337 research outputs found

    On risk management of shipping system in ice-covered waters : Review, analysis and toolbox based on an eight-year polar project

    Get PDF
    Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The AuthorsWith the climate change, polar sea ice is diminishing. This, on one hand, enables the possibility for e.g., Arctic shipping and relevant resource exploitation activities, but on the other hand brings additional risks induced by these activities. Increasing research focuses have been observed on the relevant topics in the complex and harsh polar environment and its fragile ecosystem. However, from risk management perspective, there is still a lack of holistic analysis and understanding towards safe shipping in the ice-covered waters and its available models applicable for managing risks in the system. Therefore, this paper aims to establish a framework and analysis for better understanding of this gap. The paper targets a comprehensive and long-term project specifically focusing on holistic safe shipping in ice-covered waters as the analysis basis. It firstly creates a holistic framework for the shipping system in ice-covered waters and then implements review and analysis of project publications on their overall features. Quantitative prediction models are selected for a structured applicability analysis. Furthermore, an extensive review outside the project following the elements established for the holistic shipping system is conducted so that this paper provides an overview of models for the shipping system in ice-covered waters, addressing the status of the current toolbox. Moreover, it helps to identify the next scientific steps on risk management of shipping in ice-covered waters.Peer reviewe

    Biomimetic Multiscale Hierarchical Topography Enhances Osteogenic Differentiation of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells

    Get PDF
    The interface between materials and cells plays a critical role in many biomedical applications. Inspired by the hierarchical architecture of collagen, most abundant structure in the extracellular matrix (ECM), a multiscale hierarchical topography is designed to mimic the collagen nano/micro hierarchical topography. It is hypothesized that the ECM topography affects osteogenesis of human mesenchymal stem cells but until now, it cannot be studied without the biochemical and mechanical influences of the ECM. The multiscale hierarchical topography is achieved by innovatively using sequentially aligned topography preparation via a silicone stretch-oxidation-release method and imprinting lithography. The anisotropically hierarchical topography influences stem cell morphology, orientation, and osteogenic differentiation. Intriguingly, the design resembling that of assembled collagen, exhibits the highest degree of osteogenesis. The hierarchical topotaxis effects are further exemplified by the enhanced vinculin expression, cell contractility, and more pronounced nuclear translocation of Yes-associated protein with the collagen-mimicking topography, indicative for enhanced osteogenesis. The developed multiscale hierarchical system provides insights into the importance of specific biological ECM-like topography by decoupling the biochemical influence. Various diseases, cancer, osteoarthritis, and fibrosis display impaired ECM structures, and therefore this system may have a great potential for tissue engineering approaches and developing in vitro disease models

    Synergistic Effect of Cell-Derived Extracellular Matrices and Topography on Osteogenesis of Mesenchymal Stem Cells

    Get PDF
    Cell-derived matrices (CDMs) are an interesting alternative to conventional sources of extracellular matrices (ECMs) as CDMs mimic the natural ECM composition better and are therefore attractive as a scaffolding material for regulating the functions of stem cells. Previous research on stem cell differentiation has demonstrated that both surface topography and CDMs have a significant influence. However, not much focus has been devoted to elucidating possible synergistic effects of CDMs and topography on osteogenic differentiation of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hBM-MSCs). In this study, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based anisotropic topographies (wrinkles) with various topography dimensions were prepared and subsequently combined with native ECMs produced by human fibroblasts that remained on the surface topography after decellularization. The synergistic effect of CDMs combined with topography on osteogenic differentiation of hBM-MSCs was investigated. The results showed that substrates with specific topography dimensions, coated with aligned CDMs, dramatically enhanced the capacity of osteogenesis as investigated using immunofluorescence staining for identifying osteopontin (OPN) and mineralization. Furthermore, the hBM-MSCs on the substrates decorated with CDMs exhibited a higher percentage of (Yes-associated protein) YAP inside the nucleus, stronger cell contractility, and greater formation of focal adhesions, illustrating that enhanced osteogenesis is partly mediated by cellular tension and mechanotransduction following the YAP pathway. Taken together, our findings highlight the importance of ECMs mediating the osteogenic differentiation of stem cells, and the combination of CDMs and topography will be a powerful approach for material-driven osteogenesis

