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Surface proton hopping conduction (SPHC) mechanisms is an important proton conduction mechanism in conventional polymer electrolytes, along with the Grotthuss and vehicle mechanisms. Due to the small diffusion coefficient of protons in the SPHC mechanism, few studies have focused on the SPHC mechanism. Recently, it has been found that a dense alignment of SO3 - groups significantly lowers the activation energy in the SPHC mechanism, enabling fast proton conduction. In this study, a series of polymerizable amphiphilic-zwitterions is prepared, forming bicontinuous cubic liquid-crystalline assemblies with gyroid symmetry in the presence of suitable amounts of bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl) imide (HTf2N) and water. In situ polymerization of these compounds yields gyroid-nanostructured polymer films, as confirmed by synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering experiments. The high proton conductivity of the films on the order of 10-2 S cm-1 at 40 °C and relative humidity of 90% is based solely on the SPHC mechanism.
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Although the silicon (Si) anode has a high theoretical capacity, large volume-expansion would lead to rapid capacity decay. Here, a core-nest structured Si@SnS0.5Se0.5/carbon (Si@SnS0.5Se0.5/C) is developed using silicon as the core and SnS0.5Se0.5/carbon as a binary nest. Both the core-nest structure and carbon matrix enable a stable hybrid structure during charge and discharge. The binary nest Si@SnS0.5Se0.5/C nanospheres as a lithium-ion battery anode display good capacity, recoverable rate-performance, and enhanced electron and ion transfer properties. A capacity of 1318 mA h g-1 and a high coulombic efficiency of 98.9% after 50 cycles at 0.1 A g-1 are achievable, and the capacity remains 887 mA h g-1 after 150 cycles at 0.5 A g-1. A high capacity at 50 °C is also retained, showing a high initial specific capacity. It is found that the reaction resistance of Si@SnS0.5Se0.5/C is significantly lower than that of the pure components, and the stress-strain relationship of the Li-Si system is demonstrated by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The engineering of the binary-nest structure should be able to provide some new ideas for developing many other high-performance energy-storage hybrids.
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High safety and low cost are essential for energy-storage systems. Here, an aqueous zinc ion battery composed of a hydrogel-based water-in-salt electrolyte prepared by photoinitiated polymerization of acrylamide in ZnCl2 solution (named as PZC) and flexible electrodes is developed. The stable performance in Zn||Zn symmetric cells and high Coulombic efficiency of PZC in Zn||Cu asymmetric cells verify dendrite suppression. VO2 nanobelts coated with polyaniline (PANI) are grown on a carbon cloth (CC). The battery shows a capacity of 221.5 mAh g-1 after 200 cycles. The batteries present high recovery performance after bending/cutting. After bending of 60°, 90°, and 180°, capacities remain at 240.0, 205.4, and 175.2 mAh g-1, respectively; while the battery healed from 1, 2, 3, and 4 times of cutting shows 197.5, 174.3, 124.7, and 101.2 mAh g-1, respectively. Our findings enable the engineering of a quasi-solid-state battery to have good capability for flexible and portable electronics.
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This study investigates the effects of the essential oil from Amomum villosum (EOA) on liver-protective effects in Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), utilizing a multidisciplinary approach that integrates physiological assessments and transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses. Fish were fed diets containing 2 g/kg of EOA over a 56-day trial, with a no-EOA diet serving as the control. The results demonstrate that EOA supplementation improves liver histology, enhances antioxidant capacities, and reduces inflammation in tilapia. The transcriptomic analysis revealed significant alterations in gene expression profiles related to RNA splicing, metabolism, and disease pathways. The identification of differential genes and disease databases identified key target genes associated with the primary component of EOA for its anti-hepatobiliary disease effects. Furthermore, a molecular docking analysis of EOA major components with core differentially expressed genes in the hepatobiliary syndrome indicated that α-pinene is a potential Hsp90 inhibitor, which may prevent inflammation. A metabolomic analysis further demonstrated that EOA supplementation leads to notable changes in liver phospholipids, fatty acids, and carbohydrate metabolism. These findings underscore the potential of EOA as a natural additive for improving liver health in tilapia, offering valuable insights to the aquaculture industry for enhancing fish health and welfare in intensive farming systems.
