187 results on '"Facundo, C."'
Search Results
2. Synergistic enhancement of photo-assisted water splitting by mesoporous TiO2/NiFe LDH composite nanomaterials
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Vensaus, Priscila, Liang, Yunchang, Herrera, Facundo C., Soler-Illia, Galo J.A.A., and Lingenfelder, Magalí
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- 2024
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3. The added value of [18F]Fluorocholine PET/TC in the assessment of secondary or tertiary hyperparathyroidism
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Abouzian, S., primary, López-Mora, D.A., additional, Fernández-León, A., additional, Facundo, C., additional, Stefaneli, P., additional, and Flotats, A., additional
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- 2024
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4. CoPi-Modified Mesoporous Titania Photoelectrodes for Water Splitting: Why Less Is More
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Vensaus, Priscila, primary, Mendioroz, Lucas N., additional, Herrera, Facundo C., additional, Kreuzer, Mark P., additional, Viva, Federico A., additional, and Soler Illia, Galo J. A. A., additional
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- 2024
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5. Fe–Ni porphyrin/mesoporous titania thin film electrodes: a bioinspired nanoarchitecture for photoelectrocatalysis.
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Herrera, Facundo C., Caraballo, Rolando M., Vensaus, Priscila, Soler Illia, Galo J. A. A., and Hamer, Mariana
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- 2024
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6. Sunlight-Driven Photocatalysis for a Set of 3D Metal–Porphyrin Frameworks Based on a Planar Tetracarboxylic Ligand and Lanthanide Ions
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Herrera, Facundo C., primary, Caraballo, Rolando M., additional, Soler Illia, Galo J. A. A., additional, Gomez, Germán E., additional, and Hamer, Mariana, additional
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- 2023
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7. Chemical Design of Efficient Photoelectrodes by Heterogeneous Nucleation of Carbon Dots in Mesoporous Ordered Titania Films
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Herrera, Facundo C., primary, Sireus, Veronica, additional, Rassu, Pietro, additional, Stagi, Luigi, additional, Reale, Marco, additional, Sciortino, Alice, additional, Messina, Fabrizio, additional, Soler-Illia, Galo J. A. A., additional, Malfatti, Luca, additional, and Innocenzi, Plinio, additional
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- 2023
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8. Valor añadido de la PET/TC con [18F]fluorocolina en la valoración del hiperparatiroidismo secundario o terciario
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Abouzian, S., López-Mora, D.A., Fernández-León, A., Facundo, C., Stefaneli, P., and Flotats, A.
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- 2024
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9. Early Macrophage Infiltration and Sustained Inflammation in Kidneys From Deceased Donors Are Associated With Long-Term Renal Function
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Guillén-Gómez, E., Dasilva, I., Silva, I., Arce, Y., Facundo, C., Ars, E., Breda, A., Ortiz, A., Guirado, L., Ballarín, J.A., and Díaz-Encarnación, M.M.
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- 2017
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10. La crítica marxiana al derecho y la conexión Babeuf
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Rocca, Facundo C., primary
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- 2018
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11. Recovery of dialysis patients with COVID-19: health outcomes 3 months after diagnosis in ERACODA
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Hemmelder, M. H., Noordzij, M., Vart, P., Hilbrands, L. B., Jager, K. J., Abrahams, A. C., Arroyo, D., Battaglia, Y., Ekart, R., Mallamaci, F., Malloney, S. -R., Oliveira, J., Rydzewski, A., Sridharan, S., Vogt, L., Duivenvoorden, R., Gansevoort, R. T., Franssen, C. F. M., van der Net, J. B., Essig, M., du Buf-Vereijken, P. W. G., van Ginneken, B., Maas, N., van Jaarsveld, B. C., Bemelman, F. J., Klingenberg-Salahova, F., Heenan-Vos, F., Vervloet, M. G., Nurmohamed, A., Abramowicz, D., Verhofstede, S., Maoujoud, O., Malfait, T., Fialova, J., Melilli, E., Fava, A., Cruzado, J. M., Perez, N. M., Lips, J., Krepel, H., Adilovic, H., Hengst, M., Konings, C. J. A. M., Braconnier, P., Weis, D., Gellert, R., Alferes, D. G., Radulescu, D., Zakharova, E. V., Ambuehl, P. M., Guidotti, R., Walker, A., Lepeytre, F., Rabate, C., Rostoker, G., Marques, S., Azasevac, T., Majstorovic, G. S., Katicic, D., Dam, M. T., Kruger, T., Brzosko, S., Liakopoulos, V., Zanen, A. L., Logtenberg, S. J. J., Fricke, L., Kuryata, O., Slebe, J. J. P., Abd ElHafeez, S., Kemlin, D., van de Wetering, J., Reinders, M. E. J., Hesselink, D. A., van Gestel, J. K., Eiselt, J., Kielberger, L., El-Wakil, H. S., Verhoeven, M. A. M., Logan, I., Canal, C., Facundo, C., Ramos, A. M., Debska-Slizien, A., Veldhuizen, N. M. H., Tigka, E., Polyzou Konsta, M. A., Panagoutsos, S., Postorino, A., Cambareri, F., Matceac, I., Nistor, I., Covic, A., Groeneveld, J. H. M., Jousma, J., Diekmann, F., Oppenheimer, F., Blasco, M., Pereira, T. A., dos Santos Junior, A. C. S., Arias-Cabrales, C., Crespo, M., Llinas-Mallol, L., Buxeda, A., Tarrega, C. B., Redondo-Pachon, D., Arenas Jimenez, M. D., Mendoza-Valderrey, A., Martins, A. C., Mateus, C., Alvila, G., Laranjinha, I., Hofstra, J. M., Siezenga, M. A., Franco, A., Castellano, S., Rodriguez-Ferrero, M. L., Manzanos, S. B., Haridian Sosa Barrios, R., Lemahieu, W., Bartelet, K., Dirim, A. B., Demir, E., Sever, M. S., Turkmen, A., Safak, S., Hollander, D. A. M. J., Kerckhoffs, A., Buttner, S., de Vries, A. P. J., Meziyerh, S., van der Helm, D., Mallat, M., Bouwsma, H., Petruliene, K., Verberk, I., van der Sande, F. M., Christiaans, M. H. L., Mohankumar, N., Luca, M. D., Tuglular, S. Z., Kramer, A., Beerenhout, C., Luik, P. T., Kerschbaum, J., Tiefenthaler, M., Watschinger, B., Adema, A. Y., Stepanov, V. A., Zulkarnaev, A. B., Turkmen, K., Gandolfini, I., Maggiore, U., Fliedner, A., Asberg, A., Mjoen, G., Miyasato, H., de Fijter, C. W. H., Mongera, N., Pini, S., de Biase, C., van de Logt, A. E., Maas, R., Lebedeva, O., Lopez, V., Reichert, L. J. M., Verhave, J., Titov, D., Parshina, E. V., Zanoli, L., Marcantoni, C., van Kempen, G., van Gils-Verrij, L. E. A., Harty, J. C., Meurs, M., Myslak, M., Lentini, P., den Deurwaarder, E., Stendahl, M., Rahimzadeh, H., Schouten, M., Rychlik, I., Cabezas-Reina, C. J., Roca, A. M., Nauta, F., Sahin, I., Goffin, E., Kanaan, N., Labriola, L., Devresse, A., Diaz-Mareque, A., Coca, A., de Arriba, G., Meijers, B. K. I., Naesens, M., Kuypers, D., Desschans, B., Tonnerlier, A., Wissing, K. M., Dedinska, I., Pessolano, G., Malik, S., Dounousi, E., Papachristou, E., Berger, S. P., Meijer, E., Sanders, J. S. F., Ozyilmaz, A., Ponikvar, J. B., Pernat, A. M., Kovac, D., Arnol, M., Molenaar, F. M., van Zuilen, A. D., Meijvis, S. C. A., Dolmans, H., Tantisattamo, E., Esposito, P., Krzesinski, J. -M., Barahira, J. D., Gallieni, M., Martin-Moreno, P. L., Guglielmetti, G., Guzzo, G., Toapanta, N., Soler, M. J., Luik, A. J., van Kuijk, W. H. M., Stikkelbroeck, L. W. H., Hermans, M. M. H., Rimsevicius, L., Righetti, M., Islam, M., Heitink-Ter Braak, N., Nephrology, ACS - Microcirculation, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, UCL - SSS/IREC/NEFR - Pôle de Néphrologie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de néphrologie, Clinical sciences, Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG, Groningen Kidney Center (GKC), Cardiovascular Centre (CVC), Groningen Institute for Organ Transplantation (GIOT), Interne Geneeskunde, RS: Carim - V02 Hypertension and target organ damage, Medical Informatics, APH - Aging & Later Life, APH - Quality of Care, APH - Global Health, ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, and Internal Medicine
