974 resultados para CCD(Charge Coupled Device)
Resumo:
A 76-year-old male patient was admitted for percutaneous left atrial appendage (LAA) closure because of chronic atrial fibrillation and a history of gastrointestinal bleeding under oral anticoagulation. The procedure was complicated by perforation of the LAA with the lobe of the closure device being placed in the pericardial space. Keeping access to the pericardial space with the delivery sheath, the LAA closure device was replaced by an atrial septal defect closure device to seal the perforation. Then the initial LAA closure device was reimplanted in a correct position. Needle pericardiocentesis was required but the subsequent course was uneventful.
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The S0 ↔ S1 spectra of the mild charge-transfer (CT) complexes perylene·tetrachloroethene (P·4ClE) and perylene·(tetrachloroethene)2 (P·(4ClE)2) are investigated by two-color resonant two-photon ionization (2C-R2PI) and dispersed fluorescence spectroscopy in supersonic jets. The S0 → S1 vibrationless transitions of P·4ClE and P·(4ClE)2 are shifted by δν = −451 and −858 cm–1 relative to perylene, translating to excited-state dissociation energy increases of 5.4 and 10.3 kJ/mol, respectively. The red shift is ∼30% larger than that of perylene·trans-1,2-dichloroethene; therefore, the increase in chlorination increases the excited-state stabilization and CT character of the interaction, but the electronic excitation remains largely confined to the perylene moiety. The 2C-R2PI and fluorescence spectra of P·4ClE exhibit strong progressions in the perylene intramolecular twist (1au) vibration (42 cm–1 in S0 and 55 cm–1 in S1), signaling that perylene deforms along its twist coordinate upon electronic excitation. The intermolecular stretching (Tz) and internal rotation (Rc) vibrations are weak; therefore, the P·4ClE intermolecular potential energy surface (IPES) changes little during the S0 ↔ S1 transition. The minimum-energy structures and inter- and intramolecular vibrational frequencies of P·4ClE and P·(4ClE)2 are calculated with the dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT) methods B97-D3, ωB97X-D, M06, and M06-2X and the spin-consistent-scaled (SCS) variant of the approximate second-order coupled-cluster method, SCS-CC2. All methods predict the global minima to be π-stacked centered coplanar structures with the long axis of tetrachloroethene rotated by τ ≈ 60° relative to the perylene long axis. The calculated binding energies are in the range of −D0 = 28–35 kJ/mol. A second minimum is predicted with τ ≈ 25°, with ∼1 kJ/mol smaller binding energy. Although both monomers are achiral, both the P·4ClE and P·(4ClE)2 complexes are chiral. The best agreement for adiabatic excitation energies and vibrational frequencies is observed for the ωB97X-D and M06-2X DFT methods.
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We calculate the anomalous dimensions of operators with large global charge J in certain strongly coupled conformal field theories in three dimensions, such as the O(2) model and the supersymmetric fixed point with a single chiral superfield and a W = Φ3 superpotential. Working in a 1/J expansion, we find that the large-J sector of both examples is controlled by a conformally invariant effective Lagrangian for a Goldstone boson of the global symmetry. For both these theories, we find that the lowest state with charge J is always a scalar operator whose dimension ΔJ satisfies the sum rule J2ΔJ−(J22+J4+316)ΔJ−1−(J22+J4+316)ΔJ+1=0.04067 up to corrections that vanish at large J . The spectrum of low-lying excited states is also calculable explcitly: for example, the second-lowest primary operator has spin two and dimension ΔJ+3√. In the supersymmetric case, the dimensions of all half-integer-spin operators lie above the dimensions of the integer-spin operators by a gap of order J+12. The propagation speeds of the Goldstone waves and heavy fermions are 12√ and ±12 times the speed of light, respectively. These values, including the negative one, are necessary for the consistent realization of the superconformal symmetry at large J.
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We discuss two different approaches to overcome the power limitations of CW THz generation imposed to conventional photomixers. The increase in power achievable by using arrays of AEs is studied. Then ?large area emitters? are proposed as an alternate approach to overcome the power limitations. In this antenna-free new scheme of photomixing, the THz radiation originates directly from the acceleration of photo-induced charge carriers generated within a large semiconductor area. The quasi-continuous distribution of emitting elements corresponds to a high-density array and results in particularly favorable radiation profiles.
