Publications by authors named "P Sartori"

Leprosy, a chronic infectious disease caused mainly by Mycobacterium leprae (M. leprae), is still an important public health problem in countries such as Brazil and India. Here, we estimate key epidemiological parameters in the Prata Village, a unique, hyper-endemic, former leprosy colony isolated in the Brazilian Amazon.

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Like the letters in the alphabet forming words, reusing components of a heterogeneous mixture is an efficient strategy for assembling a large number of target structures. Examples range from synthetic DNA origami to proteins self-assembling into complexes. The standard self-assembly paradigm views target structures as free-energy minima of a mixture.

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Article Synopsis
  • Biological mixtures like cellular cytoplasm consist of various components that lead to the formation of organized structures, such as liquid phases with specific compositions.
  • A new model called the liquid Hopfield model is introduced to understand how these multicomponent liquids can achieve desired compositions through certain interactions.
  • The study reveals that nonlinear repulsive interactions are essential for retrieving these structures, highlighting a balance between the ability to retrieve target compositions and the tendency of mixtures to simplify into fewer components at low temperatures.
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Thanks to an environmentally friendly physical treatment of high purity graphite, a good control of the structure of graphene nanoparticles (GNPs) has been obtained with the production of stable and reproducible GNPs water dispersions. The preparation protocol entailed ball-milling of synthetic graphite followed by sonication in water and centrifugation/separation procedures. This way, two different GNPs samples with slightly different structural characteristics were harvested: TOP60, showing an average lateral size of the graphene layers  = 70 nm and average number of stacked layers  = 4, and BOTTOM60, with  = 120 nm and  = 6.

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