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Male ,Outcome Assessment ,survival ,mental health status ,COVID-19 Testing ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Renal Dialysis ,functional health status ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,80 and over ,Humans ,KIDNEY-TRANSPLANT ,AcademicSubjects/MED00340 ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Transplantation ,SARS-CoV-2 ,MORTALITY ,COVID-19 ,Middle Aged ,Health Care ,Intensive Care Units ,Renal disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 11] ,Nephrology ,dialysis ,Original Article ,Female ,Renal disorders Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 11] - Abstract
Background Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related short-term mortality is high in dialysis patients, but longer-term outcomes are largely unknown. We therefore assessed patient recovery in a large cohort of dialysis patients 3 months after their COVID-19 diagnosis. Methods We analyzed data on dialysis patients diagnosed with COVID-19 from 1 February 2020 to 31 March 2021 from the European Renal Association COVID-19 Database (ERACODA). The outcomes studied were patient survival, residence and functional and mental health status (estimated by their treating physician) 3 months after COVID-19 diagnosis. Complete follow-up data were available for 854 surviving patients. Patient characteristics associated with recovery were analyzed using logistic regression. Results In 2449 hemodialysis patients (mean ± SD age 67.5 ± 14.4 years, 62% male), survival probabilities at 3 months after COVID-19 diagnosis were 90% for nonhospitalized patients (n = 1087), 73% for patients admitted to the hospital but not to an intensive care unit (ICU) (n = 1165) and 40% for those admitted to an ICU (n = 197). Patient survival hardly decreased between 28 days and 3 months after COVID-19 diagnosis. At 3 months, 87% functioned at their pre-existent functional and 94% at their pre-existent mental level. Only few of the surviving patients were still admitted to the hospital (0.8–6.3%) or a nursing home (∼5%). A higher age and frailty score at presentation and ICU admission were associated with worse functional outcome. Conclusions Mortality between 28 days and 3 months after COVID-19 diagnosis was low and the majority of patients who survived COVID-19 recovered to their pre-existent functional and mental health level at 3 months after diagnosis.
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- 2022
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12. COVID-19 Pandemic Waves and Mortality Among Patients on Kidney Replacement Therapy
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Vart, P., Jager, K.J., Arnol, M., Duivenvoorden, R., Franssen, C.F., Groeneveld, Marc, Hemmelder, M.H., Lepeytre, F., Malfait, T., Midtvedt, K., Mitra, S., Facundo, C., Noordzij, M., Reina, C.C., Safak, S., Toapanta, N., Hilbrands, L.B., Gansevoort, R.T., Vart, P., Jager, K.J., Arnol, M., Duivenvoorden, R., Franssen, C.F., Groeneveld, Marc, Hemmelder, M.H., Lepeytre, F., Malfait, T., Midtvedt, K., Mitra, S., Facundo, C., Noordzij, M., Reina, C.C., Safak, S., Toapanta, N., Hilbrands, L.B., and Gansevoort, R.T.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 282615.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)
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- 2022
13. Immunoguided Discontinuation of Prophylaxis for Cytomegalovirus Disease in Kidney Transplant Recipients Treated With Antithymocyte Globulin: A Randomized Clinical Trial
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Paez-Vega, A, Gutierrez-Gutierrez, B, Aguera, ML, Facundo, C, Redondo-Pachon, D, Suner, M, Lopez-Oliva, MO, Yuste, JR, Montejo, M, Galeano-Alvarez, C, Ruiz-San Millan, JC, Los-Arcos, I, Hernandez, D, Fernandez-Ruiz, M, Munoz, P, Valle-Arroyo, J, Cano, A, Rodriguez-Benot, A, Crespo, M, Rodelo-Haad, C, Lobo-Acosta, MA, Garrido-Gracia, JC, Vidal, E, Guirado, L, Cantisan, S, and Torre-Cisneros, J
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kidney transplant ,QuantiFERON-CMV assay ,antithymocyte globulin ,CMV-specific cell-mediated immunity ,cytomegalovirus infection - Abstract
Background Antiviral prophylaxis is recommended in cytomegalovirus (CMV)-seropositive kidney transplant (KT) recipients receiving antithymocyte globulin (ATG) as induction. An alternative strategy of premature discontinuation of prophylaxis after CMV-specific cell-mediated immunity (CMV-CMI) recovery (immunoguided prevention) has not been studied. Our aim was to determine whether it is effective and safe to discontinue prophylaxis when CMV-CMI is detected and to continue with preemptive therapy. Methods In this open-label, noninferiority clinical trial, patients were randomized 1:1 to follow an immunoguided strategy, receiving prophylaxis until CMV-CMI recovery or to receive fixed-duration prophylaxis until day 90. After prophylaxis, preemptive therapy (valganciclovir 900 mg twice daily) was indicated in both arms until month 6. The primary and secondary outcomes were incidence of CMV disease and replication, respectively, within the first 12 months. Desirability of outcome ranking (DOOR) assessed 2 deleterious events (CMV disease/replication and neutropenia). Results A total of 150 CMV-seropositive KT recipients were randomly assigned. There was no difference in the incidence of CMV disease (0% vs 2.7%; P = .149) and replication (17.1% vs 13.5%; log-rank test, P = .422) between both arms. Incidence of neutropenia was lower in the immunoguided arm (9.2% vs 37.8%; odds ratio, 6.0; P < .001). A total of 66.1% of patients in the immunoguided arm showed a better DOOR, indicating a greater likelihood of a better outcome. Conclusions Prophylaxis can be prematurely discontinued in CMV-seropositive KT patients receiving ATG when CMV-CMI is recovered since no significant increase in the incidence of CMV replication or disease is observed. In cytomegalovirus (CMV)-seropositive kidney transplant recipients receiving ATG induction, immunoguided prevention is not inferior to prophylaxis to prevent CMV complications. Prophylaxis can be prematurely discontinued after CMV-cell-mediated immunity recovery with no significant increase in the incidence of CMV replication or disease.
