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Design, Synthesis and Catalytic Activity of Di-<i>N</i>-Heterocyclic Carbene Complexes of Nickel and PalladiumPaulose, Tressia Alias Princy 05 August 2009 (has links)
<i>N</i>-heterocyclic carbenes (NHC) have widely been used as spectator ligands in organometallic chemistry. Chelating bidentate di-<i>N-</i>heterocyclic carbenes (diNHC) provide additional entropic stability to their complexes relative to monodentate analogues. The steric and electronic environment around the metal centre can be fine-tuned by varying the substituents on the nitrogen atoms of the diNHC ligand. Synthesis and characterization of air and moisture stable bis(diimidazolylidene)nickel(II) complexes, [(diNHC)2Ni]2+, and their corresponding silver(I) and palladium(II) analogues are described.<p>
Investigations into the catalytic potential of diNHC complexes of nickel as an alternative to palladium systems in carbon-carbon coupling reactions are discussed. In the Suzuki-Miyaura coupling reaction, the [(diNHC)2Ni]2+ complex was active for the coupling of aryl chlorides as well as aryl fluorides. The analogously synthesized Pd(II) complexes resulted in formation of (diNHC)PdCl2 species which were not active for the coupling of aryl fluorides. Transition-metal free coupling reactions were investigated and the results indicated that in the Mizoroki-Heck reaction, aryl iodides could be activated in the absence of nickel or palladium precatalysts when using Na2CO3 or NEt3 as base, while in the Suzuki-Miyaura reaction, aryl iodides and aryl bromides could be activated without any precatalyst when K3PO4 was used as base.<p>
A general route into the synthesis of non-symmetrically substituted ligand precursors has been developed. Synthesis and characterization of non-symmetrically substituted ligand precursors, and their corresponding silver(I), palladium(II) and nickel(II) complexes are described. The activity of one of the non-symmetrically substituted (diNHC)Pd(II) complexes in the Suzuki-Miyaura coupling reaction of bulky substrates has been investigated. Non-symmetrically substituted diNHC ligand precursors with a hemi-labile pyridine arm have been synthesized and their corresponding Ni(II) and Pd(II) complexes are described.<p>
Attempts to synthesize three-coordinate Pd(II) complexes using bulky â-diketiminato ligands are also discussed.
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Predicting Forage Nutritive Value Using an In Vitro Gas Production Technique and Dry Matter Intake of Grazing Animals Using n-AlkanesAguiar, Andre D. 2010 May 1900 (has links)
In the first experiment, forage samples (n = 39) were collected during 4 years (2006
? 2009) from pastures grazed by Santa Gertrudis cattle at the King Ranch, TX. The in vitro
gas production technique (IVGP) was performed to understand the pattern of fermentation
parameters of the forage and obtain fractional digestion rate (kd) values to predict total
digestible nutrients (TDN). The best nonlinear model to describe the IVGP values of the
forages was the two-pool logistic equation. The passage rate (kp) of 4%/h was used.. The kp
predicted by the Large Nutrient Ruminant System (LNRS) model was 3.66%/h. The average
TDN was 55.9% compared to 53.8% using a theoretical equation. In the second experiment,
Brahman bulls (n = 16) grazed Coastal bermudagrass pastures [Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers.]
and stocked at a moderate to low grazing pressure. Three periods of fecal collections were
made within each period. Bulls were individually fed at 0700 and 1900 h of 400 g of corn
gluten pellets containing C32 n-alkanes. Each period was divided in 2 sub periods in which fecal samples were collected 4 times a day (0700, 1100, 1500 and 1900 h). N-alkanes in the
forage and feces were determined using gas chromatography. In the third experiment, four
methods were used to estimate dry matter intake (DMI): C31 or C33 with or without
adjustment for forage C32 (C31_0 and C33_0, respectively). There was a difference between
morning (0700 and 1100 h) and afternoon fecal collections (1500 and 1900 h) on the
predicted DMI using C31 (P = 0.0010), C33 (P = 0.0001), C31_0 (P = 0.0010), or C33_0 (P <
0.0001). There was no difference in average daily gain (ADG) between low and high
residual feed intake (RFI) (P = 0.5709). The nonparametric analysis indicated that preranking
animals for efficiency under confinement conditions does not guarantee (P <
0.0001) similar ranking under grazing conditions when using the alkane technique to
determine forage DMI. In order to estimate DMI at least 5 d of fecal collection and 2 times a
day of collection (0700 and 1500h) are needed to decrease the variability.
