While there has been rapid development of microfabrication techniques to produce high-resolution surface modifications on a variety of materials in the last decade, there is still a strong need to produce novel alternatives to induce guided tissue regeneration on dental implants. High-resolution microscopy provides qualitative and quantitative techniques to study cellular guidance in the first stages of cell-material interactions. The purposes of this work were (1) to produce and characterize the surface topography of isotropic and anisotropic microfabricated silica thin films obtained by sol-gel processing, and (2) to compare the in vitro biological behavior of human bone marrow stem cells on these surfaces at early stages of adhesion and propagation. The results confirmed that a microstamping technique can be used to produce isotropic and anisotropic micropatterned silica coatings. Atomic force microscopy analysis was an adequate methodology to study in the same specimen the sintering derived contraction of the microfabricated coatings, using images obtained before and after thermal cycle. Hard micropatterned coatings induced a modulation in the early and late adhesion stages of cell-material and cell-cell interactions in a geometry-dependent manner (i.e., isotropic versus anisotropic), as it was clearly determined, using scanning electron and fluorescence microscopies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1431927610094158 | DOI Listing |
Biomed Phys Eng Express
January 2025
University of Gothenburg, Bruna stråket 13, Goteborg, 405 30, SWEDEN.
Dual-polarity readout is a simple and robust way to mitigate Nyquist ghosting in diffusion-weighted echo-planar imaging but imposes doubled scan time. We here propose how dual-polarity readout can be implemented with little or no increase in scan time by exploiting an observed b-value dependence and signal averaging. The b-value dependence was confirmed in healthy volunteers with distinct ghosting at low b-values but of negligible magnitude at b = 1000 s/mm2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Sci Instrum
January 2025
Department of Micro Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyotodaigaku-Katsura C3, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto 615-8540, Japan.
The measurement of thermal conductivities of anisotropic materials and atomically thin films is pivotal for the thermal design of next-generation electronic devices. Frequency-domain thermoreflectance (FDTR) is a pump-probe technique that is known for its accurate and straightforward approach to determining thermal conductivity and stands out as one of the most effective methodologies. Existing research has focused on advancing a measurement system that incorporates beam-offset FDTR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Inst Mech Eng H
January 2025
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Chandigarh University, Mohali, Punjab, India.
Bone is a highly heterogeneous and anisotropic material with a hierarchical structure. The effect of diaphysis locations and directions of loading on elastic-plastic compressive properties of bovine femoral cortical bone was examined in this study. The impact of location and loading directions on elastic-plastic compressive properties of cortical bone was found to be statistically insignificant in this study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
January 2025
Shanghai Key Laboratory of Advanced Polymeric Materials, Frontiers Science Center for Materiobiology and Dynamic Chemistry, School of Materials Science and Engineering, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai, 200237, China.
Endowing biomimetic sequence-controlled polymers with chiral functionality to construct stimuli-responsive chiral materials offers a promising approach for innovative chiroptical switch, but it remains challenging. Herein, it is reported that the self-assembly of sequence-defined chiral amphiphilic alternating azopeptoids to generate photo-responsive and ultrathin bilayer peptoidosomes with a vesicular thickness of ≈1.50 nm and a diameter of around ≈290 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanotechnology
January 2025
School of Chemical Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.
Herein, we synthesized anisotropic silica nanoparticles (AISNPs) with organic amines with different structures. Monoamines and diamines with distance between amine groups shorter than4 Å have been observed to facilitate the formation of isotropic silica nanoparticles (ISNPs). AISNPs were synthesized with diamines with distance between amine groups longer than4 Å and linear structures of triamines.
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