• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 237
  • 74
  • 67
  • 43
  • 8
  • 6
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 687
  • 211
  • 123
  • 122
  • 92
  • 89
  • 84
  • 79
  • 67
  • 65
  • 63
  • 63
  • 58
  • 57
  • 56
  • 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.
541

Modification of aspect ratio and surface charge to decrease sequestration of MRI contrast nanomaterials

Van Gordon, Kyle 30 June 2020 (has links)
Contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are but one of a variety of nanosystems that have incredible potential for the detection and diagnosis of cancer. Nanosystems share a common disadvantage: they are quickly sequestered by biological processes that clear foreign material from the body, requiring ever larger doses to accumulate in targets, and reducing their overall effectiveness and viability. This thesis explores a pair of strategies for nanomaterials to boost their evasiveness from these defensive systems in the context of lanthanide MRI contrast agents, in an attempt to increase their probability to collect in cancerous tissue. Chapter 1 provides precedent and rationale for the modification of two parameters regarding novel nanosystem design: aspect ratio and zeta potential. Chapter 2 details the controlled syntheses and analysis of sodium dysprosium fluoride nanomaterials at a range of aspect ratios. Chapter 3 concerns the construction of tunable zwitterionic polymer coatings for synthesized nanomaterials to demonstrate control over the zeta potential in aqueous dispersion. Chapter 4 tests polymer-coated spherical nanoparticles and nanorods for internalization into or adsorbance onto a cancerous cell line. Chapter 5 summarizes the work of the previous chapters and suggests future research approaches. Though internalization or adsorbance onto HeLa cells was not observed for prepared nanomaterials, control over their aspect ratio at the synthetic level and zeta potential via constructed zwitterionic polymers was demonstrated, with implications for application to a plethora of nanosystems. / Graduate
542

Nitride-Based Nanocomposite Thin Films Towards Tunable Nanostructures and Functionalities

Xuejing Wang (9099860) 29 July 2020 (has links)
<p> Optical metamaterials have triggered extensive studies driven by their fascinating electromagnetic properties that are not observed in natural materials. Aside from the extraordinary progress, challenges remain in scalable processing and material performance which limit the adoption of metamaterial towards practical applications. The goal of this dissertation is to design and fabricate nanocomposite thin films by combining nitrides with a tunable secondary phase to realize controllable multi-functionalities towards potential device applications. Transition metal nitrides are selected for this study due to the inherit material durability and low-loss plasmonic properties that offer stable two-phase hybridization for potential high temperature optical applications. Using a pulsed laser deposition technique, the nitride-metal nanocomposites are self-assembled into various geometries including pillar-in-matrix, embedded nanoinclusions or complex multilayers, that possess large surface coverage, high epitaxial quality, and sharp phase boundary. The nanostructures can be further engineered upon precise control of growth parameters. </p><p> This dissertation is composed of a general review of related background and experimental approaches, followed by four chapters of detailed research chapters. The first two research chapters involve hybrid metal (Au, Ag) - titanium nitride (TiN) nanocomposite thin films where the metal phase is self-assembled into sub-20 nm nanopillars and further tailored in terms of packing density and tilting angles. The tuning of plasmonic resonance and dielectric constant have been achieved by changing the concentration of Au nanopillars, or the tuning of optical anisotropy and angular selectivity by changing the tilting angle of Ag nanopillars. Towards applications, the protruded Au nanopillars are demonstrated to be highly functional for chemical bonding detection or surface enhanced sensing, whereas the embedded Ag nanopillars exhibit enhanced thermal and mechanical stabilities that are promising for high temperature plasmonic applications. In the last two chapters, dissimilar materials candidates beyond plasmonics have been incorporated to extend the electromagnetic properties, include coupling metal nanoinclusions into a wide bandgap semiconducting aluminum nitride matrix, as well as inserting a dielectric spacer between the hybrid plasmonic claddings for geometrical tuning and electric field enhancement. As a summary, these studies present approaches in addressing material and fabrication challenges in the field of plasmonic metamaterials from fundamental materials perspective. As demonstrated in the following chapters, these hybrid plasmonic nanocomposites provide multiple advantages towards tunable optical or biomedical sensing, high temperature plasmonics, controllable metadevices or nanophotonic chips.</p><div><br></div>
543

