172,007 results
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2. The Student Papers of Martin Luther King, Jr.: A Summary Statement on Research
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An Alpha Revisionist Manifesto: Concept White Paper
- Author
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Lichty, Patrick
- Published
- 2001
4. Locust bean gum adsorption onto softwood kraft pulp fibres: isotherms, kinetics and paper strength
- Author
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Jingqian Chen, Heather L. Trajano, and Rodger P. Beatson
- Subjects
Softwood ,Polymers and Plastics ,Chemistry ,Adsorption isotherms ,Pulp (paper) ,Locust bean gum ,Langmuir adsorption model ,engineering.material ,Northern bleached softwood kraft ,Hemicellulose ,Northern bleached softwood kraft pulp ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adsorption kinetics ,Adsorption ,Paper strength additive ,Chemical engineering ,Kraft process ,Chemisorption ,symbols ,engineering ,Original Research - Abstract
The adsorption of locust bean gum (LBG) onto Northern Bleached Softwood Kraft (NBSK) pulp improved paper tensile and burst strength and lowered refining energy by strengthening inter-fibre bonding. Adsorption kinetics and isotherms were investigated to develop a fundamental understanding of the adsorption mechanism. The adsorption rate followed pseudo-second-order kinetics and the activation energy was 99.34 kJ·mol−1, suggesting chemisorption. The adsorption rate constant increased rapidly with temperature from 25 to 45 °C (k = 1.93 to 24.03 g·mg−1·min−1), but the amount adsorbed at equilibrium decreased (qe = 1.91 to 0.48 mg·g−1 o.d. fibre). LBG adsorption to NBSK at 25 °C was consistent with the Langmuir adsorption model for LBG n = 5.00, and the equilibrium constant Kf = 2.57 mg·g−1·(mg·L−1)−1/n at 25 °C. Favorable adsorption conditions for negatively charged LBG were identified: 25 °C for 10 min, low dosage level ( 150 r.p.m.), acidic or neutral conditions (pH 2–7) without salt addition. Graphic abstract
- Published
- 2021
5. Inkjet Printing of Ag and Polystyrene Nanoparticle Emulsions for the One-Step Fabrication of Hydrophobic Paper-Based Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering Substrates
- Author
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Tiago Fernandes, Helena I. S. Nogueira, Natércia C.T. Martins, Sara Fateixa, and Tito Trindade
- Subjects
Surface (mathematics) ,Fabrication ,Materials science ,SERS ,Metal nanoparticles ,Nanoparticle ,Nanotechnology ,One-Step ,Paper based ,Paper sensors ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,Hydrophobic surfaces ,chemistry ,symbols ,General Materials Science ,Polystyrene ,Pesticides ,Raman scattering ,Inkjet printing - Abstract
Hydrophobic substrates for surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) of adsorbate species are of great interest in chemical analysis because they can concentrate the analyte molecules in a small area of the surface, thereby improving the SERS sensitivity. Here, we propose a general strategy to fabricate hydrophobic paper-based substrates for SERS applications. The paper substrates have been manufactured by inkjet printing of aqueous emulsions containing Ag and polystyrene (PS) colloidal nanoparticles. In a first stage, the SERS performance of the substrates was optimized by varying the relative amounts of polymer/metal colloidal nanoparticles, the number of printing layers, and the degree of hydrophobicity of the substrates, using crystal violet as a molecular probe, which is well known for its strong SERS activity. In these conditions, the strongest surface Raman enhancement was observed for the highest water contact angle (146°) achieved. The selected Ag/PS-coated paper substrates showed wide applicability for several analytes, but in this study, a detailed analysis is provided for the pesticide thiram as a proof of concept. Several samples spiked with thiram have been analyzed by SERS, giving a detection limit of 0.024 ppm thiram in mineral water and apple juice, while in apple peel, the detection limit achieved for the same pesticide was 600 ng/cm2. We suggest that this one-step fabrication method produces a hydrophobic coating whose nanoscale features improve the SERS performance of the paper substrates. published
- Published
- 2021
6. Characteristics of calcium lignin from pulping waste liquor and application for the treatment middle-stage wastewater of paper making
- Author
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Hao Yang, Guangzai Nong, Yijing Li, and Tian Zhu
- Subjects
Sodium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,macromolecular substances ,engineering.material ,Calcium ,complex mixtures ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,Adsorption ,law ,Environmental Chemistry ,Lignin ,Calcination ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Water Science and Technology ,Lime ,fungi ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,food and beverages ,Langmuir adsorption model ,General Medicine ,Pulp and paper industry ,chemistry ,Wastewater ,engineering ,symbols - Abstract
In order to obtain a lignin-based adsorbent with low cost, simple operation and no further modification, a calcium lignin adsorbent was prepared from chemical mechanical pulping (CMP) waste liquor by directly calcification from lime. The calcium lignin was characterized by BET, SEM, TEM, FT-IR and solid-state NMR analyses. The results showed that the molecular structure of the calcium lignin particles did not change when compared to sodium lignin, the formation mechanism of calcium lignin was revealed. The initial COD and lignin contents of CMP waste liquid were 54858 mg/L and 24.39 g/L, the conversion rate of lignin can reach 71.36% when was deal with lime. Thus, most of the lignin resources in the waste liquid were recovered. The middle-stage wastewater (MSWW) of pulping and papermaking was dealt with calcium lignin, the COD removal rate was up to 85.83%. The adsorption isotherms and kinetics were well fitted by the Langmuir model and pseudo-second-order kinetic model, respectively. Lime was regenerated from the used calcium lignin with high-temperature calcination, the conversion rate of calcium ions can reach 83.56%. Overall, the calcium lignin prepared by the one-step method exhibited great potential for effectively removing COD from middle-stage wastewater.
- Published
- 2021
7. ISOTHERM, KINETICS AND THERMODYNAMICS ADSORPTION STUDIES OF DYE ONTO Fe3O4-WASTE PAPER ACTIVATED CARBON COMPOSITES
- Author
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Deswita Deswita, Rahma Dina Safitri, Sari Hasnah Dewi, Nurhasni Nurhasni, and Adel Fisli
- Subjects
Materials science ,Kinetics ,General Engineering ,Magnetic separation ,Langmuir adsorption model ,Thermodynamics ,Waste paper ,Endothermic process ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,Adsorption ,chemistry ,medicine ,symbols ,Composite material ,Methylene blue ,Activated carbon ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This paper focused on the studying of adsorption properties of Fe3O4-waste paper activated carbon composites for the removal of methylene blue dyes from water. The various parameters were carried out for the adsorption test of the composites, namely; contact time, adsorbent dose, initial MB concentration, pH solution, and temperature. The adsorption of isotherm, thermodynamics and kinetic was used to determine the characteristics of methylene blue adsorption onto the prepared adsorbent. The result indicates that the optimum adsorption capacity has occurred at pH = 6 in water solution. The adsorption capacity increase as the temperature increase until at 315K (45oC). The Langmuir isotherm is more appropriate to be applied as the adsorption model with the maximum adsorption capacity (qm) value of 101 and 93 mg/g for KA HCl-Fe3O4 and KA-Fe3O4 composites, respectively. The value of adsorption thermodynamic parameters was positive for ΔH, negative for ΔGo and positive for ΔSo, meaning the process adsorptions were endothermic, feasibility and spontaneity and randomness, respectively. The pseudo-second-order model was appropriate to predict the kinetic models for methylene blue adsorption onto the composites. The obtained adsorbent composites possess high adsorption efficiency and rapid magnetic separation. They were a promising for practical wastewater treatment for dyes removal from water.
- Published
- 2020
8. TOGA feature selection and the prediction of mechanical properties of paper from the Raman spectra of unrefined pulp
- Author
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Zahra Poursorkh, Najmeh Tavassoli, Edward R. Grant, and Paul Alexandre Bicho
- Subjects
Discrete wavelet transform ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Pulp (paper) ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Feature selection ,02 engineering and technology ,Limiting ,engineering.material ,Covariance ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,symbols.namesake ,engineering ,symbols ,Process control ,Paper Makers ,0210 nano-technology ,Process engineering ,business ,Raman spectroscopy - Abstract
Process-monitoring laboratories in the pulp and paper industry generally use a combination of wet chemical analyses and physical measurements to certify the fitness of a production pulp for a specific end-use. These laboratory tests require time and the effort of trained personnel, limiting their utility for real-time process control. Here we show that Raman probes of unrefined cellulosic pulps, well-suited to the online measurement of in-process materials, can predict the quality attributes of manufactured papers. The accuracy of prediction improves when the covariance is modelled in a reduced measurement space selected by a data-driven, feature-selection technique referred to as a Template Oriented Genetic Algorithm (TOGA). TOGA, combined with discrete wavelet transform (DWT), isolates functional-group features that correlate best with mechanical properties paper derived from refined pulp. Paper makers refine market pulps to build sheet strength using a beating process that decreases freeness as it increases fibre-fibre bonding. Methods demonstrated here predict manufactured sheet properties obtainable after any specified degree of refining from the Raman spectrum of an unrefined pulp. This analysis capacity will enable both vendors of market pulp and makers of sheet paper to specify in advance the amount of beating required to produce a desired product, thereby saving cost and conserving resources.