Resumo:
La presente tesis es un estudio analítico y numérico del electrospray. En la configuración más sencilla, un caudal constante del líquido a atomizar, que debe tener una cierta conductividad eléctrica, se inyecta en un medio dieléctrico (un gas u otro líquido inmiscible con el primero) a través de un tubo capilar metálico. Entre este tubo y un electrodo lejano se aplica un voltaje continuo que origina un campo eléctrico en el líquido conductor y en el espacio que lo rodea. El campo eléctrico induce una corriente eléctrica en el líquido, que acumula carga en su superficie, y da lugar a un esfuerzo eléctrico sobre la superficie, que tiende a alargarla en la dirección del campo eléctrico. El líquido forma un menisco en el extremo del tubo capilar cuando el campo eléctrico es suficientemente intenso y el caudal suficientemente pequeño. Las variaciones de presión y los esfuerzos viscosos asociados al movimiento del líquido son despreciables en la mayor parte de este menisco, siendo dominantes los esfuerzos eléctrico y de tensión superficial que actúan sobre la superficie del líquido. En el modo de funcionamiento llamado de conochorro, el balance de estos esfuerzos hace que el menisco adopte una forma cónica (el cono de Taylor) en una región intermedia entre el extremo del tubo y la punta del menisco. La velocidad del líquido aumenta al acercarse al vértice del cono, lo cual propicia que las variaciones de la presión en el líquido generadas por la inercia o por la viscosidad entren en juego, desequilibrando el balance de esfuerzos mencionado antes. Como consecuencia, del vértice del cono sale un delgado chorro de líquido, que transporta la carga eléctrica que se acumula en la superficie. La acción del campo eléctrico tangente a la superficie sobre esta carga origina una tracción eléctrica que tiende a alargar el chorro. Esta tracción no es relevante en el menisco, donde el campo eléctrico tangente a la superficie es muy pequeño, pero se hace importante en el chorro, donde es la causa del movimiento del líquido. Lejos del cono, el chorro puede o bien desarrollar una inestabilidad asimétrica que lo transforma en una espiral (whipping) o bien romperse en un spray de gotas prácticamente monodispersas cargadas eléctricamente. La corriente eléctrica transportada por el líquido es la suma de la corriente de conducción en el interior del líquido y la corriente debida a la convección de la carga acumulada en su superficie. La primera domina en el menisco y la segunda en el chorro lejano, mientras que las dos son comparables en una región intermedia de transferencia de corriente situada al comienzo del chorro aunque aguas abajo de la región de transición cono-chorro, en la que el menisco deja de ser un cono de Taylor. Para un campo exterior dado, la acumulación de carga eléctrica en la superficie del líquido reduce el campo eléctrico en el interior del mismo, que llega a anularse cuando la carga alcanza un estado final de equilibrio. El tiempo característico de este proceso es el tiempo de relajación dieléctrica, que es una propiedad del líquido. Cuando el tiempo de residencia del líquido en la región de transición cono-chorro (o en otra región del campo fluido) es grande frente al tiempo de relajación dieléctrica, la carga superficial sigue una sucesión de estados de equilibrio y apantalla al líquido del campo exterior. Cuando esta condición deja de cumplirse, aparecen efectos de relajación de carga, que se traducen en que el campo exterior penetra en el líquido, a no ser que su constante dieléctrica sea muy alta, en cuyo caso el campo inducido por la carga de polarización evita la entrada del campo exterior en el menisco y en una cierta región del chorro. La carga eléctrica en equilibrio en la superficie de un menisco cónico intensifica el campo eléctrico y determina su variación espacial hasta distancias aguas abajo del menisco del orden de su tamaño. Este campo, calculado por Taylor, es independiente del voltaje aplicado, por lo que las condiciones locales del flujo y el valor de la corriente eléctrica son también independientes del voltaje en tanto los tamaños de las regiones que determinan estas propiedades sean pequeños frente al tamaño del menisco. Los resultados experimentales publicados en la literatura muestran que existe un caudal mínimo para el que el modo cono-chorro que acabamos de describir deja de existir. El valor medio y la desviación típica de la distribución de tamaños de las gotas generadas por un electrospray son mínimos cuando se opera cerca del caudal mínimo. A pesar de que los mecanismos responsables del caudal mínimo han sido muy estudiados, no hay aún una teoría completa del mismo, si bien su existencia parece estar ligada a la aparición de efectos de relajación de carga en la región de transición cono-chorro. En esta tesis, se presentan estimaciones de orden de magnitud, algunas existentes y otras nuevas, que muestran los balances dominantes responsables de las distintas regiones de la estructura asintótica de la solución en varios casos de interés. Cuando la inercia del líquido juega un papel en la transición cono-chorro, los resultados muestran que la región de transferencia de corriente, donde la mayor parte de la corriente pasa a