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The outer blood-retinal barrier (oBRB) tightly controls the transport processes between the neural tissue of the retina and the underlying blood vessel network. The barrier is formed by the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), its basal membrane and the underlying choroidal capillary bed. Realistic three-dimensional cell culture based models of the oBRB are needed to study mechanisms and potential treatments of visual disorders such as age-related macular degeneration that result from dysfunction of the barrier tissue. Ideally, such models should also include clinically relevant read-outs to enable translation of experimental findings in the context of pathophysiology. Here, we report a microfluidic organ-on-a-chip model of the oBRB that contains a monolayer of human immortalized RPE and a microvessel of human endothelial cells, separated by a semi-permeable membrane. Confluent monolayers of both cell types were confirmed by fluorescence microscopy. see more The three-dimensional vascular structures within the chip were imaged by optical coherence tomography a medical imaging technique, which is routinely applied in ophthalmology. Differences in diameters and vessel density could be readily detected. Upon inducing oxidative stress by treating with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a dose dependent increase in barrier permeability was observed by using a dynamic assay for fluorescence tracing, analogous to the clinically used fluorescence angiography. This organ-on-a-chip of the oBRB will allow future studies of complex disease mechanisms and treatments for visual disorders using clinically relevant endpoints in vitro.The effect of para-substitution upon the structural and electronic properties of a series of m-terphenyl lithium complexes [R-Ar#-Li]2 (R = t-Bu 1, SiMe32, H 3, Cl 4, CF35; where R-Ar# = 2,6-2,6-Xyl2-4-R-C6H2 and 2,6-Xyl = 2,6-Me2C6H3) has been investigated. X-ray crystallography reveals the complexes to be structurally similar, with little variation in C-M-C bond lengths and angles across the series. However, in-depth NMR spectroscopic studies reveal notable electronic differences, showing a linear correlation between the 7Li1H NMR chemical shifts of the para-substituted complexes and their Hammett constants. The flanking methyl protons exhibit a similar electronic shift in the 1H NMR spectra, which has been rationalised by the presence of through-space LiH interactions, as evidenced by two-dimensional 7Li-1H heteronuclear Overhauser spectroscopy (HOESY). In both cases, electron-withdrawing substituents are found to cause an upfield peak shift. A computational analysis is employed to account for these trends.This paper presents a thorough quantum investigation of the optical properties of twelve transition metal complexes using state of the art (TD)DFT computations. The studied molecules are two Pt-based and ten Ir-based complexes. Geometrical parameters, absorption and emission spectra are directly compared to available experimental data. Phosphorescence spectra have been computed within the Adiabatic Hessian (AH) method which takes into account mode mixing and a proper description of both ground and excited states potential energy surfaces (frequency calculations). For each compound, three methods have been considered to obtain the relaxed triplet excited state supposedly involved in the phosphorescence process, i.e. unrestricted DFT, TDDFT and its Tamm-Dancoff approximation (TDA). In overall, unrestricted DFT and TDA overperform TDDFT for the investigated complexes especially when an Ir centre is present. The AH model demonstrates its good capability to reproduce accurately phosphorescence spectra. Finally, simulation and experimental data are represented over a CIE chromaticity horseshoe.Colloidal particles have been extensively used to comprehend the main principles governing liquid-crystal nucleation. Multiple mechanisms and frameworks have been proposed, through either experiments or computational approaches, to rationalise the ubiquitous formation of colloidal crystals. In this work, we elucidate the nucleation scenario behind the crystallization of oppositely charged colloids. By performing molecular dynamics simulations of colloidal electrolytes in combination with the Seeding technique, we evaluate the fundamental factors, such as the nucleation rate, free energy barrier, surface tension and kinetic pre-factor, that determine the liquid-to-solid transition of several crystalline polymorphs. Our results show that at a high packing fraction, there is a cross-over between the nucleation of the CsCl structure and that of a substitutionally disordered fcc phase, despite the CuAu crystal being the most stable phase. We demonstrate that the crucial factor in determining which phase nucleates the fastest is the free energy cost of the cluster formation rather than their kinetic ability to grow from the liquid. While at a low packing fraction, the stable phase, CsCl, is the one that nucleates and subsequently grows, we show how at moderate and high packing fractions, a disordered fcc phase subsequently grows regardless of the nature of the nucleating phase, termed parasitic crystallization. Taken together, our results provide a panoramic perspective of the complex nucleation scenario of oppositely charged colloids at moderate temperature and rationalise the different thermodynamic and kinetic aspects behind it.We present trace gas vertical profiles observed by instruments on the NASA DC-8 and at a ground site during the Korea-US air quality study (KORUS) field campaign in May to June 2016. We focus on the region near the Seoul metropolitan area and its surroundings where both anthropogenic and natural emission sources play an important role in local photochemistry. Integrating ground and airborne observations is the major research goal of many atmospheric chemistry field campaigns. Although airborne platforms typically aim to sample from near surface to the free troposphere, it is difficult to fly very close to the surface especially in environments with complex terrain or a populated area. A detailed analysis integrating ground and airborne observations associated with specific concentration footprints indicates that reactive trace gases are quickly oxidized below an altitude of 700 m. The total OH reactivity profile has a rapid decay in the lower part of troposphere from surface to the lowest altitude (700 m) sampled by the NASA DC-8.