scholarly journals Lanthanide luminescent logic gate mimics in soft matter: [H+] and [F−] dual-input device in a polymer gel with potential for selective component release

2015 ◽  
Vol 51 (92) ◽  
pp. 16565-16568 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel J. Bradberry ◽  
Joseph P. Byrne ◽  
Colin P. McCoy ◽  
Thorfinnur Gunnlaugsson

Non-covalent incorporation of responsive luminescent lanthanide into a polymer gel produces three-output logic circuit with significant naked-eye colour changes.

2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (24) ◽  
pp. 15654-15660 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lina Zhang ◽  
Hui Zhang ◽  
Mei Liu ◽  
Bin Dong
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 460-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Changlin Zhao ◽  
Zhiqiang Wang ◽  
Xueqing Gong ◽  
Qisong Zhang ◽  
Chengyun Wang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Mohammad Zulkarnain O. ◽  
Amar Faiz Z.A. ◽  
Syahrul Hisham M. ◽  
Nur Dalila K.A. ◽  
N. Ismail

To supplement conventional teaching methods, use of new technology have recently being adapted in the current education system. Such examples are implementing simulators and quiz kits in a classroom session to assist teachers in providing standardized evaluation or practical and more direct examples of concepts that are being taught. Additionally, the well-known issue of attracting student interest in a so-called uninteresting conventional lecture may be solved by using this technological method. The objective of this works to provide methods on developing a prototype training kit (named as e-Logic trainer kit or e-LTK) which comprises of an electronic simulator and quiz assessment module to evaluate subject knowledge on logic gates. The e-LTK is developed by using Arduino Mega 2560 as the base microcontroller, equipped with keypad and display module as the user input/output interface. The quiz assessment module contained in the prototype also allows conversion of inputs by combinatorial logic circuits into output in the form of timing diagram. This equipment enables electrical engineering students to simulate several combinations of logic circuit, reinforcing the understanding of logic circuit operation. The effectiveness of using this prototype in educational settings have been evaluated through a survey on students and instructors at Faculty of Technology in Engineering (FTK) in Universiti Teknikal Malaysia Melaka (UTeM). Response has been positive, with 60% of the correspondence has shown positive feedbacks, indicating the usefulness of the prototype kit.


Author(s):  
E. W. Sexton ◽  
A. R. Clark ◽  
G. M. Spooner

1. In a large number of experiments with Gammarus chevreuxi when the animals were kept under similar conditions at temperatures ranging from 20° to 28° C., twenty instances occurred in which red-eyed mutations appeared independently and simultaneously. The most important of these (Mutant Stock V) is described in detail in this paper.2. The Red eyes which have arisen in this Stock V and in the four previous Stocks, I to IV, have proved to be all genetically distinct from one another.3. There are at leadt two different classes of “red-eye,” the one simple, the other with intermediate stages. Mutant Stock V, here described, represents the second type. Differences in the method of origin of the two classes have been pointed out.4. The inheritance of the red-eyedness of the second class—namely, that in which intermediate stages and various colour changes occur—is of a complicated kind. For an interpretation in terms of Mendelian genes, even if allowance is made for an extent of variation in members of one particular genotype, clearly several of them are involved. Further, there must be considerable interplay of one kind or another among the different genes.5. Although so many different colour shades have appeared in Mutant Stock V, all can be interpreted in terms of varying concentrations of two pigments—the black and the red. Dilute black pigment with little or no red gives a purple eye.


2017 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
JEFFREY G. DUCKETT ◽  
SILVIA PRESSEL

Other than general statements about ‘fruiting’ seasons, published floras provide little or no instructive information on moss phenology. Moreover, detailed primary data on reproductive cycles are limited to a very few mosses and remain unknown for the majority of the commonest species. Thus we recorded, over a three year period, the reproductive stages of five very common mosses (Bryum capillare, B. radiculosum, Grimmia pulvinata, Schistidium crassipilum and Tortula muralis) growing on walls in London, England, relying throughout on freshly observed materials rather than dried specimens used in most previous studies. In addition to all the stages visible to the naked eye, which we photographed at regular intervals, specimens were examined microscopically for the presence of viable gametangia, young embryos and the condition of the stomata.         Each species had its own distinct phenology and an unique sequence of capsule colour changes. In the two Bryum species, gametangium ontogeny, followed by fertilization, takes place in the spring but the embryos remain dormant until the autumn whereas these stages are autumnal in Grimmia pulvinata, Schistidium crassipilum and Tortula muralis with sporophyte development following immediately. Most stages in sporophyte ontogeny occur over the winter months. The time from embryo formation to spore release ranges from over fifteen months in the two Bryum species down to eight months in Schistidium. In all but this last species there is a delay of up to several months between sporophyte maturation and spore release. In Bryum, hygroscopic movements of the annular cells following heavy rain eventually leads to lid shedding. Over the three years of this study the reproductive cycles were generally the same except that damp weather in the autumn promoted capsule expansion in Grimmia and Schistidium and warm dry weather in the spring hastened capsule maturation in Bryum. Whatever the weather conditions, the stomata of the two Bryum species, Grimmia and Tortula were always open suggesting a primary role in capsule desiccation leading to spore discharge rather than the regulation of gaseous exchange.


Author(s):  
Tom McLeish

‘Liveliness’ studies the new biologically inspired field of active soft matter. Almost any type of soft matter possesses an active form. Using myosin corresponds to making the cross-links of a polymer gel active. However, polymerization itself can be actively driven, as well as the cross-linking between polymers. Bacteria are, within this perspective, an active form of colloid—nanoparticles that can swim. As their shape becomes highly anisotropic, they generate the notion of ‘active liquid crystals’.


2016 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Pazik ◽  
Beata Kamińska ◽  
Anna Skwierawska ◽  
Sandra Nakonieczna ◽  
Tadeusz Ossowski

AbstractThe synthesis of a new chromogenic N,N′-phenyltetrazole receptor is reported here. The cationbinding properties of this receptor in solution were investigated by naked-eye colour change, electrochemical methods and UV-Vis spectroscopy in various solvents (CH


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