la superficie, está en el chorro aguas abajo de la región de transición cono-chorro. Los efectos de relajación de carga aparecen de forma simultánea en el chorro y la región de transición cuando el caudal se disminuye hasta valores de un cierto orden. Para caudales aún menores, los efectos de relajación de carga se notan en el menisco, en una región grande comparada con la de transición cono-chorro. Cuando el efecto de las fuerzas de viscosidad es dominante en la región de transición, la región de transferencia de corriente está en el chorro pero muy próxima a la región de transición cono-chorro. Al ir disminuyendo el caudal, los efectos de relajación de carga aparecen progresivamente en el chorro, en la región de transición y por último en el menisco. Cuando el caudal es mucho mayor que el mínimo del modo cono-chorro, el menisco deja de ser cónico. El campo eléctrico debido al voltaje aplicado domina en la región de transferencia de corriente, y tanto la corriente eléctrica como el tamaño de las diferentes regiones del problema pasan a depender del voltaje aplicado. Como resultado de esta dependencia, el plano caudal-voltaje se divide en diferentes regiones que se analizan separadamente. Para caudales suficientemente grandes, la inercia del líquido termina dominando frente a las fuerzas de la viscosidad. Estos resultados teóricos se han validado con simulaciones numéricas. Para ello se ha formulado un modelo simplificado del flujo, el campo eléctrico y el transporte de carga en el menisco y el chorro del electrospray. El movimiento del líquido se supone casi unidireccional y se describe usando la aproximación de Cosserat para un chorro esbelto. Esta aproximación, ampliamente usada en la literatura, permite simular con relativa facilidad múltiples casos y cubrir amplios rangos de valores de los parámetros reteniendo los efectos de la viscosidad y la inercia del líquido. Los campos eléctricos dentro y fuera del liquido están acoplados y se calculan sin simplificación alguna usando un método de elementos de contorno. La solución estacionaria del problema se calcula mediante un método iterativo. Para explorar el espacio de los parámetros, se comienza calculando una solución para valores fijos de las propiedades del líquido, el voltaje aplicado y el caudal. A continuación, se usa un método de continuación que permite delinear la frontera del dominio de existencia del modo cono-chorro, donde el método iterativo deja de converger. Cuando el efecto de la inercia del líquido domina en la región de transición cono-chorro, el caudal mínimo para el cual el método iterativo deja de converger es del orden del valor estimado del caudal para el que comienza a haber efectos de relajación de carga en el chorro y el cono. Aunque las simulaciones no convergen por debajo de dicho caudal, el valor de la corriente eléctrica para valores del caudal ligeramente mayores parece ajustarse a las estimaciones para caudales menores, reflejando un posible cambio en los balances aplicables. Por el contrario, cuando las fuerzas viscosas dominan en la región de transición, se pueden obtener soluciones estacionarias para caudales bastante menores que aquel para el que aparecen efectos de relajación de carga en la región de transición cono-chorro. Los resultados numéricos obtenidos para estos pequeños caudales se ajustan perfectamente a las estimaciones de orden de magnitud que se describen en la memoria. Por último, se incluyen como anexos dos estudios teóricos que han surgido de forma natural durante el desarrollo de la tesis. El primero hace referencia a la singularidad en el campo eléctrico que aparece en la línea de contacto entre el líquido y el tubo capilar en la mayoría de las simulaciones. Primero se estudia en qué situaciones el campo eléctrico tiende a infinito en la línea de contacto. Después, se comprueba que dicha singularidad no supone un fallo en la descripción del problema y que además no afecta a la solución lejos de la línea de contacto. También se analiza si los esfuerzos eléctricos infinitamente grandes a los que da lugar dicha singularidad pueden ser compensados por el resto de esfuerzos que actúan en la superficie del líquido. El segundo estudio busca determinar el tamaño de la región de apantallamiento en un chorro de líquido dieléctrico sin carga superficial. En esta región, el campo exterior es compensado parcialmente por el campo que induce la carga de polarización en la superficie del líquido, de forma que en el interior del líquido el campo eléctrico es mucho menor que en el exterior. Una región como ésta aparece en las estimaciones cuando los efectos de relajación de carga son importantes en la región de transferencia de corriente en el chorro. ABSTRACT This aim of this dissertation is a theoretical and numerical analysis of an electrospray. In its most simple configuration, a constant flow rate of the liquid to be atomized, which has to be an electrical conductor, is injected into a dielectric medium (a gas or another inmiscible fluid) through a metallic capillary tube. A constant voltage is applied between this tube and a distant electrode that produces an electric field in the liquid and the surrounding medium. This electric field induces an electric current