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1.
J Pharm Sci ; 2024 May 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38777176

RESUMO

The formulation of paediatric medicines faces significant challenges to meet the requirements for safe and accurate administration, while maintaining a suitable taste. Multiparticulate formulations have a strong potential to address these challenges because they combine dose flexibility with ease of administration. Understanding the stability of multiparticulate formulations over storage as a function of time and environmental parameters, such as humidity and temperature, is important to manage their commercialisation and use. In this work, we have expanded the toolkit of available techniques for studying multiparticulates beyond those such as scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and confocal laser scanning microscopy. We include advanced methods of environmentally-controlled SEM to monitor temperature- and humidity-induced changes in-situ, and a variety of Raman spectroscopies including stimulated Raman scattering microscopy to identify and localise the different ingredients at the surface and inside the multiparticulates. These techniques allowed unprecedented monitoring of specific changes to the particulate structure and distribution of individual ingredients due to product aging. These methods should be considered as valuable novel tools for in-depth characterisation of multiparticulate formulations to further understand chemical changes occurring during their development, manufacturing and long-term storage. We envisage these techniques to be useful in furthering the development of future medicine formulations.

2.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 9(8)2018 Aug 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30424337

RESUMO

The acoustically-driven dynamics of isolated particle-like objects in microfluidic environments is a well-characterised phenomenon, which has been the subject of many studies. Conversely, very few acoustofluidic researchers looked at coated microbubbles, despite their widespread use in diagnostic imaging and the need for a precise characterisation of their acoustically-driven behaviour, underpinning therapeutic applications. The main reason is that microbubbles behave differently, due to their larger compressibility, exhibiting much stronger interactions with the unperturbed acoustic field (primary Bjerknes forces) or with other bubbles (secondary Bjerknes forces). In this paper, we study the translational dynamics of commercially-available polymer-coated microbubbles in a standing-wave acoustofluidic device. At increasing acoustic driving pressures, we measure acoustic forces on isolated bubbles, quantify bubble-bubble interaction forces during doublet formation and study the occurrence of sub-wavelength structures during aggregation. We present a dynamic characterisation of microbubble compressibility with acoustic pressure, highlighting a threshold pressure below which bubbles can be treated as uncoated. Thanks to benchmarking measurements under a scanning electron microscope, we interpret this threshold as the onset of buckling, providing a quantitative measurement of this parameter at the single-bubble level. For acoustofluidic applications, our results highlight the limitations of treating microbubbles as a special case of solid particles. Our findings will impact applications where knowing the buckling pressure of coated microbubbles has a key role, like diagnostics and drug delivery.

3.
Nano Lett ; 16(10): 6196-6206, 2016 Oct 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27576749

RESUMO

The dynamics of graphene growth on polycrystalline Pt foils during chemical vapor deposition (CVD) are investigated using in situ scanning electron microscopy and complementary structural characterization of the catalyst with electron backscatter diffraction. A general growth model is outlined that considers precursor dissociation, mass transport, and attachment to the edge of a growing domain. We thereby analyze graphene growth dynamics at different length scales and reveal that the rate-limiting step varies throughout the process and across different regions of the catalyst surface, including different facets of an individual graphene domain. The facets that define the domain shapes lie normal to slow growth directions, which are determined by the interfacial mobility when attachment to domain edges is rate-limiting, as well as anisotropy in surface diffusion as diffusion becomes rate-limiting. Our observations and analysis thus reveal that the structure of CVD graphene films is intimately linked to that of the underlying polycrystalline catalyst, with both interfacial mobility and diffusional anisotropy depending on the presence of step edges and grain boundaries. The growth model developed serves as a general framework for understanding and optimizing the growth of 2D materials on polycrystalline catalysts.

4.
Nano Lett ; 15(3): 1867-75, 2015 Mar 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25664483

RESUMO

The scalable chemical vapor deposition of monolayer hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) single crystals, with lateral dimensions of ∼0.3 mm, and of continuous h-BN monolayer films with large domain sizes (>25 µm) is demonstrated via an admixture of Si to Fe catalyst films. A simple thin-film Fe/SiO2/Si catalyst system is used to show that controlled Si diffusion into the Fe catalyst allows exclusive nucleation of monolayer h-BN with very low nucleation densities upon exposure to undiluted borazine. Our systematic in situ and ex situ characterization of this catalyst system establishes a basis for further rational catalyst design for compound 2D materials.

5.
Ultramicroscopy ; 111(5): 320-9, 2011 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21396526

RESUMO

For precise orientation and strain measurements, advanced Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD) techniques require both accurate calibration and reproducible measurement of the system geometry. In many cases the pattern centre (PC) needs to be determined to sub-pixel accuracy. The mechanical insertion/retraction, through the Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) chamber wall, of the electron sensitive part of modern EBSD detectors also causes alignment and positioning problems and requires frequent monitoring of the PC. Optical alignment and lens distortion issues within the scintillator, lens and charge-coupled device (CCD) camera combination of an EBSD detector need accurate measurement for each individual EBSD system. This paper highlights and quantifies these issues and demonstrates the determination of the pattern centre using a novel shadow-casting technique with a precision of ∼10µm or ∼1/3 CCD pixel.

6.
Ultramicroscopy ; 110(7): 761-2, 2010 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20223590

RESUMO

This comment on the paper "Bragg's Law diffraction simulations for electron backscatter diffraction analysis" by Kacher et al. explains the limitations in determining elastic strains using synthetic EBSD patterns. Of particular importance are those due to the accuracy of determination of the EBSD geometry projection parameters. Additional references and supporting information are provided.

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