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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

Tissue and Cellular Responses to Chronic In Vivo Heating

Liu, Erin Heng-Yu 25 May 2004 (has links)
No description available.
142

DESIGN OF CONTROLLED AND TARGETED THERMAL SENSITIZER FOR ENHANCING RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION

Krupka, Tianyi M. January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
143

Dosimetric Calculation of a Thermo Brachytherapy Seed: A Monte Carlo Study

Khan, Nadeem 18 December 2008 (has links)
No description available.
144

Aqueous syntheses of transition metal oxide nanoparticles for bioapplications

Worden, Matthew 07 December 2015 (has links)
No description available.
145

Probing the Magnetic Relaxation Dynamics and Optical Properties of Superparamagnetic Iron-Oxide (Fe3O4) Nanoparticles for Biomedical Applications

Sadat, Md Ehsan January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
146

Thermal tolerance of skeletal muscle and small intestine: role of eicosanoid metabolism and oxidative stress

Oliver, Scott Ryan 30 September 2009 (has links)
No description available.
147

Nanoscale thermal transport for biological and physical applications

Liangruksa, Monrudee 03 January 2012 (has links)
Nanotechnology has made it possible to create materials with unique properties. This development offers new opportunities and overcomes challenges for many thermal transport applications. Yet, it requires a more fundamental scientific understanding of nanoscale transport. This thesis emphasizes how simulation, mathematical, and numerical methods can lead to more grounded studies of nanoscale thermal transport for biological and physical applications. For instance, magnetic fluid hyperthermia (MFH), an emerging cancer treatment, is a noninvasive method to selectively destroy a tumor by heating a ferrofluid-impregnated malignant tissue with minimal damage to the surrounding healthy tissue. We model the problem by considering an idealized spherical tumor that is surrounded by healthy tissue. The dispersed magnetic nanoparticles in the tumor are excited by an AC magnetic field to generate heat. The temperature distribution during MFH is investigated through a bioheat transfer relation which indicates that the P\'eclet, Joule, and Fourier numbers are the more influential parameters that determine the heating during such a thermotherapy. Thus, we show that a fundamental parametric investigation of the heating of soft materials can provide pathways for optimal MFH design. Since ferrofluid materials themselves play a key role in heating, we examine six materials that are being considered as candidates for MFH use. These are simulated to investigate the heating of ferrofluid-loaded tumors. We show that iron-platinum, magnetite, and maghemite are viable MFH candidates since they are able to provide the desired heating of a tumor which will destroy it while keeping the surrounding healthy tissues at a relatively safe temperature. Recent advances in the synthesis and nanofabrication of electron devices have lead to diminishing feature sizes. This has in turn increased the power dissipation per unit area that is required to cool the devices, leading to a serious thermal management challenge. The phonon thermal conductivity is an important material property because of its role in thermal energy transport in semiconductors. A higher thermal conductivity material is capable of removing more heat since higher frequency phonons are able to travel through it. In this thesis, the effects of surface stress on the lattice thermal conductivity are presented for a silicon nanowire. Based on a continuum approach, a phonon dispersion relation is derived for a nanowire that is under surface stress and the phonon relaxation time is employed to subsequently determine its thermal conductivity. The surface stress is found to significantly influence the phonon dispersion and thus the Debye temperature. Consequently, the phonon thermal conductivity decreases with increasing surface stress. Different magnitudes of surface stress could arise from various material coatings and through different nanofabrication processes, effects of which are generally unclear and not considered. Our results show how such variations in surface stress can be gainfully used in phonon engineering and to manipulate the thermal conductivity of a nanomaterial. The thermal transport during thermoelectric cooling is also an important property since thermoelectric devices are compact, reliable, easy to control, use no refrigerants and require lower maintenance than do more traditional refrigeration devices. We focus on the Thomson effect that occurs when there is a current flow in the presence of a temperature gradient in the material, and investigate its influence on an intrinsic silicon nanowire cooler. The temperature dependence of the Thomson effect has a significant influence on the cooling temperature. We also consider thermal nonequilibrium between electrons and phonons over the carrier cooling length in the nanowire. The results show that a strong energy exchange between electrons and phonons lowers the cooling performance, suggesting useful strategies for thermoelectric device design. / Ph. D.
148

