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A highly efficient method to oxidize methylarenes to their corresponding acids with a reusable Cr catalyst was developed. Rapamycin The reaction can be carried out in water with 1 atm oxygen and K2S2O8 as cooxidants, proceeds under green and mild conditions, and is suitable for the oxidation of both electron-deficient and electron-rich methylarenes, including heteroaryl methylarenes, even at the gram level. The excellent result, together with its simplicity of operation and the ability to continuously reuse the catalyst, makes this new methodology environmentally benign and cost-effective. The generality of this methodology gives it the potential for use on an industrial scale. Differing from the accepted oxidation mechanism of toluene, GC-MS studies and DFT calculations have revealed that the key benzyl alcohol intermediate is formed under the synergetic effect of the chromium and molybdenum in the Cr catalyst, which can be further oxidized to afford benzaldehyde and finally benzoic acid.In recent years, microphysiological system (MPS, also known as, organ-on-a-chip or tissue chip) platforms have emerged with great promise to improve the predictive capacity of preclinical modeling thereby reducing the high attrition rates when drugs move into trials. While their designs can vary quite significantly, in general MPS are bioengineered in vitro microenvironments that recapitulate key functional units of human organs, and that have broad applications in human physiology, pathophysiology, and clinical pharmacology. A critical next step in the evolution of MPS devices is the widespread incorporation of functional vasculature within tissues. The vasculature itself is a major organ that carries nutrients, immune cells, signaling molecules and therapeutics to all other organs. It also plays critical roles in inducing and maintaining tissue identity through expression of angiocrine factors, and in providing tissue-specific milieus (i.e., the vascular niche) that can support the survival and function of stem cells. Thus, organs are patterned, maintained and supported by the vasculature, which in turn receives signals that drive tissue specific gene expression. In this review, we will discuss published vascularized MPS platforms and present considerations for next-generation devices looking to incorporate this critical constituent. Finally, we will highlight the organ-patterning processes governed by the vasculature, and how the incorporation of a vascular niche within MPS platforms will establish a unique opportunity to study stem cell development.SilE and SilB are both proteins involved in the silver efflux pump found in Gram-negative bacteria such as S. typhimurium. Using model peptides along with NMR and CD experiments, we show how SilE may store silver ions prior to delivery and we hypothesize for the first time the interplay between SilB and SilE.In this article, we synthesized a series of new warm-white emitting persistent luminescent phosphors by co-doping Zn2+ into Pr3+ activated BaLu2Al2Ga2SiO12, and systematically investigated the effect of Zn2+ co-doping on both their photoluminescence and persistent luminescence properties. Following the removal of UV excitation, the phosphor emits warm-white persistent luminescence consisting of greenish-blue and red emissions originating from 3P0 and 1D2 multiplet electron transitions at the 4f level of Pr3+. The luminescence properties of the Ba1-xZnxLu2Al2Ga2SiO12Pr3+ phosphors can be modified by changing the content of Ba/Zn in the host, which affects the non-radiative energy flow between 5d1-3P0-1D2 levels and resultantly enhances the intensity of the 4f → 4f transition. Compared with the undoped sample, Zn2+ co-doping can significantly enhance the persistent luminescence intensity of the phosphors in the range of 400-800 nm and reduce the intensity in the UV region. Meanwhile, Zn2+ co-doping can also change the intensity ratio between the greenish-blue and red emissions, and the persistent luminescence color can be tuned from red to warm-white with the increase of Zn2+ concentration. Besides, the Zn2+ ions entering the crystal lattice also enhance the persistent luminescence performance by modifying the defect levels in the phosphor. For the optimized phosphor, bright warm-white persistent luminescence can be observed by the naked eye in the dark after the removal of the excitation source for 4 h. Based on the experimental results, a feasible mechanism was also proposed to reveal the persistent luminescence generation process for the BaLu2Al2Ga2SiO12Pr3+,Zn2+ phosphor.A series of homodinuclear β-diketone lanthanide(III) complexes, formulated as [(acac)4Ln2(L1)] (Ln3+ = Dy3+ (1), Tb3+ (2), and Gd3+ (3), respectively) were first synthesized based on a closed-macrocyclic ligand (H2L1) derived from the [2 + 2] cyclocondensation of 4-tert-butyl-2,6-diformylphenol and o-phenylenediamine in the presence of lanthanide acetylacetonates. Subsequently, by using the above compounds as building blocks to assemble directly with another Schiff base ligand, N,N'-bis(5-chlorosalicylidene)-o-phenylenediamine (H2L2), three new homodinuclear sandwich-type lanthanide complexes with the general formula [Ln2(L1)(L2)2] (Ln3+ = Dy3+ (4), Tb3+ (5), and Gd3+ (6), respectively) were further designed and prepared. Single-crystal X-ray analyses show that the central Ln3+ ion adopts a distorted square antiprism conformation with D4d local symmetry. Magnetic studies reveal ferromagnetic interaction between Dy3+ and Tb3+ centres and zero-field slow relaxation of magnetization for Dy complexes 1 and 4. The corresponding magneto-structural correlations of SMMs 1 and 4 were further discussed by theoretical calculations and with experimental outcomes.The rational development of multicolor upconversion (UC) luminescent materials is particularly promising for achieving high-tech anti-counterfeiting and security applications. Here, an