958 resultados para bed-by-bed correlation
Resumo:
Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) is an optical technique that allows the measurement of the diffusion coefficient of molecules in a diluted sample. From the diffusion coefficient it is possible to calculate the hydrodynamic radius of the molecules. For colloidal quantum dots (QDs) the hydrodynamic radius is valuable information to study interactions with other molecules or other QDs. In this chapter we describe the main aspects of the technique and how to use it to calculate the hydrodynamic radius of quantum dots (QDs).
Resumo:
One of the most important properties of quantum dots (QDs) is their size. Their size will determine optical properties and in a colloidal medium their range of interaction. The most common techniques used to measure QD size are transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray diffraction. However, these techniques demand the sample to be dried and under a vacuum. This way any hydrodynamic information is excluded and the preparation process may alter even the size of the QDs. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) is an optical technique with single molecule sensitivity capable of extracting the hydrodynamic radius (HR) of the QDs. The main drawback of FCS is the blinking phenomenon that alters the correlation function implicating in a QD apparent size smaller than it really is. In this work, we developed a method to exclude blinking of the FCS and measured the HR of colloidal QDs. We compared our results with TEM images, and the HR obtained by FCS is higher than the radius measured by TEM. We attribute this difference to the cap layer of the QD that cannot be seen in the TEM images.
Resumo:
Our objective was a prospective comparison of MR enteroclysis (MRE) with multidetector spiral-CT enteroclysis (MSCTE). Fifty patients with various suspected small bowel diseases were investigated by MSCTE and MRE. The MSCTE was performed using slices of 2.5 mm, immediately followed by MRE, obtaining T1- and T2-weighted sequences, including gadolinium-enhanced acquisition with fat saturation. Three radiologists independently evaluated MSCTE and MRE searching for 12 pathological signs. Interobserver agreement was calculated. Sensitivities and specificities resulted from comparison with pathological results ( n=29) and patient's clinical evolution ( n=21). Most pathological signs, such as bowel wall thickening (BWT), bowel wall enhancement (BWE) and lymphadenopathy (ADP), showed better interobserver agreement on MSCTE than on MRE (BWT: 0.65 vs 0.48; BWE: 0.51 vs 0.37; ADP: 0.52 vs 0.15). Sensitivity of MSCTE was higher than that of MRE in detecting BWT (88.9 vs 60%), BWE (78.6 vs 55.5%) and ADP (63.8 vs 14.3%). Wilcoxon signed-rank test revealed significantly better sensitivity of MSCTE than that of MRE for each observer ( p=0.028, p=0.046, p=0.028, respectively). Taking the given study design into account, MSCTE provides better sensitivity in detecting lesions of the small bowel than MRE, with higher interobserver agreement.
Resumo:
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) is a powerful technique to determine the diffusion of fluorescence molecules in various environments. The technique is based on detecting and analyzing the fluctuation of fluorescence light emitted by fluorescence species diffusing through a small and fixed observation volume, formed by a laser focused into the sample. Because of its great potential and high versatility in addressing the diffusion and transport properties in complex systems, FCS has been successfully applied to a great variety of systems. In my thesis, I focused on the application of FCS to study the diffusion of fluorescence molecules in organic environments, especially in polymer melts. In order to examine our FCS setup and a developed measurement protocol, I first utilized FCS to measure tracer diffusion in polystyrene (PS) solutions, for which abundance data exist in the literature. I studied molecular and polymeric tracer diffusion in polystyrene solutions over a broad range of concentrations and different tracer and matrix molecular weights (Mw). Then FCS was further established to study tracer dynamics in polymer melts. In this part I investigated the diffusion of molecular tracers in linear flexible polymer melts [polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), polyisoprene (PI)], a miscible polymer blend [PI and poly vinyl ethylene (PVE)], and star-shaped polymer [3-arm star polyisoprene (SPI)]. The effects of tracer sizes, polymer Mw, polymer types, and temperature on the diffusion coefficients of small tracers were discussed. The distinct topology of the host polymer, i.e. star polymer melt, revealed the notably different motion of the small tracer, as compared to its linear counterpart. Finally, I emphasized the advantage of the small observation volume which allowed FCS to investigate the tracer diffusions in heterogeneous systems; a swollen cross-linked PS bead and silica inverse opals, where high spatial resolution technique was required.