- Published
- 2020
9. On Some Features in the Hereditary Transmission of the Self-Black and the "Irish" Coat Characters in Rats.--Paper I
- Published
- 1908
10. A Circuital Model-Based Analysis of Moisture Content in Oil-Impregnated-Paper Insulation Using Frequency Domain Spectroscopy
- Author
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Feng Yang and Lin Du
- Subjects
Physical model ,Materials science ,General Computer Science ,Moisture ,General Engineering ,Dielectric ,Oil-impregnated-paper insulation ,extended Debye model ,symbols.namesake ,frequency domain spectroscopy ,Bushing ,moisture ,symbols ,General Materials Science ,lcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,Biological system ,Water content ,Condenser (heat transfer) ,lcsh:TK1-9971 ,Debye model ,Parametric statistics - Abstract
The explicitly numerical or well-defined correlations between the dielectrics responses (DRs) and dielectric essences of oil-impregnated paper (OIP) insulation have not been fully understood yet. As a result, it is rather difficult to quantitatively diagnose the critical insulation condition, like determining moisture content in insulation paper (MCP) of power equipment only using electrical-based techniques such as frequency domain spectroscopy (FDS). To obtain MCP value, from a new perspective of parametric study on the circuital DR equivalence of OIP insulation-extended Debye model (EDM), the present contribution introduces a novel approach by exploring the pattern when EDM parameters vary with MCP and temperatures T. Further, mathematical correlations are developed between sensitive R-C values and MCP-T values. On the above analysis, small-scale physical models of real-life transformer bushings were prepared as test samples. Their OIP condenser bodies were artificially absorbed different controlled quantities of moisture and conditioned at different temperatures to record corresponding FDS results. Then a hybrid genetic algorithm combined with the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm was proposed to estimate the EDM parameters by fitting the measured FDS data. Sensitive parameters therein were identified using subspectrum decomposition and formulated with MCP-T values so that a reliable moisture content estimation can be achieved once the testing temperature and FDS recordings of an insulation body are known.
- Published
- 2020
11. Conduct Unbecoming , by Maurice Punch . : Tavistock , 1985 , 220 pp., $13.00 (paper) .
- Author
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Manning, P.K.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. SERS Platform Based on Bimetallic Au-Ag Nanowires-Decorated Filter Paper for Rapid Detection of miR-196ain Lung Cancer Patients Serum
- Author
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Ji Xia, Yifan Liu, Menglin Ran, Xiaowei Cao, Youwei Wang, and Dan Lu
- Subjects
Detection limit ,Article Subject ,Filter paper ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Succinic anhydride ,Cancer ,Substrate (chemistry) ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry ,microRNA ,medicine ,Biophysics ,symbols ,Lung cancer ,Raman spectroscopy ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Detecting microRNA (miRNA) biomarkers expression is of great significance for the diagnosis and treatment of lung cancer. Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) has achieved microRNA sensing for the diagnosis of primary liver cancers. In this work, we developed a SERS technology for the rapid detection of lung cancers-related miRNA (miR-196a) using bimetallic Au-Ag nanowire (AgNW@AuNPs) substrates coupled with the target hairpin DNA. The finite-difference time-domain simulation proved that a large number of “hot spots” were generated between the AgNW and AuNPs, which resulted in a huge enhancement of the signal of Raman reporters. Filter paper treated by hexadecenyl succinic anhydride hydrophobic and modified with AgNWs@AuNPs was used as capturing substrate. The detection limits of miR-196a in PBS and serum were as low as 96.58 aM and 130 aM, respectively. Studies on nonspecific sequence and single-base mismatch of miRNA demonstrated that SERS-based platform was highly selective, excellent uniform, and reproducible. Finally, the platform was used to show that the miR-196a expression in the serum of lung cancer patients was much higher than that in healthy people. The detection results indicated that the SERS platform had potential applications in cancer diagnosis and might be a viable alternative to the conventional miRNA detection method, the real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technology.
- Published
- 2020
13. Recycled waste paper–cement composite panels reinforced with kenaf fibres: durability and mechanical properties
- Author
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Samson Omokaro Osadolor and Stephen Amiandamhen
- Subjects
Cement ,Materials science ,biology ,Composite number ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Young's modulus ,Waste paper ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Durability ,Kenaf ,symbols.namesake ,Flexural strength ,Mechanics of Materials ,symbols ,Statistical analysis ,021108 energy ,Composite material ,Waste Management and Disposal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
There is a growing interest on recycling of waste fibres as an alternative to landfill disposal. The aim of the study was to investigate the durability and mechanical properties of waste paper–cement composite panels reinforced with varying kenaf fibre content (FC, 2–10%). The panels produced were evaluated for properties including modulus of rupture (MOR) and apparent modulus of elasticity (MOE). The resistance of the panels was tested in the field for both termite damage and fungi decay for a period of 24 weeks. Accelerated decay test was also performed on selected samples. The results showed that the mean MOR ranged from 3.17 MPa for samples with 10% FC to 4.84 MPa for samples with 8% FC. The mean MOE ranged from 248 MPa for samples with 10% FC to 1298.1 MPa for samples with 8% FC. Statistical analysis showed that the effect of the fibre content was significant on the properties evaluated (p
- Published
- 2020
14. Paper swab based SERS detection of non-permitted colourants from dals and vegetables using a portable spectrometer
- Author
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Aditya Kumar and Venugopal Santhanam
- Subjects
Paper ,Silver ,Sample (material) ,Food Contamination ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,symbols.namesake ,Molecular level ,Vegetables ,Rosaniline Dyes ,Environmental Chemistry ,Sample preparation ,Coloring Agents ,Spectroscopy ,Adulterant ,Spectrometer ,Rhodamines ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Analytical technique ,Peas ,Chemical Engineering ,Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Nanostructures ,0104 chemical sciences ,symbols ,Capsicum ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman spectroscopy ,Azo Compounds - Abstract
Rising concern about the use of non-permitted colourants, in common food items such as dals and green vegetables sold in Indian markets, have led to a demand for low-cost point-of-use chemical analysis tools. Conventional food-analysis techniques involving tedious sample preparation protocols are not suited for in-field applications. Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS) is an analytical technique that is well-suited for point-of-use chemical analysis with molecular level detection capability, which can also serve as a quality assurance tool for businesses. Effective and rapid signal collection from a large-area sample within a field-setting using disposable, low-cost SERS substrates is a key challenge in implementing such a solution. Herein, we demonstrate the use of inkjet-printed thin films comprising of robust nanostructured-silver as flexible, paper-based SERS (P-SERS) swabs for the direct detection of Metanil Yellow (MY) from toor dal (yellow split pigeon peas) samples and Malachite Green (MG) from green peas and green chillies. The macroscopic uniformity of these thin-films in combination with a portable Raman spectrometer equipped with orbital raster scanning (ORS™) technology for signal collection results in an unprecedented precision (RSD ∼ 1.6%) upon characterizing samples saturated with Rhodamine-6G (R6G), a standard Raman probe. As several food-cleansing products have appeared in the marketplace, the adulterant removal efficacy of some commercially available ‘washes’ as well as products such as ‘ozoniser’, which was determined by SERS characterization of swabs before and after use, is also reported.
- Published
- 2019
15. Label-free Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) on Centrifugal Silver Plasmonic Paper (CSPP): A Novel Methodology for Unprocessed Biofluids Sampling and Analysis
- Author
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Valter Sergo, Stefano Fornasaro, Alessandro Esposito, Alois Bonifacio, Esposito, Alessandro, Bonifacio, Aloi, Sergo, Valter, and Fornasaro, Stefano
- Subjects
Serum ,Bioanalysis ,Materials science ,Silver ,label-free SERS ,biofluids ,plasmonic paper ,vibrational spectroscopy ,serum ,Clinical Biochemistry ,biofluid ,Nanoparticle ,Metal Nanoparticles ,Nanotechnology ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,Article ,symbols.namesake ,Humans ,Colloids ,Plasmon ,Label free ,Reproducibility ,Reproducibility of Results ,Colloidal silver ,General Medicine ,symbols ,Raman scattering ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Localized surface plasmon ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Label-free SERS is a powerful bio-analytical technique in which molecular fingerprinting is combined with localized surface plasmons (LSPs) on metal surfaces to achieve high sensitivity. Silver and gold colloids are among the most common nanostructured substrates used in SERS, but since protein-rich samples such as serum or plasma can hinder the SERS effect due to protein–substrate interactions, they often require a deproteinization step. Moreover, SERS methods based on metal colloids often suffer from a poor reproducibility. Here, we propose a paper-based SERS sampling method in which unprocessed human serum samples are first soaked on paper strips (0.4 × 2 cm2), and then mixed with colloidal silver nanoparticles by centrifugation to obtain a Centrifugal Silver Plasmonic Paper (CSPP). The CSPP methodology has the potential to become a promising tool in bioanalytical SERS applications: it uses common colloidal substrates but without the need for sample deproteinization, while having a good reproducibility both in terms of overall spectral shape (r > 0.96) and absolute intensity (RSD < 10%). Moreover, this methodology allows SERS analysis more than one month after serum collection on the paper strip, facilitating storage and handling of clinical samples (including shipping from clinical sites to labs).
- Published
- 2021
16. Symposium Papers, Comments and an Abstract: Merleau-Ponty and the Myth of Bodily Intentionality
- Author
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Russow, Lilly-Marlene
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Preparation and characterization of waste papers based composites and their applications in leather industries
- Author
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Hajer A. Ali, Rola A. K. Abbas, and Mahmood M. Barbooti
- Subjects
Wax ,Materials science ,business.product_category ,Absorption of water ,Pulp (paper) ,Young's modulus ,engineering.material ,Carton ,symbols.namesake ,Compressive strength ,Paraffin wax ,Dixon ,visual_art ,Waste paper, Leather industries ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,symbols ,engineering ,cellulose-based composite ,lcsh:Q ,Composite material ,business ,lcsh:Science ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Shrinkage - Abstract
In this work, the utilization of waste paper in the preparation of cellulous-based composite is described, with latex as a binder. Paraffin wax and acrylic woven fibers were also used at various weight ratios to get the best mechanical and physical properties. The results were compared with the performance the Dixon, regularly used material in shoes manufacturing. The following tests were performed: compression resistance, density, water absorption, shrinkage, and moisture content. Manual method was employed in the preparation of test specimens in addition to laboratory forging machine for finishing of the specimens. Results of compression test (Modulus of elasticity, compressive strength, resistance to crushing) of the Specimens that contain pulp paper and reinforced with latex and acrylic fibers and low content of paraffin wax showed the highest resistance to compression, The increase of additives contents within the mix resulted in an increase in density. To mimic the real application conditions of the insole, the specimens were subjected to water absorption test by irrigation for 2 hours. The best specimen compositions for the water resistance test are those with high (5-10%) wax content due to the fact that the wax is a water repellent material. The shrinkage is another important parameter for the use of the composite in shoe industry. Result of shrinkage and humidity of all specimens show comparable results to commercially available and Dixon are also very close to the requirements of the specification of leather industry. However, in comparison with the available carton and dixon, our specimens contain from weight fraction (50g) waste pulp, (20g) latex, (4g) paraffin wax, (0.7g) acrylic fibers, proved comparable performance.