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Gyroid, double diamond and the body-centred "Plumber's nightmare" are the three most common bicontinuous cubic phases in lyotropic liquid crystals and block copolymers. While the first two are also present in solvent-free thermotropics, the latter had never been found. Containing six-fold junctions, it was unlikely to form in the more common phases with rod-like cores normal to the network columns, where a maximum of four branches can join at a junction. The solution has therefore been sought in side-branched mesogens that lie in axial bundles joined at their ends by flexible "hinges". But for the tightly packed double framework, geometric models predicted that the side-chains should be very short. The true Plumber's nightmare reported here, using fluorescent dithienofluorenone rod-like mesogen, has been achieved with, indeed, no side chains at all, but with 6 flexible end-chains. Such molecules normally form columnar phases, but the key to converting a complex helical column-forming mesogen into a framework-forming one was the addition of just one methyl group to each pendant chain. A geometry-based explanation is given.
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We designed V-shaped ionic liquid crystals with two sterically congested ionic parts at the vertex. Depending on the degree of steric hindrance, atropisomerisation occurred in solution. All compounds formed bicontinuous cubic phases with double-gyroid structures in the bulk state, partially owing to the co-existence of atropisomers with opposite chirality.
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Eugenol is a commonly used fish anesthetic, but its mechanism of action is not fully understood. This study employed network pharmacology, molecular docking, and molecular dynamics simulation to explore the anesthetic targets of eugenol in fish. Initially, 63 potential targets for eugenol anesthesia were identified using databases such as SwissTarget, TargetNet, GeneCards, OMIM, and TTD. The DAVID database was utilized to analyze the GO functions and KEGG pathways of these targets, revealing 384 GO enrichment terms and 43 KEGG pathways. These terms involved neuroactive ligand-receptor interaction, calcium signaling pathway, and synaptic transmission. Subsequently, AutodockTools software facilitated molecular docking with targets in the KEGG pathway for "neuroactive ligand-receptor interaction." The results showed that eugenol had a strong affinity with these proteins. Concurrently, molecular dynamics simulations were conducted on the proteins with the top four lowest binding energies (Cnr1, Oprk1, Nr3c1, and Chrm5a) in the presence of eugenol. The eugenol-protein complexes remained stable and equilibrated within the dynamic environment. The results indicated that eugenol-anesthesia might affect membrane receptors, neurotransmitters, and ion signaling. This study elucidates the anesthetic mechanism of eugenol, enriches the primary data on fish anesthesia, and offers new analytical tools for understanding the action mechanisms of fishery drugs.
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Confined in a cylindrical pore with homeotropic anchoring condition, the hexagonal columnar phase of discotic liquid crystals can form a "log-pile" configuration, in which the columns are perpendicular to the long axis of the pore. However, the {100} planes of the hexagonal lattice can orient either parallel (termed (100)â orientation) or perpendicular ((100)â¥) to pore axis. Here we experimentally show that the (100)â orientation is found in narrower cylindrical pores, and the (100)â-(100)⥠transition can be controlled by engineering the structure of the molecules. The (100)â orientation is destroyed in asymmetric discotics hepta(heptenyloxy)triphenylene (SATO7); replacing the oxygen linkage in hexa(hexyloxy)triphenylene (HATO6) by sulphur (HATS6) improves the (100)â orientation in small pores; adding a perfluorooctyl end to each alkyl chain of HATO6 (HATO6F8) moves the (100)â-(100)⥠transition to larger pores. We have provided a semi-quantitative explanation of the experimental observations, and discussed them in the context of previous findings on related materials in a wider pore size range from 60 nm to 100 µm. This allows us to produce a comprehensive picture of confined columnar liquid crystals whose applications critically depend on our ability to align them.