in the liquid that accumulates charge at its surface and leads to electric stresses that stretch the surface in the direction of the electric field. A meniscus appears on the end of the capillary tube when the electric field is sufficiently high and the flow rate is small. Pressure variations and viscous stresses due to the motion of the liquid are negligible in most of the meniscus, where normal electric and surface tension stresses acting on the surface are dominant. In the so-called cone-jet mode, the balance of these stresses forces the surface to adopt a conical shape -Taylor cone- in a intermediate region between the end of the tube and the tip of the meniscus. When approaching the cone apex, the velocity of the liquid increases and leads to pressure variations that eventually disturb the balance of surfaces tension and electric stresses. A thin jet emerges then from the tip of the meniscus that transports the charge accumulated at its surface. The electric field tangent to the surface of the jet acts on this charge and continuously stretches the jet. This electric force is negligible in the meniscus, where the component of the electric field tangent to the surface is small, but becomes very important in the jet. Far from the cone, the jet can either develop an asymmetrical instability named “whipping”, whereby the jet winds into a spiral, or break into a spray of small, nearly monodisperse, charged droplets. The electric current transported by the liquid has two components, the conduction current in the bulk of the liquid and the convection current due to the transport of the surface charge by the flow. The first component dominates in the meniscus, the second one in the far jet, and both are comparable in a current transfer region located in the jet downstream of the cone-jet transition region where the meniscus ceases to be a Taylor cone. Given an external electric field, the charge that accumulates at the surface of the liquid reduces the electric field inside the liquid, until an equilibrium is reached in which the electric field induced by the surface charge counters the external electric field and shields the liquid from this field. The characteristic time of this process is the electric relaxation time, which is a property of the liquid. When the residence time of the liquid in the cone-jet transition region (or in other region of the flow) is greater than the electric relaxation time, the surface charge follows a succession of equilibrium states and continuously shield the liquid from the external field. When this condition is not satisfied, charge relaxation effects appear and the external field penetrates into the liquid unless the liquid permittivity is large. For very polar liquids, the field due to the polarization charge at the surface prevents the external field from entering the liquid in the cone and in certain region of the jet. The charge at the surface of a conical meniscus intensifies the electric field around the cone, determining its spatial variation up to distances downstream of the apex of the order of the size of the meniscus. This electric field, first computed by Taylor, is independent of the applied voltage. Therefore local flow characteristics and the electric current carried by the jet are also independent of the applied voltage provided the size of the regions that determine these magnitudes are small compared with the size of the meniscus. Many experiments in the literature show the existence of a minimum flow rate below which the cone-jet mode cannot be established. The mean value and the standard deviation of the electrospray droplet size distribution are minimum when the device is operated near the minimum flow rate. There is no complete explanation of the minimum flow rate, even though possible mechanisms have been extensively studied. The existence of a minimum flow rate seems to be connected with the appearance of charge relaxation effects in the transition region. In this dissertation, order of magnitude estimations are worked out that show the dominant balances in the different regions of the asymptotic structure of the solution for different conditions of interest. When the inertia of the liquid plays a role in the cone-jet transition region, the region where most of the electric current is transfered to the surface lies in the jet downstream the cone-jet transition region. When the flow rate decreases to a certain value, charge relaxation effects appear simultaneously in the jet and in the transition region. For smaller values of the flow rate, charge relaxation effects are important in a region of the meniscus larger than the transition region. When viscous forces dominate in the flow in the cone-jet transition region, the current transfer region is located in the jet immediately after the transition region. When flow rate is decreased, charge relaxation effects appears gradually, first in the jet, then in the transition region, and finally in the meniscus. When flow rate is much larger than the cone-jet mode minimum, the meniscus ceases to be a cone. The electric current and the structure of the solution begin to depend on the applied voltage. The flow rate-voltage plane splits into different regions