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Roger M. Pallares

Researcher at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Publications -  45
Citations -  1622

Roger M. Pallares is an academic researcher from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 28 publications receiving 817 citations. Previous affiliations of Roger M. Pallares include University College London & Agency for Science, Technology and Research.

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Characterization techniques for nanoparticles: comparison and complementarity upon studying nanoparticle properties

TL;DR: The principal objective of this review is to summarize the present knowledge on the use, advances, advantages and weaknesses of a large number of experimental techniques that are available for the characterization of nanoparticles.
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Fine-tuning of gold nanorod dimensions and plasmonic properties using the Hofmeister effects

TL;DR: In this paper, a method for the synthesis of highly pure and monodisperse gold nanorods with fine-tuneable dimensions and longitudinal localised surface plasmon resonance by addition of Hofmeister salts into the growth medium is presented.
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Sensing of circulating cancer biomarkers with metal nanoparticles

TL;DR: The clinical relevance of each category of circulating biomarkers is critically discussed, followed by a thorough analysis of how these nanoparticle-based designs have overcome some of the main challenges that gold standard analytical techniques currently face, and what new directions the field may take in the future.
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Growth of atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride films by diffusion through a metal film and precipitation

TL;DR: In this paper, a hexagonal boron nitride was grown on both the top and bottom surfaces of polycrystalline Co or Ni films by annealing a Co (Ni)/amorphous BORON nitride/SiO2 structure in vacuum.
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Smaller CpG-Conjugated Gold Nanoconstructs Achieve Higher Targeting Specificity of Immune Activation

TL;DR: This study describes a side-by-side comparison of the in vitro immunostimulatory activity of cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG)-conjugated gold nanoparticles and shows changes in nanoparticle size and presentation of activating ligands affect construct-induced immune responses at different levels.