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- 2022
14. Manejo de la inmunosupresión en pacientes trasplantados de riñón con COVID19. Estudio multicéntrico nacional derivado del registro COVID de la S.E.N
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López-Oliva MO, Pérez-Flores I, Molina M, José Aladrén M, Trujillo H, Redondo-Pachón D, López V, Facundo C, Villanego F, Rodríguez M, Carmen Ruiz M, Antón P, Rivas-Oural A, Cabello S, Portolés J, de la Vara L, Tabernero G, Valero R, Galeano C, Moral E, Ventura A, Coca A, Muñoz MÁ, Hernández-Gallego R, Shabaka A, Ledesma G, Martínez P, Ángeles Rodríguez M, Tamajón LP, Cruzado L, Emilio Sánchez J, and Jiménez C
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immunosuppression ,Spain ,SARS-CoV2 ,Kidney transplant - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: SARS CoV2 infection has had a major impact on renal transplant patients with a high mortality in the first months of the pandemic. Intentional reduction of immunosuppressive therapy has been postulated as one of the cornerstone in the management of the infection in the absence of targeted antiviral treatment. This has been modified according to the patient`s clinical situation and its effect on renal function or anti-HLA antibodies in the medium term has not been evaluated. OBJECTIVES: Evaluate the management of immunosuppressive therapy made during SARS-CoV2 infection, as well as renal function and anti-HLA antibodies in kidney transplant patients 6 months after COVID19 diagnosis. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Retrospective, national multicentre, retrospective study (30 centres) of kidney transplant recipients with COVID19 from 01/02/20 to 31/12/20. Clinical variables were collected from medical records and included in an anonymised database. SPSS statistical software was used for data analysis. RESULTS: 615 renal transplant recipients with COVID19 were included (62.6% male), with a mean age of 57.5 years.The predominant immunosuppressive treatment prior to COVID19 was triple therapy with prednisone, tacrolimus and mycophenolic acid (54.6%) followed by m-TOR inhibitor regimens (18.6%). After diagnosis of infection, mycophenolic acid was discontinued in 73.8% of patients, m-TOR inhibitor in 41.4%, tacrolimus in 10.5% and cyclosporin A in 10%. In turn, 26.9% received dexamethasone and 50.9% were started on or had their baseline prednisone dose increased.Mean creatinine before diagnosis of COVID19, at diagnosis and at 6 months was: 1.7±0.8, 2.1±1.2 and 1.8±1 mg/dl respectively (p
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- 2022
15. Clinical triage of patients on kidney replacement therapy presenting with COVID-19: An ERACODA registry analysis
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Mitra, S., Jayanti, A., Vart, P., Coca, A., Gallieni, M., Ovrehus, M. A., Midtvedt, K., Abd Elhafeez, S., Gandolfini, I., Buttner, S., Franssen, C. F. M., Hemmelder, M. H., Van Der Net, J. B., Essig, M., Du Buf-Vereijken, P. W. G., Van Ginneken, B., Maas, N., Vogt, L., Van Jaarsveld, B. C., Jager, K. J., Bemelman, F. J., Klingenberg-Salahova, F., Heenan-Vos, F., Vervloet, M. G., Nurmohamed, A., Abramowicz, D., Verhofstede, S., Maoujoud, O., Malfait, T., Fialova, J., Melilli, E., Fava, A., Cruzado, J. M., Perez, N. M., Lips, J., Krepel, H., Adilovic, H., Hengst, M., Rydzewski, A., Gellert, R., Oliveira, J., Alferes, D. G., Zakharova, E. V., Ambuehl, P. M., Walker, A., Winzeler, R., Lepeytre, F., Rabate, C., Rostoker, G., Marques, S., Azasevac, T., Katicic, D., Dam, M. T., Kruger, T., Brzosko, S., Zanen, A. L., Logtenberg, S. J. J., Fricke, L., Slebe, J. J. P., Kemlin, D., Van De Wetering, J., Reinders, M. E. J., Eiselt, J., Kielberger, L., El-Wakil, H. S., Verhoeven, M. A. M., Canal, C., Facundo, C., Ramos, A. M., Debska-Slizien, A., Veldhuizen, N. M. H., Tigka, E., Konsta, M. A. P., Panagoutsos, S., Mallamaci, F., Postorino, A., Cambareri, F., Covic, A., Matceac, I., Nistor, I., Cordos, M., Groeneveld, J. H. M., Jousma, J., Marjolijn Van Buren, Diekmann, F., Tiago Assis Pereira, Santos, A. C. S., Arias-Cabrales, C., Crespo, M., Llinas-Mallol, L., Buxeda, A., Tarrega, C. B., Redondo-Pachon, D., Jimenez, M. D. A., Hofstra, J. M., Franco, A., Arroyo, D., Rodriguez-Ferrero, M. L., Manzanos, S. B., Barrios, R. H. S., Avila, G., Laranjinha, I., Mateus, C., Lemahieu, W., Bartelet, K., Dirim, A. B., Sever, M. S., Demir, E., Safak, S., Turkmen, A., Hollander, D. A. M. J., De Vries, A. P. J., Meziyerh, S., Van Der Helm, D., Mallat, M., Bouwsma, H., Sridharan, S., Petruliene, K., Maloney, S. -R., Verberk, I., Van Der Sande, F. M., Christiaans, M. H. L., Mohankumar, N., Di Luca, M., Tuglular, S. Z., Kramer, A., Beerenhout, C., Luik, P. T., Kerschbaum, J., Tiefenthaler, M., Watschinger, B., Adema, A. Y., Stepanov, V. A., Zulkarnaev, A. B., Turkmen, K., Fliedner, A., Asberg, A., Mjoen, G., Miyasato, H., De Fijter, C. W. H., Mongera, N., Pini, S., De Biase, C., Duivenvoorden, R., Hilbrands, L., Kerckhoffs, A., Van De Logt, A. -E., Maas, R., Lebedeva, O., Lopez, V., Verhave, J., Reichert, L. J. M., Titov, D., Parshina, E. V., Zanoli, L., Marcantoni, C., Van Gils-Verrij, L. E. A., Harty, J. C., Meurs, M., Myslak, M., Battaglia, Y., Lentini, P., Den Deurwaarder, E., Stendahl, M., Rahimzadeh, H., Schouten, M., Rychlik, I., Cabezas-Reina, C. J., Roca, A. M., Nauta, F., Goffin, E., Kanaan, N., Labriola, L., Devresse, A., Diaz-Mareque, A., Meijers, B. K. I., Naesens, M., Kuypers, D., Desschans, B., Tonnelier, A., Wissing, K. M., De Arriba, G., Dedinska, I., Pessolano, G., Maggiore, U., Malik, S., Papachristou, E., Gansevoort, R. T., Noordzij, M., Berger, S. P., Meijer, E., Ozyilmaz, A., Sanders, J. S. F., Ponikvar, J. B., Arnol, M., Pernat, A. M., Kovac, D., Ekart, R., Abrahams, A. C., Molenaar, F. M., Van Zuilen, A. D., Meijvis, S. C. A., Dolmans, H., Tantisattamo, E., Esposito, P., Krzesinski, J. -M., Barahira, J. D., Sabiu, G., Martin-Moreno, P. L., Guglielmetti, G., Guzzo, G., Toapanta, N., Soler, M. J., Luik, A. J., Van Kuijk, W. H. M., Stikkelbroeck, L. W. H., Hermans, M. M. H., Rimsevicius, L., Righetti, M., Islam, M., Braak, N. H. -T., Nephrology, UCL - SSS/IREC/NEFR - Pôle de Néphrologie, UCL - (SLuc) Service de néphrologie, Interne Geneeskunde, RS: Carim - V02 Hypertension and target organ damage, Groningen Kidney Center (GKC), ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, AII - Inflammatory diseases, AII - Infectious diseases, Internal Medicine, and Clinical sciences
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kidney ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pulmonary insufficiency ,infectious diseases ,Kidney ,Second presentation ,Interquartile range ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,Mortality ,AcademicSubjects/MED00340 ,Dialysis ,Aged ,Transplantation ,second presentation ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,mortality ,Triage ,Hospitalization ,Renal Replacement Therapy ,Renal disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 11] ,Nephrology ,Oxygen Saturation ,dialysis ,Original Article ,Hemodialysis ,Renal disorders Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 11] ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,business ,transplantation - Abstract
Background Patients on kidney replacement therapy (KRT) are at very high risk of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The triage pathway for KRT patients presenting to hospitals with varying severity of COVID-19 illness remains ill-defined. We studied the clinical characteristics of patients at initial and subsequent hospital presentations and the impact on patient outcomes. Methods The European Renal Association COVID-19 Database (ERACODA) was analysed for clinical and laboratory features of 1423 KRT patients with COVID-19 either hospitalized or non-hospitalized at initial triage and those re-presenting a second time. Predictors of outcomes (hospitalization, 28-day mortality) were then determined for all those not hospitalized at initial triage. Results Among 1423 KRT patients with COVID-19 [haemodialysis (HD), n = 1017; transplant, n = 406), 25% (n = 355) were not hospitalized at first presentation due to mild illness (30% HD, 13% transplant). Of the non-hospitalized patients, only 10% (n = 36) re-presented a second time, with a 5-day median interval between the two presentations (interquartile range 2–7 days). Patients who re-presented had worsening respiratory symptoms, a decrease in oxygen saturation (97% versus 90%) and an increase in C-reactive protein (26 versus 73 mg/L) and were older (72 vs 63 years) compared with those who did not return a second time. The 28-day mortality between early admission (at first presentation) and deferred admission (at second presentation) was not significantly different (29% versus 25%; P = 0.6). Older age, prior smoking history, higher clinical frailty score and self-reported shortness of breath at first presentation were identified as risk predictors of mortality when re-presenting after discharge at initial triage. Conclusions This study provides evidence that KRT patients with COVID-19 and mild illness can be managed effectively with supported outpatient care and with vigilance of respiratory symptoms, especially in those with risk factors for poor outcomes. Our findings support a risk-stratified clinical approach to admissions and discharges of KRT patients presenting with COVID-19 to aid clinical triage and optimize resource utilization during the ongoing pandemic.