Ho3+ and Yb3+ ion co-doped KLa(MoO4)2 material can achieve multicolored UC luminescence by thermally manipulating the electron transition process, which could be developed to execute advanced optical anti-counterfeiting applications. The emission color of this material turns from bright green to deep orange with the temperature controlled from 85 K to 240 K in a cryogenic environment. The maximum absolute sensitivity and relative sensitivity of this temperature-sensing material based on non-thermally coupled levels of Ho3+ ions reached 0.049 K-1 and 4.6% K-1. And utilizing the thermochromic luminescence properties and high sensitivity for low temperature of the KLa(MoO4)2Yb3+/Ho3+ UC material, we created KLa(MoO4)2Yb3+/Ho3+ fluorescent security inks and UC photonic barcodes to realize novel visual reading and digital recognition dual-mode anti-counterfeiting in a secure manner. These results may provide useful enlightenment for the design and modulation of high-sensitivity temperature-sensing materials for high-level anti-counterfeiting applications.Biomimetic delivery of osteoinductive growth factors via an osteoconductive matrix is an interesting approach for stimulating bone regeneration. In this context, the bone extracellular matrix (ECM) has been explored as an optimal delivery system, since it releases growth factors in a spatiotemporal manner from the matrix. However, a bone ECM hydrogel alone is weak, unstable, and prone to microbial contamination and also has been reported to have significantly reduced bone morphogenic protein-2 (BMP-2) post decellularization. In the present work, a microsphere embedded osteoinductive decellularized bone ECM/oleoyl chitosan based hydrogel construct (BOC) was developed as a matrix allowing dual delivery of an anti-resorptive drug (alendronate, ALN, via the microspheres) and BMP-2 (via the hydrogel) for a focal tibial defect in a rabbit model. The synthesized gelatin microspheres (GMs) were spherical in shape with diameter ∼32 μm as assessed by SEM analysis. The BOC construct showed sustained release of ALN and BMP-2 under the studied conditions. Interestingly, amniotic membrane-derived stem cells (HAMSCs) cultivated on the hydrogel construct demonstrated excellent biocompatibility, cell viability, and active proliferation potential. Additionally, cell differentiation on the constructs showed an elevated expression of osteogenic genes in an RT-PCR study along with enhanced mineralized matrix deposition as demonstrated by alkaline phosphatase (ALP) assay and alizarin red assay. The hydrogel construct was witnessed to have improved neo-vascularization potential in a chick chorioalantoic membrane (CAM) assay. Also, histological and computed tomographic findings evidenced enhanced bone regeneration in the group treated with the BOC/ALN/BMP hydrogel construct in a rabbit tibial defect model. To conclude, the developed multifunctional hydrogel construct acts as an osteoinductive and osteoconductive platform facilitating controlled delivery of ALN and BMP-2, essential for stimulating bone tissue regeneration.The advent of two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides (2D-TMDs) has led to an extensive amount of interest amongst scientists and engineers alike and an intensive amount of research has brought about major breakthroughs in the electronic and optical properties of 2D materials. This in turn has generated considerable interest in novel device applications. With the polymorphic structural features of 2D-TMDs, this class of materials can exhibit both semiconducting and metallic (quasi-metallic) properties in their respective phases. This polymorphic property further increases the interest in 2D-TMDs both in fundamental research and for their potential utilization in novel high-performance device applications. In this review, we highlight the unique structural properties of few-layer and monolayer TMDs in the metallic 1T- and quasi-metallic 1T'-phases, and how these phases dictate their electronic and optical properties. An overview of the semiconducting-to-(quasi)-metallic phase transition of 2D-TMD systems will be covered along with a discussion on the phase transition mechanisms. The current development in the applications of (quasi)-metallic 2D-TMDs will be presented ranging from high-performance electronic and optoelectronic devices to energy storage, catalysis, piezoelectric and thermoelectric devices, and topological insulator and neuromorphic computing applications. We conclude our review by highlighting the challenges confronting the utilization of TMD-based systems and projecting the future developmental trends with an outlook of the progress needed to propel this exciting field forward.Confinement of molecules within nanocontainers can be a powerful tool for controlling the states of guest-molecules, tuning properties of host-nanocontainers and triggering the emergence of synergistic properties within the host-guest systems. Among nanocontainers, single-walled carbon nanotubes - atomically thin cylinders of carbon, with typical diameters below 2 nm and lengths reaching macroscopic dimensions - are ideal hosts for a variety of materials, including inorganic crystals, and organic, inorganic and organometallic molecules. The extremely high aspect ratio of carbon nanotubes is complemented by their functional properties, such as exceptionally high electrical conductivity and thermal, chemical and electrochemical stability, making carbon nanotubes ideal connectors between guest-molecules and macroscopic electrodes. The idea of harnessing nanotubes both as nanocontainers and nanoelectrodes has led to the incorporation of redox-active species entrapped within nanotube cavities where the host-nanotubes may serve as conduits of electrons to/from the guest-molecules, whilst restricting the molecular positions, orientations, and local environment around the redox centres.

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