Resonance-Based Techniques for Microwave Breast Cancer Applications

Hong, Sun 30 October 2012 (has links)
It is well known that a finite-size scatterer has a set of natural resonances, which are uniquely determined by the physical properties of the scatterer. This is also the case for a breast tumor which can be regarded as a dielectric scatterer. Since the scatterer is naturally "tuned" at the resonances, it is expected that an increased electromagnetic coupling would take place at the resonance frequencies compared to other frequencies. For a breast tumor, this would mean a higher power absorption, indicating a faster temperature increase resulting in more efficient hyperthermia. In this dissertation, an adaptive microwave concept is demonstrated for breast cancer applications. The general approach is to detect and identify the tumor-specific resonance, determine the electrical location of the tumor, and apply the focused microwave hyperthermia using the identified resonance and the electrical location. The natural resonances vary depending on the tumor size, shape, and breast tissue configuration. Therefore, an adaptive tuning of the microwave source to tumor-specific resonance frequencies could improve the overall efficiency of hyperthermia treatment by allowing for a faster and more effective heating to achieve a desired therapeutic temperature level. Applying the singularity expansion method (SEM), both the resonances and the electrical location can be obtained from the poles and residues, respectively. This SEM-based approach is computationally inexpensive and can easily be implemented as a combination processing into emerging UWB microwave systems. Alternatively, a relatively simple microwave system based on this concept can potentially be used in conjunction with existing mammography. / Ph. D.
149

Intracellular Transport in Cancer Treatments: Carbon Nanohorns Conjugated to Quantum Dots and Chemotherapeutic Agents

Zimmermann, Kristen Ann 05 June 2012 (has links)
Cancer therapies are often limited by bulk and cellular barriers to transport. Nanoparticle or chemotherapeutic compound intracellular transport has implications in understanding therapeutic effect and toxicity. The scope of this thesis was to study the intracellular transport of carbon nanohorns and to improve the efficacy of various chemotherapeutic agents through increased intracellular transport. In the first study, fluorescent probes (quantum dots) were conjugated to carbon nanohorns to facilitate the optical visualization of the nanohorns. These hybrid particles were characterized with transmission electron microscopy, electron dispersive spectroscopy and UV-VIS/FL spectroscopy. Their cellular uptake kinetics, uptake efficiencies, and intracellular distribution were determined in three malignant cell lines (breast – MDA-MB-231, bladder – AY-27, and brain – U87-MG) using flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Intracellular distribution did not vary greatly between cell lines; however, the uptake kinetics and efficiencies were highly dependent on cell morphology. In the second study, the efficacy of various chemotherapeutic agents (i.e., doxorubicin, cisplatin, and carboplatin) was evaluated in AY-27 rat bladder transitional cell carcinoma cells. In the future, severe hyperthermia and chemothermotherapy (chemotherapy + hyperthermia) will also be evaluated. Doxorubicin and cisplatin compounds were more toxic compared to carboplatin. Hyperthermia has previously shown to increase the cellular uptake of chemotherapeutic agents; therefore, chemothermotherapy is expected to have synergistic effects on cell death. This work can then be translated to carbon nanohorn-based laser heating to generate thermal energy in a local region for delivery of high concentrations of chemotherapeutic agents. Although these two concepts are small pieces of the overall scope of nanoparticle-based therapies, they are fundamental to the advancement of such therapies. / Master of Science
150

Designing and Building a Novel Magnetic Heating System to Investigate the Dependence of the Magnetic System and the Optical Emission from Nanoparticles

Algaddafi, Ali E. January 2022 (has links)
A Magnetic Heating Coil (MHC) has been designed, which has the potential to interact with magnetic Nanoparticles (NPs) to produce local temperature changes. The aim is to design a device capable of studying medically targeted magnetic-fluorescent core-shell NPs (with potential applications in cancer therapy via hyperthermia). Very little is known about how the magnetic-fluorescent NPs respond to magnetic fields and the effect this would have on their optical properties, therefore, considerable work is still required in order to understand the detailed interactions. Several modelling and simulations of the MHC were conducted besides developing the MHC that was designed and built for small samples of NPs (1-10ml volumes). Two different heating coil geometries were examined (coil A and coil B), where the former operates at 83 kHz and the latter operates at 125 kHz. Several tests for fluorescent emission, lifetime and anisotropy with several different NPs samples were conducted. We found that as the temperature increased from 5 °C to 45 °C, the fluorescence lifetime dropped from 3.8 ns to 3.6 ns. Also, the correlation time of the fluorescence in dilute solutions with varying temperatures from 20 °C to 40 °C was investigated, and it was found that decreased from 0.9 ns to 0.6 ns showing that the rotational diffusion of the dye increased and the molecules become more mobile. The MNPs were found to quench the fluorescent emission at high concentrations. Also, the MNPs induce only a small change in a lifetime from 3.9 ns to 3.4 ns. / Libyan Higher Ministry of Education

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