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A series of 1Hamorphous tri-phenyl pyridine (HAPPY) dyes have been synthesized from luminescent triphenyl-group-containing 2-methyl-6-styryl-substituted-4H-pyran-4-ylidene derivatives in reactions with benzylamine and investigated for suitability as solution-processable light-emitting medium components in thin films for amplified spontaneous emission (ASE). Conversion of a 4H-pyrane ring into a 1H-pyridine fragment enables aggregation-induced emission enhancement (AIEE) behavior in the target products and slightly increases thermal stability, glass transition temperatures, and ASE efficiency with PLQY up to 15% and ASE thresholds as low as 46 μJ/cm2 in neat spin-cast films, although thermal and photophysical properties are mostly dominated by the incorporated electron acceptors. Continued lasing parameter efficiency parameter improvement experiments revealed that no further optimization of HAPPY dyes by doping in polymer matrixes is required as the amplified spontaneous emission thresholds were lowest in pure neat films due to the AIEE phenomenon.Enzymatically degradable polymeric micelles have great potential as drug delivery systems, allowing the selective release of their active cargo at the site of disease. Furthermore, enzymatic degradation of the polymeric nanocarriers facilitates clearance of the delivery system after it has completed its task. While extensive research is dedicated toward the design and study of the enzymatically degradable hydrophobic block, there is limited understanding on how the hydrophilic shell of the micelle can affect the properties of such enzymatically degradable micelles. In this work, we report a systematic head-to-head comparison of well-defined polymeric micelles with different polymeric shells and two types of enzymatically degradable hydrophobic cores. To carry out this direct comparison, we developed a highly modular approach for preparing clickable, spectrally active enzyme-responsive dendrons with adjustable degree of hydrophobicity. Azaindole 1 cell line The dendrons were linked with three different widely used hydrophilic polymhe hydrophilic shell significantly affects the micellar stability, localization, cell internalization kinetics, and the cargo release mechanism. Overall, the high molecular precision and the ability of these amphiphiles to report their disassembly, even in complex biological media, allowed us to directly compare the different types of micelles, providing striking insights into how the composition of the micelle shells and cores can affect their properties and potential to serve as nanocarriers.Novel Pickering emulsions were stabilized by complex interfaces in the presence of zein colloidal particles (ZCPs), propylene glycol alginate (PGA), and rhamnolipid (Rha) for delivery of β-carotene. The influence of the particle-surfactant, particle-biopolymer, and particle-biopolymer-surfactant mixed interfaces on the physiochemical properties and digestion fate of Pickering emulsions was investigated. It is the first time that three different types of emulsifiers have been used to synergistically stabilize food Pickering emulsions for delivery of lipophilic nutraceuticals. The physicochemical stability, microstructure, rheological properties, and in vitro gastrointestinal digestion of Pickering emulsions were controlled by the addition sequence and mass ratio of multiple stabilizers, which showed the enhanced stability and delayed lipid digestion of the particle-biopolymer-surfactant-stabilized Pickering emulsions. After encapsulation into Pickering emulsions, the retention rate of β-carotene increased 2-fold under UV radiation for 8 h. The coexistence of ZCPs, PGA, and Rha could induce the competitive displacement, multilayer deposition, and interparticle network at the interface. The combination of particles, a biopolymer, and a surfactant delayed the lipolysis during in vitro gastrointestinal tract. By modulating the interfacial composition, the release rate of free fatty acids from Pickering emulsions was reduced from 19.46% to 2.83% through different mechanisms. The novel Pickering emulsion could be incorporated in foods as well as pharmaceuticals for controlled lipid digestion or targeted nutrient delivery purposes.Although the structure and properties of water under conditions of extreme confinement are fundamentally important for a variety of applications, they remain poorly understood, especially for dimensions less than 2 nm. This problem is confounded by the difficulty in controlling surface roughness and dimensionality in fabricated nanochannels, contributing to a dearth of experimental platforms capable of carrying out the necessary precision measurements. In this work, we utilize an experimental platform based on the interior of lithographically segmented, isolated single-walled carbon nanotubes to study water under extreme nanoscale confinement. This platform generates multiple copies of nanotubes with identical chirality, of diameters from 0.8 to 2.5 nm and lengths spanning 6 to 160 μm, that can be studied individually in real time before and after opening, exposure to water, and subsequent water filling. We demonstrate that, under controlled conditions, the diameter-dependent blue shift of the Raman radial breathing mode (RBM) between 1 and 8 cm-1 measures an increase in the interior mechanical modulus associated with liquid water filling, with no response from exterior water exposure. The observed RBM shift with filling demonstrates a non-monotonic trend with diameter, supporting the assignment of a minimum of 1.81 ± 0.09 cm-1 at 0.93 ± 0.08 nm with a nearly linear increase at larger