ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Globally, populations are aging, generating concerns about the sustainability of health and social care provision. In terms of the public provision of social care in particular, unpaid carers provide much of the support to people with disabilities and older people. In addition, there is an increased onus in many countries on digital transformation projects, in the hope that the digitalization of services can create efficiencies and savings in both costs and care labor. In England, the focus of this paper, the shift to digital services is also framed as a means to enhance choice and control for older unpaid carers, while being part of a broader offering that includes nondigital alternatives and support to mitigate digital exclusion. OBJECTIVE: This study examines the impact of digitalization on older, unpaid carers-a group more likely to be both expected to engage digitally with services and at risk of digital exclusion-in England, focusing on their lived experiences in terms of caring and access to social care. METHODS: We used a constructionist approach to thematic analysis, where data from 48 older unpaid carers collected through focus groups were analyzed using thematic analysis, resulting in 4 prevailing themes. RESULTS: Our findings indicated that while unpaid carers largely acknowledge the benefits of digitalization, they also highlight several points of failure, whereby engagement with digital spaces is experienced as coercive and exacerbates feelings of exclusion. These are further worsened by government failures to address issues of connectivity, imposing additional financial burdens and complicating tasks such as benefit applications. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we have highlighted the need for greater involvement in shaping both policy and technological solutions, which in turn will be more inclusive and aligned to the aspirations and circumstances of older carers.
Subject(s)
Caregivers , Humans , England , Aged , Male , Female , Focus Groups , Middle Aged , Aged, 80 and overABSTRACT
Raman spectroscopy is a well-appreciated technique in cultural heritage research for its ability to obtain molecular information nondestructively. During Raman mapping experiments, advantage is taken of the excellent spatial resolution of the approach, allowing to visualize the spatial distribution of the molecules. In the current research, macro-Raman mapping is proposed, allowing us to map large areas of an artwork (typically tens or hundreds of square centimeters). Therefore, a new setup is made, using a commercially available mobile Raman spectrometer and fast translation stages. Moreover, the probe is equipped with a triangulator to measure the distance to the surface of the artwork and thus achieving accurate focusing of the Raman probe. Finally, the correct setup is guaranteed by using a calibration module that is designed to allow for spectral calibration and aligning all components of the probe. The use of the method is demonstrated by three cases, where different data processing techniques are illustrated.
ABSTRACT
Iridescence is widespread in the living world, occurring in organisms as diverse as bacteria, plants, and animals. Yet, compared to pigment-based forms of coloration, we know surprisingly little about the developmental and molecular bases of the structural colors that give rise to iridescence. Birds display a rich diversity of iridescent structural colors that are produced in feathers by the arrangement of melanin-containing organelles called melanosomes into nanoscale configurations, but how these often unusually shaped melanosomes form, or how they are arranged into highly organized nanostructures, remains largely unknown. Here, we use functional genomics to explore the developmental basis of iridescent plumage using superb starlings (Lamprotornis superbus), which produce both iridescent blue and non-iridescent red feathers. Through morphological and chemical analyses, we confirm that hollow, flattened melanosomes in iridescent feathers are eumelanin-based, whereas melanosomes in non-iridescent feathers are solid and amorphous, suggesting that high pheomelanin content underlies red coloration. Intriguingly, the nanoscale arrangement of melanosomes within the barbules was surprisingly similar between feather types. After creating a new genome assembly, we use transcriptomics to show that non-iridescent feather development is associated with genes related to pigmentation, metabolism, and mitochondrial function, suggesting non-iridescent feathers are more energetically expensive to produce than iridescent feathers. However, iridescent feather development is associated with genes related to structural and cellular organization, suggesting that, while nanostructures themselves may passively assemble, barbules and melanosomes may require active organization to give them their shape. Together, our analyses suggest that iridescent feathers form through a combination of passive self-assembly and active processes.
