Publications by authors named "Cameron Holder"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aims to assess the time Pathologists' Assistants (PAs) take to gross second and third trimester singleton placentas, highlighting the importance of this data for workload management in pathology labs.
  • Seven certified PAs grossed at least 10 placenta specimens each using a standard protocol, with the results showing average grossing times ranging from 11.0 to 17.8 minutes, ultimately leading to an overall average of 14.5 minutes.
  • The analysis revealed that more blocks prepared by PAs correlated with longer grossing times, suggesting a potential prediction model where consistently preparing four blocks might lower the average grossing time to approximately 13.3 minutes.
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All-inorganic metal halide perovskite-related phases are semiconducting materials that are of significant interest for a wide range of applications. Nanoparticles of these materials are particularly useful because they permit solution processing while offering unique and tunable properties. Of the many metal halide systems that have been studied extensively, cesium cadmium chlorides remain underexplored, and synthetic routes to access them as nanoscale materials have not been established.

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Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are well known catalysts as both bulk and nanoscale materials. Two-dimensional (2-D) TMDs, which contain single- and few-layer nanosheets, are increasingly studied as catalytic materials because of their unique thickness-dependent properties and high surface areas. Here, colloidal 2H-WS nanostructures are used as a model 2-D TMD system to understand how high catalytic activity and selectivity can be achieved for useful organic transformations.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Functionalizing transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) nanosheets with noble metals like gold and silver enhances their electrical contact in devices and boosts their catalytic and sensing abilities.
  • - The study explores how gold and silver can be deposited onto various TMDs at room temperature, leading to different hybrid structures between the metals and the TMDs.
  • - The size and shape of the metal deposits vary, with gold forming uniform nanoparticles and silver displaying different forms based on the specific type of TMD, due to the varying strength of metal-chalcogen bonds.
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The rational synthesis of metastable inorganic solids, which is a grand challenge in solid-state chemistry, requires the development of kinetically controlled reaction pathways. Topotactic strategies can achieve this goal by chemically modifying reactive components of a parent structure under mild conditions to produce a closely related analogue that has otherwise inaccessible structures and/or compositions. Refractory materials, such as transition metal borides, are difficult to structurally manipulate at low temperatures because they generally are chemically inert and held together by strong covalent bonds.

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The identification of materials capable of catalyzing the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in highly acidic electrolytes is a critical bottleneck in the development of many water-splitting technologies. Bulk-scale solid-state compounds can be readily produced using high-temperature reactions and therefore used to expand the scope of earth-abundant OER catalysts capable of operating under strongly acidic conditions. Here, we show that high temperature arc melting and powder metallurgy reactions can be used to synthesize electrodes consisting of intermetallic NiTa that can catalyze the OER in 0.

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Transition metal phosphides recently have been identified as promising Earth-abundant electrocatalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Here, we present a general and scalable strategy for the synthesis of transition metal phosphide electrodes based on the reaction of commercially available metal foils (Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, and NiFe) with various organophosphine reagents. The resulting phosphide electrodes were found to exhibit excellent electrocatalytic HER and OER performance.

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