RESUMO
Abnormalities in tissue can be detected and analyzed by evaluating mechanical properties, such as strain and stiffness. While current sensor systems are effective in measuring longitudinal properties perpendicular to the measurement sensor, identifying in-plane deformation remains a significant challenge. To address this issue, this paper presents a novel method for reconstructing in-plane deformation of observed tissue surfaces using a fringe projection sensor specifically designed for measuring tissue deformations. The method employs the latest techniques from computer vision, such as differentiable rendering, to formulate the in-plane reconstruction as a differentiable optimization problem. This enables the use of gradient-based solvers for an efficient and effective optimization of the problem optimum. Depth information and image information are combined using landmark correspondences between the respective image observations of the undeformed and deformed scenes. By comparing the reconstructed pre- and post-deformation geometry, the in-plane deformation can be revealed through the analysis of relative variations between the corresponding models' geometries. The proposed reconstruction pipeline is validated on an experimental setup, and the potential for intraoperative applications is discussed.
Assuntos
Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Imagens de FantasmasRESUMO
In search of a better transparent contact to p-GaN, we analyze various metal/indium-tin-oxide (ITO) (Ag/ITO, AgCu/ITO, Ni/ITO, and NiZn/ITO) contact schemes and compare to Ni/Au, NiZn/Ag, and ITO. The metal layer boosts conductivity while the ITO thickness can be adjusted to constructive transmission interference on GaN that exceeds extraction from bare GaN. We find a best compromise for an Ag/ITO (3 nm/67 nm) ohmic contact with a relative transmittance of 97% of the bare GaN near 530 nm and a specific contact resistance of 0.03 Ω·cm2. The contact proves suitable for green light-emitting diodes in epi-up geometry.
RESUMO
We report on the effect of Mg doping on the properties of GaN nanowires grown by plasma assisted molecular beam epitaxy. The most significant feature is the presence of triple-twin domains, the density of which increases with increasing Mg concentration. The resulting high concentration of misplaced atoms gives rise to local changes in the crystal structure equivalent to the insertion of three non-relaxed zinc-blende (ZB) atomic cells, which result in quantum wells along the wurtzite (WZ) nanowire growth axis. High resolution electron energy loss spectra were obtained exactly on the twinned (zinc-blende) and wurtzite planes. These atomically resolved measurements, which allow us to identify modifications in the local density of states, revealed changes in the band to band electronic transition energy from 3.4 eV for wurtzite to 3.2 eV in the twinned lattice regions. These results are in good agreement with specific ab initio atomistic simulations and demonstrate that the redshift observed in previous photoluminescence analyses is directly related to the presence of these zinc-blende domains, opening up new possibilities for band-structure engineering.
RESUMO
Efficient encapsulation of foreign molecules like proteins and low molecular weight drugs into polyoma virus-like particles (capsoids) was achieved by the development of an anchoring technique based upon the specific interaction of the inner core protein VP2 with VP1 pentamers. A stretch of 49 amino acids of VP2 served as an anchor molecule, either expressed as a fusion protein with green fluorescent protein (GFP) or covalently linked to methotrexate (MTX). The loaded capsoids showed regular morphology and stability for several months. GFP and MTX were internalized into cells in vitro, as was demonstrated by the detection of GFP and VP1 fluorescence in mouse fibroblasts and the cytostatic effect of intracellularly released MTX on leukemia T cells.