Subject(s)
Feathers , Starlings , Animals , Gene Expression , Iridescence , Pigmentation/geneticsABSTRACT
In this work, we provide a detailed account of the liquid-phase exfoliation (LPE) of rhenium disulfide (ReS2), a promising new-generation two-dimensional material. By screening LPE in a wide range of solvents, we show that the most optimal solvents are characterized by similar Hildebrand or dispersive Hansen solubility parameters of 25 and 18 MPa1/2, respectively. Such values are attained by solvents such as N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone, N,N-dimethylformamide, and 1-butanol. In line with solution thermodynamics, we interpret the conditions for high-yield exfoliation as a matching of the solvent and ReS2 solubility parameters. Using N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone as an exemplary exfoliation solvent, we undertook a detailed analysis of the exfoliated ReS2. In-depth morphological, structural, and elemental characterization outlined that the LPE procedure presented here produces few-layer, anisotropically stacked, and chemically pure ReS2 platelets with long-term stability against oxidation. These results underscore the suitability of LPE to batch-produce few-layer and pristine ReS2 in solvents that have a solubility parameter close to 25 MPa1/2.
ABSTRACT
Microspatially offset Raman spectroscopy (micro-SORS) has been proposed as a valuable approach to sample molecular information from layers that are covered by a turbid (nontransparent) layer. However, when large magnifications are involved, the approach is not straightforward, as spatial constraints exist to position the laser beam and the objective lens with the external beam delivery or, with internal beam delivery, the maximum spatial offset achievable is restricted. To overcome these limitations, we propose here a prototype of a new micro-SORS sensor, which uses bare glass fibers to transfer the laser radiation to the sample and to collect the Raman signal from a spatially offset zone to the Raman spectrometer. The concept also renders itself amenable to remote delivery and to the miniaturization of the probe head which could be beneficial for special applications, e.g., where access to sample areas is restricted. The basic applicability of this approach was demonstrated by studying several layered structure systems. Apart from proving the feasibility of the technique, also, practical aspects of the use of the prototype sensor are discussed.
ABSTRACT
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are nanostructured semiconductors with prospects in optoelectronics and photocatalysis. Several bottom-up procedures to synthesize such materials have been developed yielding colloidal transition metal dichalcogenides (c-TMDs). Where such methods initially yielded multilayered sheets with indirect band gaps, recently, also the formation of monolayered c-TMDs became possible. Despite these advances, no clear picture on the charge carrier dynamics in monolayer c-TMDs exists to date. Here, we show through broadband and multiresonant pump-probe spectroscopy, that the carrier dynamics in monolayer c-TMDs are dominated by a fast electron trapping mechanism, universal to both MoS2 and MoSe2, contrasting hole-dominated trapping in their multilayered counterparts. Through a detailed hyperspectral fitting procedure, sizable exciton red shifts are found and assigned to static shifts originating from both interactions with the trapped electron population and lattice heating. Our results pave the way to optimizing monolayer c-TMDs via passivation of predominantly the electron-trap sites.
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Eight miniaturized Raman spectrometers were used to perform a fast outdoor screening and discrimination of carotenoids of a series of halophilic and non-halophilic microorganisms on a set of eight lyophilized samples, each containing high concentrations of a specific dominant carotenoid pigment. Raman spectra were acquired using different excitations (532, 785, sequentially shifted excitation of 785 and 853, and 1064 nm), based on the model of each Raman spectrometer, in order to ascertain the feasibility of individual wavelengths. The wavenumber positions of diagnostic Raman bands of carotenoids were observed for the different carotenoid species. Characteristic carotenoid Raman bands of the pigment bacterioruberin were reported (using the 532 nm excitation) at 1504-1509 cm-1, salinixanthin at 1510-1513 cm-1, spirilloxanthin at 1509-1513 cm-1, decaprenoxanthin at 1519 cm-1, ß-carotene at 1526 cm-1, and sarcinaxanthin at 1526-1528 cm-1. A 532 nm excitation consistently provided best results due to the significant resonance signal enhancement (both quantitative and qualitative carotenoid detection). Good results were also obtained using the sequentially shifted excitation combining two lasers in the near infrared spectral region, and similarly good results were acquired using a standard 1064 nm excitation. The least suitable was a 785 nm excitation, with the carotenoid Raman signal almost always weaker compared to major fluorescence signal arising from other types of pigments or biomolecules in the samples. A thorough light shielding was essential in order to acquire good quality data. This study shows that miniaturized Raman spectrometers, some even equipped with longer wavelength excitation, are able to detect different carotenoid pigments under non-laboratory conditions in a fast way, and discriminate between them, to a certain degree. The implications of this type of research are especially useful in astrobiology, where the searching, detection and discrimination of biomarkers such as carotenoids is receiving significant attention.