Resumo:
The adsorption of particles and surfactants at water-oil interfaces has attracted continuous attention because of its emulsion stabilizing effect and the possibility to form two-dimensional materials. Herein, I studied the interfacial diffusion of single molecules and nanoparticles at water-oil interfaces using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. rnrnFluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) is a promising technique to study diffusion of fluorescent tracers in diverse conditions. This technique monitors and analyzes the fluorescence fluctuation caused by single fluorescent tracers coming in and out of a diffraction-limited observation volume “one at a time”. Thus, this technique allows a combination of high precision, high spatial resolution and low tracer concentration. rnrnIn chapter 1, I discussed some controversial questions regarding the properties of water-hydrophobic interfaces and also introduced the current progress on the stability and dynamic of single nanoparticles at water-oil interfaces. The materials and setups I used in this thesis were summarized in chapter 2. rnrnIn chapter 3, I presented a new strategy to study the properties of water-oil interfaces. The two-dimensional diffusion of isolated molecular tracers at water/n-alkane interfaces was measured using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. The diffusion coefficients of larger tracers with a hydrodynamic radius of 4.0 nm agreed well with the values calculated from the macroscopic viscosities of the two bulk phases. However, for small molecule tracers with hydrodynamic radii of only 1.0 and 0.6 nm, notable deviations were observed, indicating the existence of an interfacial region with a reduced effective viscosity. rnrnIn chapter 4, the interfacial diffusion of nanoparticles at water-oil interfaces was investigated using FCS. In stark contrast to the interfacial diffusion of molecular tracers, that of nanoparticles at any conditions is slower than the values calculated in accordance to the surrounding viscosity. The diffusion of nanoparticles at water-oil interfaces depended on the interfacial tension of liquid-liquid interfaces, the surface properties of nanoparticles, the particle sizes and the viscosities of surrounding liquid phases. In addition, the interfacial diffusion of nanoparticles with Janus motif is even slower than that of their symmetric counterparts. Based on the experimental results I obtained, I drew some possibilities to describe the origin of nanoparticle slowdown at water-oil interfaces.
Resumo:
Gels are elastic porous polymer networks that are accompanied by pronounced mechanical properties. Due to their biocompatibility, ‘responsive hydrogels’ (HG) have many biomedical applications ranging from biosensors and drug delivery to tissue engineering. They respond to external stimuli such as temperature and salt by changing their dimensions. Of paramount importance is the ability to engineer penetrability and diffusion of interacting molecules in the crowded HG environment, as this would enable one to optimize a specific functionality. Even though the conditions under which biomedical devices operate are rather complex, a bottom-up approach could reduce the complexity of mutually coupled parameters influencing tracer mobility. The present thesis focuses on the interaction-induced tracer diffusion in polymer solutions and their homologous gels, probed by means of Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS). This is a single-molecule-sensitive technique having the advantage of optimal performance under ultralow tracer concentrations, typically employed in biosensors. Two different types of hydrogels have been investigated, a conventional one with broad polydispersity in the distance between crosslink points and a so-called ‘ideal’, with uniform mesh size distribution. The former is based on a thermoresponsive polymer, exhibiting phase separation in water at temperatures close to the human body temperature. The latter represents an optimal platform to study tracer diffusion. Mobilities of different tracers have been investigated in each network, varying in size, geometry and in terms of tracer-polymer attractive strength, as perturbed by different stimuli. The thesis constitutes a systematic effort towards elucidating the role of the strength and nature of different tracer-polymer interactions, on tracer mobilities; it outlines that interactions can still be very important even in the simplified case of dilute polymer solutions; it also demonstrates that the presence of permanent crosslinks exerts distinct tracer slowdown, depending on the tracer type and the nature of the tracer-polymer interactions, expressed differently by each tracer with regard to the selected stimulus. In aqueous polymer solutions, the tracer slowdown is found to be system-dependent and no universal trend seems to hold, in contrast to predictions from scaling theory for non-interacting nanoparticle mobility and empirical relations concerning the mesh size in polymer solutions. Complex tracer dynamics in polymer networks may be distinctly expressed by FCS, depending on the specific synergy among-at least some of - the following parameters: nature of interactions, external stimuli employed, tracer size and type, crosslink density and swelling ratio.
