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1.
BMC Oral Health ; 21(1): 52, 2021 02 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33546674

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Transmission of COVID-19 via salivary aerosol particles generated when using handpieces or ultrasonic scalers is a major concern during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to assess the spread of dental aerosols on patients and dental providers during aerosol-generating dental procedures. METHODS: This pilot study was conducted with one volunteer. A dental unit used at the dental school for general dental care was the site of the experiment. Before the study, three measurement meters (DustTrak 8534, PTrak 8525 and AeroTrak 9306) were used to measure the ambient distribution of particles in the ambient air surrounding the dental chair. The volunteer wore a bouffant, goggles, and shoe covers and was seated in the dental chair in supine position, and covered with a surgical drape. The dentist and dental assistant donned bouffant, goggles, face shields, N95 masks, surgical gowns and shoe covers. The simulation was conducted by using a high-speed handpiece with a diamond bur operating in the oral cavity for 6 min without touching the teeth. A new set of measurement was obtained while using an ultrasonic scaler to clean all teeth of the volunteer. For both aerosol generating procedures, the aerosol particles were measured with the use of saliva ejector (SE) and high-speed suction (HSS) followed a separate set of measurement with the additional use of an extra oral high-volume suction (HVS) unit that was placed close to the mouth to capture the aerosol in addition to SE and HSS. The distribution of the air particles, including the size and concentration of aerosols, was measured around the patient, dentist, dental assistant, 3 feet above the patient, and the floor. RESULTS: Four locations were identified with elevated aerosol levels compared to the baseline, including the chest of the dentist, the chest of patient, the chest of assistant and 3 feet above the patient. The use of additional extra oral high volume suction reduced aerosol to or below the baseline level. CONCLUSIONS: The increase of the level of aerosol with size less than 10 µm was minimal during dental procedures when using SE and HSS. Use of HVS further reduced aerosol levels below the ambient levels.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Pandemias , Aerossóis , Humanos , Projetos Piloto , SARS-CoV-2 , Saliva , Faculdades de Odontologia
2.
Langmuir ; 36(31): 9225-9234, 2020 Aug 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32660251

RESUMO

The analytical theories derived here for the acoustic load impedance measured by a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM), due to the presence of layers of different types (rigid, elastic, and viscous) immersed in a fluid, display generic properties, such as "vanishing mass" and positive frequency shifts, which have been observed in QCM experiments with soft-matter systems. These phenomena seem to contradict the well-known Sauerbrey relation at the heart of many QCM measurements, but here, we show that they arise as a natural consequence of hydrodynamics. We compare our one-dimensional immersed plate theory with three-dimensional simulations of rigid and flexible submicron-sized suspended spheres and with experimental results for adsorbed micron-sized colloids, which yield a "negative acoustic mass". The parallel behavior unveiled indicates that the QCM response is highly sensitive to hydrodynamics, even for adsorbed colloids. Our conclusions call for a revision of existing theories based on adhesion forces and elastic stiffness at contact, which should, in most cases, include hydrodynamics.

3.
Nanoscale ; 15(36): 14831-14836, 2023 Sep 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37664969

RESUMO

Transient Photoluminescence Microscopy (TPLM) allows for the direct visualization of carrier transport in semiconductor materials with sub nanosecond and few nanometer resolution. The technique is based on measuring changes in the spatial distribution of a diffraction limited population of carriers using spatiotemporal detection of the radiative decay of the carriers. The spatial resolution of TPLM is therefore primarily determined by the signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR). Here we present a method using cylindrical lenses to boost the signal acquisition in TPLM experiments. The resulting asymmetric magnification of the photoluminescence emission of the diffraction limited spot can increase the collection efficiency by more than a factor of 10, significantly reducing acquisition times and further boosting spatial resolution.