diameters. We find that a simple hard-sphere model of water in the confined nanotube interior describes key features of the diameter-dependent modulus change of the carbon nanotube and supports previous observations in the literature. Longer segments of 160 μm show partial filling from their ends, consistent with pore clogging. These devices provide an opportunity to study fluid behavior under extreme confinement with high precision and repeatability.Infrared (IR) solar cells are promising devices for significantly improving the power conversion efficiency of common solar cells by harvesting the low-energy IR photons. PbSe quantum dots (QDs) are superior IR photon absorbing materials due to their strong quantum confinement and thus strong interdot electronic coupling. However, the high chemical activity of PbSe QDs leads to etching and poor passivation in ligand exchange, resulting in a high trap-state density and a high open circuit voltage (VOC) deficit. Here we develop a hybrid ligand co-passivation strategy to simultaneously passivate the Pb and Se sites; that is, halide anions passivate the Pb sites and Cd cations passivate the Se sites. The cation and anion hybrid passivation substantially improves the quality of PbSe QD solids, giving rise to an excellent trap-state control and prolonged carrier lifetime. A high VOC and a high short circuit current density (JSC) are achieved simultaneously in the IR QD solar cells based on this hybrid ligand treatment. Finally, a IR-PCE of 1.31% under the 1100-nm-filtered solar illumination is achieved in the PbSe QD solar cells, which is the highest IR-PCE for PbSe QD IR solar cells at present. Additionally, the PbSe QD devices show a high external quantum efficiency of 80% at ∼1295 nm.Ensembler is a Python package that enables method prototyping using 1D and 2D model systems and allows deepening of the understanding of different molecular dynamics (MD) methods, starting from basic techniques to enhanced sampling and free-energy approaches. The ease of installing and using the package increases shareability, comparability, and reproducibility of scientific code developments. Here, we describe the implementation and usage of the package and provide an application example for free-energy calculation. The code of Ensembler is freely available on GitHub at https//github.com/rinikerlab/Ensembler.To achieve practically high electrocatalytic performance for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), the active surface area should be maximized without severely compromising electron and mass transport throughout the catalyst electrode. Though the importance of electron and mass transport has been studied using low surface area catalysts under low current densities (∼tens of mA/cm2), the transport properties of large surface area catalysts under high operating current densities (∼500 mA/cm2) for practical OER catalysis have rarely been explored. Herein, three-dimensional (3D) hierarchically porous anodized nickel foams (ANFs) with large and variable surface areas were synthesized via electrochemical anodization of 3D nickel foam and applied as OER electrocatalysts in Fe-free and unpurified KOH electrolytes. Using Fe-free and in situ Fe-doped ANF that were prepared in Fe-free and unpurified electrolytes, respectively, we investigated the interdependent effects of active surface area and transport properties on OER activity under practically high current densities. While activity increased linearly with active surface area for Fe-free ANF, the activity of Fe-doped ANF showed a nonlinear increase with active surface area due to lower electrocatalytic activity enhancement. Detailed investigations on the possible factors (Fe incorporation, mass transport, and electron transport) identified that electron transport limitations played the major role in restricting the activity enhancement with increasing active surface area for Fe-doped ANF, although Fe-doped ANF has electron transport properties better than those of Fe-free ANF. This study exemplifies the growing significance of electron transport properties in large surface area catalysts, especially those with superb intrinsic catalytic activity and high operating current density.Experimentally measured infrared spectra are often compared to their computed equivalents. However, the accordance is typically characterized by visual inspection, which is prone to subjective judgment. The primary challenge for a similarity-based analysis is that the artifacts introduced by each approach are very different and, therefore, may require preprocessing steps to determine and correct impeding irregularities. To allow for automated objective assessment, we propose a practical and comprehensive workflow involving scaling factors, a novel baseline correction scheme, and peak smoothing. The resulting spectra can then easily be compared quantitatively using similarity measures, for which we found the Pearson correlation coefficient to be the most suitable. The proposed procedure is then applied to compare the agreement of the experimental infrared spectra from the NIST Chemistry Web book with the calculated spectra using standard harmonic frequency analysis and spectra extracted from ab initio molecular dynamics simulations at different levels of theory. We conclude that the direct, quantitative comparison of calculated and measured IR spectra might become a novel, sophisticated approach to benchmark quantum-chemical methods. In the present benchmark, simulated spectra based on ab initio molecular dynamics show in general better agreement with the experiment than static calculations.

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