    Topography-Mediated Enhancement of Nonviral Gene Delivery in Stem Cells

    Get PDF
    Gene delivery holds great promise for bioengineering, biomedical applications, biosensors, diagnoses, and gene therapy. In particular, the influence of topography on gene delivery is considered to be an attractive approach due to low toxicity and localized delivery properties. Even though many gene vectors and transfection systems have been developed to enhance transfection potential and combining it with other forms of stimulations could even further enhance it. Topography is an interesting surface property that has been shown to stimulate differentiation, migration, cell morphology, and cell mechanics. Therefore, it is envisioned that topography might also be able to stimulate transfection. In this study, we tested the hypothesis "topography is able to regulate transfection efficiency", for which we used nano- and microwave-like topographical substrates with wavelengths ranging from 500 nm to 25 µm and assessed the transfectability of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hBM-MSCs) and myoblasts. For transfection, Lipofectamine 2000 and a gene encoding plasmid for red-fluorescent protein (m-Cherry) were used and topography-induced cell morphology and transfection efficiency was analyzed. As a result, topography directs cell spreading, elongation, and proliferation as well as the transfection efficiency, which were investigated but were found not to be correlated and dependent on the cell type. A 55% percent improvement of transfection efficiency was identified for hBM-MSCs grown on 2 µm wrinkles (24.3%) as compared to hBM-MSCs cultured on flat controls (15.7%). For myoblast cells, the highest gene-expression efficiency (46.1%) was observed on the 10 µm topography, which enhanced the transfection efficiency by 64% as compared to the flat control (28.1%). From a qualitative assessment, it was observed that the uptake capacity of cationic complexes of TAMRA-labeled oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) was not topography-dependent but that the intracellular release was faster, as indicated by the positively stained nuclei on 2 μm for hBM-MSCs and 10 μm for myoblasts. The presented results indicate that topography enhances the gene-delivery capacity and that the responses are dependent on cell type. This study demonstrates the important role of topography on cell stimulation for gene delivery as well as understanding the uptake capacity of lipoplexes and may be useful for developing advanced nonviral gene delivery strategies

    On-chip generation and collectively coherent control of the superposition of the whole family of Dicke states

    Full text link
    Integrated quantum photonics has recently emerged as a powerful platform for generating, manipulating, and detecting entangled photons. Multipartite entangled states lie at the heart of the quantum physics and are the key enabling resources for scalable quantum information processing. Dicke state is an important class of genuinely entangled state, which has been systematically studied in the light-matter interactions, quantum state engineering and quantum metrology. Here, by using a silicon photonic chip, we report the generation and collectively coherent control of the entire family of four-photon Dicke states, i.e. with arbitrary excitations. We generate four entangled photons from two microresonators and coherently control them in a linear-optic quantum circuit, in which the nonlinear and linear processing are achieved in a chip-scale device. The generated photons are in telecom band, which lays the groundwork for large-scale photonic quantum technologies for multiparty networking and metrology.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures in the main text and 13 figures in the Supplemental Materia

    Developing fuzzy logic strength of evidence index and application in Bayesian networks for system risk management