- Published
- 2019
18. Plasmonic Paper Microneedle Patch for On-Patch Detection of Molecules in Dermal Interstitial Fluid
- Author
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Sisi Cao, Chandana Kolluru, Rohit Gupta, Hamed Gholami Derami, Mikayla Williams, Mark R. Prausnitz, Richard K. Noel, Qisheng Jiang, and Srikanth Singamaneni
- Subjects
Paper ,Materials science ,Injections, Intradermal ,Bioengineering ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,Proof of Concept Study ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Rhodamine 6G ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,Interstitial fluid ,Animals ,Molecule ,Instrumentation ,Plasmon ,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Nanotubes ,Filter paper ,Rhodamines ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Extracellular Fluid ,Dermis ,Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Rats ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Needles ,Point-of-Care Testing ,symbols ,Polystyrenes ,Female ,Nanorod ,Gold ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman scattering - Abstract
Minimally invasive devices to detect molecules in dermal interstitial fluid (ISF) are desirable for point-of-care diagnostic and monitoring applications. In this study, we developed a microneedle (MN) patch that collects ISF for on-patch biomarker analysis by surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). The micrometer-scale MNs create micropores in the skin surface, through which microliter quantities of ISF are collected onto plasmonic paper on the patch backing. The plasmonic paper was prepared by immobilizing poly(styrenesulfonate) (PSS) coated gold nanorods (AuNRs) on a thin strip of filter paper using plasmonic calligraphy. Negatively charged PSS was used to bind positively charged rhodamine 6G (R6G), which served as a model compound, and thereby localize R6G on AuNR surface. R6G bound on the AuNR surface was detected and quantified by acquiring SERS spectra from the plasmonic paper MN patch. This approach was used to measure pharmacokinetic profiles of R6G in ISF and serum from rats in vivo. This proof-of-concept study indicates that a plasmonic paper MN patch has the potential to enable on-patch measurement of molecules in ISF for research and future medical applications.
- Published
- 2019
19. New Result on the Feedback Capacity of the Action-Dependent Dirty Paper Wiretap Channel
- Author
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Guangfen Xie and Bin Dai
- Subjects
Computer science ,Science ,QC1-999 ,Gaussian ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,Astrophysics ,Interference (wave propagation) ,Upper and lower bounds ,Article ,symbols.namesake ,action encoder ,wiretap channel ,Control theory ,Secrecy ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Physics ,Transmitter ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,channel feedback ,Action (physics) ,QB460-466 ,symbols ,intelligent reflecting surfaces ,State (computer science) ,dirty paper channel ,Communication channel - Abstract
The Gaussian wiretap channel with noncausal state interference available at the transmitter, which is also called the dirty paper wiretap channel (DP-WTC), has been extensively studied in the literature. Recently, it has been shown that taking actions on the corrupted state interference of the DP-WTC (also called the action-dependent DP-WTC) helps to increase the secrecy capacity of the DP-WTC. Subsequently, it has been shown that channel feedback further increases the secrecy capacity of the action-dependent DP-WTC (AD-DP-WTC), and a sub-optimal feedback scheme is proposed for this feedback model. In this paper, a two-step hybrid scheme and a corresponding new lower bound on the secrecy capacity of the AD-DP-WTC with noiseless feedback are proposed. The proposed new lower bound is shown to be optimal (achieving the secrecy capacity) and tighter than the existing one in the literature for some cases, and the results of this paper are further explained via numerical examples.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. On the Representations of the Symmetric Group: (Third Paper)
- Published
- 1948
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Research Paper Search Using a Topic-Based Boolean Query Search and a General Query-Based Ranking Model
- Author
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Yoichi Tomiura, Emi Ishita, and Satoshi Fukuda
- Subjects
050101 languages & linguistics ,Information retrieval ,Computer science ,05 social sciences ,Rank (computer programming) ,InformationSystems_INFORMATIONSTORAGEANDRETRIEVAL ,Information needs ,02 engineering and technology ,Search recall ,Latent Dirichlet allocation ,Set (abstract data type) ,Search engine ,symbols.namesake ,Ranking ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,symbols ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Latent Dirichlet Allocation ,Word (computer architecture) ,Boolean conjunctive query ,Research paper search - Abstract
When conducting a search for research papers, the search should return comprehensive results related to the user’s query. In general, a user inputs a Boolean query that reflects the information need, and the search engine ranks the research papers based on the query. However, it is difficult to anticipate all possible terms that authors of relevant papers might have used. Moreover, general query-based ranking methods emphasize how to rank the relevant documents at the top of the results, but require some means of guaranteeing the comprehensiveness of the results. Therefore, two ranking methods that consider the comprehensiveness of relevant papers are proposed. The first uses a topic-based Boolean query search. This search converts every word in the abstract set and query into a topic via topic analysis by Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) and conducts a search at the topic level. The topic assigned to synonyms of a search term is expected to be the same as that assigned to the search term. Each paper is ranked based on the number of times it is matched with each topic-based Boolean query search executed for various LDA parameter settings. The second is a hybrid method that emphasizes better results from our topic-based ranking result and a general query-based ranking result. This method is based on the observation that the paper sets retrieved by our method and by a general ranking method will be different. Through experiments using the NTCIR-1 and -2 datasets, the effectiveness of our topic-based and hybrid methods are demonstrated.
- Published
- 2019
22. Research paper classification systems based on TF-IDF and LDA schemes
- Author
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Sang-Woon Kim and Joon-Min Gil
- Subjects
Scheme (programming language) ,General Computer Science ,Computer science ,LDA ,K-means clustering ,02 engineering and technology ,Latent Dirichlet allocation ,lcsh:QA75.5-76.95 ,symbols.namesake ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,lcsh:Information theory ,Cluster analysis ,tf–idf ,computer.programming_language ,Information retrieval ,Paper classification ,business.industry ,TF-IDF ,Information technology ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,Class (biology) ,lcsh:Q350-390 ,Term (time) ,ComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITION ,symbols ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,lcsh:Electronic computers. Computer science ,business ,computer - Abstract
With the increasing advance of computer and information technologies, numerous research papers have been published online as well as offline, and as new research fields have been continuingly created, users have a lot of trouble in finding and categorizing their interesting research papers. In order to overcome the limitations, this paper proposes a research paper classification system that can cluster research papers into the meaningful class in which papers are very likely to have similar subjects. The proposed system extracts representative keywords from the abstracts of each paper and topics by Latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) scheme. Then, the K-means clustering algorithm is applied to classify the whole papers into research papers with similar subjects, based on the Term frequency-inverse document frequency (TF-IDF) values of each paper.
- Published
- 2019
23. Layer-opened graphene paper with carbon nanotubes as support in a flexible electrode material for supercapacitors
- Author
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Jie Yang, Changqing Miao, Lu Shi, Chen Gairong, Zhijun Zhang, Liujie Wang, Ma Zhihua, and Jingwei Zhang
- Subjects
Materials science ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,Carbon nanotube ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,law ,Specific surface area ,Materials Chemistry ,Graphene oxide paper ,Supercapacitor ,Graphene ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metals and Alloys ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Dielectric spectroscopy ,Chemical engineering ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,symbols ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman spectroscopy ,Carbon - Abstract
Graphene paper is a promising electrode material for use in flexible supercapacitors due to its good electronic conductivity and excellent mechanical characteristics. However, layers of graphene paper have a strong tendency to restack, resulting in a seriously reduced specific surface area and limited electrochemical performance. In this paper, restacked layers of graphene paper are reopened by a vacuum-assisted method, and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are directly deposited on the enlarged space between the opened graphene layers. Consequently, an ordered carbon composite structure with alternately arranged graphene sheets and CNTs is constructed and exhibits increased specific surface area and a 3D conductive network. The structure and morphology of the samples were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Raman spectroscopy and N2 adsorption/desorption measurements. The electrochemical performance was tested by galvanostatic charge-discharge test (GDC), electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and cyclic voltammograms (CV). The obtained graphene/CNT paper exhibits a remarkably improved capacity of 170.8 F g−1, which is nearly two times higher than that obtained for a regular graphene paper.
- Published
- 2019
24. Removal of Methylene Blue Using Used Paper Powder
- Author
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Muhammad Cholid Djunaidi, Ghina Labiebah, Didik Setiyo Widodo, Abdul Haris, and Gunawan Gunawan
- Subjects
Batch method ,used paper powder ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adsorption ,Adsorption method ,Desorption ,South east ,QD1-999 ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Langmuir adsorption model ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,adsorption ,desorption ,symbols ,methylene blue ,Sorption isotherm ,0210 nano-technology ,Methylene blue ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
Methylene blue removal by adsorption method had been done in batch method using adsorbent of used paper powder. Adsorption parameters covering adsorbent doses, contact times, pH, adsorbate concentrations and adsorption isotherm as well as desorption study of the absorbed methylene blue were evaluated. The results showed the highest adsorption of methylene blue was obtained at an optimum adsorbent dose, for 30 min at pH > 9. The maximum adsorption capacity of 30.77 mg/g was obtained with Langmuir isotherm model. While the effective methylene blue desorption on the used paper powder adsorbent was obtained c.a. 0.27 mg/g at pH 1.