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- 2021
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16. 3D Augmented reality-guided robotic-assisted kidney transplantation: Revealing the concealed
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Piana, A., primary, Gallioli, A., additional, Diana, P., additional, Territo, A., additional, Gaya, J.M., additional, Gavrilov, P., additional, Rodriguez Faba, Ó., additional, Huguet, J., additional, Guirado, L., additional, Facundo, C., additional, Campi, R., additional, Bellin, A., additional, Amparore, D., additional, Serni, S., additional, Palou, J., additional, Porpiglia, F., additional, and Breda, A., additional
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- 2022
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17. Zinc porphyrin/mesoporous titania thin film electrodes: a hybrid material nanoarchitecture for photocatalytic reduction
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Galo Juan de Avila Arturo Soler Illia, Mariana Hamer, Facundo C. Herrera, Priscila Vensaus, and Rolando Manuel Caraballo
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Materials science ,biology ,General Chemical Engineering ,chemistry.chemical_element ,General Chemistry ,Zinc ,biology.organism_classification ,Mesoporous titania ,Zinc porphyrin ,Chemical engineering ,chemistry ,Photocatalysis ,Tetra ,Thin film electrode ,Thin film ,Hybrid material - Abstract
In this work, photocatalytic reduction of methyl viologen is achieved using zinc tetra(4-N-methylpyridyl)porphine (ZnP) functionalized mesoporous titania thin films (MTTF). Metalloporphyrins are the core of natural systems that harvest energy from the sun. Thus, a bioinspired approach is used, taking advantage of ZnP sensitizing capabilities and MTTF organized structure.
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- 2021
18. Elucidating the Role of the Metal Catalyst and Oxide Support in the Ru/CeO
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Sergio, López-Rodríguez, Arantxa, Davó-Quiñonero, Esther, Bailón-García, Dolores, Lozano-Castelló, Facundo C, Herrera, Eric, Pellegrin, Carlos, Escudero, Max, García-Melchor, and Agustín, Bueno-López
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Article - Abstract
This study addresses the yet unresolved CO2 methanation mechanism on a Ru/CeO2 catalyst by means of near-ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP–XPS) and diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) complemented with periodic density functional theory (DFT) calculations. NAP–XPS results show that the switch from H2 to CO2 + H2 mixture oxidizes both the Ru and CeO2 phases at low temperatures, which is explained by the CO2 adsorption modes assessed by means of DFT on each representative surface. CO2 adsorption on Ru is dissociative and moderately endergonic, leading to polybonded Ru-carbonyl groups whose hydrogenation is the rate-determining step in the overall process. Unlike on Ru metal, CO2 can be strongly adsorbed as carbonates on ceria surface oxygen sites or on the reduced ceria at oxygen vacancies as carboxylates (CO2–δ), resulting in the reoxidation of ceria. Carboxylates can then evolve as CO, which is released either via direct splitting at relatively low temperatures or through stable formate species at higher temperatures. DRIFTS confirm the great stability of formates, whose depletion relates with CO2 conversion in the reaction cell, while carbonates remain on the surface up to higher temperatures. CO generation on ceria serves as an additional reservoir of Ru-carbonyls, cooperating to the overall CO2 methanation process. Altogether, this study highlights the noninnocent role of the ceria support in the performance of Ru/CeO2 toward CO2 methanation.
- Published
- 2021
19. Elucidating the Role of the Metal Catalyst and Oxide Support in the Ru/CeO2-Catalyzed CO2 Methanation Mechanism
- Author
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López-Rodríguez, Sergio, primary, Davó-Quiñonero, Arantxa, additional, Bailón-García, Esther, additional, Lozano-Castelló, Dolores, additional, Herrera, Facundo C., additional, Pellegrin, Eric, additional, Escudero, Carlos, additional, García-Melchor, Max, additional, and Bueno-López, Agustín, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Prevalence Evolution and Impact of Cardiovascular Risk Factors on Allograft and Renal Transplant Patient Survival
- Author
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Díaz, J.M., Gich, I., Bonfill, X., Solà, R., Guirado, L., Facundo, C., Sainz, Z., Puig, T., Silva, I., and Ballarín, J.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. New technologies in robot-assisted kidney transplantation: Improving surgical performances, expanding the indication
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Piana, A., primary, Territo, A., additional, Gallioli, A., additional, Fontana, M., additional, Diana, P., additional, Gaya, J.M., additional, Rodríguez Faba, O., additional, Huguet, J., additional, Gavrilov, P., additional, Mercadé, A., additional, Subiela, J.D., additional, Guirado, L., additional, Facundo, C., additional, Bellin, A., additional, Amparore, D., additional, Palou, J., additional, Porpiglia, F., additional, and Breda, A., additional
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Thermocatalytic CO2 Conversion over a Nickel-Loaded Ceria Nanostructured Catalyst: A NAP-XPS Study
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Adrián Barroso-Bogeat, Facundo C. Herrera, Carlos Escudero, José M. Pintado, Ginesa Blanco, Eric Pellegrin, Juan José Pérez-Sagasti, and Ciencia de los Materiales e Ingeniería Metalúrgica y Química Inorgánica
- Subjects
rare earth oxides ,Materials science ,CO2 hydrogenation ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,Ceria nanocubes ,010402 general chemistry ,Nnickel ,lcsh:Technology ,01 natural sciences ,Water-gas shift reaction ,Methane ,Article ,Catalysis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,nickel ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,ceria nanocubes ,General Materials Science ,lcsh:Microscopy ,Rare earth oxides ,lcsh:QC120-168.85 ,Near Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (NAP-XPS) ,lcsh:QH201-278.5 ,lcsh:T ,business.industry ,Fossil fuel ,Química ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Nickel ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,lcsh:TA1-2040 ,lcsh:Descriptive and experimental mechanics ,lcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,lcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,lcsh:TK1-9971 ,Syngas ,Ambient pressure - Abstract
Despite the increasing economic incentives and environmental advantages associated to their substitution, carbon-rich fossil fuels are expected to remain as the dominant worldwide source of energy through at least the next two decades and perhaps later. Therefore, both the control and reduction of CO2 emissions have become environmental issues of major concern and big challenges for the international scientific community. Among the proposed strategies to achieve these goals, conversion of CO2 by its reduction into high added value products, such as methane or syngas, has been widely agreed to be the most attractive from the environmental and economic points of view. In the present work, thermocatalytic reduction of CO2 with H2 was studied over a nanostructured ceria-supported nickel catalyst. Ceria nanocubes were employed as support, while the nickel phase was supported by means a surfactant-free controlled chemical precipitation method. The resulting nanocatalyst was characterized in terms of its physicochemical properties, with special attention paid to both surface basicity and reducibility. The nanocatalyst was studied during CO2 reduction by means of Near Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (NAP-XPS). Two different catalytic behaviors were observed depending on the reaction temperature. At low temperature, with both Ce and Ni in an oxidized state, CH4 formation was observed, whereas at high temperature above 500 °C, the reverse water gas shift reaction became dominant, with CO and H2O being the main products. NAP-XPS was revealed as a powerful tool to study the behavior of this nanostructured catalyst under reaction conditions., Instituto de Investigaciones Fisicoquímicas Teóricas y Aplicadas