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Among the intriguing bicontinuous self-assembled structures, the gyroid cubic is the most ubiquitous. It is found in block and star polymers, surfactants with or without solvent, in thermotropic liquid crystals with end- or side-chains, and in biosystems providing structural color and modelling cell mitosis. It contains two interpenetrating networks of opposite chirality and is thus achiral if, as usual, the content of the two nets is the same. However, we now find that this is not the case for strongly chiral compounds. While achiral molecules follow the opposite twists of nets 1 and 2, molecules with a chiral center in their rod-like core fail to follow the 70° twist between junctions in net 2 and instead wind against it by -110° to still match the junction orientation. The metastable chiral gyroid is a high-entropy high-heat-capacity mesophase. The homochirality of its nets makes the CD signal of the thienofluorenone compounds close to that in the stable I23 phase with 3â isochiral nets.
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We developed a magnesium/sodium (Mg/Na) hybrid battery using a hierarchical disk-whisker FeSe2 architecture (HD-FeSe2) as the cathode material and a modified dual-ion electrolyte. The polarizable Se2- anion reduced the Mg2+ migration barrier, and the 3D configuration possessed a large surface area, which facilitated both Mg2+/Na+ cation diffusion and electron transport. The dual-ion salts with NaTFSI in ether reduced the Mg plating/stripping overvoltage in a symmetric cell. The hybrid battery exhibited an energy density of 260.9 Wh kg-1 and a power density of 600.8 W kg-1 at 0.2 A g-1. It showed a capacity retention of 154 mAh g-1 and a Coulombic efficiency of over 99.5% under 1.0 A g-1 after 800 long cycles. The battery also displayed outstanding temperature tolerance. The findings of 3D architecture as cathode material and hybrid electrolyte provide a pathway to design a highly reliable Mg/Na hybrid battery.
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Cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury (CIRI) can induce massive death of ischemic penumbra neurons via oxygen burst, exacerbating brain damage. Parthanatos is a form of caspase-independent cell death involving excessive activation of PARP-1, closely associated with intense oxidative stress following CIRI. 4'-O-methylbavachalcone (MeBavaC), an isoprenylated chalcone component in Fructus Psoraleae, has potential neuroprotective effects. This study primarily investigates whether MeBavaC can act on SIRT3 to alleviate parthanatos of ischemic penumbra neurons induced by CIRI. MeBavaC was oral gavaged to the middle cerebral artery occlusion-reperfusion (MCAO/R) rats after occlusion. The effects of MeBavaC on cerebral injury were detected by the neurological deficit score and cerebral infarct volume. In vitro, PC-12 cells were subjected to oxygen and glucose deprivation/reoxygenation (OGD/R), and assessed cell viability and cell injury. Also, the levels of ROS, mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), and intracellular Ca2+ levels were detected to reflect mitochondrial function. We conducted western blotting analyses of proteins involved in parthanatos and related signaling pathways. Finally, the exact mechanism between the neuroprotection of MeBavaC and parthanatos was explored. Our results indicate that MeBavaC reduces the cerebral infarct volume and neurological deficit scores in MCAO/R rats, and inhibits the decreased viability of PC-12 cells induced by OGD/R. MeBavaC also downregulates the expression of parthanatos-related death proteins PARP-1, PAR, and AIF. However, this inhibitory effect is weakened after the use of a SIRT3 inhibitor. In conclusion, the protective effect of MeBavaC against CIRI may be achieved by inhibiting parthanatos of ischemic penumbra neurons through the SIRT3-PARP-1 axis.
