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1.
Heliyon ; 10(1): e23365, 2024 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38169803

RESUMEN

The travel and tourism industry is among most severely impacted by natural disasters, terrorism, financial crises, and pandemics. Scholars are currently paying attention to how to revive tourism and establish tourist loyalty in the post-pandemic era. Aesthetics is a fundamental component of the tourist experience, and significantly affects tourist loyalty, intention, and behavior. However, research on destination aesthetics is limited, with most studies neglecting the role of memorability in the outcomes of aesthetics, particularly after the pandemic. Therefore, this study explores the mediating role of memorability in the effects of the aesthetic experiential qualities (scenery, cleanliness, harmony, art/architecture, and genuineness) of a nature-based tourism destination on tourist loyalty. Based on a two-wave panel data approach, 509 survey responses were collected and analyzed using Smarts. The findings indicate that the aesthetic experiential qualities positively affect tourists' memorability. Although three of the five aesthetic qualities (scenery, harmony, art/architecture) demonstrated no direct impact on loyalty, all the qualities had significant indirect effects on loyalty through the mediation of memorability. This study provides insights and new perspectives for promoting tourist loyalty in the context of post-pandemic tourism recovery.

2.
Faraday Discuss ; 246(0): 508-519, 2023 Oct 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37427451

RESUMEN

The development of modern membranes for ionic separations and energy-storage devices such as supercapacitors depends on the description of ions at solid interfaces, as is often provided by the electrical double layer (EDL) model. The classical EDL model ignores, however, important factors such as possible spatial organization of solvent at the interface and the influence of the solvent on the spatial dependence of the electrochemical potential; these effects in turn govern electrokinetic phenomena. Here we provide a molecular-level understanding of how solvent structure can dictate ionic distributions at interfaces using a model system of a polar, aprotic solvent, propylene carbonate, in its enantiomerically pure and racemic forms, at a silica interface. We link the interfacial structure to the tuning of ionic and fluid transport by the chirality of the solvent and the salt concentration. The results of nonlinear spectroscopic experiments and electrochemical measurements suggest that the solvent exhibits lipid-bilayer-like interfacial organization, with a structure that is dependent on the solvent chirality. The racemic form creates highly ordered layered structure that dictates local ionic concentrations, such that the effective surface potential becomes positive in a wide range of electrolyte concentrations. The enantiomerically pure form exhibits weaker ordering at the silica surface, which leads to a lower effective surface charge induced by ions partitioning into the layered structure. The surface charge in silicon nitride and polymer pores is probed through the direction of electroosmosis that the surface charges induce. Our findings add a new dimension to the nascent field of chiral electrochemistry, and emphasize the importance of including solvent molecules in descriptions of solid-liquid interfaces.

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