MECHANOCHEMICAL EXFOLIATION OF GRAPHENE IN VOLATILE ORGANIC SOLVENTS

Muhammed Ramazan Oduncu (12885026) 17 June 2022 (has links)
<p>  </p> <p>Graphene is a two-dimensional (2-D) sheet of <em>sp2</em> hybridized carbon atoms with extraordinary thermal, electrical, and mechanical properties. Among numerous sophisticated and costly synthesis techniques including chemical vapor deposition (CVD), SiC and microwave plasma; liquid-phase exfoliation (LPE) has been one of the most widely used techniques for low-cost and large scale graphene synthesis since it was first reported in 2008. LPE involves the use of liquid media to exfoliate graphite precursors directly into mono- or few-layered graphene. Stable dispersions of few-layered graphene are desirable for thin-film deposition on a large scale but are limited by the use of polar organic solvents with high boiling points and unfavorable toxicity profiles. This limitation can be overcome by milling and exfoliation of graphene nanoplatelets (GrNPs) in ethyl acetate (EtOAc) and acetone, volatile solvents with low toxicity profiles and modest environmental impact. Solvent-assisted grinding of pristine GrNPs on a horizontal ball mill followed by sonication produces concentrated suspensions up to 356 µg/mL that remain stable at room temperature for a minimum of 6 weeks without the addition of surfactants. Exfoliated graphene layers have an average thickness of 4.5 nm which corresponds to 10–12 layers of graphene on Si/SiO2 substrates. EtOAc and acetone-based dispersions of exfoliated graphene can be deposited uniformly using conventional airbrush equipment as low-boiling point solvents evaporates instantaneously after deposition. This deposition method also provides freedom regarding to target substrate and overcomes any substrate related limitations observed in other techniques. Practical demonstrations of spray-coated graphene films include (i) conductive surfaces with sheet resistance as low as 1 kΩ/sq, and (ii) solid contacts for disposable and low-cost nitrate-selective electrodes, with high reproducibility in the voltage readouts across multiple sensors.</p>
544

Scalable Continuous Synthesis of Metal and Metal-oxide based Nanomaterials through Jet-mixing

Ranadive, Pinaki Manoj January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
545

GREEN SYNTHESIS OF METAL NANORODS - EXPLOITING NOVEL BIOLOGICAL TEMPLATES: BARLEY STRIPE MOSAIC VIRUS VIRUS-LIKE PARTICLES