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Chalconas , Fármacos Neuroprotectores , Parthanatos , Ratas Sprague-Dawley , Daño por Reperfusión , Sirtuinas , Animales , Ratas , Masculino , Chalconas/farmacología , Chalconas/uso terapéutico , Fármacos Neuroprotectores/farmacología , Fármacos Neuroprotectores/uso terapéutico , Daño por Reperfusión/tratamiento farmacológico , Daño por Reperfusión/patología , Daño por Reperfusión/metabolismo , Parthanatos/efectos de los fármacos , Accidente Cerebrovascular Isquémico/tratamiento farmacológico , Accidente Cerebrovascular Isquémico/patología , Accidente Cerebrovascular Isquémico/metabolismo , Especies Reactivas de Oxígeno/metabolismo , Células PC12 , Potencial de la Membrana Mitocondrial/efectos de los fármacos , Neuronas/efectos de los fármacos , Neuronas/patología , Neuronas/metabolismo , Calcio/metabolismo , Infarto de la Arteria Cerebral Media/tratamiento farmacológico , Infarto de la Arteria Cerebral Media/patología , Infarto de la Arteria Cerebral Media/complicaciones , Supervivencia Celular/efectos de los fármacos , Sirtuina 3/metabolismo , Sirtuina 3/genética , Poli(ADP-Ribosa) Polimerasa-1/metabolismo , Poli(ADP-Ribosa) Polimerasa-1/antagonistas & inhibidores , Mitocondrias/efectos de los fármacos , Mitocondrias/metabolismoRESUMEN
A simple theory has been developed to explain quantitatively the multiple crystal growth rate minima observed experimentally in polyethylene brassylates (PEBs), polymers with regularly spaced "chemical defects", in this case, diester groups separated by 11 methylenes. The minima occur at the transitions where the fold length drops from 4 to 3 repeat units and from 3 to 2 units. An analytical rate-equation model was developed with elementary attachment and detachment steps of individual monomer repeat units, also including postattachment stem lengthening (stem conversion). The model produced a good fit to experimental crystallization rate curves for PEBs of three different molecular weights. The fits confirm in a quantitative way that the anomalies are caused by the self-poisoning effect, as proposed in the original experimental report on PEBs, based on the ideas developed in previous studies on long-chain n-alkanes. It is concluded that the rate minima in PEBs are the result of temporary attachment to the growth surface of stems that are too short to be stable yet long enough and close to stability to obstruct productive growth by stems of sufficient length. The results confirm the ubiquitous presence of self-poisoning at the growth front of polymer crystals in general and will help to achieve a better understanding of the complex process of crystallization of polymers. It will also allow the determination of more realistic parameters controlling their lamellar growth kinetics.
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The enantiomeric ratio is a key factor affecting the crystallization behavior and morphology of poly-l-lactide/poly-d-lactide (PLLA/PDLA) blends. Despite a number of studies on crystallization of nonequimolar PLLA/PDLA blends, a full picture of the effect of the L/D ratio is still lacking. Here, we put the two enantiomers in contact and allow interdiffusion above the melting point of the stereocomplex crystal (SC) to prepare samples with a continuously changing L/D ratio from enantiopure PLLA (ratio 0/100) to enantiopure PDLA (100/0). Using polarized optical microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and microbeam X-ray diffraction, the continuous spectrum of morphologies and phase behaviors across the contact zone is investigated. The blend morphology shows clear evidence of "poisoning by purity" of SC crystallization at all blend compositions. The low birefringence of the 50/50 SC is found to be due to the meandering of broken edge-on lamellae. Its further decrease to near zero as L/D deviates further away from 50/50 is explained by transition from radial edge-on lamellae to fully random meandering lamellae, then to mixed flat-on lamellae, and finally to submicron-sized axialites. In comparison with the smooth and straight homocrystal (HC) lamellae of pure enantiomers, the lamellae in the blends often have serrated edges caused by pinning by rejected excess enantiomer acting as an impurity during lamellar growth. A feature of the binary phase diagram is pure enantiomers acting as an impurity to the SC and counter-enantiomer acting as an impurity to homocrystallization of the enantiomers. Crystallization was found to be most suppressed at 99% enantiomeric purity, where the amount of the counter-enantiomer is insufficient for creation of SC nuclei and HC growth is inhibited by the small amount of the enantio-impurity. These and other intriguing results are less likely to be noticed without the continuous composition gradient of the contact sample.