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- 2021
23. Renin-Angiotensin System Blockers and the Risk of COVID-19-Related Mortality in Patients with Kidney Failure
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Soler, MJ, Noordzij, M, Abramowicz, D, de Arriba, G, Basile, C, van Buren, M, Covic, A, Crespo, M, Duivenvoorden, R, Massy, ZA, Ortiz, A, Sanchez, JE, Petridou, E, Stevens, K, White, C, Vart, P, Gansevoort, RT, Canal C., Facundo C., and ERACODA Collaborators
- Abstract
Background and objectives There is concern about potential deleterious effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEis) and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Patients with kidney failure, who often use ACEis/ARBs, are at higher risk of more severe COVID-19. However, there are no data available on the association of ACEi/ARB use with COVID-19 severity in this population. Design, setting, participants, & measurements From the European Renal Association COVID-19 database (ERACODA), we retrieved data on kidney transplant recipients and patients on dialysis who were affected by COVID-19, between February 1 and October 1, 2020, and had information on 28-day mortality. We used Cox proportional-hazards regression to calculate hazard ratios for the association between ACEi/ ARB use and 28-day mortality risk. Additionally, we studied the association of discontinuation of these agents with 28-day mortality. Results We evaluated 1511 patients: 459 kidney transplant recipients and 1052 patients on dialysis. At diagnosis of COVID-19, 189 (41%) of the transplant recipients and 288 (27%) of the patients on dialysis were on ACEis/ ARBs. A total of 88 (19%) transplant recipients and 244 (23%) patients on dialysis died within 28 days of initial presentation. In both groups of patients, there was no association between ACEi/ ARB use and 28-day mortality in both crude and adjusted models (in transplant recipients, adjusted hazard ratio, 1.12; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.69 to 1.83; in patients on dialysis, adjusted hazard ratio, 1.04; 95% CI, 0.73 to 1.47). Among transplant recipients, ACEi/ARB discontinuation was associated with a higher mortality risk after adjustment for demographics and comorbidities, but the association was no longer statistically significant after adjustment for severity of COVID-19 (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.36; 95% CI, 0.40 to 4.58). Among patients on dialysis, ACEi/ARB discontinuation was not associated with mortality in any model. We obtained similar results across subgroups when ACEis and ARBs were studied separately, and when other outcomes for severity of COVID-19 were studied, e.g., hospital admission, admission to the intensive care unit, or need for ventilator support. Conclusions Among kidney transplant recipients and patients on dialysis with COVID-19, there was no significant association of ACEi/ ARB use or discontinuation with mortality.
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- 2021
24. Elucidating the Role of the Metal Catalyst and Oxide Support in the Ru/CeO2-Catalyzed CO2 Methanation Mechanism
- Author
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Esther Bailón-García, Dolores Lozano-Castelló, Facundo C. Herrera, Max García-Melchor, Agustín Bueno-López, Sergio López-Rodríguez, Eric Pellegrin, Arantxa Davó-Quiñonero, Carlos Escudero, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Química Inorgánica, and Materiales Carbonosos y Medio Ambiente
- Subjects
Materials science ,Oxide ,Ru/CeO2-catalyzed ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,Catalysis ,Oxide support ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Methanation ,Metal catalyst ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Química Inorgánica ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Combinatorial chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,General Energy ,chemistry ,13. Climate action ,CO2 methanation mechanism ,0210 nano-technology ,Mechanism (sociology) - Abstract
This study addresses the yet unresolved CO2 methanation mechanism on a Ru/CeO2 catalyst by means of near-ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP–XPS) and diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) complemented with periodic density functional theory (DFT) calculations. NAP–XPS results show that the switch from H2 to CO2 + H2 mixture oxidizes both the Ru and CeO2 phases at low temperatures, which is explained by the CO2 adsorption modes assessed by means of DFT on each representative surface. CO2 adsorption on Ru is dissociative and moderately endergonic, leading to polybonded Ru-carbonyl groups whose hydrogenation is the rate-determining step in the overall process. Unlike on Ru metal, CO2 can be strongly adsorbed as carbonates on ceria surface oxygen sites or on the reduced ceria at oxygen vacancies as carboxylates (CO2–δ), resulting in the reoxidation of ceria. Carboxylates can then evolve as CO, which is released either via direct splitting at relatively low temperatures or through stable formate species at higher temperatures. DRIFTS confirm the great stability of formates, whose depletion relates with CO2 conversion in the reaction cell, while carbonates remain on the surface up to higher temperatures. CO generation on ceria serves as an additional reservoir of Ru-carbonyls, cooperating to the overall CO2 methanation process. Altogether, this study highlights the noninnocent role of the ceria support in the performance of Ru/CeO2 toward CO2 methanation. The authors thank the financial support of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Project CTQ2015-67597-C2-2-R and grant FJCI-2015-23769), the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2019-105960RB-C22), Generalitat Valenciana (Project PROMETEO/2018/076), and the EU (FEDER funding). A.D.-Q. and M.G.-M. acknowledge the financial support from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement no. 713567 and Science Foundation Ireland Research Centre award 12/RC/2278_P2. F.C.H. acknowledges the Argentinian National Research Council (CONICET) for the financial support. C.E. acknowledges funding from the MICINN/FEDER RTI2018-093996-B-32 project. The computational results of this research have been achieved using the DECI resource Salomon based in the Czech Republic at the IT4Innovations National Supercomputing Center with support from the PRACE aisbl. The DJEI/DES/SFI/HEA Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC) is also acknowledged for the provision of computational facilities.
- Published
- 2021
25. Monocyte implication in renal allograft dysfunction
- Author
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Guillén-Gómez, E., Guirado, L., Belmonte, X., Maderuelo, A., Santín, S., Juarez, C., Ars, E., Facundo, C., Ballarín, J. A., Vidal, S., and Díaz-Encarnación, M. M.