Yu-Hsuan Lee (5930717) 05 May 2021 (has links)
<p>Nanotechnology has experienced a tremendous rise in the last decade. The synthesis of nanomaterials of defined structure and controlled properties is one of the most challenging part. Solution processing bottom-up fabrication techniques enables the facile synthesis of low dimension and ordered structures with low cost through the self-assembly of basic building blocks. Biotemplating has become an emerging field in which natural biomolecular objects are utilized for creating functional, hierarchical, controlled patterned structures with nanometric precision. It is a capital effective, eco-friendly and energy-efficient synthetic process. Viral biotemplating has shown great potential in electronics, environmental and biomedical devices. In recent years, in-planta produced Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) and its variants have been used to produce metal nanorods and nanowires of monodisperse structures under mild conditions without the use of harsh chemical treatments although there remains much to be understood. Mass production of biotemplate, programming of viral particles of desired functionalities, manipulation for biomineralized metal materials of good quality have not been sufficiently studied to allow for directed synthesis. The fundamental studies on platform development for viral biotemplate production, design of viral proteins carrying engineered properties, and the hydrothermal synthesis of biotemplated metal nanomaterials, which create great uniformity and high coverage are of interest in this dissertation. Three experimental studies are outlined.<br></p><p><br></p><p>A novel virus biotemplate, Barley stripe mosaic virus (BSMV) virus-like particle is designed and engineered through genetic engineering. By fusing the Origin of Assembly from TMV to the transcript encoding BSMV capsid protein, the self-assembly of BSMV-VLP nanorod from microbial-based protein expression system was achieved for the first time. An alternate platform for viral particle production has been developed. Optimization of VLP expression, purification and processing conditions are performed. This developed alternative E. coli production platforms offer unique opportunities for genetic engineering and faster protein expression; therefore, the development of our system enables rapid design-build-test cycles for the engineering and production of BSMV-VLPs with desired properties. Results in this project shows the power of genetic engineering and serves as a springboard for genetic engineering of the VLPs.<br></p><p><br></p><p>Programming on BSMV-VLP is further used to decouple the VLP assembly into governing internal molecular interactions. To drive the nucleic acid free helical BSMV-VLP rod assembly and further increase the stability of capsid proteins, an identification of Caspar Carboxylate cluster in BSMV is performed. Various carboxylate residues were selected through protein crystal structure and examined systematically through experimental work. By introducing mutations on selected residues, the intersubunit carboxylate interaction of the proteins was significantly altered, resulting in an in vivo production of nucleic-acid free BSMV-VLP assembly for the first time. The change in interactions leads to increased stability of the modified VLP, enabling the formation of longer nanorods with lengths over one micrometer. Moreover, both wild-type and mutated BSMV-VLPs were shown to have great structural stability across a wide range of pHs. Overall, we exhibit experimental identification to systematically probe the key carboxylate interactions to increase the stability of proteins and drive RNA-free BSMV-VLP assembly. This project greatly expands the potential usefulness of the engineered BSMV-VLP biotemplates for a wide variety of applications.<br></p><p><br></p><p>Finally, to demonstrate the versatile uses of BSMV-VLP in biotemplating, the new biotemplate was utilized to expand understandings on the directed synthesis of metal nanostructures. By using the hydrothermal synthesis, VLPs were successfully utilized to synthesize monometallic palladium nanorods with a wide range of length scales. The VLP-mediated nanorods are more uniformly and fully-covered than the ones synthesized with in planta-produced BSMV virion. Besides, the synthesis shows an effective control over the metal nanorod diameter. The capability of BSMV-VLP was readily expanded from the synthesis of monometallic nanorods to bimetallic hybrid. In the absence of an exogenous reducing agent, mineralization of platinum, gold and copper was successfully demonstrated on the VLP. It is attributed to lower reduction barrier introduced by already-deposited palladium nanoparticles which serve as nucleation sites for subsequent metal reduction. The formation of bimetallic complexes was further supported by STEM, EDS and XPS analysis evidenced the presences of multiple metals. Overall, BSMV-VLP-mediated biotemplating using the hydrothermal synthesis has been confirmed to be a promising and feasible approach to create organic-inorganic complex nanocomposite.<br></p><p><br></p><p>Lastly, to move toward an application, the synthesized Pd nanorods coated with full coverage and great uniformity of nanoparticles were utilized as an exciting hydrogen sensing material. The developed hydrogen sensing system using a quartz crystal microbalance shows a fast response toward hydrogen as well as the ability of hydrogen detection and quantification of the adsorption capacity. This study serves as an entry point and opens up enormous possibility for next-generation of Pd-virus hybrid hydrogen sensors.<br></p><p><br></p><p>Taken together, this dissertation has demonstrated the engineering and production of a novel BSMV virus-like particle bacterial system. This alternative platform and developed parameter space for VLP production is genetically tractable and requires significantly shorter processing duration for large-scale and mass production. The BSMV-VLP biotemplated metal nanomaterials present great qualities and controllable dimensions. This approach has explored the synthetic palette and opened up enormous possibilities in the bottom-up nanofabrication of versatile and tunable organic-inorganic nanoscaled complex and would facilitate future engineering industrial applications.<br></p>
546

An Approach to Extending Ontologies in the Nanomaterials Domain

Leshi, Olumide January 2020 (has links)
As recently as the last decade or two, data-driven science workflows have become increasingly popular and semantic technology has been relied on to help align often parallel research efforts in the different domains and foster interoperability and data sharing. However, a key challenge is the size of the data and the pace at which it is being generated, so much that manual procedures lag behind. Thus, eliciting automation of most workflows. In this study, the effort is to continue investigating ways by which some tasks performed by experts in the nanotechnology domain, specifically in ontology engineering, could benefit from automation. An approach, featuring phrase-based topic modelling and formal topical concept analysis is further motivated, together with formal implication rules, to uncover new concepts and axioms relevant to two nanotechnology-related ontologies. A corpus of 2,715 nanotechnology research articles helps showcase that the approach can scale, as seen in a number of experiments conducted. The usefulness of document text ranking as an alternative form of input to topic models is highlighted as well as the benefit of implication rules to the task of concept discovery. In all, a total of 203 new concepts are uncovered by the approach to extend the referenced ontologies
547

Nanocellulose surface functionalization for in-situ growth of zeolitic imidazolate framework 67 and 8