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The recently discovered orthorhombic liquid crystal (LC) phase of symmetry Fddd is proving to be widespread. In this work, a chiral hydroxybutyrate linkage is inserted into the molecular core of hexacatenar rodlike compounds, containing a thienylfluorenone fluorophore. In addition to more usual tools, the methods used include grazing-incidence X-ray scattering, modulated differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), flash DSC with rates up to 6000 K/s, and chiro-optical spectroscopies using Mueller matrix method, plus conformational mapping. Although pure R and S enantiomers form only a strongly chiral hexagonal columnar LC phase (Colh*), the racemic mixture forms a highly ordered Fddd phase with 4 right- and 4 left-handed twisted ribbon-like columns traversing its large unit cell. In that structure, the two enantiomers locally deracemize and self-sort into the columns of their preferred chirality. The twisted ribbons in Fddd, with a 7.54 nm pitch, consist of stacked rafts, each containing â¼2 side-by-side molecules, the successive rafts rotated by 17°. In contrast, an analogous achiral compound forms only the columnar phase. The multiple methods used gave a comprehensive picture and helped in-depth understanding not only of the Fddd phase but also of the "parachiral" Colh* in pure enantiomers with irregular helicity, whose chirality is compared to the magnetization of a paramagnet in a field. Unusual short-range ordering effects are also described. An explanation of these phenomena is proposed based on conformational analysis. Surprisingly, the isotropic-columnar transition is extremely fast, completing within â¼20 ms. A clear effect of phase on UV-vis absorption and emission is observed.
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Polymorphism of semicrystalline polymers has significant influence on their physical properties, with each form having its advantages and disadvantages. However, real-life polymer processing often results in different coexisting crystal polymorphs, and it remains a challenge to determine their shape, spatial distribution, and volume fraction. Here, i-polypropylene (i-PP) sheets containing both α- and ß-forms were prepared either by adding ß-nucleating agent or by fiber pulling-induced crystallization. By adding a compatible dye that is partially rejected from the growing crystalline aggregates (spherulites and cylindrites), we visualize the shape of these objects in 3D using two-photon fluorescence confocal microscopy. To distinguish between crystal forms, we take advantage of the difference in dye-retaining ability of the α- and ß-aggregates. Even in 2D, fluorescence microscopy (FM) distinguishes the two crystal forms better than polarized microscopy. In 3D imaging, the volume fraction and spatial distribution of α- and ß-forms in different morphological types could be determined quantitatively. Morphologies described as α-teeth, ß-fans, and α-teardrops were visualized for the first time in 3D. Furthermore, internal and surface microcracks were seen to be associated predominantly with the ß-form and around the fiber. Spatial distribution of α- and ß-forms was also determined by scanning with a synchrotron X-ray beam. Good agreement was obtained with 3D microscopy, but XRD could not match the detail obtainable by the tomography. The work demonstrates the ability of the 3D imaging method to distinguish different crystal forms and their specific morphologies.
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Since current graphite-based lithium-ion battery anode has a low theoretical capacity, the development of high-performance lithium-ion battery is severely restricted. Here, novel hierarchical composites composing of microdisc and the secondarily grown nanosheets and nanowires are developed, taking NiMoO4nanosheets and Mn3O4nanowires growing on Fe2O3microdiscs as demonstrating examples. The growth processes of the hierarchical structures have been investigated by adjusting a series of preparation conditions. The morphologies and structures have been characterized by using scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscope and x-ray diffraction. Fe2O3@Mn3O4composite-based anode displays a capacity of 713 mAh g-1after 100 cycles at 0.5 A g-1with a high Coulombic efficiency. A good rate-performance is also achieved. Fe2O3@NiMoO4anode delivers 539 mAh g-1after 100 cycles at 0.5 A g-1, which is obviously higher than that of pure Fe2O3. The hierarchical structure is conducive to improve the transport of electrons and ions, and provide numerous active sites, thus significantly enhancing the electrochemical performance. Moreover, the electron transfer performance is investigated by using density functional theory calculations. It is expected the findings presented here and the rational engineering of nanosheets/nanowires on microdiscs would be applicable for developing many other high-performance energy-storage composites.
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Quasicrystals are intriguing structures that have long-range positional correlations but no periodicity in real space, and typically with rotational symmetries that are 'forbidden' in conventional periodic crystals. Here, we present a two-dimensional columnar liquid quasicrystal with dodecagonal symmetry. Unlike previous dodecagonal quasicrystals based on random tiling, a honeycomb structure based on a strictly quasiperiodic tessellation of tiles is observed. The structure consists of dodecagonal clusters made up of triangular, square and trapezoidal cells that are optimal for local packing. To maximize the presence of such dodecagonal clusters, the system abandons periodicity but adopts a quasiperiodic structure that follows strict packing rules. The stability of random-tiling dodecagonal quasicrystals is often attributed to the entropy of disordering when strict tiling rules are broken, at the sacrifice of the long-range positional order. However, our results demonstrate that quasicrystal stability may rest on energy minimization alone, or with only minimal entropic intervention.