that are analyzed separately. For sufficiently large flow rates, the effect of the inertia of the liquid always becomes greater than the effect of the viscous forces. A set of numerical simulations have been carried out in order to validate the theoretical results. A simplified model of the problem has been devised to compute the flow, the electric field and the surface charge in the meniscus and the jet of an electrospray. The motion of the liquid is assumed to be quasi-unidirectional and described by Cosserat’s approximation for a slender jet. This widely used approximation allows to easily compute multiple configurations and to explore wide ranges of values of the governing parameters, retaining the effects of the viscosity and the inertia of the liquid. Electric fields inside and outside the liquid are coupled and are computed without any simplification using a boundary elements method. The stationary solution of the problem is obtained by means of an iterative method. To explore the parameter space, a solution is first computed for a set of values of the liquid properties, the flow rate and the applied voltage, an then a continuation method is used to find the boundaries of the cone-jet mode domain of existence, where the iterative method ceases to converge. When the inertia of the liquid dominates in the cone-jet transition region, the iterative method ceases to converge for values of the flow rate for which order-of-magnitude estimates first predict charge relaxation effects to be important in the cone and the jet. The electric current computed for values of the flow rate slightly above the minimum for which convergence is obtained seems to agree with estimates worked out for lower flow rates. When viscous forces dominate in the transition region, stationary solutions can be obtained for flow rates significantly smaller than the one for which charge relaxation effects first appear in the transition region. Numerical results obtained for those small values of the flow rate agree with our order of magnitude estimates. Theoretical analyses of two issues that have arisen naturally during the thesis are summarized in two appendices. The first appendix contains a study of the singularity of the electric field that most of the simulations show at the contact line between the liquid and the capillary tube. The electric field near the contact line is analyzed to determine the ranges of geometrical configurations and liquid permittivity where a singularity appears. Further estimates show that this singularity does not entail a failure in the description of the problem and does not affect the solution far from the contact line. The infinite electric stresses that appear at the contact line can be effectively balanced by surface tension. The second appendix contains an analysis of the size and slenderness of the shielded region of a dielectric liquid in the absence of free surface charge. In this region, the external electric field is partially offset by the polarization charge so that the inner electric field is much lower than the outer one. A similar region appears in the estimates when charge relaxation effects are important in the current transfer region.
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Thinning the absorber layer is one of the possibilities envisaged to further decrease the production costs of Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (CIGSe) thin films solar cell technology. In the present study, the electronic transport in submicron CIGSe-based devices has been investigated and compared to that of standard devices. It is observed that when the absorber is around 0.5 μm-thick, tunnelling enhanced interface recombination dominates, which harms cells energy conversion efficiency. It is also shown that by varying either the properties of the Mo back contact or the characteristics of 3-stage growth processing, one can shift the dominating recombination mechanism from interface to space charge region and thereby improve the cells efficiency. Discussions on these experimental facts led to the conclusions that 3-stage process implies the formation of a CIGSe/CIGSe homo-interface, whose location as well as properties rule the device operation; its influence is enhanced in submicron CIGSe based solar cells.
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Accurate quantum mechanical simulations of the primary charge transfer in photosynthetic reaction centers are reported. The process is modeled by three coupled electronic states corresponding to the photoexcited chlorophyll special pair (donor), the reduced bacteriopheophytin (acceptor), and the reduced accessory chlorophyll (bridge) that interact with a dissipative medium of protein and solvent degrees of freedom. The time evolution of the excited special pair is followed over 17 ps by using a fully quantum mechanical path integral scheme. We find that a free energy of the reduced accessory chlorophyll state approximately equal to 400 cm(-1) lower than that of the excited special pair state yields state populations in agreement with experimental results on wild-type and modified reaction centers. For this energetic configuration electron transfer is a two-step process.