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p-type semiconducting Cu2O thin films prepared by reactive magnetron sputtering and a study of its properties and applicationYang, Shun-jie 06 July 2005 (has links)
Polycrystalline p-Cu2O were fabricated by reactive rf magnetron sputtering . we found that The electrical, optical, and crystallographical properties of films were strongly dependent on the deposition condition . Grant size increasing in the range from 10 to 45nm , A hole concentration increasing in the range from 1016 to 1017 cm-3 and a mobility increasing on the order of 10-1 cm2/V s were obtained in the cuprous oxide thin film prepared by controlling work pressure (Argon partial partial pressure ) .
Fabricated thin-film heterojunction diodes consisting of a p-type cuprous oxide combined with and n-type Al-doped ZnO and ITO exhibited a rectifying current-voltage characteristic .
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Structural and functional involvement of N-terminal region in the enzymatic activity of Taiwan cobra phospholipase A2Chiou, Yi-ling 10 August 2006 (has links)
The goal of the present study is to explore the functional involvement of the N-terminal region in the biological activity of phospholipase A2 (PLA2) enzyme. Native PLA2 from the venoms of Naja naja atra and Bungarus multicinctus and N-terminally mutated N. naja atra PLA2, i.e. an additional Met before Asn-1(M-PLA2), substitution of Asn-1 with Met-1(PLA2(N1M)) and removal of N-terminal seven residues (PLA2(¡µN7)), were employed in this study. Mutations on the N-terminal region insignificantly perturbed the binding ability of PLA2 for Ca2+ and ANS, but the enzymatic activity of mutants drastically decreased. Moreover, an alteration in the secondary structure was observed as revealed by CD spectra. Compared to other mutants, the fine structure of Ca2+-binding site within PLA2(¡µN7)) changed. Additionally, removal of the N-terminal region caused significant alternation in the structures of active site and substrate-binding site as evidenced by the results of fluorescence measurement, chemical modification and denaturation with detergents. In all N-terminal mutants, substituting Ans-1 with Met-1 affected the NNA-PLA2 structure to a least extent. The membrane-damage activity of PLA2(N1M) and M-PLA2 was 89% and 34% that of NNA-PLA2, respectively. PLA2(¡µN7) did not exhibit the membrane-damage activity. Studies on the biological activities of chemically modified N. naja atra PLA2 reflected a dissociation of the enzymatic activity from membrane-damage activity, and suggested the involvement of Trp-18, Trp-61, Lys-65, Tyr-3 and Tyr-63 in membrane-damage activity. Collectively, our data indicate that the intact N-terminus was crucial for maintaining of the functional conformation of PLA2 in the manifestation of the enzymatic activity and membrane-damage activity, and the enzymatic activity of PLA2 is in aid of but not exclusively essential for the membrane-damage effect.
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Petroleum Related Organic Compounds in the Sediments of Kaohsiung Harbor and It's Neighboring Coastal Area, TaiwanHsien, Ming-Tsun 13 September 2000 (has links)
Twenty-two sediment samples were collected from Kaohsiung Harbour, and it¡¦s
neighboring coastal area, Taiwan and analysed for a suite of n-C10-C35 aliphatic
hydrocarbons and fifteen polycycilc aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The average total
concentration of n-alkanes was 4.327 £gg/g dry wt. (0.461-22.601 £gg/g dry wt.) and
PAHs was 0.588 £gg/g dry wt. (0.088-1.75 £gg/g dry wt.). The highest n-alkanes and
PAHs concentrations were recorded in samples from D and A stations in Kaohsiung
Harbour ; stations D and A are near the outlets of Chyan-Jenn and Jen-Ai rivers,
respectively. The sources of n-alkanes are probably contributed form origins of
petrogenic, biogenic and higher plants according to the value of CPI (carbon
preference index), chromatogram of UCM (unresolved complex materials), and n-C16
ratio etc.; while PAHs were contributed mainly from combustion in coastal areas and
petrogenic in harbour areas based on the ratios of total combustion and LMW/HMW
ratios. Overall, sediment concentrations of n-alkanes and PAHs in Kaohsiung coastal
area were similar to literature in the world. The potential for biological effects due to
PAHs is found to be low based as their individual PAHs concentrations are in general
lower than effects most existed sediment quality guidelines, except Acenaphthaene,
Anthracene, Benzo[a]anthracene, and Fluorene.