- Published
- 2019
25. Round #2: A Reaction to the "What Is Real?" Papers
- Author
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Goodsell, Charles
- Published
- 1996
26. IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF MONITORING OF CIRCULATING AND WASTE WATERS OF PULP AND PAPER PRODUCTION
- Author
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Михаил (Mikhail) Семенович (Semenovich) Лурье (Lur'e), Юрий (Iuriy) Давыдович (Davydovich) Алашкевич (Alashkevich), Александр (Aleksandr) Владимирович (Vladimirovich) Смородько (Smorod'ko), and Ольга (Ol'ga) Михайловна (Mikhaylovna) Лурье (Lur'e)
- Subjects
погрешности монтажа ,Materials science ,installation errors ,Plant Science ,engineering.material ,vortex flowmeters ,Flow measurement ,sewage and circulating water ,Biomaterials ,symbols.namesake ,вихревые расходомеры ,Deflection (engineering) ,численное моделирование ,Measurement method ,Pulp (paper) ,Organic Chemistry ,flow body ,Paper production ,Mechanics ,Frequency spectrum ,Volumetric flow rate ,сточные и оборотные воды ,numerical simulation ,тело обтекания ,engineering ,symbols ,Strouhal number - Abstract
The issue of operation of submersible vortex flowmeters used in the systems of monitoring of circulating and waste waters of pulp and paper production is considered. It is shown that in the event of an error in the installation of these instruments, an additional error appears due to the angle between the axis of the flow body (TO) of the flowmeter and the axis of the pipeline. This error is related to the measurement method, which in turn leads to a change in the Strouhal number (Sh). The influence of this error leads to a change in the geometry of the flow part of the submerged flowmeter (the appearance of the angle β), which in turn leads to a change in the vortex formation process. Variants of finding this error are considered, from which the method of numerical modeling of hydrodynamic processes with subsequent processing by the method of experiment planning was chosen. For each investigated velocity of the fiber suspension and the angle of deflection of the TO axis, a graph of the frequency spectrum of the vortex formation process was obtained. Which was later used to find the number Sh. The dependence of the installation error ΔSh,% is presented. in the form of a response surface. It is revealed that the error in the installation of the TO, which is estimated by the angle β, is relatively small and varies linearly with increasing β. If the angle β = ± 3 ° is accepted as an allowable value, then the error in measuring the flow rate of the suspension will not exceed 0.25% over the entire range of velocities under consideration., Рассматривается вопрос особенностей эксплуатации погружных вихревых расходомеров, применяемых в системах мониторинга оборотных и сточных вод целлюлозно-бумажного производства. Показано, что при ошибке монтажа данных приборов может появляться дополнительная погрешность, появляющаяся вследствие угла между осью тело обтекания (ТО) расходомера и осью трубопровода. Данная погрешность связана с методом измерения, которая в свою очередь ведет к изменению числа Струхаля (Sh). Влияние данной погрешности приводит к изменению геометрии проточной части погружного расходомера (появление угла β), что способствует изменению процесса вихреобразования. Рассмотрены варианты нахождения данной погрешности из которых был выбран метод численного моделирования гидродинамических процессов с последующей обработкой методом планирования эксперимента. Для каждой исследуемой скорости волокнистой суспензии и угле отклонения оси ТО был получен график частотного спектра процесса вихреобразования на ТО, который впоследствии использовался для нахождения числа Sh. Представлена зависимость погрешности монтажа ΔSh,% в виде поверхности отклика. Выявлено, что погрешность монтажа ТО, которая оценивается углом β, является относительно небольшой иизменяется сувеличением β линейно. Если принять в качестве допустимой величины угла β=±3°, то погрешность измерения расхода суспензии не будет превосходить 0,25% во всем диапазоне рассматриваемых скоростей.
- Published
- 2018
27. Application of Plasma-Printed Paper-Based SERS Substrate for Cocaine Detection
- Author
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Kostya Ostrikov, Anthony B. Murphy, Jinghua Fang, Shanlin Fu, F Isa, Linda Xiao, Avi Bendavid, Rhiannon Alder, Edith Chow, Jungmi Hong, Bryony Ashford, and Christophe Comte
- Subjects
Materials science ,paper substrate ,illicit drugs ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,lcsh:Chemical technology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,symbols.namesake ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,lcsh:TP1-1185 ,on-site testing ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Instrumentation ,Detection limit ,SERS ,plasma printing ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Paper based ,Plasma ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,0104 chemical sciences ,forensics ,chemistry ,Colloidal gold ,cocaine detection ,gold nanoparticles ,symbols ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman spectroscopy ,Carbon - Abstract
Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) technology is an attractive method for the prompt and accurate on-site screening of illicit drugs. As portable Raman systems are available for on-site screening, the readiness of SERS technology for sensing applications is predominantly dependent on the accuracy, stability and cost-effectiveness of the SERS strip. An atmospheric-pressure plasma-assisted chemical deposition process that can deposit an even distribution of nanogold particles in a one-step process has been developed. The process was used to print a nanogold film on a paper-based substrate using a HAuCl4 solution precursor. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis demonstrates that the gold has been fully reduced and that subsequent plasma post-treatment decreases the carbon content of the film. Results for cocaine detection using this substrate were compared with two commercial SERS substrates, one based on nanogold on paper and the currently available best commercial SERS substrate based on an Ag pillar structure. A larger number of bands associated with cocaine was detected using the plasma-printed substrate than the commercial substrates across a range of cocaine concentrations from 1 to 5000 ng/mL. A detection limit as low as 1 ng/mL cocaine with high spatial uniformity was demonstrated with the plasma-printed substrate. It is shown that the plasma-printed substrate can be produced at a much lower cost than the price of the commercial substrate.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Integrating van der Waals materials on paper substrates for electrical and optical applications
- Author
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Jose R. Ares, João Elias Figueiredo Soares Rodrigues, Isabel J. Ferrer, Martin Lee, José Antonio Alonso, Carmen Munuera, Tao Wang, Andres Castellanos-Gomez, Carlos Sánchez, Herre S. J. van der Zant, Javier Gainza, Riccardo Frisenda, Qinghua Zhao, Eduardo Flores, Wenliang Zhang, UAM.Departamento de Física de Materiales, Instituto Universitario de Ciencia de Materiales Nicolás Cabrera (INC), and Materiales de Interés en Energias Renovables: Sistema Solar-H2
- Subjects
Drawn ,Fabrication ,Materials science ,SB2S3 ,FOS: Physical sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,Substrate (electronics) ,Applied Physics (physics.app-ph) ,010402 general chemistry ,Transistors ,01 natural sciences ,Paper-based electronics ,symbols.namesake ,Van der Waals materials ,General Materials Science ,Electronics ,Optical Properties ,Óptica ,Electrical properties ,Optical properties ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,INKS ,business.industry ,Sensors ,Electrical Properties ,Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci) ,Física ,Physics - Applied Physics ,Orders of magnitude (numbers) ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Rubbing ,Semiconductor ,Van Der Waals Materials ,visual_art ,Electronic component ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,symbols ,Optoelectronics ,Graphite ,van der Waals force ,Graphene ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Paper-Based Electronics - Abstract
Paper holds the promise to replace silicon substrates in applications like internet of things or disposable electronics that require ultra-low-cost electronic components and an environmentally friendly electronic waste management. In the last years, spurred by the abovementioned properties of paper as a substrate and the exceptional electronic, mechanical and optical properties of van der Waals (vdW) materials, many research groups have worked towards the integration of vdW materials-based devices on paper. Recently, a method to deposit a continuous film of densely packed interconnects of vdW materials on paper by simply rubbing the vdW crystals against the rough surface of paper has been presented. This method utilizes the weak interlayer vdW interactions and allows cleaving of the crystals into micro platelets through the abrasion against the paper. Here, we aim to illustrate the general character and the potential of this technique by fabricating films of 39 different vdW materials (including superconductors, semi-metals, semiconductors, and insulators) on standard copier paper. We have thoroughly characterized their optical properties showing their high optical quality: one can easily resolve the absorption band edge of semiconducting vdW materials and even the excitonic features present in some vdW materials with high exciton binding energy. We also measured the electrical resistivity for several vdW materials films on paper finding exceptionally low values, which are in some cases, orders of magnitude lower than those reported for analogous films produced by inkjet printing. We finally demonstrate the fabrication of field-effect devices with vdW materials on paper using the paper substrate as an ionic gate., Comment: 4 figures in main text, 21 figures in Supp. Info
- Published
- 2021
29. A Feynman–Kac approach to a paper of Chung and Feller on fluctuations in the coin-tossing game
- Author
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Sergio Grunbaum and F alberto Grunbaum
- Subjects
Discrete mathematics ,symbols.namesake ,Coin flipping ,Applied Mathematics ,General Mathematics ,symbols ,Feynman diagram ,Mathematics - Abstract
A classical result of K. L. Chung and W. Feller deals with the partial sums S k S_k arising in a fair coin-tossing game. If N n N_n is the number of “positive” terms among S 1 S_1 , S 2 S_2 , …, S n S_n then the quantity P ( N 2 n = 2 r ) P(N_{2n} = 2r) takes an elegant form. We lift the restriction on an even number of tosses and give a simple expression for P ( N 2 n + 1 = r ) P(N_{2n+1} = r) , r = 0 r = 0 , 1 1 , 2 2 , …, 2 n + 1 2n+1 . We get to this ansatz by adaptating the Feynman–Kac methodology.
