793 research outputs found

    Investigation of Nanoparticles in High Resolution Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Low Voltage SEM by Digital Image-Analysis

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    Small particles (Cu, Ag, In, Sn, Au, also MgO and NaCl) were prepared in the diameter range from 1 nm to 100 nm on different conductive substrates by thermal evaporation in high-vacuum or in an inert gas atmosphere. Imaging of the particles was performed in a high resolution scanning electron microscope (HRSEM) that can also be operated at low beam voltages of a few hundred volts. This mode of operation is called low voltage SEM (LVSEM). Scanning electron micrographs were taken at different beam voltages VO (0.5-30 kV). The micrographs were digitally recorded and analyzed with an image processing system operated on-line to the HRSEM. Grey-value line profiles and densitometric quantities of single particles, as well as the contrast between particle and substrate, changed with VO. The results for tin-particles on a bulk carbon substrate are shown. In all cases considered, only positive contrasts, i.e., particles looking brighter than the substrate, were obtained. The main contrast producing mechanism is, therefore, assigned to effects that include the particle\u27s geometrical properties of size, shape and surface. Sn-, In-, and Ag-particles, imaged in the secondary electron (SE) mode showed significantly larger particle diameters, as did images simultaneously recorded with transmitted electrons; however, Au-particles did not show that difference. This effect may be qualitatively explained by SE resulting from decaying plasmons

    Relationship between magnetic susceptibility and elemental composition of Guano from Solek Cave, West Sumatera

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    We measured the magnetic properties and geochemistry of guano on a vertical profile from Solek Cave in West Sumatera. The aim of study was to evaluate whether there was a relation between magnetic susceptibility and the elemental composition of guano. Samples were collected at depth every 5 cm a depth of 230 cm where bedrock was reached. Magnetic susceptibility was measured by using susceptibility meter type Bartington MS2B and the element composition of guano samples was measured by X-Ray Fluoroscence (XRF). Percentage frequency dependence magnetic susceptibility was calculated from the percentage ratio of χ lf - χ hf. The results showed that the magnetic susceptibility varied between 86.8 × 10-8 m3/kg to 2204.2 x 10-8 m3/kg. The results of the frequency dependence magnetic susceptibility indicates that the samples were dominated by multi domain magnetic grains. Additionally, guano samples were found to contain several elements such as Mg, Al, Si, Ca, K, P, Fe and Ti. In We find that there is weak correlation between magnetic susceptibility and elemental composition, particularly Fe and Ti. It indirectly shows the presence of authigenic minerals

    Drop entrainment from the surface of oil mist filters: mechanisms, kinetics, and drop spectra

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    Oil entrainment from coalescence filters has been characterized by different techniques. Drop spectra and entrainment rates were measured by a combination of techniques from 1 mm over long periods of time. Dominant entrainment mechanism(s) are identified on the basis of comparisons of entrainment rates measured in different regions of the filter surface with rates of air bubble formation, measurements of oil film thickness, as well as visual observations. Experiments are supported by force estimates to entrain oil into the gas flow

    Magnetic susceptibility and heavy metals in guano from South Sulawesi caves

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    Measurement of some magnetic properties have been performed on vertical profile from South Sulawesi caves (Mampu and Bubau) by using low cost, rapid, sensitive and non destructive magnetic method. The aim is to attempt to use magnetic characters as a fingerprint for anthropogenic pollution in the caves. Guano samples were collected every 5 cm at a certain section of Mampu and Bubau cave, South Sulawesi, starting from surface through 300 cm in depth of mampu Cave and 30 cm of Bubau Cave. The magnetic parameters such as magnetic susceptibility and percentage frequency dependence susceptibility were measured using the Bartington MS2-MS2B instruments and supported by X-Ray Fluoroscence (XRF) to know their element composition. The results show that the samples had variations in magnetic susceptibility from 3.5 to 242.6 x 10(-8) m(3)/kg for Mampu Cave and from 8.6 to 106.5 x 10(-8) m(3)/kg for Bubau Cave and also magnetic domain. Then, the XRF results show that the caves contain several heavy metals. Magnetic and heavy metal analyses showing that the magnetic minerals in caves are lithogenic (Fe bearingminerals) in origin and anthropogenic (Zn content) in the caves

