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Applied Physics
CINVESTAV-Merida
Scopus Publications
Scholar Citations
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Lilian Pérez Delgado, Adriana Paola Franco-Bacca, Fernando Cervantes-Alvarez, Elizabeth Ortiz-Vazquez, Jesús Manuel Ramon-Sierra, Victor Rejon, María Leopoldina Aguirre-Macedo, Juan José Alvarado-Gil, and Geonel Rodríguez-Gattorno
MDPI AG
Through the execution of scientific innovations, “smart materials” are shaping the future of technology by interacting and responding to changes in our environment. To make this a successful reality, proper component selection, synthesis procedures, and functional active agents must converge in practical and resource-efficient procedures to lay the foundations for a profitable and sustainable industry. Here we show how the reaction time, temperature, and surface stabilizer concentration impact the most promising functional properties in a cotton-based fabric coated with silver nanoparticles (AgNPs@cotton), i.e., the thermal and bactericidal response. The coating quality was characterized and linked to the selected synthesis parameters and correlated by a parallel description of “proof of concept” experiments for the differential heat transfer (conversion and dissipation properties) and the bactericidal response tested against reference bacteria and natural bacterial populations (from a beach, cenote, and swamp of the Yucatan Peninsula). The quantification of functional responses allowed us to establish the relationship between (i) the size and shape of the AgNPs, (ii) the collective response of their agglomerates, and (iii) the thermal barrier role of a surface modifier as PVP. The procedures and evaluations in this work enable a spectrum of synthesis coordinates that facilitate the formulation of application-modulated fabrics, with grounded examples reflected in “smart packaging”, “smart clothing”, and “smart dressing”.
L.P. Delgado, M.Z. Figueroa-Torres, M.C. Ceballos-Chuc, R. García-Rodríguez, J.J. Alvarado-Gil, G. Oskam, and G. Rodriguez-Gattorno
Elsevier BV
Karen Valadez-Villalobos, Jesús Idígoras, Lilian P. Delgado, David Meneses-Rodríguez, Juan A. Anta, and Gerko Oskam
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Metal halide perovskites (MHPs) are mixed electronic-ionic semiconductors with a remarkable photovoltaic potential that has led to a current world record efficiency surpassing 23%. This good performance stems from the combination of excellent light harvesting and relatively slow nonradiative recombination, which are characteristic of MHPs. However, taking advantage of these properties requires electron and hole transport materials that can efficiently extract charge with minimal photovoltage losses and recombination. It is well-known that n-type anatase TiO2 is a good electron-selective contact (ESC), although the fundamental reasons for its functioning are not completely clear to date. In this Letter, we investigate this issue by preparing perovskite-based solar cells with various n-type metal-oxide electron-selective contacts of different chemical nature and crystal structure. Our main finding is that the open-circuit photovoltage remains essentially independent of the nature of the contact for highly selective electron contacts, a fact that we attribute to a recombination rate that is mainly governed by the bulk of the MHPs. In contrast, replacement of the "standard" TiO2 contact by alternative contacts leads to lower short-circuit photocurrents and more pronounced hysteresis, related to enhanced surface recombination at less effective electron-selective contacts.
Grisel Marrero, Lilian P. Delgado, Humberto Caroll, Neise Ortiz, Alexis Musacchio, and Tamara Menendez
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Abstract A rapid, specific and sensible polystyrene latex-based reagent has been developed to detect rheumatoid factor (RF) in human sera. Detection of RF is one of the criteria for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) diagnosis. RF includes immunoglobulins IgG, IgM or IgA targeting human-IgG Fc region, found in sera of 70–90% of patients with RA. Spherical, clean polystyrene particles of 480±80 nm with a Z-potential of -28 mV were synthesized. Purified gamma-globulin human blood fraction, used as IgG source, was adsorbed on particles in glycine-buffered saline with a fivefold excess of the immunoglobulins needed to saturate the calculated total surface area of the particles. The reagent was calibrated against the World Health Organization international serum reference preparation and tested with commercial positive and negative RF controls. Reactivity of the developed diagnostic reagent with human sera, either positive or negative for RF, was evaluated. The sera were tested both intact and following complement inactivation. When complement-inactivated sera were used, our reagent showed 100% coincidence of results with a commercial diagnostic kit of specificity of 80% and sensibility of 93%. The in-house reagent developed in the present work is easy to prepare and at relatively low cost, making it ideal for RF detection in low-income settings.