Subject(s)
Carotenoids , Spectrum Analysis, Raman , Lasers , Spectrum Analysis, Raman/methods , beta CaroteneABSTRACT
The mechanisms and evolution of metallic structural colours are of both fundamental and applied interest, yet most work in arthropods has focused on derived butterflies and beetles with distinct hues. In particular, basal hexapods-groups with many scaled, metallic representatives-are currently poorly studied and controversial, with some recent studies suggesting either that thin-film (lamina thickness) or diffraction grating (longitudinal ridges, cross-ribs) elements produce these colours in early Lepidoptera and one springtail (Collembola) species. Especially the collembolan basal scale design, consisting of a single lamina and longitudinal ridges with smooth valleys lacking cross-ribs, makes them an interesting group to explore the mechanisms of metallic coloration. Using microspectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, electron microscopy and finite-difference time-domain optical modelling, we investigated scale colour in seven springtail species that show clear metallic coloration. Reflectance spectra are largely uniform and exhibit a broadband metallic/golden coloration with peaks in the violet/blue region. Our simulations confirm the role of the longitudinal ridges, working in conjunction with thin-film effects to produce a broadband metallic coloration. Broadband coloration occurs through spatial colour mixing, which probably results from nanoscale variation in scale thickness and ridge height and distance. These results provide crucial insights into the colour production mechanisms in a basal scale design and highlight the need for further investigation of scaled, basal arthropods.
Subject(s)
Arthropods , Butterflies , Animals , Color , Pigmentation , Wings, AnimalABSTRACT
Organic minerals occur rather rarely in some types of peat bogs, sedimentary geological environments, and hydrothermal veins. Commonly, calcium oxalates are produced by several plants, terpenoids are often associated with conifers. Because of the organic precursor, these minerals, from the smallest group of the mineralogical system, are sometimes considered as biomarkers. Potential detection of these compounds has high relevance in the fields of exobiology or geobiology. Here we show the potential of four portable Raman spectrometers, using different excitation wavelengths and technologies (operating at 532, 785, and 1064nm together with an advanced spectrometer using the sequentially shifted excitation (SSE) technology), for the rapid and non-destructive identification of these phases. For the organic minerals investigated here, the most intense Raman bands are generally detected at the expected wavenumber positions ±1-4cm-1 in the region 100-2000cm-1 in the spectra obtained from all spectrometers. Additionally, two spectrometers (the 532nm instrument and the SSE) are capable of detecting Raman bands in the higher wavenumber shift region of 2000-3500cm-1, allowing the more detailed characterization and differentiation of the related phases. From this work, and on the basis of the experimental data obtained, it is clear that the longer laser excitation wavelengths are more preferable for organic minerals identification due to the better mitigation of fluorescence emission. In contrast, the Raman spectrometer equipped with the shortest excitation wavelength (532nm) gives a significantly higher spectral resolution and a more detailed discrimination of the Raman bands, provided that the conditions of general lower level of fluorescence emission are met. The results presented in the current study complement the knowledge on minerals and biomarkers of relevance for Martian environments which have been measured with mobile Raman spectrometers. The outcome creates a solid base towards the use of lightweight mobile Raman systems that can be used outdoors and on terrestrial outcrops. Moreover, these results and conclusions are of use for the further development of dedicated spectrometers destined for the instrumental suites on planetary rovers, in the frame of the forthcoming exobiology focused missions to Mars to be launched by NASA and ESA.
ABSTRACT
Raman spectroscopy and X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analysis are commonly applied to archaeological objects as a fast and nondestructive way to characterize the materials. Here, micro-Raman spectroscopy and chemometrics on handheld XRF results were used to completely characterize beads found during archaeological excavations in the Congo. Metallic objects, organogenic materials, and glass beads were studied. Special attention was paid to the glassy materials, as they seem to be of European production. The matrix family and crystalline phases assemblage, as well as the results from principal components analysis on the elemental data, were used to define groups of beads of similar composition, and therefore probably of similar origin. This research project establishes the feasibility of this approach to archaeological glasses, and can be used to confirm and support the bead typologies used by archaeologists.