- Published
- 2022
30. The effect of proton irradiation on the properties of a graphene oxide paper
- Author
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Xiao-Juan Zhen, Feng Zhanzu, Xiaogang Qin, Jianhong Zhuang, Yi-Fan Huang, Shengsheng Yang, Ba Dedong, and Wang Yi
- Subjects
Materials science ,Proton ,Phonon ,General Chemical Engineering ,Analytical chemistry ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Fluence ,0104 chemical sciences ,symbols.namesake ,Thermal conductivity ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,symbols ,Irradiation ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman spectroscopy ,Graphene oxide paper - Abstract
A graphene oxide paper (GOP) was irradiated with 500 keV proton for total fluence of 2 × 1013 cm−2 to 2 × 1015 cm−2 in a ground-based irradiation simulator. The spacing of layer, surface chemical composition, structural defects, thermal conductivity and electrical property of the GOP before and after irradiation was measured. The results indicated that the spacing of layer decreased after irradiation. The ratio of total carbon atom and total oxygen atom increased from 2.40 to 4.31 as well as the sp2 hybridized carbons obviously increased after 2 × 1015 cm−2 irradiation. The XPS analysis suggested the occurrence of reduction, and the Raman spectra indicated that the defects were produced after proton irradiation. Furthermore, the thermal conductivity of GOP decreased, and then increased smoothly as the irradiation fluences were increased, and the electrical property showed the similar trend. The change in the thermal and electrical properties for GOP could be attributed to the defects and the removal of oxygen-containing functional groups, which lead to the phonon conduct path and scattering centers changed under proton irradiation. This study could promote the application of GOP in future space expeditions.
- Published
- 2019
31. Integrating superconducting van der Waals materials on paper substrates
- Author
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Andres Castellanos-Gomez, Martin Lee, Herre S. J. van der Zant, Mar García-Hernández, Riccardo Frisenda, Jon Azpeitia, Federico Mompean, Damian Bouwmeester, and Wenliang Zhang
- Subjects
Materials science ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Superconductors ,Van der Waals materials ,Paper substrates ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Superconductivity (cond-mat.supr-con) ,symbols.namesake ,Deposition (phase transition) ,Electrical performance ,General Materials Science ,Electronics ,Crystalline silicon ,Superconductivity ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed matter physics ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci) ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Engineering physics ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemistry ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Meissner effect ,visual_art ,Electronic component ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,symbols ,van der Waals force ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Paper has the potential to dramatically reduce the cost of electronic components. In fact, paper is 10 000 times cheaper than crystalline silicon, motivating the research to integrate electronic materials on paper substrates. Among the different electronic materials, van der Waals materials are attracting the interest of the scientific community working on paper-based electronics because of the combination of high electrical performance and mechanical flexibility. Up to now, different methods have been developed to pattern conducting, semiconducting and insulating van der Waals materials on paper but the integration of superconductors remains elusive. Here, the deposition of NbSe2, an illustrative van der Waals superconductor, on standard copy paper is demonstrated. The deposited NbSe2 films on paper display superconducting properties (e.g. observation of Meissner effect and resistance drop to zero-resistance state when cooled down below its critical temperature) similar to those of bulk NbSe2., Paper has the potential to dramatically reduce the cost of electronic components but the integration of electronic materials is challenging. Here the integration of NbSe2, a van der Waals superconductor, on paper is demonstrated.
- Published
- 2021
32. Direct Characterization of Thermal Nonequilibrium between Optical and Acoustic Phonons in Graphene Paper under Photon Excitation
- Author
-
Xinwei Wang, Ridong Wang, Hamidreza Zobeiri, Tianyu Wang, and Nicholas J.R. Hunter
- Subjects
Photon ,Materials science ,Phonon ,thermal nonequilibrium ,General Chemical Engineering ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Raman thermometry ,symbols.namesake ,Thermal conductivity ,Wavenumber ,General Materials Science ,Laser power scaling ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,phonon coupling factor ,Research Articles ,Condensed matter physics ,General Engineering ,graphene paper ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,optical and acoustic phonons ,0104 chemical sciences ,symbols ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman spectroscopy ,Excitation ,Research Article - Abstract
Raman spectroscopy has been widely used to measure thermophysical properties of 2D materials. The local intense photon heating induces strong thermal nonequilibrium between optical and acoustic phonons. Both first principle calculations and recent indirect Raman measurements prove this phenomenon. To date, no direct measurement of the thermal nonequilibrium between optical and acoustic phonons has been reported. Here, this physical phenomenon is directly characterized for the first time through a novel approach combining both electrothermal and optothermal techniques. While the optical phonon temperature is determined from Raman wavenumber, the acoustic phonon temperature is precisely determined using high‐precision thermal conductivity and laser power absorption that are measured with negligible nonequilibrium among energy carriers. For graphene paper, the energy coupling factor between in‐plane optical and overall acoustic phonons is found at (1.59–3.10) × 1015 W m−3 K−1, agreeing well with the quantum mechanical modeling result of 4.1 × 1015 W m−3 K−1. Under ≈1 µm diameter laser heating, the optical phonon temperature rise is over 80% higher than that of the acoustic phonons. This observation points out the importance of subtracting optical–acoustic phonon thermal nonequilibrium in Raman‐based thermal characterization., The optical–acoustic phonon thermal nonequilibrium is first probed through novel electrothermal and optothermal techniques. For graphene paper, the optical‐acoustic phonon energy coupling factor is found at (1.59–3.10) × 1015 W m−3 K−1, agreeing well with theoretical predictions. Under ≈1 µm laser heating, the optical phonon temperature rise is over 80% higher than that of the acoustic phonons.
- Published
- 2020
33. Detoxification of waste hand paper towel hydrolysate by activated carbon adsorption
- Author
-
H. Argun, G. Onaran, and L. Gürel
- Subjects
Paper ,Activated Carbon ,Langmuir ,Environmental Engineering ,Diffusion ,Minnesota ,Context (language use) ,reduction ,substrate ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Hydrolysate ,Isotherms ,Activated carbon adsorption ,symbols.namesake ,Intraparticle diffusion models ,Adsorption ,Organics uptake ,Organics ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Acid hydrolysis ,pollutant removal ,Reaction Kinetics ,Freundlich equation ,detoxification ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Chemistry ,isotherm ,Langmuir adsorption model ,Langmuir isotherm models ,United States ,Discarded paper ,Acidolysis ,Substrate pretreatment ,hydrolysis ,Intra-particle diffusion ,adsorption ,Biofuels ,symbols ,5 hydroxymethyl furfurals ,biofuel ,Morris ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Activated carbon ,medicine.drug ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
This study presents 5-hydroxymethylfurfural removal from waste hand paper hydrolysate using activated carbon adsorption. In this context, the effects of adsorbent dosage, initial 5-hydroxymethylfurfural concentration, temperature, and agitation speed on 5-hydroxymethylfurfural adsorption were investigated. Moreover, isotherm and kinetic evaluations were performed using Langmuir, Freundlich, and Temkin models. The experimental data were correlated with zero, first, pseudo-first, and Weber–Morris intraparticle diffusion models. The toxicity of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural was determined using the resazurin reduction assay, and the EC50 of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural in the hydrolysate was found as 192 mg/L. Most convenient 5-hydroxymethylfurfural adsorption was obtained at 5 g/L AC dosage, 40 °C and 150 rpm agitation speed. The highest 5-hydroxymethylfurfural removal efficiency was 92% at 7 g/L AC dosage. The adsorption data fitted best with the Langmuir isotherm model with a maximum uptake capacity of 70.92 mg/g (R2: 0.96). The zero-order reaction kinetic model was the most suitable one among the others inspected. It was determined that intraparticle diffusion was not the rate-limiting step. This study showed that waste hand paper hydrolysate can effectively be detoxified by activated carbon adsorption. © 2019, Islamic Azad University (IAU).
- Published
- 2020
34. Drawing WS 2 thermal sensors on paper substrates
- Author
-
Riccardo Frisenda, Ali Mazaheri, Andres Castellanos-Gomez, Herre S. J. van der Zant, and Martin Lee
- Subjects
Respiration monitoring ,Materials science ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Semiconductor materials ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Applied Physics (physics.app-ph) ,02 engineering and technology ,Paper substrates ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,symbols.namesake ,Thermal ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Thermal sensors ,business.industry ,Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci) ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Paper based ,Physics - Applied Physics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Rubbing ,symbols ,2D Materials ,Optoelectronics ,van der Waals force ,0210 nano-technology ,business - Abstract
Paper based thermoresistive sensors are fabricated by rubbing WS2 powder against a piece of standard copier paper, like the way a pencil is used to write on paper. The abrasion between the layered material and the rough paper surface erodes the material, breaking the weak van der Waals interlayer bonds, yielding a film of interconnected platelets. The resistance of WS2 presents a strong temperature dependence, as expected for a semiconductor material in which charge transport is due to thermally activated carriers. This strong temperature dependence makes the paper supported WS2 devices extremely sensitive to small changes in temperature. This exquisite thermal sensitivity, and their fast response times to sudden temperature changes, is exploited thereby demonstrating the usability of a WS2-on-paper thermal sensor in a respiration monitoring device., 6 main text figures, 1 table, 6 supp. info. figures
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Rapid Detection Method for On-site Screening of Estazolam in Beverages with Au@Ag Core-shell Nanoparticles Paper-based SERS Substrate
- Author
-
Xuanyu Sha, Hang Zhao, Chen Zhang, Nan Li, Wuliji Hasi, and Siqingaowa Han
- Subjects
Paper ,Silver ,Surface Properties ,Nanoparticle ,Metal Nanoparticles ,02 engineering and technology ,Core shell nanoparticles ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,01 natural sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,symbols.namesake ,medicine ,Hypnotics and Sedatives ,Particle Size ,Orange juice ,Aqueous solution ,Filter paper ,Molecular Structure ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,food and beverages ,Substrate (chemistry) ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Estazolam ,0104 chemical sciences ,symbols ,Gold ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman spectroscopy ,Nuclear chemistry ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Estazolam (EST) is a common sedative-hypnotic drug with a risk of abuse. Therefore, rapid on-site detection of EST is necessary to control the abuse of EST. In this paper, a fast, simple, and sensitive method is demonstrated for the detection of EST in both water and beverages, using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) techniques. Au@Ag core-shell nanoparticles (NPs) assembled on the filter paper as a SERS substrate exhibit good applicability and practicality. At the same time, density functional theory (DFT) is used to assign the vibration mode of the EST molecules, which can be used as a guide for subsequent experiments. The lowest detectable concentration of EST in aqueous solution can be as low as 5 mg/L, and signal uniformity is excellent (RSD687 = 5.56%, RSD1000 = 4.35%). In addition, EST components artificially added to orange juice and pomegranate juice can be effectively detected by simple pretreatment with a minimum detection concentration as low as 10 mg/L. Therefore, this study found that the use of Au@Ag core-shell nanoparticles paper-based SERS substrate provides a quick and easy method for the detection of illegally added drugs in beverages.