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- 2014
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26. Mesoporous TiO2 photoelectrodes for water splitting: effect of Co catalyst deposition
- Author
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Galo J. A. A. Soler-Illia, Federico A. Viva, Mark P. Kreuzer, Facundo C. Herrera, Lucas N. Mendioroz, and Priscila Vensaus
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- 2020
- Full Text
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27. Insights into the Oxygen Vacancy Filling Mechanism in CuO/CeO2 Catalysts: A Key Step Toward High Selectivity in Preferential CO Oxidation
- Author
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Eric Pellegrin, Esther Bailón-García, Agustín Bueno-López, Carlos Escudero, Dolores Lozano-Castelló, Sergio López-Rodríguez, Arantxa Davó-Quiñonero, Max García-Melchor, J. Juan-Juan, Facundo C. Herrera, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Química Inorgánica, and Materiales Carbonosos y Medio Ambiente
- Subjects
Reaction mechanism ,Química Inorgánica ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,High selectivity ,chemistry.chemical_element ,General Chemistry ,Operando NAP−XPS ,010402 general chemistry ,DFT calculations ,01 natural sciences ,Copper ,Catalysis ,Oxygen vacancy ,0104 chemical sciences ,Ceria ,Catalytic reforming ,Chemical engineering ,Oxygen vacancies ,Mechanism (philosophy) ,CO-PROX reaction - Abstract
The preferential CO oxidation (CO-PROX) reaction is paramount for the purification of reformate H2-rich streams, where CuO/CeO2 catalysts show promising opportunities. This work sheds light on the lattice oxygen recovery mechanism on CuO/CeO2 catalysts during CO-PROX reaction, which is critical to guarantee both good activity and selectivity, but that is yet to be well understood. Particularly, in situ Raman spectroscopy reveals that oxygen vacancies in the ceria lattice do not form in significant amounts until advanced reaction degrees, whereas pulse O2 isotopic tests confirm the involvement of catalyst oxygen in the CO and H2 oxidation processes occurring at all stages of the CO-PROX reaction (Mars–van Krevelen). Further mechanistic insights are provided by operando near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP–XPS) and near edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) experiments, which prove the gradual CuO reduction and steady oxidized state of Ce ions until the very surface reduction of CeO2 at the point of selectivity loss. Experiments are complemented by density functional theory (DFT) calculations, which reveal a more facile oxygen refill according to the trend CuO > CeO2 > Cu2O. Overall, this work concludes that the oxygen recovery mechanism in CO-PROX switches from a direct mechanism, wherein oxygen restores vacancy sites in the partially reduced CuO particles, to a synergistic mechanism with the participation of ceria once CuxO particles reach a critical reduction state. This mechanistic switch ultimately results in a decrease in CO conversion in favor of the undesired H2 oxidation, which opens-up future research on potential strategies to improve oxygen recovery. The authors thank the financial support of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Project CTQ2015-67597-C2-2-R and grant FJCI-2015-23769), the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports (grant FPU14/01178), the Generalitat Valenciana (Project PROMETEO/2018/076) and the EU (FEDER funding). F.C.H. acknowledges the Argentinian National Research Council (CONICET) for financial support.
- Published
- 2020
28. Insights into the Oxygen Vacancy Filling Mechanism in CuO/CeO2 Catalysts: A Key Step Toward High Selectivity in Preferential CO Oxidation
- Author
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Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Química Inorgánica, Davó-Quiñonero, Arantxa, Bailón-García, Esther, López-Rodríguez, Sergio, Juan Juan, Jerónimo, Lozano-Castello, Dolores, García-Melchor, Max, Herrera, Facundo C., Pellegrin, Eric, Escudero, Carlos, Bueno López, Agustín, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Química Inorgánica, Davó-Quiñonero, Arantxa, Bailón-García, Esther, López-Rodríguez, Sergio, Juan Juan, Jerónimo, Lozano-Castello, Dolores, García-Melchor, Max, Herrera, Facundo C., Pellegrin, Eric, Escudero, Carlos, and Bueno López, Agustín
- Abstract
The preferential CO oxidation (CO-PROX) reaction is paramount for the purification of reformate H2-rich streams, where CuO/CeO2 catalysts show promising opportunities. This work sheds light on the lattice oxygen recovery mechanism on CuO/CeO2 catalysts during CO-PROX reaction, which is critical to guarantee both good activity and selectivity, but that is yet to be well understood. Particularly, in situ Raman spectroscopy reveals that oxygen vacancies in the ceria lattice do not form in significant amounts until advanced reaction degrees, whereas pulse O2 isotopic tests confirm the involvement of catalyst oxygen in the CO and H2 oxidation processes occurring at all stages of the CO-PROX reaction (Mars–van Krevelen). Further mechanistic insights are provided by operando near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP–XPS) and near edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) experiments, which prove the gradual CuO reduction and steady oxidized state of Ce ions until the very surface reduction of CeO2 at the point of selectivity loss. Experiments are complemented by density functional theory (DFT) calculations, which reveal a more facile oxygen refill according to the trend CuO > CeO2 > Cu2O. Overall, this work concludes that the oxygen recovery mechanism in CO-PROX switches from a direct mechanism, wherein oxygen restores vacancy sites in the partially reduced CuO particles, to a synergistic mechanism with the participation of ceria once CuxO particles reach a critical reduction state. This mechanistic switch ultimately results in a decrease in CO conversion in favor of the undesired H2 oxidation, which opens-up future research on potential strategies to improve oxygen recovery.
- Published
- 2020
29. Unexpected Optical Blue Shift in Large Colloidal Quantum Dots by Anionic Migration and Exchange
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Cefe López, Facundo C. Herrera, F. Javier Palomares, Beatriz H. Juárez, Juan F. Galisteo-López, Félix G. Requejo, María Acebrón, Martín Mizrahi, Comunidad de Madrid, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (Argentina), and Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (Argentina)
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Materials science ,Absorption spectroscopy ,quantum dots ,INGENIERÍAS Y TECNOLOGÍAS ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,purl.org/becyt/ford/2.10 [https] ,XPS ,General Materials Science ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Nanotecnología ,X-ray absorption spectroscopy ,Potential well ,Ion migration ,Nano-materiales ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,XANES ,0104 chemical sciences ,Blueshift ,EXAFS ,purl.org/becyt/ford/2 [https] ,Nanocrystal ,Chemical physics ,Colloidal quantum dots ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Compositional changes taking place during the synthesis of alloyed CdSeZnS nanocrystals (NCs) allow shifting of the optical features to higher energy as the NCs grow. Under certain synthetic conditions, the effect of those changes on the surface/interface chemistry competes with and dominates over the conventional quantum confinement effect in growing NCs. These changes, identified by means of complementary advanced spectroscopic techniques such as XPS (X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy) and XAS (X-ray absorption spectroscopy), are understood in the frame of an ion migration and exchange mechanism taking place during the synthesis. Control over the synthetic routes during NC growth represents an alternative tool to tune the optical properties of colloidal quantum dots, broadening the versatility of the wet chemical methods., This work has been partially supported through the following projects: S2013/MIT-2740 from Comunidad de Madrid and FIS2015-67367-C2-1-P and MAT2016-80394-R from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness. F.C.H., M.M., and F.G.R. acknowledge CONICET and ANPCYT (Project PICT 2015-2285). XAFS experiments were partially supported by Projects XAFS2-20170359 and SXS-20160690 (LNLS, Campinas, Brazil).
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- 2018
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30. Thermocatalytic CO2 Conversion over a Nickel-Loaded Ceria Nanostructured Catalyst: A NAP-XPS Study
- Author
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Barroso-Bogeat, Adrián, primary, Blanco, Ginesa, additional, Pérez-Sagasti, Juan José, additional, Escudero, Carlos, additional, Pellegrin, Eric, additional, Herrera, Facundo C., additional, and Pintado, José María, additional
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
31. Zinc porphyrin/mesoporous titania thin film electrodes: a hybrid material nanoarchitecture for photocatalytic reduction
- Author
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Caraballo, Rolando M., primary, Vensaus, Priscila, additional, Herrera, Facundo C., additional, Soler Illia, Galo J. A. A., additional, and Hamer, Mariana, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Insights into the Oxygen Vacancy Filling Mechanism in CuO/CeO2 Catalysts: A Key Step Toward High Selectivity in Preferential CO Oxidation
- Author
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Davó-Quiñonero, Arantxa, primary, Bailón-García, Esther, additional, López-Rodríguez, Sergio, additional, Juan-Juan, Jerónimo, additional, Lozano-Castelló, Dolores, additional, García-Melchor, Max, additional, Herrera, Facundo C., additional, Pellegrin, Eric, additional, Escudero, Carlos, additional, and Bueno-López, Agustín, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Determining Factors of the Response to Hyperhomocysteinemia Treatment in Renal Transplant Patients
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DÍaz, J.M., Sainz, Z., Gich, I., Guirado, L.L., Puig, T., Oliver, A., Montañés, R., Facundo, C., Chuy, E., and Solà, R.
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- 2005
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34. Post–Renal Transplantation Weight Gain: Its Causes and Its Consequences
- Author
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Díaz, J.M., Sainz, Z., Oliver, A., Guirado, L.I., Facundo, C., García-Maset, R., and Solà, R.