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An ISM-Band Frequency Synthesizer with Closed-Loop GFSK ModulationChen, Hsing-Hung 04 July 2001 (has links)
An ISM-band frequency synthesizer is introduced in this thesis. The technique allows digital phase/frequency modulation to be achieved in a closed phase locked loop (PLL) without mixers and D/As. According to the simulation results using ADS, quantization noise will be filtered by the PLL bandwidth. But the data rate is also bounded by the PLL bandwidth. Two key components of this closed-loop architecture, Gaussian filter and delta-sigma modulator have been implemented by FPGA together with the Qualcomm Q3236 synthesizer IC.
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The dependence of E0+£G0 transition on temperature by photoreflectance spectroscopy of surface-intrinsic-n+ GaAsWang, kuan-kuei 13 June 2003 (has links)
Photoreflectance (PR) of surface-intrinsic-n+ type GaAs has been measured for various temperatures, then we can get the energy of E0+£G0 transition in various temperatures. The spectra exhibited many Franz-Keldysh oscillations, when probe beam¡¦s energy is larger than energy gap. Electric field (F) and transition energy can be determined from analyzing the Franz-Keldysh oscillation. Further more we can get the surface¡¦s Fermi level from the dependence of surface¡¦s electric field (Fs) on temperature (T).
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Asymmetric hydrogenations of aryl alkenes using imidazol-2-ylidene iridium complexesCui, Xiuhua 29 August 2005 (has links)
A library of iridium complexes featuring oxazoline and imidazol-2-ylidene ligands
were synthesized by reaction of a library of imidazoles with a second library of oxazoline
iodides. These complexes were active catalysts for hydrogenations of aryl substituted
monoenes. Tri- and 1,1-disubstituted alkenes were hydrogenated quantitatively with ee??s
up to 99% at 1 atm hydrogen pressure. Catalyst, substrate, temperature and pressure
effects were studied.
The iridium complexes were also used for the kinetic study of hydrogenation of 2,3-
diphenylbutadiene. This hydrogenation is a stepwise reaction: one double bond was
hydrogenated first, then the second one. Both step hydrogenations were zero order in
alkene. The consumption of 2,3-diphenylbutadiene was first order in catalyst, and
probably first order in hydrogen pressure too. The enantioselectivity for the first step
hydrogenation was low. There were match and mismatch catalyst-substrate relationships
for the second step hydrogenation, and the enantioselectivities for this step were catalyst
controlled. NMR studies indicated that the initiation of the reaction involved both
hydrogen and alkene substrate. A competitive experiment was designed to explore the
formation of meso-alkane at first step hydrogenation, and the results indicated that the
alkane was formed predominantly via an associative mechanism.
Four types of conjugate dienes were synthesized and hydrogenated. Different
reactivities and selectivities were obtained for each type of dienes. In the best case, a
diene was hydrogenated quantitatively with an excellent ent/meso ratio of 20:1.0 and
99% enantioselectivity. The scope, limitation and potential applications of the reactions
were discussed. A selection of the dienes was hydrogenated with the Crabtree??s catalyst,
for comparison, and the yields, conversions and diastereoselectivities were inferior to
those from iridium-oxazoline-imidazol-2-ylidene catalysts.
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Effect of HZE radiation and diets rich in fiber and n-3 poly unsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) on colon cancer in ratsGlagolenko, Anna Anatolievna 16 August 2006 (has links)
This study examines the carcinogenic effect of HZE radiation and protective
effects of different types of diets against colon carcinogenesis in a rat model.