    Tungsten fibre-reinforced composites for advanced plasma facing components

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    AbstractThe European Fusion Roadmap foresees water cooled plasma facing components in a first DEMO design in order to provide enough margin for the cooling capacity and to only moderately extrapolate the technology which was developed and tested for ITER. In order to make best use of the water cooling concept copper (Cu) and copper-chromium-zirconium alloy (CuCrZr) are envisaged as heat sink whereas as armour tungsten (W) based materials will be used. Combining both materials in a high heat flux component asks for an increase of their operational range towards higher temperature in case of Cu/CuCrZr and lower temperatures for W. A remedy for both issues- brittleness of W and degrading strength of CuCrZr- could be the use of W fibres (Wf) in W and Cu based composites. Fibre preforms could be manufactured with industrially viable textile techniques. Flat textiles with a combination of 150/70 µm W wires have been chosen for layered deposition of tungsten-fibre reinforced tungsten (Wf/W) samples and tubular multi-layered braidings with W wire thickness of 50 µm were produced as a preform for tungsten-fibre reinforced copper (Wf /Cu) tubes. Cu melt infiltration was performed together with an industrial partner resulting in sample tubes without any blowholes. Property estimation by mean field homogenisation predicts strongly enhanced strength of the Wf/CuCrZr composite compared to its pure CuCrZr counterpart. Wf /W composites show very high toughness and damage tolerance even at room temperature. Cyclic load tests reveal that the extrinsic toughening mechanisms counteracting the crack growth are active and stable. FEM simulations of the Wf/W composite suggest that the influence of fibre debonding, which is an integral part of the toughening mechanisms, and reduced thermal conductivity of the fibre due to the necessary interlayers do not strongly influence the thermal properties of future components

    Dermal Phospho-Alpha-Synuclein Deposition in Patients With Parkinson's Disease and Mutation of the Glucocerebrosidase Gene

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    Heterozygous mutations in the glucocerebrosidase gene (GBA1) represent the most common genetic risk factor for Parkinson's disease (PD) and are histopathologically associated with a widespread load of alpha-synuclein in the brain. Therefore, PD patients with GBA1 mutations are a cohort of high interest for clinical trials on disease-modifying therapies targeting alpha-synuclein. There is evidence that detection of phospho-alpha-synuclein (p-syn) in dermal nerve fibers might be a biomarker for the histopathological identification of PD patients even at premotor or very early stages of disease. It is so far unknown whether dermal p-syn deposition can also be found in PD patients with GBA1 mutations and may serve as a biomarker for PD in these patients. Skin biopsies of 10 PD patients with different GBA1 mutations (six N370S, three E326K, one L444P) were analyzed by double-immunofluorescence labeling with anti-p-syn and anti-protein gene product 9.5 (PGP9.5, axonal marker) to detect intraaxonal p-syn deposition. Four biopsy sites (distal, proximal leg, paravertebral Th10, and C7) per patient were studied. P-syn was found in six patients (three N370S, three E326K). P-syn deposition was mainly detected in autonomic nerve fibers, but also in somatosensory fibers and was not restricted to a certain GBA1 mutation. In summary, dermal p-syn in PD patients with GBA1 mutations seems to offer a similar distribution and frequency as observed in patients without a known mutation. Skin biopsy may be suitable to study p-syn deposition in these patients or even to identify premotor patients with GBA1 mutations

    CSF Protein Level of Neurotransmitter Secretion, Synaptic Plasticity, and Autophagy in PD and DLB

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    BACKGROUND: Molecular pathways associated with α-synuclein proteostasis have been detected in genetic studies and in cell models and include autophagy, ubiquitin-proteasome system, mitochondrial homeostasis, and synaptic plasticity. However, we lack biomarkers that are representative for these pathways in human biofluids. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to evaluate CSF protein profiles of pathways related to α-synuclein proteostasis. METHODS: We assessed CSF protein profiles associated with neurotransmitter secretion, synapse plasticity, and autophagy in 2 monocentric cohorts with α-synucleinopathy (385 PD patients and 67 DLB patients). We included 80 PD patients and 17 DLB patients with variants in the glucocerebrosidase gene to serve as proxy for accelerated α-synuclein pathology with pronounced clinical trajectories. RESULTS: (1) Proteins associated with neurotransmitter secretion, synaptic plasticity, and endolysosomal autophagy were lower in PD and DLB patients compared with healthy controls. (2) These patterns were more pronounced in DLB than in PD patients, accentuated by GBA variant status in both entities. (3) CSF levels of these proteins were positively associated with CSF levels of total α-synuclein, with lower levels of proteostasis proteins related to lower levels of total α-synuclein. (4) These findings could be confirmed longitudinally. PD patients with low CSF profiles of proteostasis proteins showed lower CSF levels of α-synuclein longitudinally compared with PD patients with a normal proteostasis profile. CONCLUSION: CSF proteins associated with neurotransmitter secretion, synaptic plasticity, and endolysosomal autophagy might serve as biomarkers related to α-synuclein proteostasis in PD and DLB
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