Grace Noel (trailthread7)
Our findings provide a therapeutic system based on modular peptide probes to reduce the recurrence of ovarian cancer after surgery, which provides a perspective for the surgical management of ovarian cancer.In this paper, we study theoretically and experimentally the effect of induced charging currents on the fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. As explained in this paper, the phenomenon originates from the coupling between faradaic and capacitive currents in the presence of uncompensated resistance. Due to the existence of induced charging currents, the capacitive contribution to the total current is different from the capacitive current measured in the absence of electroactive species. In this paper, we show that this effect is particularly important when the ratio of the capacitive current and the total current is close to unity, even for a relatively low cell time constant. Consequently, the conventional background subtraction method may be inaccurate in these situations. In this work, we develop a method that separates the faradaic and capacitive currents, combining simulation and experimental data. The method is applicable even in the presence of potential-dependent capacitance. Selleck Daidzein The theoretical results are compared with some previously reported results and with experiments carried out on the potassium ferrocyanide/ferricyanide redox couple. Platinum disk electrodes of different diameters and NaClO4 support electrolyte of different concentrations were used to obtain different cell time constants. The proposed method allowed us to separate the real capacitive current even in the situations where the conventional background subtraction used in many published papers is clearly inappropriate.A novel multichannel sensor array has been designed using a single, yet multiemissive lanthanide-doped upconversion nanoparticle (UCNP). The energy levels of lanthanide ions gave rise to several emission bands which were exploited as individual sensor elements for the recognition of four important neurotransmitters (NTs) dopamine, norepinephrine, levodopa, and serotonin. At alkaline conditions, the oxidation products of these NTs quenched the fluorescence emissions of UCNPs with different quenching degrees. The resulting fingerprint multichannel emission profiles from NaYF4Yb/Er/Tm UCNPs allowed the discrimination of NTs with excellent accuracy. The recognition was further verified in artificial cerebrospinal fluid, as a complex biological media. We believe that the designed UCNP-based multichannel sensor array offers innovative insights into the discrimination of various chemical signatures using a single measurement.Photoluminescence perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) have shown significant potential in optoelectronic applications in view of their narrow band emission with high photoluminescence quantum yields and color tunability. The main obstacle for practical applications is to obtain high durability against an external environment. In this work, a low temperature (50 °C) plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition (PE-ALD) protection strategy was developed to stabilize CsPbBr3 NCs. Silica was employed as the encapsulation layer because of its excellent light transmission performance and water corrosion resistance. The growth mechanism of inorganic SiO2 via PE-ALD was investigated in detail. The Si precursor bis(diethylamino)silane (BDEAS) reacted with the hydroxyl groups (-OH) and thereby initiated the subsequent silica growth while having minimal influence to the organic ligands and did not cause PL quenching. Subsequently, O2 plasma with high reactivity was used to oxidize the amine ligands of the BDEAS precursor while did not etch the NCs. The obtained CsPbBr3 NCs/SiO2 film exhibited exceptional stability in water, light, and heat as compared to the pristine NC film. Based on this method, a white light-emitting diode with improved operational stability was successfully fabricated, which exhibited a wide color gamut (∼126% o