- Published
- 2019
36. Kraft scrap paper pulp as a substitute of wood chips in manufacture of particleboards resinated with hybrid pf/pmdi resin
- Author
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Izabela Modzelewska, Katarzyna Buszka, and Dorota Dukarska
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Materials science ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,Composite number ,utilization ,Scrap ,Young's modulus ,Mechanical properties ,engineering.material ,mechanical properties ,01 natural sciences ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,symbols.namesake ,Flexural strength ,010608 biotechnology ,lcsh:Manufactures ,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous) ,lcsh:Forestry ,040101 forestry ,Moisture ,Bond strength ,Pulp (paper) ,Forestry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,water resistance ,wood composites ,Pulp and paper industry ,engineering ,symbols ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,lcsh:SD1-669.5 ,waste paper ,Kraft paper ,lcsh:TS1-2301 - Abstract
This study analyzed feasibility of manufacture of composite particleboards resinated with a mixture of phenol-formaldehyde resin and 4,4′-methylenediphenyl isocyanate in the weight ratio 70:30. For this purpose 3-layer particleboards were produced with varying shares of Kraft scrap paper pulp in the core. Experimental boards were manufactured applying 0, 10, 15, 25, 50 and 75% substitution of wood chips with Kraft paper pulp. Analyses were conducted to determine physico-mechanical properties of boards, i.e. bending strength, modulus of elasticity, internal bond before and after the boiling test and swelling in thickness after 24 soaking in water. Based on recorded testing results it was stated that moisture resistant composite boards manufactured with a 25% substitution of wood chips with Kraft paper pulp meet the requirements of the EN 312 standard for boards used in humid conditions in terms of their strength and moisture resistance specified in the internal bond after the boiling test.
- Published
- 2018
37. Axisymmetric acoustophoresis for paper pulp concentration
- Author
-
Pierre Gelinas, Maxime Bilodeau, Romain Le Magueresse, Robert Schiavi, Tamara Krpic, and Nicolas Quaegebeur
- Subjects
Materials science ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,QC221-246 ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,Acoustic levitation ,01 natural sciences ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Paper pulp concentration ,symbols.namesake ,stomatognathic system ,Pulp flow simulation ,Stokes' law ,Acoustophoresis ,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous) ,Environmental Chemistry ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Original Research Article ,Acoustic radiation force ,QD1-999 ,Turbulence ,Pulp (paper) ,Papermaking ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Acoustics. Sound ,Mechanics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemistry ,stomatognathic diseases ,Fiber suspension flow ,symbols ,engineering ,Particle ,Particle size ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Highlights • Numerical simulations of acoustophoresis in pulp flow is conducted. • Parametric study of fiber characteristics, pulp flow regimes and acoustic parameters are conducted. • A feasibility study of industrial acoustophoresis for pulp concentration is performed. • A potential concentration gain of 15% is obtained experimentally., In pulp and paper mills, mechanical processes such as screening and washing are commonly used to remove accumulated solid suspensions and concentrate the pulp. For environmental reasons and to optimize paper production, an emerging challenge is to develop alternative methods to concentrate paper pulp between 3 % and 6 % consistency for which the mixed pulp-water flow is complex. Among the proposed solutions in the literature, solutions based on acoustic levitation, also referred as acoustophoresis, of low-consistency pulp have been demonstrated as a potential solution for efficient pulp concentration and water recirculation. However, no sensitivity analysis on the ultrasound and physical parameters was proposed, limiting the extension to a realistic application. Thus, this paper presents a numerical modeling of acoustophoresis for pulp flow concentration in a pipe. For this purpose, the pulp flow is defined as a pseudo-homogenous fluid with a turbulent Low Re k- ∊ formalism, and the pulp particles are considered spherical and deflected by two acoustic forces, namely the acoustic radiation force and the Stokes drag force, both induced by an ultrasound wave generated along the walls of a circular pipe. The combined action of these two forces in the pulp flow enables to concentrate the particles at the center of the pipe. The influences of particle size and mechanical properties, fluid properties and ultrasound parameters are analyzed within a parametric study to optimize the particle deflection and the pulp concentration. The experimental feasibility of the industrial use of acoustophoresis for the concentration of paper pulp is demonstrated with a concentration gain up to 15 %.
- Published
- 2021
38. Pyrolysis behaviour, kinetics and thermodynamic data of hydrothermal carbonization–Treated pulp and paper mill sludge
- Author
-
Yuming Wen, Weihong Yang, Henry Hammarström, Pär Jönsson, and Shule Wang
- Subjects
060102 archaeology ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Chemistry ,020209 energy ,Activated complex ,Thermal decomposition ,06 humanities and the arts ,02 engineering and technology ,Gibbs free energy ,symbols.namesake ,Hydrothermal carbonization ,Chemical engineering ,Yield (chemistry) ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,symbols ,0601 history and archaeology ,Heat of combustion ,Pyrolytic carbon ,Pyrolysis - Abstract
Organic-rich pulp and paper mill sludge (PPMS) has the potential to become a renewable carbon source for producing alternatives to fossil-based product. In this work, PPMS treated by hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) was investigated based on its pyrolysis properties. The pyrolytic mechanism, kinetics data and product of the sample were studied using TG as well as pyrolysis tests in Py-GC/MS and a bench-scale reactor at 450, 550, and 650 °C. The results show that the thermal decomposition of feedstock is a two-stage reaction. The mean activation energy of the pyrolysis of HTC treated PPMS was estimated as 233.08 kJ/mol, which is higher than that of the pyrolysis of paper sludge reported before. The changes in enthalpies, entropies and Gibbs free energies from the reactants to the activated complex were estimated. The concentration of monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the derived organic liquid fraction shows a positive correlation with the pyrolysis temperature. At 550 °C, the organic liquid fraction reached its highest yield at 13.7% with an oxygen level of 10.7 wt% and a higher heating value of 35.9 MJ/kg. The pyrolytic chars show that a molar ratio of O:C is less than 0.2, which shows potential for use as a carbon sink.
- Published
- 2021
39. Paper‐based surface‐enhanced Raman spectroscopy sensors for field applications
- Author
-
Shawn Poirier, Ali Ghaemi, Shiliang Wang, John Hulse, and Li-Lin Tay
- Subjects
inkjet printing ,Materials science ,Field (physics) ,business.industry ,aerosol ,SERS ,Paper based ,Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ,fentanyl ,symbols.namesake ,symbols ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,business ,Raman spectroscopy ,Reference standards ,Spectroscopy ,Inkjet printing ,reference standard - Abstract
Paper-based surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) sensors can be fabricated easily by dropcasting or inkjet printing colloidal Au nanoparticles onto cellulose-based filter papers. They are flexible, economical, and sensitive and provide the crucial advantage of point-of-need sampling for application in the field. In this study, paper-based SERS sensors are fabricated through inkjet printing of a colloidal Au sol onto a filter paper substrate. We have characterized their SERS performances with benzenethiol and pyridine molecules using a handheld Raman analyzer. Due to the heterogeneous loading of the Au nanoclusters on the paper substrate, we introduce the concept of receiver operating characteristic as an alternate measurand to quantify the performance of these sensors. With their inherent filtration sampling capability, we demonstrate the use of paper SERS sensors for the detection of chemical aerosols. Lastly, we present the use of a precision materials printer to deposit quantifiable amounts of analyte (fentanyl) uniformly across the active sensing area of a paper SERS sensor. This will allow for analyte-loaded certified references to be prepared and used in the field as standards for comparison.
- Published
- 2020
40. Effects of laser power and substrate on the Raman shift of carbon-nanotube papers
- Author
-
Fuqian Yang, Shanshan Wang, and Yuling Zhang
- Subjects
Range (particle radiation) ,Materials science ,Fabrication ,business.industry ,Laser power ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,Thermoelastic deformation ,Carbon nanotube ,Substrate (electronics) ,Raman shift ,law.invention ,lcsh:Chemistry ,symbols.namesake ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Carbon-nanotube papers ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,law ,symbols ,Optoelectronics ,Wavenumber ,Laser power scaling ,Deformation (engineering) ,business ,Raman spectroscopy - Abstract
The progress in the fabrication of carbon-nanotube-based structures has made it possible to use Raman spectroscopy to measure the deformation states of carbon nanotubes and abutting materials. In this work, we investigate the effects of laser power and surrounding materials on the Raman shift of carbon-nanotube (CNT) papers for the laser intensity in a range of 0.071 to 1.415 kW/mm2 without action of mechanical loading. Two different configurations of the CNT papers are used in the Raman measurement; one uses a suspended CNT paper, and the other places a CNT paper on a glass or aluminum substrate. The experimental results reveal that there exist combinational effects of the laser power and abutting materials on the changes of the wavenumbers of the D, G and G′ bands of the CNT papers. We derive an analytical relation between the strain components, temperature and the change of the wavenumber of the Raman peak, which yields a proportional relationship between the change of the wavenumber of the Raman peak and the laser power. Such a relationship is supported by the experimental results.
