Measurements at appropriate spatial and temporal scales are essential for understanding and monitoring spatially heterogeneous environments with complex and highly variable emission sources, such as in urban areas. However, the costs and complexity of conventional air quality measurement methods means that measurement networks are generally extremely sparse. In this paper we show that miniature, low-cost electrochemical gas sensors, traditionally used for sensing at parts-per-million (ppm) mixing ratios can, when suitably configured and operated, be used for parts-per-billion (ppb) level studies for gases relevant to urban air quality. Sensor nodes, in this case consisting of multiple individual electrochemical sensors, can be low-cost and highly portable, thus allowing the deployment of scalable high-density air quality sensor networks at fine spatial and temporal scales, and in both static and mobile configurations. In this paper we provide evidence for the performance of electrochemical sensors at the parts-per-billion level, and then outline results obtained from deployments of networks of sensor nodes in both an autonomous, high-density, static network in the wider Cambridge (UK) area, and as mobile networks for quantification of personal exposure. Examples are presented of measurements obtained with both highly portable devices held by pedestrians and cyclists, and static devices attached to street furniture. The widely varying mixing ratios reported by this study confirm that the urban environment cannot be fully characterised using sparse, static networks, and that measurement networks with higher resolution (both spatially and temporally) are required to quantify air quality at the scales which are present in the urban environment. We conclude that the instruments described here, and the low-cost/high-density measurement philosophy which underpins it, have the potential to provide a far more complete assessment of the high-granularity air quality structure generally observed in the urban environment, and could ultimately be used for quantification of human exposure as well as for monitoring and legislative purposes.
Materials that combine facile synthesis, simple tuning of degradation rate, processability, and biocompatibility are in high demand for use in biomedical applications. We report on acetalated dextran, a biocompatible material that can be formed into microparticles with degradation rates that are tunable over 2 orders of magnitude depending on the degree and type of acetal modification. Varying the degradation rate produces particles that perform better than poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) and iron oxide, two commonly studied materials used for particulate immunotherapy, in major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) and MHC II presentation assays. Modulating the material properties leads to antigen presentation on MHC I via pathways that are dependent or independent of the transporter associated with antigen processing. To the best of our knowledge, this is the only example of a material that can be tuned to operate on different immunological pathways while maximizing immunological presentation.acid-sensitive ͉ biocompatible ͉ encapsulation ͉ polymer ͉ vaccine
The result of mixing varying concentrations of the nonionic detergent octyl glucoside (OG) with small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) of egg phosphatidylcholine (PC) made by sonication depends on the ratio between OG and PC in the mixed aggregates. When this molar ratio (Re) is lower than 1.4, the detergent partitions between the PC vesicles and the aqueous medium with a partition coefficient of K = 0.033 mM-1. As a consequence of introduction of OG into the bilayers, the vesicles grow in size. The resultant vesicles have a mean diameter that is an increasing function of Re and is independent of the total PC concentration. Experiments in which the vesicles were loaded with high molecular weight dextran prior to being exposed to OG suggest that the mechanism responsible for the size growth involves lipid transfer rather than fusion. Mixtures with Re values within the range of 1.4-3.2 separate into two macroscopic phases: The lower phase is clear but very viscous. It contains constant OG and PC concentrations and is characterized by an Re value of 3.2, independent of the composition of the whole dispersion. The upper phase contains vesicles of varying concentrations of OG and PC, but a constant Re of 1.4. When the saturating level of 1.4 OG molecules per PC molecule is approached, the concentration of OG monomers in the aqueous medium reaches the value of 16.6 +/- 0.3 mM, which is the apparent cmc of OG in the lipid-containing medium. OG-PC mixed micelles contain at least 3.2 OG molecules per PC molecule. The mixed micelles present at Re = 3.2 apparently have the shape of oblate ellipsoids with a minor axis of about 2 nm and two major axes of about 25 nm. The surface area of the mixed micelles at this point is just sufficient for them to undergo conversion into the smallest possible spherical vesicles of a radius of 12 nm. At Re values above 3.2, the major axis of the mixed micelles becomes smaller as Re increases, while at values of Re below 3.2 the micelles would have been expected to grow very rapidly with decreasing Re. This may explain the partial vesicle closure occurring below Re = 3.2.
From glycosylated cell surfaces to sterically stabilized liposomes, polymers attached to membranes attract biological and therapeutic interest. Can the scaling laws of polymer "brushes" describe the physical properties of these coats? We delineate conditions where the Alexander-de Gennes theory of polymer brushes successfully fits the intermembrane distance versus applied osmotic stress data of Kenworthy et al. for poly(ethylene glycol)-grafted multilamellar liposomes. We establish that the polymer density and size in the brush must be high enough that, in a bulk solution of equivalent monomer density, the polymer osmotic pressure is independent of polymer molecular weight (the des Cloizeaux semidilute regime of bulk polymer solutions). The condition that attached polymers behave as semidilute bulk solutions offers a rigorous criterion for brush scaling-law behavior. There is a deep connection between the behaviors of semidilute polymer solutions in bulk and polymers grafted to a surface at a density such that neighbors pack to form a uniform brush. In this regime, two-parameter unconstrained fits of the Alexander-de Gennes brush scaling laws to the Kenworthy et al. data yield effective monomer lengths of 3.3-3.6 A, which agree with structural predictions. The fitted distances between grafting sites are larger than expected from the nominal mole fraction of poly(ethylene glycol)-lipids; the chains apparently saturate the surface. Osmotic stress measurements can be used to estimate the actual densities of membrane-grafted polymers.
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