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Application of L-glutamate to retinal glial (Müller) cells results in an inwardly rectifying current due to the net influx of one positive charge per molecule of glutamate transported into the cell. However, at positive potentials an outward current can be elicited by glutamate. This outward current is eliminated by removal of external chloride ions. Substitution of external chloride with the anions thiocyanate, perchlorate, nitrate, and iodide, which are known to be more permeant at other chloride channels, results in a considerably larger glutamate-elicited outward current at positive potentials. The large outward current in external nitrate has the same ionic dependence, apparent affinity for L-glutamate, and pharmacology as the glutamate transporter previously reported to exist in these cells. Varying the concentration of external nitrate shifts the reversal potential in a manner consistent with a conductance permeable to nitrate. Together, these results suggest that the glutamate transporter in retinal glial cells is associated with an anionic conductance. This anionic conductance may be important for preventing a reduction in the rate of transport due the depolarization that would otherwise occur as a result of electrogenic glutamate uptake.
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This thesis is devoted to the investigation of inter and intramolecular charge transfer (CT) in molecular functional materials and specifically organic dyes and CT crystals. An integrated approach encompassing quantum-chemical calculations, semiempirical tools, theoretical models and spectroscopic measurements is applied to understand structure-property relationships governing the low-energy physics of these materials. Four main topics were addressed: 1) Spectral properties of organic dyes. Charge-transfer dyes are constituted by electron donor (D) and electron acceptor (A) units linked through bridge(s) to form molecules with different symmetry and dimensionality. Their low-energy physics is governed by the charge resonance between D and A groups and is effectively described by a family of parametric Hamiltonians known as essential-state models. These models account for few electronic states, corresponding to the main resonance structures of the relevant dye, leading to a simple picture that is completed introducing the coupling of the electronic system to molecular vibrations, treated in a non-adiabatic way, and an effective classical coordinate, describing polar solvation. In this work a specific essential-state model was proposed and parametrized for the dye Brilliant Green. The central issue in this work has been the definition of the diabatic states, a not trivial task for a multi-branched chromophore. In a second effort, we have used essential-state models for the description of the early-stage dynamics of excited states after ultrafast excitation. Crucial to this work is the fully non-adiabatic treatment of the coupled electronic and vibrational motion, allowing for a reliable description of the dynamics of systems showing a multistable, broken-symmetry excited state. 2) Mixed-stack CT salts. Mixed-stack (MS) CT crystals are an interesting class of multifunctional molecular materials, where D and A molecules arrange themselves to form stacks, leading to delocalized electrons in one dimension. The interplay between the intermolecular CT, electrostatic interactions, lattice phonons and molecular vibrations leads to intriguing physical properties that include (photoinduced) phase transitions, multistability, antiferromagnetism, ferroelectricity and potential multiferroicity. The standard microscopic model to describe this family of materials is the Modified Hubbard model accounting for electron-phonon coupling (Peierls coupling), electron-molecular vibrations coupling (Holstein coupling) and electrostatic interactions. We adopt and validate a method, based on DFT calculations on dimeric DA structures, to extract relevant model parameters. The approach offers a powerful tool to shed light on the complex physics of MS-CT salts. 3) Charge transfer in organic radical dipolar dyes. In collaboration with the group of Prof. Jaume Veciana (ICMAB- Barcellona), we have studied spectral properties of a special class of CT dyes with D-bridge-A structure where the acceptor group is a stable radical (of the perchlorotriphenylmethyl, PTM, family), leading to an open-shell CT dyes. These materials are of interest since they associate the electronic and optical properties of CT dyes with magnetic properties from the unpaired electron. The first effort was devoted to the parametrization of the relevant essential-state model. Two strategies were adopted, one based on the calculation of the low-energy spectral properties, the other based on the variation of ground state properties with an applied electric field. 4) The spectral properties of organic nanoparticles based on radical species are investigated in collaboration with Dr. I. Ratera (ICMAB- Barcellona). Intriguing spectroscopic behavior was observed pointing to the presence of excimer states. In an attempt to rationalize these findings, extensive calculations (TD-DFT and ZINDO) were performed. The results for the isolated dyes are validated against experimental spectra in solution. To address intermolecular interactions we studied dimeric structures in the gas phase, but the preliminary results obtained do not support excimer formation.
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One of the main technical difficulties in the fabrication of optical antennas working as light detectors is the proper design and manufacture of auxiliary elements as load lines and signal extraction structures. These elements need to be quite small to reach the location of the antennas and should have a minimal effect on the response of the device. Unfortunately this is not an easy task and signal extraction lines resonate along with the antenna producing a complex signal that usually masks the one given by the antenna. In order to decouple the resonance from the transduction we present in this contribution a parametric analysis of the response of a bolometric stripe that is surrounded by resonant dipoles with different geometries and orientations. We have checked that these elements should provide a signal proportional to the polarization state of the incoming light.