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Two-photon confocal laser microscopy was used to obtain three-dimensional (3D) images of the morphology of poly(lactic acid) after shear-induced crystallization. The necessary fluorescence contrast was achieved by doping the polymer with Nile Red. The dye gets partially rejected from the growing crystalline aggregates during their formation, thus creating a renderable high-low fluorescence boundary outlining the shape of the aggregates. Parallel-plate melt-shearing and pulling a glass fiber through the melt were used as the two methods to achieve shear-induced crystallization. This study focuses on the shape of the resulting cylindrites, i.e., large-diameter shish-kebabs. The first 3D images of polymer cylindrites show that, if far from boundaries, they are circular cylinders, highly regular after fiber pull, but less so after parallel-plate shear. In the latter case, the cylindrite reveals the trajectory of the foreign particle that had nucleated its growth. Interestingly, lateral growth of the cylindrites was found to accelerate toward the sample surface when approaching it, giving the cylindrite an elliptical cross section. Furthermore and surprisingly, in the case of fiber pull, a row of spherulites is nucleated at the polymer-substrate interface nearest to the fiber, aligned along the fiber axis and appearing ahead of the rest of the space-filling spherulites. Both the phenomena, elliptical cylindrites and row of spherulites, are attributed to negative pressure buildup peaking at the cylindrite growth front and at the nearby film surface caused by crystallization-induced volume contraction. The pressure and flow distribution in the system is confirmed by numerical simulation. The results illustrate the value of 3D imaging of crystalline morphology in polymer science and polymer processing industry.
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Magnolia denudata is a well-known ornamental tree in China due to its beautiful blossoms, and it has been used as an analgesic to treat human headaches. This study investigated the anesthetic potential and physiological response of the essential oil of M. denudata flowers on spotted seabass Lateolabrax maculatus. Fish (mean ± SD, 164.16 ± 15.40 g) were individually exposed to different concentrations of M. denudata essential oil (MDO, 10, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, and 120 mg/L) and eugenol (10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, and 70 mg/L) to investigate anesthetic efficacy. Based on the ideal time criterion for anesthetic induction (< 3 min) and recovery (< 10 min), the lowest effective concentration for spotted seabass was 100 mg/L for MDO and 60 mg/L for eugenol. The physiological and histopathological damage in the gill of L. maculatus after using MDO and eugenol was also evaluated at the minimum dose inducing deep anesthesia, and at 0, 6, and 24 h after recovery. The results showed that MDO and eugenol anesthesia alleviated the levels of cortisol and glucose and the lactic dehydrogenase activity induced by handling. Compared with eugenol, MDO also caused secondary stress to the body, but MDO caused minor physiological responses and histological changes in the gills. This study suggests that MDO is an effective anesthetic for spotted seabass.
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Anestésicos , Lubina , Magnolia , Aceites Volátiles , Animales , Anestésicos/farmacología , Lubina/fisiología , Eugenol/farmacología , Branquias , Glucosa , Hidrocortisona , Aceites Volátiles/farmacología , OxidorreductasasRESUMEN
Helical structures continue to inspire, prompted by examples such as DNA double-helix and alpha-helix in proteins. Most synthetic polymers also crystallize as helices, which relieves steric clashes by twisting, while keeping the molecules straight for their ordered packing. In columnar liquid crystals, which often display useful optoelectronic properties, overall helical chirality can be induced by inclusion of chiral chemical groups or dopants; these bias molecular twist to either left or right, analogous to a magnetic field aligning the spins in a paramagnet. In this work, however, we show that liquid-crystalline columns with long-range helical order can form by spontaneous self-assembly of straight- or bent-rod molecules without inclusion of any chiral moiety. A complex lattice with Fddd symmetry and 8 columns per unit cell (4 right-, 4 left-handed) characterizes this "antiferrochiral" structure. In selected compounds it allows close packing of their fluorescent groups reducing their bandgap and giving them promising light-emitting properties.