presented. The proposed hardware solution is tested and verified using a PHY link emulator. Architecture, design, implementation, and test of a reconfigurable digital baseband processor are described too. Description includes the baseband algorithms (the main blocks being MIMO channel estimation and Tx-Rx analogue beamforming), their FPGA-based implementation, baseband printed-circuit-board, and real-time test
Tumor-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells Use Distinct Mechanisms to Block the Activity of Natural Killer Cell Subsets.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) display pleiotropic functions, which include secretion of soluble factors with immunosuppressive activity implicated in cancer progression. We compared the immunomodulatory effects on natural killer (NK) cells of paired intratumor (T)- and adjacent non-tumor tissue (N)-derived MSCs from patients with squamous cell lung carcinoma (SCC). We observed that T-MSCs were more strongly immunosuppressive than N-MSCs and affected both NK function and phenotype, as defined by CD56 expression. T-MSCs shifted NK cells toward the CD56 <sup>dim</sup> phenotype and differentially modulated CD56 <sup>bright/dim</sup> subset functions. Whereas MSCs affected both degranulation and activating receptor expression in the CD56 <sup>dim</sup> subset, they primarily inhibited interferon-γ production in the CD56 <sup>bright</sup> subset. Pharmacological inhibition of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) synthesis and, in some MSCs, interleukin-6 (IL-6) activity restored NK function, whereas NK cell stimulation by PGE2 alone mimicked T-MSC-mediated immunosuppression. Our observations provide insight into how stromal responses to cancer dampen NK cell activity in human lung SCC
AGE-RELATED EFFECTS OF INCREASING POSTURAL CHALLENGE ON EYE MOVEMENT ONSET LATENCIES TO VISUAL TARGETS
When a single light cue is given in the visual field, our eyes orient towards it with an average latency of 200 ms. If a second cue is presented at or around the time of the response to the first, a secondary eye movement occurs that represents a re-orientation to the new target. While studies have shown that eye movement latencies to ‘single-step’ targets may or may not be lengthened with age, secondary eye-movements (during ‘double-step’ displacements) are significantly delayed with increasing age. The aim of this study was to investigate if the postural challenge posed simply by standing (as opposed to sitting) results in significantly longer eye movement latencies in older adults compared to the young. Ten young (65 years) participated in the study. They were required to fixate upon a central target and move their eyes in response to 2 types of stimuli: 1) a single-step perturbation of target position either 15º to the right or left, and 2) a double-step target displacement incorporating an initial target jump to the right or left by 15º, followed after 200 ms, by a shift of target position to the opposite side (e.g., +15º then -15º). All target displacement conditions were executed in sit and stand positions with the participant at the same distance from the targets. Eye movements were recorded using electro-oculography. Older adults did not show significantly longer eye movement latencies than the younger adults for single-step target displacements, and postural configuration (stand compared to sit) had no effect upon latencies for either group. We categorised double-step trials into those during which the second light changed after or before the onset of the eye shift to the first light. For the former category, young participants showed faster secondary eye shifts to the second light in the standing position, while the older adults did not. For the latter category of double-step trial, young participants showed no significant difference between sit and stand secondary eye movement latencies, but older adults were significantly longer standing compared to sitting. The older adults were significantly longer than the younger adults across both postural conditions, regardless of when the second light change occurred during the eye shift to the first light. We suggest that older adults require greater time and perhaps attentional processes to execute eye movements to unexpected changes of target position when faced with the need to maintain standing balance. Keywords: Balance, Ageing, Gaze, Electro-oculography, Target perturbations
Selective suppression of CD44 in keratinocytes of mice bearing an antisense CD44 transgene driven by a tissue-specific promoter disrupts hyaluronate metabolism in the skin and impairs keratinocyte proliferation
CD44 is a broadly distributed polymorphic glycoprotein that serves as the principal cell-surface receptor for hyaluronate. Although CD44-mediated cell interaction with hyaluronate has been implicated in a variety of physiologic events, including cell-cell and cell-substrate adhesion, cell migration, proliferation, and activation, as well as hyaluronate uptake and degradation, the biologic role of CD44 in vivo in various tissues remains to be determined. In the present work we have developed transgenic mice that express an antisense CD44 cDNA driven by the keratin-5 promoter. These mice lack detectable CD44 expression in skin keratinocytes and corneal epithelium and display abnormal hyaluronate accumulation in the superficial dermis and corneal stroma, distinct morphologic alterations of basal keratinocytes and cornea, and defective keratinocyte proliferation in response to mitogen and growth factors. These alterations are reflected by a decrease in skin elasticity, impaired local inflammatory response and tissue repair, delayed hair regrowth, and failure of the epidermis to undergo hyperplasia in response to carcinogen. Our observations indicate that two major functions of CD44 in skin are the regulation of keratinocyte proliferation in response to extracellular stimuli and the maintenance of local hyaluronate homeostasi
Life Beyond the Solar System: Space Weather and Its Impact on Habitable Worlds
The search of life in the Universe is a fundamental problem of astrobiology
and a major priority for NASA. A key area of major progress since the NASA
Astrobiology Strategy 2015 (NAS15) has been a shift from the exoplanet
discovery phase to a phase of characterization and modeling of the physics and
chemistry of exoplanetary atmospheres, and the development of observational
strategies for the search for life in the Universe by combining expertise from
four NASA science disciplines including heliophysics, astrophysics, planetary
science and Earth science. The NASA Nexus for Exoplanetary System Science
(NExSS) has provided an efficient environment for such interdisciplinary
studies. Solar flares, coronal mass ejections and solar energetic particles
produce disturbances in interplanetary space collectively referred to as space
weather, which interacts with the Earth upper atmosphere and causes dramatic
impact on space and ground-based technological systems. Exoplanets within close
in habitable zones around M dwarfs and other active stars are exposed to
extreme ionizing radiation fluxes, thus making exoplanetary space weather (ESW)
effects a crucial factor of habitability. In this paper, we describe the recent
developments and provide recommendations in this interdisciplinary effort with
the focus on the impacts of ESW on habitability, and the prospects for future
progress in searching for signs of life in the Universe as the outcome of the
NExSS workshop held in Nov 29 - Dec 2, 2016, New Orleans, LA. This is one of
five Life Beyond the Solar System white papers submitted by NExSS to the
National Academy of Sciences in support of the Astrobiology Science Strategy
for the Search for Life in the Universe.Comment: 5 pages, the white paper was submitted to the National Academy of
Sciences in support of the Astrobiology Science Strategy for the Search for
Life in the Univers
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