Publications by authors named "Sagrario Munoz"

A preliminary exploration of the physiology and morphology of the zebrafish embryo (ZFE) during the late-blastula and early-gastrula stages through its electrical properties was performed, applying the electrorotation (ROT) technique. This method, based on induced polarizability at the interfaces, was combined with an analytical spherical shell model to obtain the best fit of empirical data and the desired information, providing a means of understanding the role of different membranes. Suspended in two solutions of low conductivity, the major compartments of the ZFE were electrically characterized, considering morphological data from both observed records and data from the literature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The possible effects of ionizing radiation on four commercial membranes, which are typically used as electrolytes in fuel cells supplying energy to a huge variety of medical implantable devices, were studied. These devices could obtain energy from the biological environment through a glucose fuel cell, which could be a good candidate to replace conventional batteries as a power source. In these applications, materials with high radiation stability for the fuel cell elements would be disabled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The alcohol permeability of anion exchange membranes is a crucial property when they are used as a solid electrolyte in alkaline direct alcohol fuel cells and electrolyzers. The membrane is the core component to impede the fuel crossover and allows the ionic transport, and it strongly affects the fuel cell performance. The aim of this work is to compare different anion exchange membranes to be used as an electrolyte in alkaline direct alcohol fuels cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To determine why some pathways but not others produce sizable local field potentials (LFPs) and how far from the source can these be recorded, complementary experimental analyses and realistic modeling of specific brain structures are required. In the present study, we combined multiple in vivo linear recordings in rats and a tridimensional finite element model of the dentate gyrus, a curved structure displaying abnormally large positive LFPs. We demonstrate that the polarized dendritic arbour of granule cells (GCs), combined with the curved layered configuration of the population promote the spatial clustering of GC currents in the interposed hilus and project them through the open side at a distance from cell domains.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We use the Maxwell stress tensor to calculate the dielectrophoretic force and electrorotational torque acting on a realistic four-shelled model of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae in a nonuniform rotating electric field generated by four coplanar square electrodes. The comparison of these results with numerical calculations of the dipolar and quadrupolar contributions obtained from an integral equation for the polarization charge density shows the effect of the quadrupole contribution in the proximity of the electrode plane. We also show that under typical experimental conditions the substitution of the multilayered cell by an equivalent cell with homogeneous permittivity underestimates the quadrupole contribution to the force and torque by 1 order of magnitude.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Progress in microelectrode-based technologies has facilitated the development of sophisticated methods for manipulating and separating cells, bacteria, and other bioparticles. For many of these various applications, the theoretical modeling of the electrical response of compartmentalized particles to an external field is important. In this paper we address the analysis of the interaction between cells immersed in rf fields.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We predict the complex polarizability of a realistic model of a red blood cell (RBC), with an inhomogeneous dispersive and anisotropic membrane. In this model, the frequency-dependent complex electrical parameters of the individual cell layers are described by the Debye equation while the dielectric anisotropy of the cell membrane is taken into account by the different permittivities along directions normal and tangential to the membrane surface. The realistic shape of the RBC is described in terms of the Jacobi elliptic functions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study is to analyze the electromagnetic energy stored in stomatocyte, erythrocyte and echinocyte cells exposed to a linearly polarized electromagnetic plane wave at 900, 1800 and 2450MHz radiofrequency signals. This analysis can provide a better understanding of the order of appearance of altered shapes of erythrocytes (RBC) in the stomatocyte-echinocyte transition under radiofrequency exposure in terms of the deposited electromagnetic energy. For this purpose we use a realistic geometrical cell model based on parametric equations that allow for continuous transformations between normal erythrocytes and three stomatocyte subclasses with different degree of invagination and also between normal erythrocytes and echinocytes with an arbitrary number of spicules.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We show that within the dipole approximation the complex polarizability of shelled particles of arbitrary shape can be written as the volume of the particle times a weighted average of the electric field in the particle, with weights determined by the differences in permittivities between the shells and the external, possibly lossy media. To calculate the electric field we use an adaptive-mesh finite-element method which is very effective in handling the irregular domains, material inhomogeneities, and complex boundary conditions usually found in biophysical applications. After extensive tests with exactly solvable models, we apply the method to four types of hematic cells: platelets, T-lymphocytes, erythrocytes, and stomatocytes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF