60 research outputs found

    Gold colloidal nanoparticle electrodeposition on a silicon surface in a uniform electric field

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    The electrodeposition of gold colloidal nanoparticles on a silicon wafer in a uniform electric field is investigated using scanning electron microscopy and homemade electrochemical cells. Dense and uniform distributions of particles are obtained with no aggregation. The evolution of surface particle density is analyzed in relation to several parameters: applied voltage, electric field, exchanged charge. Electrical, chemical, and electrohydrodynamical parameters are taken into account in describing the electromigration process

    Spectroscopic ellipsometry and polarimetry for materials and systems analysis at the nanometer scale: state-of-the-art, potential, and perspectives

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    This paper discusses the fundamentals, applications, potential, limitations, and future perspectives of polarized light reflection techniques for the characterization of materials and related systems and devices at the nanoscale. These techniques include spectroscopic ellipsometry, polarimetry, and reflectance anisotropy. We give an overview of the various ellipsometry strategies for the measurement and analysis of nanometric films, metal nanoparticles and nanowires, semiconductor nanocrystals, and submicron periodic structures. We show that ellipsometry is capable of more than the determination of thickness and optical properties, and it can be exploited to gain information about process control, geometry factors, anisotropy, defects, and quantum confinement effects of nanostructures

    Amplified Responsiveness of Multilayered Polymer Grafts: Synergy between Brushes and Hydrogels

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    The responsive properties of surface-grafted polymer films in aqueous media can be amplified by covalently layering thermosensitive brushes and hydrogels. This was demonstrated by synthesizing layers of linear poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) brushes, alternating with cross-linked, poly(hydroxyethyl)methacrylate (PHEMA) hydrogels via sequential surface-initiated atom-transfer radical polymerization (SI-ATRP) steps. Below the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PNIPAM, brush/hydrogel multilayered films swell similarly to linear PNIPAM homopolymer brushes, as measured by liquid ellipsometry. In contrast, above the LCST, the PHEMA hydrogel interlayer acts as stiffening element within the collapsed multilayered film, as monitored by atomic force microscopy (AFM) nanoindentation and lateral force microscopy (LFM). This translates into a 10-fold increase in Young's modulus by the collapsed, layered films compared to 2 4 PNIPAM homopolymer analogues. The (macro)molecular continuity between the brush main chains and hydrogel constituents thus enables a chemically robust layering to form graded, quasi-3D grafted polymer architectures, which display a concerted and amplified temperature-triggered transition

    Body condition of predatory fishes linked to the availability of sandeels

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    Lesser sandeels Ammodytes marinus are eaten by a range of predatory fishes including commercially fished species, but are also exploited at large scale by industrial fisheries. Is availability of sandeels, as key prey source, linked to the body condition of predatory fishes? In the North Sea, the largest sandeel biomass is concentrated in the Dogger Bank region. Here we studied predator-sandeel interactions at two sites differing widely in sandeel abundance and local sandeel fishing effort. Surveys took place in 2004, 2005, and 2006, years when local sandeel densities observed at these sites were low, intermediate, and high, respectively. Five predator species--whiting, lesser weever, grey gurnard, plaice, and haddock--showed better body condition indices in either the years or study area (or both) characterised by higher local sandeel densities, when compared to sandeel-poorer conditions. Moreover, whiting, weever, and gurnard condition was better for those individuals actually observed to have eaten sandeels (based on stomach contents) than for those that had not. As body condition relates to growth, reproduction, and survival, predators in sandeel-rich conditions may be inferred to have a higher fitness. These links between sandeel availability, sandeel consumption, and predator condition hint that, if large-scale localised depletions of sandeels were to occur, negative indirect effects on predatory fish might become apparent, underlining the importance of considering the sandeel fishery in an ecosystem context
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