RESUMEN
Microneedle-based technologies are the subject of intense research and commercial interest for applications in transdermal delivery and diagnostics, primarily because of their minimally invasive and painless nature, which in turn could lead to increased patient compliance and self-administration. In this paper, a process for the fabrication of arrays of hollow silicon microneedles is described. This method uses just two bulk silicon etches - a front-side wet etch to define the 500 µm tall octagonal needle structure itself, and a rear-side dry etch to create a 50 µm diameter bore through the needle. This reduces the number of etches and process complexity over the approaches described elsewhere. Ex-vivo human skin and a customised applicator were used to demonstrate biomechanical reliability and the feasibility of using these microneedles for both transdermal delivery and diagnostics. Microneedle arrays show no damage even when applied to skin up to 40 times, are capable of delivering several mL of fluid at flowrates of 30 µL/min, and of withdrawing 1 µL of interstitial fluid using capillary action.
Asunto(s)
Diseño de Equipo , Agujas , Silicio , Humanos , Administración Cutánea , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos/instrumentación , Microinyecciones/instrumentación , Microinyecciones/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Piel , Industria Manufacturera , Diseño de Equipo/métodosRESUMEN
All existing transistors are based on the use of semiconductor junctions formed by introducing dopant atoms into the semiconductor material. As the distance between junctions in modern devices drops below 10 nm, extraordinarily high doping concentration gradients become necessary. Because of the laws of diffusion and the statistical nature of the distribution of the doping atoms, such junctions represent an increasingly difficult fabrication challenge for the semiconductor industry. Here, we propose and demonstrate a new type of transistor in which there are no junctions and no doping concentration gradients. These devices have full CMOS functionality and are made using silicon nanowires. They have near-ideal subthreshold slope, extremely low leakage currents, and less degradation of mobility with gate voltage and temperature than classical transistors.
RESUMEN
Gold acetylide compounds [(R3P)AuC[triple bond]CC(Me)(OH)Et], where R = Ph 1 or cyclohexyl (Cy) 2, were synthesised and 2 was characterised using X-ray diffraction techniques. The solid-state structure of 2 contained a two-coordinate gold atom and a linear P-Au-C[triple bond]C-C bonding sequence. The reactions between 1 or 2 and [NR4][nido-7,8-As2B9H10] or [NR4][nido-7-TeB10H10] in ethanol-acetone solvent afforded the twelve-vertex cluster species [NMe4][3-(R3P)-closo-3,1,2-AuAs2B9H9], where R = Ph 5 or Cy 6, or [NEt4][3-(R3P)-closo-2,1-AuTeB10H10], where R = Ph 7 or Cy 8, in moderate or low yields (ca. 35% for , and and ca. 20% for ). Compounds and were characterised with X-ray crystallographic techniques. Although there was crystallographic disorder in the {As2B3} and {TeB4} rings to which the gold atoms were attached, the structures of 5 and 7 strongly suggested that the gold atoms were pentahapto bonded to all the atoms in the {As2B3} or {TeB4} rings giving formally closo cluster geometries with closo cluster electron counts. The solution-phase NMR properties of 5, 6 and 7 were consistent with closo descriptions.