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- 2005
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35. Results and Complications of 50 Laparoscopic Nephrectomies For Live Donor Renal Transplantation
- Author
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Guirado, L.I., Díaz, J.M., Facundo, C., Alcaraz, A., Rosales, A., García-Masset, R., Sainz, Z., Chuy, E., and Solà, R.
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- 2005
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36. Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Diabetic Patients With Renal Transplants
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Díaz, J.M., Sainz, Z., Gich, I., Guirado, L.L., Facundo, C., Chuy, E., Puig, T., and Solà, R.
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- 2005
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37. Usos de escritos y conceptos políticos en ambas márgenes del Plata y del Atlántico : La Gazeta de Montevideo, entre Cádiz y Buenos Aires
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Lafit, Facundo C. E.
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Gazeta de Montevideo ,Historia política ,Argentina ,Movimientos emancipadores latinoamericanos ,Uruguay ,Siglo XIX ,Historia ,Historia americana ,Historia de los periódicos ,Talleres de imprenta ,Río de la Plata - Abstract
Fil: Lafit, Facundo C. E.. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación; Argentina.
- Published
- 2019
38. Elucidating the Role of the Metal Catalyst and Oxide Support in the Ru/CeO2-Catalyzed CO2 Methanation Mechanism.
- Author
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López-Rodríguez, Sergio, Davó-Quiñonero, Arantxa, Bailón-García, Esther, Lozano-Castelló, Dolores, Herrera, Facundo C., Pellegrin, Eric, Escudero, Carlos, García-Melchor, Max, and Bueno-López, Agustín
- Published
- 2021
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39. Lo ilimitado y su límite : deseo, temor a la muerte y palabras en la construcción hobbesiana del orden político moderno
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Rocca, Facundo C. and Rocca Facundo C., Universidad de la República (Uruguay). Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Instituto de Ciencia Política
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ILIMITACION ,RANCIERE, JACQUES ,STRAUSS, LEO ,MODERNIDAD POLITICA ,HOBBES, THOMAS - Abstract
Con Hobbes parece asistirse al nacimiento de la filosofía política moderna: en su obra la pregunta por el orden de la comunidad se emancipa definitivamente de toda trascendencia para estructurarse de forma inmanente. Sin embargo, el hombre-individuo que se pone como fundamento revela una problemática ilimitación en sus deseos. Derecho, Ley, Soberanía y Estado serían formas de una necesaria limitación de este sustrato inestable. Pero tal límite deberá encontrar su génesis en ese mismo terreno de lo ilimitado: de ahí la insistencia hobbesiana en el temor a la muerte como experiencia del límite inmanente al propio deseo ilimitado del individuo. Discutiendo las tesis de Strauss señalamos que esa insistencia no resulta tanto del reconocimiento de un fundamento moral irreductible que vendría a ser ocultado por el racionalismo hobbesiano, sino que constituye el recurso a una ultima ratio para un límite que, estando fundado exclusivamente en los intercambios de actos de palabra y voluntades (pactos), se entrampa en la inevitable indeterminación de las palabras mismas, que acecha a la modernidad política pensado, con Jacques Rancière, como era democrática. Aún más, la insistencia en el método geométrico-racionalista derivaría de esta misma dificultad: no sería sino un intento de fijar en un saber objetivo el sentido de esas palabras humanas que deben fundar, ahora, el orden político
- Published
- 2017
40. V93 - 3D Augmented reality-guided robotic-assisted kidney transplantation: Revealing the concealed
- Author
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Piana, A., Gallioli, A., Diana, P., Territo, A., Gaya, J.M., Gavrilov, P., Rodriguez Faba, Ó., Huguet, J., Guirado, L., Facundo, C., Campi, R., Bellin, A., Amparore, D., Serni, S., Palou, J., Porpiglia, F., and Breda, A.
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- 2022
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41. La crítica marxiana al derecho y la conexión Babeuf
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Facundo C. Rocca
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- 2018
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42. Unexpected optical blue shift in large colloidal quantum dots by anionic migration and exchange
- Author
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Comunidad de Madrid, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (Argentina), Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (Argentina), Acebrón, María, Galisteo-López, Juan F., López, Cefe, Herrera, Facundo C., Mizrahi, Martín, Requejo, Félix G., Palomares, F. Javier, Juárez, Beatriz H., Comunidad de Madrid, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (Argentina), Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (Argentina), Acebrón, María, Galisteo-López, Juan F., López, Cefe, Herrera, Facundo C., Mizrahi, Martín, Requejo, Félix G., Palomares, F. Javier, and Juárez, Beatriz H.
- Abstract
Compositional changes taking place during the synthesis of alloyed CdSeZnS nanocrystals (NCs) allow shifting of the optical features to higher energy as the NCs grow. Under certain synthetic conditions, the effect of those changes on the surface/interface chemistry competes with and dominates over the conventional quantum confinement effect in growing NCs. These changes, identified by means of complementary advanced spectroscopic techniques such as XPS (X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy) and XAS (X-ray absorption spectroscopy), are understood in the frame of an ion migration and exchange mechanism taking place during the synthesis. Control over the synthetic routes during NC growth represents an alternative tool to tune the optical properties of colloidal quantum dots, broadening the versatility of the wet chemical methods.
- Published
- 2018
43. Inestabilidad de tanques de petróleo durante su construcción : estudio de caso
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Hernández, Facundo C., Jaca, Rossana C., Natalini, Mario Bruno, and Godoy, Luis A.
- Subjects
Tanque ,Imperfecciones ,Etapa constructiva ,Viento ,Colapso - Abstract
Fil: Hernández, Facundo C. Universidad Nacional del Comahue; Argentina. Fil: Jaca, Rossana C. Universidad Nacional del Comahue; Argentina. Fil: Natalini, Mario Bruno. Universidad Nacional del Nordeste. Facultad de Ingeniería; Argentina. Fil: Godoy, Luis A. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales; Argentina. Este trabajo analiza, en forma numérica y experimental, la estabilidad de un tanque cilíndrico de acero de pared delgada sin techo (en etapa de construcción) no anclado, frente a cargas de viento. El tanque estudiado se encuentra en la zona Norte de la Patagonia y colapsó por viento a una velocidad de 50Km/h. Las normas que permiten diseñar los tanques de almacenamiento se concentran en su comportamiento finalizada la construcción, descuidando la etapa constructiva. El presente estudio se desarrolla en dos etapas. En una primera etapa se realiza un análisis fluido-dinámico midiendo presiones sobre modelos de tanques en túnel de viento. En la segunda etapa se analiza la respuesta estructural evaluando numéricamente las cargas que producen pandeo. Para el estudio numérico se simula la estructura por elementos finitos con un código de propósitos múltiples (ABAQUS), mediante análisis de bifurcación lineal y análisis no lineal geométrico con imperfecciones. Los resultados experimentales muestran que las presiones a barlovento en las paredes del tanque se incrementan un 40% debido a las presiones internas y, además, las presiones actuando en la base tienden a levantarla. Los resultados numéricos permiten vincular la carga de colapso en el tanque con las velocidades registradas en el lugar.
- Published
- 2017
44. Pashukanis. La crítica de la forma jurídica en los debates político-legales de la Revolución Rusa
- Author
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Facundo C Rocca
- Subjects
History ,lcsh:HD8031 ,Sociology and Political Science ,forma jurídica ,lcsh:HX1-970.7 ,derecho soviético ,extinción del derecho ,lcsh:D299-475 ,lcsh:Socialism. Communism. Anarchism ,lcsh:Labor in politics. Political activity of the working class ,lcsh:1789 ,escuela del intercambio mercantil - Abstract
La Teoría general del derecho y marxismo de Pashukanis, publicada en 1924, constituye uno de los más fecundos intentos de teoría marxista del derecho que plantea su naturaleza de forma social, destinada a extinguirse en la sociedad comunista. Se mostrará cómo ésta surge de los efectos en el pensamiento de la Revolución de 1917: al mismo tiempo de su impugnación del marxismo de la II Internacional como de las tareas político-prácticas de construcción del socialismo, y se reconstruirán algunos elementos del contexto político intelectual de debate en que ésta se inserta, así como las contradicciones internas de la teoría de la forma jurídica, para intentar elucidar las razones que llevarán a su denuncia como contrarrevolucionaria por el poder estalinista.