The effect of HZE radiation on health state and colon cancer development was
evaluated. HZE radiation was found to suppress food consumption (P<0.0001) leading to
lower body weight gain of irradiated rats when compared to the non-irradiated rats
(P<0.05). The animals exposed to HZE radiation were found to start dying and/or getting
pathologies 11 weeks earlier and at the end of the study had morbidity/mortality rate
14.2% higher (P=0.0005) than non-irradiated rats. There was no significant effect of
HZE radiation on colon cancer incidence.
The effects of dietary fibers and oils on health state and colon carcinogenesis
were evaluated. Morbidity/mortality was found to be delayed in rats fed with pectinbased
diets when compared to cellulose-based diet, regardless of radiation treatment.
Similarly, fish oil was found to beneficially affect health of the experimental animals
when compared to corn oil. Ten- and twenty-week delayed morbidity/mortality for
irradiated and non-irradiated groups, respectively, was observed for rats fed with fish
oil-based diets when compared to corn oil-based diets. Fish oil was also found to
significantly reduce colon tumor incidence and multiplicity in non-irradiated rats
(P<0.05). A similar trend was observed for the irradiated animals. No significant effect
of fiber on colon cancer incidence was found.
Finally, the effect of diets on general health and colon cancer development was
investigated. Rats fed with corn oil/cellulose diet started dying and/or getting a disease
earlier than rats fed with other diets, regardless of radiation treatment. The effect of diet
on colon cancer development was found to depend on radiation treatment. Thus, in the
absence of radiation treatment fish oil/cellulose was found to significantly reduce tumor
incidence and multiplicity when compared to corn oil/pectin diet (P<0.05). In the
presence of radiation treatment fish oil/pectin was found to lower the values of tumor
incidence and tumor multiplicity, though the data obtained were not significant.
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The selective effect of dietary n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids on murine Th1 and Th2 cell developmentZhang, Ping 30 October 2006 (has links)
To examine how dietary n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids affect Th2 cell development, female C57BL/6 mice were fed a washout corn oil (CO) diet for 1 wk followed by 2 wk of either the same CO diet or a fish oil (FO) diet. CD4+ T cells were isolated from spleens and cultured under both neutral (anti-CD3 and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)) and Th2 polarizing conditions (anti-CD3 and PMA, in presence of rIL-4, rIL-2, and anti-IFN-ó) in the presence of homologous mouse serum (HMS) or fetal bovine serum (FBS) for 2 d. Dietary n-3 PUFA significantly enhanced Th2 cell development and suppressed Th1 development under neutral conditions as assessed by intracellular cytokine staining for IL-4 and IFN-ó as the two prototypic Th2 and Th1 cytokines, respectively. However, under Th2 polarizing conditions, while the suppression of Th1 cells was maintained in FO-fed mice, no dietary effect was observed in Th2 cells. Dietary FO increased the Th2/Th1 ratio under both neutral and Th2 polarizing conditions with HMS in the cultures. To examine the effect of dietary n-3 PUFA on Th1 development, DO11.10 Rag2-/- mice expressing transgenic T cell receptor specific for ovalbumin (OVA) peptide were used. CD4+ T cells were isolated from spleens and lymph nodes and stimulated with ovalbumin (OVA) peptide and irradiated BALB/c splenocytes in the presence of rIL-12, anti-IL-4, and rIL-2 in HMS for 2d. Cells were expanded for another 3 d in the presence of rIL-2 and rIL-12. Dietary n-3 PUFA did not affect Th1 differentiation as assessed by the proportion of IFN-ó+, IL-4- T cells in the cultures, but suppressed rIL-2 induced expansion. The suppressed expansion was due to suppressed proliferation (p<0.05). In vivo expansion of antigen-specific T cells was visualized by flow cytometric analysis of CFSE-positive transgenic T cells. Dietary n-3 PUFA did not appear to affect antigen-induced CD4+ T cell cycle progression in vivo. Overall, these results suggest dietary n-3 PUFA have no direct effect on Th2 cell development but do directly suppress Th1 cell development following both mitogenic and antigenic stimulation in vitro.
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