Abdulla, Beyar January 2020 (has links)
This master’s thesis was conducted at the Department of Nanotechnology and Functional Materials at Ångström Laboratory as part of an on-going project to develop hybrid nanocomposites from Cladophora cellulose and a sub-type of metal-organic frameworks; zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs). By utilizing a state-of-the-art interfacial synthesis approach, in-situ growth of ZIF particles on the cellulose could be achieved. TEMPO-mediated oxidation was diligently used to achieve cellulose nanofibers with carboxylate groups on their surfaces. These were ion-exchanged to promote growth of ZIF particles in a nanocellulose solution and lastly, metal ions and organic linkers which the ZIFs are composed of were added to the surface functionalized and ion-exchanged nanocellulose solution to promote ZIF growth. By vacuum filtration, mechanical pressing and furnace drying; freestanding nanopapers were obtained. A core-shell morphology between the nanocellulose and ZIF crystals was desired and by adjusting the metal ion concentration, a change in morphologies was expected. The nanocomposites were investigated with several relevant analytical tools to confirm presence, attachment and in-situ growth of ZIF crystal particles upon the surface of the fine nanocellulose fibers. Both the CNF@ZIF-67 and CNF@ZIF-8 nanocomposites were successfully prepared as nanopapers with superior surface areas and thermal properties compared to pure TEMPO-oxidized cellulose nanopapers. The CNF@ZIFs showcased hierarchical porosities, stemming from the micro- and mesoporous ZIFs and nanocellulose, respectively. Also, it was demonstrated that CNF@ZIF-8 selectively adsorbed CO2 over N2. Partial formation of core-shell structure could be obtained, although a relationship between increased metal ions and ZIF particle morphology could not wholly be observed.
548

THE FABRICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF METAL OXIDE NANOPARTICLES EMPLOYED IN ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICITY AND POLYMERIC NANOCOMPOSITE APPLICATIONS

Hancock, Matthew Logan 01 January 2019 (has links)
Ceria (cerium oxide) nanomaterials, or nanoceria, have commercial catalysis and energy storage applications. The cerium atoms on the surface of nanoceria can store or release oxygen, cycling between Ce3+ and Ce4+, and can therefore act as a therapeutic to relieve oxidative stress within living systems. Nanoceria dissolution is present in acidic environments in vivo. In order to accurately define the fate of nanoceria in vivo, nanoceria dissolution or stabilization is observed in vitro using acidic aqueous environments. Nanoceria stabilization is a known problem even during its synthesis; in fact, a carboxylic acid, citric acid, is used in many synthesis protocols. Citric acid adsorbs onto nanoceria surfaces, capping particle formation and creating stable dispersions with extended shelf lives. Nanoceria was shown to agglomerate in the presence of some carboxylic acids over a time scale of up to 30 weeks, and degraded in others, at pH 4.5 (representing that of phagolysosomes). Sixteen carboxylic acids were tested: citric, glutaric, tricarballylic, α-hydroxybutyric, β-hydroxybutyric, adipic, malic, acetic, pimelic, succinic, lactic, tartronic, isocitric, tartaric, dihydroxymalonic, and glyceric acid. Each acid was introduced as 0.11 M, into pH 4.5 iso-osmotic solutions. Controls such as ammonium nitrate, sodium nitrate, and water were also tested to assess their effects on nanoceria dissolution and stabilization. To further test stability, nanoceria suspensions were subject to light and dark milieu, simulating plant environments and biological systems, respectively. Light induced nanoceria agglomeration in some, but not all ligands, and is likely to be a result of UV irradiation. Light initiates free radicals generated from the ceria nanoparticles. Some of the ligands completely dissolved the nanoceria when exposed to light. Citric and malic acids form coordination complexes with cerium on the surface of the ceria nanoparticle that can inhibit agglomeration. This approach identifies key functional groups required to prevent nanoceria agglomeration. The impact of each ligand on nanoceria was analyzed and will ultimately describe the fate of nanoceria in vivo. In addition, simulated biological fluid (SBF) exposure can change nanoceria’s surface properties and biological activity. The citrate-coated nanoceria physicochemical properties such as size, morphology, crystallinity, surface elemental composition, and charge were determined before and after exposure to simulated lung, gastric, and intestinal fluids. SBF exposure resulted in either loss or overcoating of nanoceria’s surface citrate by some of the SBF components, greater nanoceria agglomeration, and small changes in the zeta potential. Nanocomposites are comprised of a polymer matrix embedded with nanoparticles. These nanoparticles can alter material and optical properties of the polymer. SR-399 (dipentaerythritol pentaacrylate) is a fast cure, low skin irritant monomer that contains five carbon-carbon double bonds (C=C). It is a hard, flexible polymer, and also resistant to abrasion. It can be used as a sealant, binder, coating, and as a paint additive. In this case, metal oxide nanoparticles were added to the monomer prior to polymerization. Titania nanoparticles are known to absorb UV light due to their photocatalytic nature. Titania nanoparticles were chosen due to their high stability, non-toxicity, and are relatively quick, easy, and inexpensive to manufacture. Channels in thin monomer films were created using a ferrofluid manipulated by magnetic fields. The mechanical properties of a microfluidic device by rapid photopolymerization is dependent on the crosslinking gradient observed throughout the depth of the film. Quantitative information regarding the degree of polymerization of thin film polymers polymerized by free radical polymerization through the application of UV light is crucial to estimate material properties. In general, less cure leads to more flexibility, and more cure leads to brittleness. The objective was to quantify the degree of polymerization to approximate the C=C concentration and directly relate it to the mechanical properties of the polymer. Polymerization of C=C groups was conducted using a photoinitiator and an UV light source from one surface of a thin film of a multifunctional monomer. The C=C fraction in the film was found to vary with film depth and UV light intensity. The extents of conversion and crosslinking estimates were compared to local mechanical moduli and optical properties. A mathematical model linking the mechanical properties to the degree of polymerization, C=C composition, as a function of film depth and light intensity was then developed. For a given amount of light energy, one can predict the hardness and modulus of elasticity. The correlation between the photopolymerization and the mechanical properties can be used to optimize the mechanical properties of thin films within the manufacturing and energy constraints, and should be scalable to other multifunctional monomer systems.
549