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A systematic study on the influence of carbon on the signal of a large number of hard-to-ionize elements (i.e. B, Be, P, S, Zn, As, Se, Pd, Cd, Sb, I, Te, Os, Ir, Pt, Au, and Hg) in inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry has been carried out. To this end, carbon matrix effects have been evaluated considering different plasma parameters (i.e. nebulizer gas flow rate, r.f. power and sample uptake rate), sample introduction systems, concentration and type of carbon matrix (i.e. glycerol, citric acid, potassium citrate and ammonium carbonate) and type of mass spectrometer (i.e. quadrupole filter vs. double-focusing sector field mass spectrometer). Experimental results show that P, As, Se, Sb, Te, I, Au and Hg sensitivities are always higher for carbon-containing solutions than those obtained without carbon. The other hard-to-ionize elements (Be, B, S, Zn, Pd, Cd, Os, Ir and Pt) show no matrix effect, signal enhancement or signal suppression depending on the experimental conditions selected. The matrix effects caused by the presence of carbon are explained by changes in the plasma characteristics and the corresponding changes in ion distribution in the plasma (as reflected in the signal behavior plot, i.e. the signal intensity as a function of the nebulizer gas flow rate). However, the matrix effects for P, As, Se, Sb, Te, I, Au and Hg are also related to an increase in analyte ion population caused as a result of charge transfer reactions involving carbon-containing charged species in the plasma. The predominant specie is C+, but other species such as CO+, CO2+, C2+ and ArC+ could also play a role. Theoretical data suggest that B, Be, S, Pd, Cd, Os, Ir and Pt could also be involved in carbon based charge transfer reactions, but no experimental evidence substantiating this view has been found.
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The influence of the sample introduction system on the signals obtained with different tin compounds in inductively coupled plasma (ICP) based techniques, i.e., ICP atomic emission spectrometry (ICP–AES) and ICP mass spectrometry (ICP–MS) has been studied. Signals for test solutions prepared from four different tin compounds (i.e., tin tetrachloride, monobutyltin, dibutyltin and di-tert-butyltin) in different solvents (methanol 0.8% (w/w), i-propanol 0.8% (w/w) and various acid matrices) have been measured by ICP–AES and ICP–MS. The results demonstrate a noticeable influence of the volatility of the tin compounds on their signals measured with both techniques. Thus, in agreement with the compound volatility, the highest signals are obtained for tin tetrachloride followed by di-tert-butyltin/monobutyltin and dibutyltin. The sample introduction system exerts an important effect on the amount of solution loading the plasma and, hence, on the relative signals afforded by the tin compounds in ICP–based techniques. Thus, when working with a pneumatic concentric nebulizer, the use of spray chambers affording high solvent transport efficiency to the plasma (such as cyclonic and single pass) or high spray chamber temperatures is recommended to minimize the influence of the tin chemical compound. Nevertheless, even when using the conventional pneumatic nebulizer coupled to the best spray chamber design (i.e., a single pass spray chamber), signals obtained for di-tert-butyltin/monobutyltin and dibutyltin are still around 10% and 30% lower than the corresponding signal for tin tetrachloride, respectively. When operating with a pneumatic microconcentric nebulizer coupled to a 50 °C-thermostated cinnabar spray chamber, all studied organotin compounds provided similar emission signals although about 60% lower than those obtained for tin tetrachloride. The use of an ultrasonic nebulizer coupled to a desolvation device provides the largest differences in the emission signals, among all tested systems.