    Get PDF
    Digitalization is becoming a trend in our modern society and systems. Meanwhile, risk analysis and management has rooted and been applied in various fields. Therefore, there is an increasing need to integrate risk analysis and management into the coming digital society. Risk has been represented digitally by the product of probability and consequence i.e. R = P x C traditionally. However, it has been increasingly discussed to include strength of evidence (SoE) in addition to the traditional consequence (C) and probability (P). Although much advance has been achieved along this direction, there still remains challenges, e.g. ambiguity in rating SoE and visual expression of risk diagrams. This paper focuses on addressing these issues and meanwhile aims to make the risk expression fully digital so that it is more efficient and flexible to be included in a system analysis and visualization. This is achieved firstly by reviewing state-of-the-art discussions on SoE assessment in risk management and identifying the remaining challenges. Then, the paper proposes an approach to address the challenges by forming a fuzzy logic SoE index based on fuzzy logic theory, which enables a transfer from linguistic variable to a digital one with the ambiguity avoided. After the SoE index is formed, it is applied into BNs as the node size index to demonstrate its practical application. Meanwhile, with the BNs forming the infrastructure to calculate and present consequences and probabilities, it showcases a new system risk management approach. All the variables in the system can be expressed in a risk diagram. This further enables an improved risk visualization, risk management and risk communication for system analysis, towards risk digitalization.Peer reviewe

    Relationship between the morphological, mechanical and permeability properties of porous bone scaffolds and the underlying microstructure

    Get PDF
    Bone scaffolds are widely used as one of the main bone substitute materials. However, many bone scaffold microstructure topologies exist and it is still unclear which topology to use when designing scaffold for a specific application. The aim of the present study was to reveal the mechanism of the microstructure-driven performance of bone scaffold and thus to provide guideline on scaffold design. Finite element (FE) models of five TPMS (Diamond, Gyroid, Schwarz P, Fischer-Koch S and F-RD) and three traditional (Cube, FD-Cube and Octa) scaffolds were generated. The effective compressive and shear moduli of scaffolds were calculated from the mechanical analysis using the FE unit cell models with the periodic boundary condition. The scaffold permeability was calculated from the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis using the 4×4×4 FE models. It is revealed that the surface-to-volume ratio of the Fischer-Koch S-based scaffold is the highest among the scaffolds investigated. The mechanical analysis revealed that the bending deformation dominated structures (e.g., the Diamond, the Gyroid, the Schwarz P) have higher effective shear moduli. The stretching deformation dominated structures (e.g., the Schwarz P, the Cube) have higher effective compressive moduli. For all the scaffolds, when the same amount of change in scaffold porosity is made, the corresponding change in the scaffold relative shear modulus is larger than that in the relative compressive modulus. The CFD analysis revealed that the structures with the simple and straight pores (e.g., Cube) have higher permeability than the structures with the complex pores (e.g., Fischer-Koch S). The main contribution of the present study is that the relationship between scaffold properties and the underlying microstructure is systematically investigated and thus some guidelines on the design of bone scaffolds are provided, for example, in the scenario where a high surface-to-volume ratio is required, it is suggested to use the Fischer-Koch S based scaffold

    High-Throughput Screening and Hierarchical Topography-Mediated Neural Differentiation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells

    Get PDF
    Biophysical factors such as anisotropic topography composed of micro/nanosized structures are important for directing the fate of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hBM-MSCs) and have been applied to neuronal differentiation. Via high-throughput screening (HTS) methods based on topography gradients, the optimum topography is determined and translated toward a hierarchical architecture designed to mimic the nerve nano/microstructure. The polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based topography gradient with amplitudes (A) from 541 to 3073 nm and wavelengths (W) between 4 and 30 µm is developed and the fate commitment of MSC toward neuron lineage is investigated. The hierarchical structures, combining nano- and microtopography (W0.3/W26 parallel/perpendicular) are fabricated to explore the combined topography effects on neuron differentiation. From the immunofluorescent staining results (Tuj1 and MAP2), the substrate characterized by W: 26 µm; A: 2.9 µm shows highest potential for promoting neurogenesis. Furthermore, the hierarchical features (W0.3/W26 parallel) significantly enhance neural differentiation. The hBM-MSCs on the hierarchical substrates exhibit a significantly lower percentage of nuclear Yes-associated protein (YAP)/TAZ and weaker cell contractility indicating that the promoted neurogenesis is mediated by the cell tension and YAP/TAZ pathway. This research provides new insight into designing biomaterials for applications in neural tissue engineering and contributes to the understanding of topography-mediated neuronal differentiation
    • …
    corecore