- Published
- 2020
41. Innovative and Cost-Efficient BiOI Immobilization Technique on Ceramic Paper—Total Coverage and High Photocatalytic Activity
- Author
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Klára Magyari, Zsolt Pap, Klara Hernadi, Eszter Orbán, Imre Ábrahám, Seema Garg, and Zsolt Kása
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Materials science ,scale-up procedure ,Band gap ,General Chemical Engineering ,photocatalytic reactor ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Nanotechnology ,Article ,Bismuth ,lcsh:Chemistry ,symbols.namesake ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,General Materials Science ,Ceramic ,Coated paper ,chemistry ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,visual_art ,immobilization ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Photocatalysis ,symbols ,Raman spectroscopy ,photocatalysis ,Visible spectrum ,bismuth oxyiodide - Abstract
In the present work, visible light active bismuth oxyiodide (BiOI) was immobilized on a commercial, non-conductive support (an Al2O3 based ceramic paper) using a novel two-step spray coating technique and investigated with different characterization methods (e.g., SEM, Raman, XPS). Our main goal was to eliminate the separation costs after the photocatalytic measurement and investigate the chemical relevance and opportunity to use this technique in the industry. Our as-prepared uniform BiOI layer had similar properties to the well-known reference BiOI powder. The Raman and XPS measurements confirmed that the enriched amount of the surface iodine defined the color and as well the band gap of the BiOI layer. The durable BiOI layers have prominent photocatalytic activity under UV and visible light irradiation as well. The scale-up procedure proved that the designed BiOI coated paper was reusable and potentially applicable in the industry by straightforward scale-up, which is due to the elaborated non-conventional BiOI coverage estimation method. This immobilization technique could open several opportunities for immobilizing many other visible light active photocatalysts with simple materials and low cost.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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42. Whole virus detection using aptamers and paper‐based sensor potentiometry
- Author
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Massood Tabib-Azar and Subhashish Dolai
- Subjects
Materials science ,Aptamer ,biology ,business.industry ,Microfluidics ,Buffer solution ,whole virus ,Electrochemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,Buffer (optical fiber) ,Zika virus ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Zika ,chemistry ,Potentiometry ,symbols ,Potentiometric sensor ,Optoelectronics ,Nernst equation ,business ,Paper based sensor ,Research Articles ,Research Article - Abstract
Paper‐based sensors, microfluidic platforms, and electronics have attracted attention in the past couple of decades because they are flexible, can be recycled easily, environmentally friendly, and inexpensive. Here we report a paper‐based potentiometric sensor to detect the whole Zika virus with a minimum sensitivity of 0.26 nV/Zika and a minimum detectable signal (MDS) of 2.4x107 Zika. Our paper sensor works very similar to a P‐N junction where a junction is formed between two different regions with different electrochemical potentials on the paper. These two regions with slightly different ionic contents, ionic species and concentrations, produce a potential difference given by the Nernst equation. Our paper sensor consists of 2‐3 mm x 10 mm segments of paper with conducting silver paint contact patches on two ends. The paper is dipped in a buffer solution containing aptamers designed to bind to the capsid proteins on Zika. We then added the Zika (in its own buffer) to the region close to one of the silver‐paint contacts. The Zika virus (40 nm diameter with 43 kDa or 7.1x10‐20 gm weight) became immobilized in the paper’s pores and bonded with the resident aptamers creating a concentration gradient. Atomic force microscopy and Raman spectroscopy were carried out to verify that both the aptamer and Zika become immobilized in the paper. The potential measured between the two silver paint contacts reproducibly became more negative upon adding the Zika. We also showed that a Liquid Crystalline Display (LCD) powered by the sensor can be used to read the sensor output.
- Published
- 2020
43. Aptamer-based surface-enhanced resonance Raman scattering assay on a paper fluidic platform for detection of cardiac troponin I
- Author
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Allison Holderby, Gerard L. Coté, and Dandan Tu
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Paper ,Cardiac troponin ,aptamer sensor ,Aptamer ,Resonance Raman spectroscopy ,Biomedical Engineering ,Metal Nanoparticles ,macromolecular substances ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,01 natural sciences ,010309 optics ,Biomaterials ,symbols.namesake ,0103 physical sciences ,Troponin I ,Humans ,Fluidics ,Chemistry ,Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,point-of-care testing ,myocardial infarction ,Colloidal gold ,Sensing ,symbols ,cardiovascular system ,Biological Assay ,Gold ,Raman scattering ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Significance: Cardiac troponin I (cTnI) is a primary biomarker for diagnosis of myocardial infarction (MI). In contrast to central laboratory tests for cTnI, point-of-care (POC) testing has the advantage of providing results when the patient is first encountered, which helps high-risk patients to be treated more rapidly and low-risk patients to be released in a timely fashion. A paper fluidic platform is good for POC testing because the paper is abundant, low cost, and disposable. However, current cTnI assays on paper platforms use antibodies as the recognition element, which has limitations due to the high cost of production and antibody stability issues at the POC. Aim: To develop an aptamer-based assay on a paper strip using surface-enhanced resonance Raman spectroscopy (SERRS) for detection of cTnI in the clinically relevant range at the POC. Approach: Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) were functionalized with a Raman reporter molecule, malachite green isothiocyanate. The functionalized AuNPs were encapsulated in a silica shell and provided a SERRS signal using a handheld Raman system with a 638-nm excitation wavelength. A primary aptamer and a secondary aptamer of cTnI were used in a sandwich assay format to bind the cTnI on a test line of a paper fluidic platform. By measuring the SERRS signal from the test line, the concentration of cTnI was quantitatively determined. Results: The aptamer-based SERRS assay on a paper strip had a detection range of 0.016 to 0.1 ng/ml for cTnI, had good selectivity for cTnI compared to three other markers, had good stability over 10 days, and had good performance in the more complex serum sample matrix. Conclusions: The aptamer-based SERRS assay on a paper strip has the potential to provide a sensitive, selective, stable, repeatable, and cost-effective platform for the detection of cTnI toward eventual use in diagnosis of MI at the POC.
- Published
- 2020
44. Characterization of Activated Carbon Paper Electrodes Prepared by Rice Husk-Isolated Cellulose Fibers for Supercapacitor Applications
- Author
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Yong-Sun Kim, Lee Ku Kwac, Hong Gun Kim, and Hye Kyoung Shin
- Subjects
Paper ,Materials science ,cellulose fibers ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Electric Capacitance ,Electrochemistry ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,lcsh:QD241-441 ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,lcsh:Organic chemistry ,Specific surface area ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,supercapacitor ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Cellulose ,Electrodes ,Supercapacitor ,Carbonization ,Organic Chemistry ,Temperature ,Oryza ,Cellulose fiber ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Charcoal ,symbols ,Molecular Medicine ,Raman spectroscopy ,Porosity ,rice husk ,activated carbon paper ,Activated carbon ,medicine.drug - Abstract
For the preparation of activated carbon papers (APCs) as supercapacitor electrodes, impurity substances were removed from rice husks, before carbonization and various activation temperature treatments, to optimize electro chemical efficiency. The porosities and electrochemical performances of the ACPs depended strongly on activation temperature: The specific surface area increased from 202.92 (500 °, C) to 2158.48 m2 g&minus, 1 (1100 °, C). XRD and Raman analyses revealed that ACP graphitization also increased with the activation temperature. For activation at 1100 °, C, the maximum specific capacitance was 255 F g&minus, 1, and over 92% of its capacitance was retained after 2000 cycles.
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- 2020
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45. Paper Functionalized with Nanostructured TiO2/AgBr: Photocatalytic Degradation of 2–Propanol under Solar Light Irradiation and Antibacterial Activity
- Author
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Leonarda F. Liotta, Soraa Bouattour, Giuseppe Marcì, Mouheb Sboui, Michelangelo Gruttadauria, Sami Boufi, Sboui M., Bouattour S., Gruttadauria M., Marci G., Liotta L.F., and Boufi S.