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Inductively Coupled Plasma Optical Emission Spectrometry (ICP-OES) has been employed to carry out the determination of both major anions and cations in water samples. The anion quantification has been performed by means of a new automatic accessory. In this device chloride has been determined by continuously adding a silver nitrate solution. As a result solid silver chloride particles are formed and retained on a nylon filter inserted in the line. The emission intensity is read at a silver characteristic wavelength. By plotting the drop in silver signal versus the chloride concentration, a straight line is obtained. As regards bicarbonate, this anion has been on-line transformed into carbon dioxide with the help of a 2.0 mol L−1 nitric acid stream. Carbon signal is linearly related with bicarbonate concentration. Finally, information about sulfate concentration has been achieved by means of the measurement of sulfur emission intensity. All the steps have been simultaneously and automatically performed. With this setup detection limits have been 1.0, 0.4 and 0.09 mg L−1 for chloride, bicarbonate and sulfate, respectively. Furthermore, it affords good precision with RSD below 6 %. Cation (Ca, Mg, Na and K) concentration, in turn, has been obtained by simultaneously reading the emission intensity at characteristic wavelengths. The obtained limits of detection have been 8 × 10−3, 2 × 10−3, 8 × 10−4 and 10−2 mg L−1 for sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium, respectively. As regards sample throughput, about 30 samples h−1 can be analysed. Validation results have revealed that the obtained concentrations for these anions are not significantly different as compared to the data provided by conventional methods. Finally, by considering the data for anions and cations, precise ion balances have been obtained for well and mineral water samples.
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Results of a systematic study concerning non-spectral interferences from sulfuric acid containing matrices on a large number of elements in inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) are presented in this work. The signals obtained with sulfuric acid solutions of different concentrations (up to 5% w w− 1) have been compared with the corresponding signals for a 1% w w− 1− nitric acid solution at different experimental conditions (i.e., sample uptake rates, nebulizer gas flows and r.f. powers). The signals observed for 128Te+, 78Se+ and 75As+ were significantly higher when using sulfuric acid matrices (up to 2.2-fold for 128Te+ and 78Se+ and 1.8-fold for 75As+ in the presence of 5 w w-1 sulfuric acid) for the whole range of experimental conditions tested. This is in agreement with previously reported observations. The signal for 31P+ is also higher (1.1-fold) in the presence of sulfuric acid. The signal enhancements for 128Te+, 78Se+, 75As+ and 31P+ are explained in relation to an increase in the analyte ion population as a result of charge transfer reactions involving S+ species in the plasma. Theoretical data suggest that Os, Sb, Pt, Ir, Zn and Hg could also be involved in sulfur-based charge transfer reactions, but no experimental evidence has been found. The presence of sulfuric acid gives rise to lower ion signals (about 10–20% lower) for the other nuclides tested, thus indicating the negative matrix effect caused by changes in the amount of analyte loading of the plasma. The elemental composition of a certified low-density polyethylene sample (ERM-EC681K) was determined by ICP-MS after two different sample digestion procedures, one of them including sulfuric acid. Element concentrations were in agreement with the certified values, irrespective of the acids used for the digestion. These results demonstrate that the use of matrix-matched standards allows the accurate determination of the tested elements in a sulfuric acid matrix.
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BACKGROUND & AIMS The liver performs a panoply of complex activities coordinating metabolic, immunologic and detoxification processes. Despite the liver's robustness and unique self-regeneration capacity, viral infection, autoimmune disorders, fatty liver disease, alcohol abuse and drug-induced hepatotoxicity contribute to the increasing prevalence of liver failure. Liver injuries impair the clearance of bile acids from the hepatic portal vein which leads to their spill over into the peripheral circulation where they activate the G-protein-coupled bile acid receptor TGR5 to initiate a variety of hepatoprotective processes. METHODS By functionally linking activation of ectopically expressed TGR5 to an artificial promoter controlling transcription of the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), we created a closed-loop synthetic signalling network that coordinated liver injury-associated serum bile acid levels to expression of HGF in a self-sufficient, reversible and dose-dependent manner. RESULTS After implantation of genetically engineered human cells inside auto-vascularizing, immunoprotective and clinically validated alginate-poly-(L-lysine)-alginate beads into mice, the liver-protection device detected pathologic serum bile acid levels and produced therapeutic HGF levels that protected the animals from acute drug-induced liver failure. CONCLUSIONS Genetically engineered cells containing theranostic gene circuits that dynamically interface with host metabolism may provide novel opportunities for preventive, acute and chronic healthcare. LAY SUMMARY Liver diseases leading to organ failure may go unnoticed as they do not trigger any symptoms or significant discomfort. We have designed a synthetic gene circuit that senses excessive bile acid levels associated with liver injuries and automatically produces a therapeutic protein in response. When integrated into mammalian cells and implanted into mice, the circuit detects the onset of liver injuries and coordinates the production of a protein pharmaceutical which prevents liver damage.