Publications by authors named "J H Lauterbach"

Current production standards and communication campaigns about animal welfare in relation to beef strongly emphasise the "humane" rearing of cattle. Aspects such as transport and slaughtering conditions are often overlooked in both production standards and communications with consumers. Long transport routes and conventional slaughtering can cause significant stress to animals and have negative impacts on their welfare and on meat quality.

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Nanomaterials have been employed in many biomedical applications, and their distributions in biological systems can provide an understanding of their behavior . Laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) can be used to determine the distributions of metal-based NMs in biological systems. However, LA-ICP-MS has not commonly been used to quantitatively measure the cell-specific or sub-organ distributions of nanomaterials in tissues.

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During co-pyrolysis of biomass with plastic waste, bio-oil yields (BOY) could be either induced or reduced significantly via synergistic effects (SE). However, investigating/ interpreting the SE and BOY in multidimensional domains is complicated and limited. This work applied XGBoost machine-learning and Shapley additive explanation (SHAP) to develop interpretable/ explainable models for predicting BOY and SE from co-pyrolysis of biomass and plastic waste using 26 input features.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study focuses on using vacuum jacketed columns (VJC) in reversed-phase UHPLC-MS to enhance lipidomic analysis of biological samples like plasma, improving the understanding of lipid dysregulation in diseases.
  • VJC methods showed significant advantages over traditional UHPLC, with a 66% increase in peak capacity, a 34% reduction in peak tailing, and a 30% increase in the number of detectable lipids, along with improved resolution and peak intensity.
  • The results demonstrated excellent reproducibility for lipid intensities in mouse plasma samples, showing variations between 1.8% and 12% without any observed drift, indicating reliability in the analysis.
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The efficient delivery of reactive and toxic gaseous reagents to organic reactions was studied using metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). The simultaneous cargo vehicle and catalytic capabilities of several MOFs were probed for the first time using the examples of aromatization, aminocarbonylation, and carbonylative Suzuki-Miyaura coupling reactions. These reactions highlight that MOFs can serve a dual role as a gas cargo vehicle and a catalyst, leading to product formation with yields similar to reactions employing pure gases.

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