- Subjects
Materials science ,General Chemical Engineering ,Paper-TiO ,Nanoparticle ,Propanol ,lcsh:Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,antibacterial activity ,2-propanol photodegradation ,General Materials Science ,Paper–TiO2–AgBr ,Photodegradation ,Paper-TiO2-AgBr ,sunlight irradiation ,Settore CHIM/06 - Chimica Organica ,Silver bromide ,Titanium oxide ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,Photocatalysis ,symbols ,Raman spectroscopy ,AgBr ,Visible spectrum - Abstract
A facile method to produce paper&ndash, TiO2 decorated with AgBr nanoparticles by a mild hydrothermal process at 140 °, C was reported. The synthesis method was based on the immersion of the paper in a ready-made suspension of TiO2/AgBr, comprising TiO2 sol solution prepared in acidic conditions and AgBr solution (10&minus, 4 M). A paper&ndash, TiO2 sample was prepared and used as reference. The formation of crystalline phases of titanium oxide (TiO2) and silver bromide (AgBr) was demonstrated by XRD, Raman and EDX analyses. The surface morphology of the TiO2&ndash, AgBr was investigated by Field Effect Scanning Electronic Microscopy (FE&ndash, SEM). The photocatalytic performances of the prepared material were evaluated in the degradation of 2-propanol in the gas phase, under simulated sunlight illumination. Its antibacterial properties against Escherichia coli (E. coli) were also assessed. The efficiency of photodegradation and the anti-bacterial properties of paper&ndash, TiO2&ndash, AgBr were attributed to an improvement in the absorption of visible light, the increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the low recombination of photogenerated charge carriers due to the synergistic effect between TiO2 and AgBr/Ag nanoparticles.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Applying micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) and Raman spectroscopy for non-invasive characterization of coating and coating pigments on ancient Chinese papers
- Author
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Dongmei Wang, Tao Li, and Chuang Liu
- Subjects
Archeology ,Materials science ,lcsh:Fine Arts ,lcsh:Analytical chemistry ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Conservation ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,Pigment ,symbols.namesake ,Coating ,Coated paper ,Coating pigment ,Micro-computed tomography ,lcsh:QD71-142 ,Papermaking ,Micro computed tomography ,010401 analytical chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Characterization (materials science) ,visual_art ,Raman spectroscopy ,engineering ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,symbols ,Handheld X-ray fluorescence analyzer ,lcsh:N ,0210 nano-technology ,Layer (electronics) - Abstract
The coating technique, supposedly invented by Chinese papermakers no later than the 3rd century AD, greatly improved paper sheets’ qualities of color, texture, writability, and printability. Alongside the dispersal of papermaking and surface-treatment techniques beyond China, coated papers were manufactured and used in many other regions of the world. Understanding the manufacture of coated papers, therefore, is crucial for perceiving how surface treatments were developed to meet the need for paper with enhanced properties. However, the characterization of coating and coating pigments on ancient Chinese papers has long remained an unsolved issue, and previous studies on this topic have often produced inconclusive results. To explore a non-invasive methodology that can more reliably characterize coated papers and the coating pigment on them, this article presents the results of a pilot study that applied micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) and Raman spectroscopy to samples of three Qing Dynasty (1644–1911 AD) papers and two handmade papers manufactured in China in the 1990s. Micro-CT revealed the coating layer(s) on Lajian (waxed coated paper) and Lengjinjian (gold-dusted paper) of the Qing Dynasty and characterized the modern raw xuan and bamboo papers as uncoated. Raman spectroscopy, together with handheld X-ray fluorescence analysis, identified the mineral-based pigment in the coating layer, suggesting the use of lead white or kaolin as the coating pigment. Additionally, Raman analysis confirmed the use of other mineral pigments (red lead and cinnabar), beeswax, and organic dyes (gamboge, kermesic acid, and possibly purpurin) in the manufacture of Lajian and Lengjinjian papers. The combination of micro-CT and Raman spectroscopy, it is therefore suggested, is a practical, more reliable approach for non-invasive investigation of coating and coating pigments on ancient Chinese paper specimens.
- Published
- 2020
47. MoS$_2$-on-paper optoelectronics: drawing photodetectors with van der Waals semiconductors beyond graphite
- Author
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Ali Mazaheri, Andres Castellanos-Gomez, Riccardo Frisenda, Martin Lee, and Herre S. J. van der Zant
- Subjects
Materials science ,Photodetector ,FOS: Physical sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,Applied Physics (physics.app-ph) ,010402 general chemistry ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Crystal ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,medicine ,General Materials Science ,Graphite ,Molybdenum disulfide ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,nanotechnology ,business.industry ,2D materials ,Optoelectronics ,Paper substrate ,Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci) ,Physics - Applied Physics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Rubbing ,Semiconductor ,chemistry ,symbols ,van der Waals force ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Ultraviolet - Abstract
We fabricate paper-supported semiconducting devices by rubbing a layered molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) crystal onto a piece of paper, similarly to the action of drawing/writing with a pencil on paper. We show that the abrasion between the MoS2 crystal and the paper substrate efficiently exfoliates the crystals, breaking the weak van der Waals interlayer bonds and leading to the deposition of a film of interconnected MoS2 platelets. Employing this simple method, that can be easily extended to other 2D materials, we fabricate MoS2-on-paper broadband photodectectors with spectral sensitivity from the ultraviolet (UV) to the near-infrared (NIR). We also used these paper-based photodetectors to acquire pictures of objects by mounting the photodetectors in a homebuilt single-pixel camera setup., Comment: 6 main text figures + 4 Supp Info figures
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Graphene paper with electrodeposited NiCo2S4 nanoparticles as a novel flexible sensor for simultaneous detection of folic acid and ascorbic acid
- Author
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Elif Erçarıkcı, Zeriş Aksu, Ezgi Topçu, and Kader Dağcı Kıranşan
- Subjects
Materials science ,Graphene ,Mechanical Engineering ,Oxide ,Nanoparticle ,General Chemistry ,Ascorbic acid ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,Chemical engineering ,chemistry ,law ,Electrode ,Materials Chemistry ,symbols ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Raman spectroscopy ,Graphene oxide paper - Abstract
We studied the production and electrochemical performance of NiCo2S4 electrodeposited reduced graphene oxide (rGO) paper for use as a freestanding flexible electrode for the simultaneous determination of folic acid (FA) and ascorbic acid (AA). Production of rGO paper was achieved through vacuum filtration of the aqueous dispersion of graphene oxide, followed by chemical reduction in hydrogen iodide solution. NiCo2S4/rGO paper material was fabricated with a simple approach using electrodeposition of hydrothermal synthesized NiCo2S4 nanoparticles directly on rGO paper. The physicochemical properties of as-prepared flexible NiCo2S4/rGO paper were characterized by means of field emission scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray powder diffraction patterns. This freestanding paper electrode demonstrated high sensitivity, a wide linear range, and a low detection limit towards the simultaneous detection of FA and AA. NiCo2S4/rGO paper sensor, possessing easy preparation, low cost, and high flexibility, was tested in real samples with promising recoveries. This study exhibited that the approach of the electrodeposition of bimetallic sulfides on freestanding graphene paper substrates has great potential to develop high-performance flexible electrochemical sensors.
- Published
- 2022
49. Hydrophobic Paper-Based SERS Sensor Using Gold Nanoparticles Arranged on Graphene Oxide Flakes
- Author
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Dae Yu Kim and Dong-Jin Lee
- Subjects
Materials science ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,Rhodamine 6G ,Contact angle ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,law ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Instrumentation ,Polydimethylsiloxane ,Graphene ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Substrate (chemistry) ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,gold nanoparticles arranged on graphene oxide flakes (AuNPs@GO) ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Colloidal gold ,symbols ,hydrophobic paper ,Surface modification ,graphene oxide ,0210 nano-technology ,Raman spectroscopy ,surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) - Abstract
Paper-based surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) sensors have garnered much attention in the past decade owing to their ubiquity, ease of fabrication, and environmentally friendly substrate. The main drawbacks of a paper substrate for a SERS sensor are its high porosity, inherent hygroscopic nature, and hydrophilic surface property, which reduce the sensitivity and reproducibility of the SERS sensor. Here, we propose a simple, quick, convenient, and economical method for hydrophilic to hydrophobic surface modification of paper, while enhancing its mechanical and moisture-resistant properties. The hydrophobic paper (h-paper) was obtained by spin-coating diluted polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) solution onto the filter paper, resulting in h-paper with an increased contact angle of up to &asymp, 130°, To complete the h-paper-based SERS substrate, gold nanoparticles arranged on graphene oxide (AuNPs@GO) were synthesized using UV photoreduction, followed by drop-casting of AuNPs@GO solution on the h-paper substrate. The enhancement of the SERS signal was then assessed by attaching a rhodamine 6G (R6G) molecule as a Raman probe material to the h-paper-based SERS substrate. The limit of detection was 10 nM with an R2 of 0.966. The presented SERS sensor was also tested to detect a thiram at the micromolar level. We expect that our proposed AuNPs@GO/h-paper-based SERS sensor could be applied to point-of-care diagnostics applications in daily life and in spacecraft.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Fe3O4/functional exfoliation graphene on carbon paper nanocomposites for supercapacitor electrode
- Author
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Li Wang, Yanfei Li, Zhenzhong Huang, Shouhui Chen, and Jie Yu
- Subjects
business.product_category ,Materials science ,Scanning electron microscope ,General Chemical Engineering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,Electrochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,law ,General Materials Science ,Carbon paper ,Supercapacitor ,Nanocomposite ,Graphene ,General Engineering ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemical engineering ,Electrode ,symbols ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Raman spectroscopy - Abstract
In this work, the commercial carbon paper was firstly peeled in K2CO3 solution and then was further treated in a KNO3 solution to form functional exfoliation graphene (FEG) on the commercial carbon paper. The FEG/carbon paper was characterized by Raman spectra and scanning electron microscopy, confirming that some typical layered fold graphenes were successfully peeled off and stood on the carbon paper matrix. Then, Fe3O4 nanoparticles (NPs) were grown on the surface of FEG/carbon paper and the as-prepared Fe3O4 NPs/FEG/carbon paper was directly used as supercapacitor electrode. The specific capacitance of Fe3O4 NPs/FEG/carbon paper was about 316.07 F g−1 at a current density of 1 A g−1. Furthermore, the FEG/carbon papers were also functionalized by benzene carboxylic acid to form FFEG/carbon papers, and then the Fe3O4 NPs were grown on the surface of FFEG/carbon paper. The specific capacitance of Fe3O4 NPs/FFEG/carbon paper was 470 F g−1 at a current density of 1 A g−1, superior to some previous reported results. This work might provide a new strategy to prepare various nanostructures on FFEG/carbon papers for future applications.
- Published
- 2017
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