- Published
- 2017
45. Understanding and Reducing Photothermal Forces for the Fabrication of Au Nanoparticle Dimers by Optical Printing
- Author
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Stefan A. Maier, Ianina L. Violi, Julian Gargiulo, Fernando D. Stefani, Pablo Albella, Emiliano Cortés, Félix G. Requejo, Facundo C. Herrera, Thomas Brick, and Toshihiko Shibanuma
- Subjects
Technology ,Chemistry, Multidisciplinary ,Nanoparticle ,02 engineering and technology ,SILVER NANOPARTICLES ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,optical forces ,thermo-osmosis ,law ,MANIPULATION ,General Materials Science ,Reduced graphene oxide ,FLUORESCENCE ENHANCEMENT ,Optical forces ,Chemistry, Physical ,THERMOPHORESIS ,Physics ,Química ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Chemistry ,Physics, Condensed Matter ,Colloidal gold ,Physical Sciences ,Science & Technology - Other Topics ,Nanorod ,Thermo-osmosis ,0210 nano-technology ,GRAPHENE ,colloidal patterning ,Thermophoresis ,Materials science ,Fabrication ,Materials Science ,Bioengineering ,Nanotechnology ,Materials Science, Multidisciplinary ,INGENIERÍAS Y TECNOLOGÍAS ,010402 general chemistry ,reduced graphene oxide ,Physics, Applied ,NANORODS ,Nano ,MD Multidisciplinary ,METALLIC NANOPARTICLE ,PARTICLES ,Nanoscience & Nanotechnology ,Plasmon ,Nanotecnología ,Science & Technology ,Graphene ,Mechanical Engineering ,Colloidal patterning ,General Chemistry ,Photothermal therapy ,Nano-materiales ,0104 chemical sciences ,GOLD NANOPARTICLES ,Plasmonics ,SELECTIVE DEPOSITION - Abstract
Optical printing holds great potential to enable the use of the vast variety of colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) in nano- and microdevices and circuits. By means of optical forces, it enables the direct assembly of NPs, one by one, onto specific positions of solid surfaces with great flexibility of pattern design and no need of previous surface patterning. However, for unclear causes it was not possible to print identical NPs closer to each other than 300 nm. Here, we show that the repulsion restricting the optical printing of close by NPs arises from light absorption by the printed NPs and subsequent local heating. By optimizing heat dissipation, it is possible to reduce the minimum separation between NPs. Using a reduced graphene oxide layer on a sapphire substrate, we demonstrate for the first time the optical printing of Au-Au NP dimers. Modeling the experiments considering optical, thermophoretic, and thermo-osmotic forces we obtain a detailed understanding and a clear pathway for the optical printing fabrication of complex nano structures and circuits based on connected colloidal NPs., Instituto de Investigaciones Fisicoquímicas Teóricas y Aplicadas
- Published
- 2017
46. Inorganically coated colloidal quantum dots in polar solvents using a microemulsion-assisted method
- Author
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Daniel Granados, María Acebrón, Beatriz H. Juárez, Cristina Navío, Félix G. Requejo, Martín Mizrahi, Facundo C. Herrera, and Ramón Bernardo-Gavito
- Subjects
General Physics and Astronomy ,quantum dots ,XAFS SAXS XPS ,Nanotechnology ,INGENIERÍAS Y TECNOLOGÍAS ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,core–shell NCs ,01 natural sciences ,Colloid ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,Microemulsion ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Solubility ,Ciencias Exactas ,Nanotecnología ,Extended X-ray absorption fine structure ,Chemistry ,inorganic shell ,Física ,Química ,colloidal nanocrystals ,Nano-materiales ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,XANES ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemical engineering ,Nanocrystal ,microemulsion SILAR ,Absorption (chemistry) ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
The dielectric nature of organic ligands capping semiconductor colloidal nanocrystals (NCs) makes them incompatible with optoelectronic applications. For this reason, these ligands are regularly substituted through ligand-exchange processes by shorter (even atomic) or inorganic ones. In this work, an alternative path is proposed to obtain inorganically coated NCs. Differently to regular ligand exchange processes, the method reported here produces core–shell NCs and the removal of the original organic shell in a single step. This procedure leads to the formation of connected NCs resembling 1D worm-like networks with improved optical properties and polar solubility, in comparison with the initial CdSe NCs. The nature of the inorganic shell has been elucidated by X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (XANES), Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS). The 1D morphology along with the lack of long insulating organic ligands and the higher solubility in polar media turns these structures very attractive for their further integration into optoelectronic devices., Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Instituto de Investigaciones Fisicoquímicas Teóricas y Aplicadas
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Insights into the Oxygen Vacancy Filling Mechanism in CuO/CeO2 Catalysts: A Key Step Toward High Selectivity in Preferential CO Oxidation.
- Author
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Davó-Quiñonero, Arantxa, Bailón-García, Esther, López-Rodríguez, Sergio, Juan-Juan, Jerónimo, Lozano-Castelló, Dolores, García-Melchor, Max, Herrera, Facundo C., Pellegrin, Eric, Escudero, Carlos, and Bueno-López, Agustín
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Robot-Assisted kidney transplantation with regional hypothermia using grafts with multiple vessels: Results from the EAU Robotic Urology Section (ERUS) working group
- Author
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Campi, R., primary, Sessa, F., additional, Decaestecker, K., additional, Tugcu, V., additional, Sahin, S., additional, Alcaraz, A., additional, Musquera, M., additional, Territo, A., additional, Gausa, L., additional, Randon, C., additional, Stockle, M., additional, Janssen, M., additional, Fornara, P., additional, Mohammed, N., additional, Guirado, L., additional, Facundo, C., additional, Doumerc, N., additional, Vignolini, G., additional, Siena, G., additional, Breda, A., additional, and Serni, S., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Unexpected Optical Blue Shift in Large Colloidal Quantum Dots by Anionic Migration and Exchange
- Author
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Acebrón, María, primary, Galisteo-López, Juan F., additional, López, Cefe, additional, Herrera, Facundo C., additional, Mizrahi, Martín, additional, Requejo, Félix G., additional, Palomares, F. Javier, additional, and Juárez, Beatriz H., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Inorganically coated colloidal quantum dots in polar solvents using a microemulsion-assisted method
- Author
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Acebron, Maria, Herrera, Facundo C., Mizrahi, Martin, Navio, Cristina, Bernardo-Gavito, Ramon, Granados, Daniel, Requejo, Felix G., Juarez, Beatriz H., Acebron, Maria, Herrera, Facundo C., Mizrahi, Martin, Navio, Cristina, Bernardo-Gavito, Ramon, Granados, Daniel, Requejo, Felix G., and Juarez, Beatriz H.
- Abstract
The dielectric nature of organic ligands capping semiconductor colloidal nanocrystals (NCs) makes them incompatible with optoelectronic applications. For this reason, these ligands are regularly substituted through ligand-exchange processes by shorter (even atomic) or inorganic ones. In this work, an alternative path is proposed to obtain inorganically coated NCs. Differently to regular ligand exchange processes, the method reported here produces core-shell NCs and the removal of the original organic shell in a single step. This procedure leads to the formation of connected NCs resembling 1D worm-like networks with improved optical properties and polar solubility, in comparison with the initial CdSe NCs. The nature of the inorganic shell has been elucidated by X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (XANES), Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS). The 1D morphology along with the lack of long insulating organic ligands and the higher solubility in polar media turns these structures very attractive for their further integration into optoelectronic devices.
- Published
- 2017
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