Resumo:
Polymerbasierte Kolloide mit Groen im Nanometerbereich werden als aussichts- reiche Kandidaten fur die Verkapselung und den Transport von pharmazeutischen Wirkstoen angesehen. Daher ist es wichtig die physikalischen Prozesse, die die Bil- dung, Struktur und kinetische Stabilitat der polymerbasierten Kolloide beein ussen, besser zu verstehen. Allerdings ist die Untersuchung dieser Prozesse fur nanome- tergroe Objekte kompliziert und erfordert fortgeschrittene Techniken. In dieser Arbeit beschreibe ich Untersuchungen, bei denen Zwei-Farben-Fluoreszenzkreuz- korrelationsspektroskopie (DC FCCS) genutzt wurde, um Informationen uber die Wechselwirkung und den Austausch von dispergierten, nanometergroen Kolloiden zu bekommen. Zunachst habe ich den Prozess der Polymernanopartikelherstellung aus Emul- sionstropfen untersucht, welcher einen der am haugsten angewendeten Prozesse der Nanopartikelformulierung darstellt. Ich konnte zeigen, dass mit DC FCCS eindeutig und direkt Koaleszenz zwischen Emulsionstropfen gemessen werden kann. Dies ist von Interesse, da Koaleszenz als Hauptgrund fur die breite Groenverteilung der nalen Nanopartikel angesehen wird. Weiterhin habe ich den Austausch von Mizellen bildenden Molekulen zwischen amphiphilen Diblock Kopolymermizellen untersucht. Als Modellsystem diente ein Linear-Burste Block Kopolymer, welches Mizellen mit einer dichten und kurzen Korona bildet. Mit Hilfe von DC FCCS konnte der Austausch in verschiedenen Losungsmitteln und bei verschiedenen Temperaturen beobachtet werden. Ich habe herausgefunden, dass in Abhangigkeit der Qualitat des Losungsmittels die Zeit des Austausches um Groenordnungen verschoben werden kann, was eine weitreichende Einstellung der Austauschkinetik ermoglicht. Eine Eigenschaft die all diese Kolloide gemeinsam haben ist ihre Polydispersitat. Im letzten Teil meiner Arbeit habe ich am Beispiel von Polymeren als Modellsystem untersucht, welchen Eekt Polydispersitat und die Art der Fluoreszenzmarkierung auf FCS Experimente haben. Eine Anpassung des klassischen FCS Modells kann die FCS Korrelationskurven dieser Systeme beschreiben. Die Richtigkeit meines Ansatzes habe ich mit dem Vergleich zur Gel-Permeations-Chromatographie und Brownschen Molekulardynamiksimulationen bestatigt.
Resumo:
One hundred thirty-one marker horizons relating to the distinct and traceable layers were described for the Owen Ridge and Oman Margin sites. The correlations incorporated the calculations of true depth, corrected for coring disturbance and gas expansion. Intersite correlation of marker horizons has been improved based on color density data, measured with video densitometer, and oxygen isotope stratigraphic data. Distinct hiatuses were detected by the intersite correlation of the marker horizons in the Owen Ridge. The hiatuses are related to submarine slides induced by increasing gravitational instability for the accumulation of the pelagic sediments on the top of the Owen Ridge. The large amount of sediment supply with variable lithofacies during the glacial stages is represented by layer-bylayer correlation in the Oman Margin. The color density patterns with glacial-interglacial cycles are controlled by the balance of organic carbon content, increasing in the interglacial stages with strong upwelling induced by the southwest monsoon, and flux of terrigenous matter, increasing in the glacial stages. The present distinct climatic cycle relating to the southwest monsoon has been developed since Stage 8, 250 ka. The large amount of sediment supply in the glacial stages can be assumed as fluvial in origin from the humid Arabian Peninsula, relating to the weakened Tropical Easterly Jet, which is induced by the counter-current of the southwest monsoon and maintains the present arid climate in the north Africa and Arabian Peninsula.