4.
ACS Nano ; 17(4): 3797-3808, 2023 Feb 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36800201

RESUMO

Mapping of the spatial and temporal motion of particles inside an optical field is critical for understanding and further improvement of the 3D spatio-temporal control over their optical trapping dynamics. However, it is not trivial to capture the 3D motion, and most imaging systems only capture a 2D projection of the 3D motion, in which the information about the axial movement is not directly available. In this work, we resolve the 3D incorporation trajectories of 200 nm fluorescent polystyrene particles in an optical trapping site under different optical experimental conditions using a recently developed widefield multiplane microscope (imaging volume of 50 × 50 × 4 µm3). The particles are gathered at the focus following some preferential 3D channels that show a shallow cone distribution. We demonstrate that the radial and the axial flow speed components depend on the axial distance from the focus, which is directly related to the scattering/gradient optical forces. While particle velocities and trajectories are mainly determined by the trapping laser profile, they cannot be completely explained without considering collective effects resulting from hydrodynamic forces.

5.
ACS Energy Lett ; 7(1): 358-365, 2022 Jan 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35059502

RESUMO

Halide mixing is one of the most powerful techniques to tune the optical bandgap of metal-halide perovskites. However, halide mixing has commonly been observed to result in phase segregation, which reduces excited-state transport and limits device performance. While the current emphasis lies on the development of strategies to prevent phase segregation, it remains unclear how halide mixing may affect excited-state transport even if phase purity is maintained. Here, we study exciton transport in phase pure mixed-halide 2D perovskites of (PEA)2Pb(I1-x Br x )4. Using transient photoluminescence microscopy, we show that, despite phase purity, halide mixing inhibits exciton transport. We find a significant reduction even for relatively low alloying concentrations. By performing Brownian dynamics simulations, we are able to reproduce our experimental results and attribute the decrease in diffusivity to the energetically disordered potential landscape that arises due to the intrinsic random distribution of alloying sites.

6.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 2035, 2020 Apr 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32341361

RESUMO

Two-dimensional layered perovskites are attracting increasing attention as more robust analogues to the conventional three-dimensional metal-halide perovskites for both light harvesting and light emitting applications. However, the impact of the reduced dimensionality on the optoelectronic properties remains unclear, particularly regarding the spatial dynamics of the excitonic excited state within the two-dimensional plane. Here, we present direct measurements of exciton transport in single-crystalline layered perovskites. Using transient photoluminescence microscopy, we show that excitons undergo an initial fast diffusion through the crystalline plane, followed by a slower subdiffusive regime as excitons get trapped. Interestingly, the early intrinsic diffusivity depends sensitively on the choice of organic spacer. A clear correlation between lattice stiffness and diffusivity is found, suggesting exciton-phonon interactions to be dominant in the spatial dynamics of the excitons in perovskites, consistent with the formation of exciton-polarons. Our findings provide a clear design strategy to optimize exciton transport in these systems.

7.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26382543

RESUMO

Distribution functions for systems in nonequilibrium steady states are usually determined through detailed experiments, both in numerical and real-life settings in the laboratory. However, for a protocol-driven distribution function, it is usually prohibitive to perform such detailed experiments for the entire range of the protocol. In this article we show that distribution functions of nonequilibrium steady states (NESS) evolving under a slowly varying protocol can be accurately obtained from limited data and the closest known detailed state of the system. In this manner, one needs to perform only a few detailed experiments to obtain the nonequilibrium distribution function for the entire gamut of nonlinearity. We achieve this by maximizing the relative entropy functional (MaxRent) subject to constraints supplied by the problem definition and new measurements. MaxRent is found to be superior to the principle of maximum entropy (MaxEnt), which maximizes Shannon's informational entropy for estimating distributions but lacks the ability to incorporate additional prior information. The MaxRent principle is illustrated using a toy model of ϕ4 thermal conduction consisting of a single lattice point. An external protocol controlled position-dependent temperature field drives the system out of equilibrium. Two different thermostatting schemes are employed: the Hoover-Holian deterministic thermostat (which produces multifractal dynamics under strong nonlinearity) and the Langevin stochastic thermostat (which produces phase-space-filling dynamics). Out of the 80 possible states produced by the protocol, we assume that four states are known to us in detail, one of which is used as input into MaxRent at a time. We find that MaxRent approximates the phase-space density functions for every value of the protocol, even when they are far from the known distribution. MaxEnt, however, is unable to capture the fine details of the phase-space distribution functions. We expect this method to be useful in other external protocol-driven nonequilibrium cases as well, making it unnecessary to perform detailed experiments for all values of the protocol when one wishes to obtain approximate distributions.

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