Dielectric investigations on attograms and zeptograms of matter / Etudes diélectriques sur des attogrammes et zeptogrammes de matière

Houachtia, Afef 13 January 2016 (has links)
Les recherches sur des attogrammes (1 attogramme = 10 -18 gramme) et zeptogrammes (1 zeptogramme = 10-21 gramme) de matière offrent la possibilité de mettre en évidence la transition entre la nanoscience et la physique des molécules, ouvrant la porte à des questions fondamentales en physique de la matière molle, comme par exemple ‘’Quelle est la quantité minimale de matière nécessaire pour ‘‘définir’’ les propriétés des matériaux ?’’. Les propriétés électriques et diélectriques des matériaux, à cette échelle, sont étudiées par la spectroscopie diélectrique. Cette technique offre une large gamme de fréquence, pour mesurer les propriétés diélectriques des matériaux, couvrant plus de 10 ordres de grandeur et allant de 10-3 à 10+7 Hz. Cette technique assure une caractérisation précise d’une grande diversité des phénomènes physiques qui se déroulent à des échelles de longueur et de temps différents, tels que: les transitions des phases, les fluctuations de densité, les fluctuations moléculaires, le transport des charges, etc. Les mesures à l’échelle des attogrammes et zeptogrammes nécessitent l’utilisation des cellules ayant des dimensions nanométriques. Basé sur le concept d’utiliser des nano-conteneurs comme des cellules expérimentales, un développement expérimental a été mis en évidence, dans cette thèse, permettant d’étudier la dynamique moléculaire et les transitions des phases des matériaux polymères, allant jusqu’au zeptogrammes de matière. Cette approche permet de cristalliser des très petites quantités des matériaux sous l’application d’un champ électrique élevé, dans le but d’induire une cohérence macroscopique des fonctions moléculaires. Cela peut donner lieu à des nouvelles propriétés des matériaux, qui n’existent pas dans le cas des matériaux en masse / Dielectric investigations on attograms (1 attogram = 10 -18 gram) and zeptograms of matter (1 zeptogram = 10 -21 gram) offer the possibility of exploring the transition between nanoscience and molecule physics, opening the door for fundamental questions in soft-matter physics, such as for instance “What is the minimum amount of matter necessary to “define” the material properties?”. The electric and dielectric properties of materials at this level are investigated by Broadband Dielectric Spectroscopy. This technique provides an extraordinary broad frequency range, for measuring dielectric properties of matter, covering more than 10 orders of magnitude, typically from 10-3 to 10+7Hz. It ensures a precise characterization of large diversity of physical phenomena taking place at different length and time scales such as: phase transitions, density fluctuations, molecular fluctuations, charge transport processes, etc. Measurements on the scale of attograms and zeptograms require sample cells having all three dimensions on the nanometric length-scale. Based on the concept of employing nanocontainers as experimental cells, a novel experimental development allowing investigations on molecular dynamics and phase transitions of polymeric materials down to the level of zeptograms is demonstrated in the present PhD study. This approach enables one to crystallize tiny amounts of matter under high electric fields with the goal of inducing a macroscopic coherence of molecular functionalities. This could give rise to new material properties, not naturally available in the case of bulk materials.
550

Development of Bismuth Oxide-Based Materials for Iodide Capture and Photocatalysis

Zhang, Liping 26 November 2018 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0784 seconds