Institution
Stevens Institute of Technology
Education•Hoboken, New Jersey, United States•
About: Stevens Institute of Technology is a education organization based out in Hoboken, New Jersey, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Cognitive radio & Wireless network. The organization has 5440 authors who have published 12684 publications receiving 296875 citations. The organization is also known as: Stevens & Stevens Tech.
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TL;DR: Soft, layered nanocomposites are presented that exhibit controlled swelling anisotropy and spatially specific shape reconfigurations in response to light irradiation that exhibit reversible, light-induced unidirectional shape changes.
Abstract: We present soft, layered nanocomposites that exhibit controlled swelling anisotropy and spatially specific shape reconfigurations in response to light irradiation. The use of gold nanoparticles grafted with a temperature-responsive polymer (poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), PNIPAM) with layer-by-layer (LbL) assembly allowed placement of plasmonic structures within specific regions in the film, while exposure to light caused localized material deswelling by a photothermal mechanism. By layering PNIPAM-grafted gold nanoparticles in between nonresponsive polymer stacks, we have achieved zero Poisson’s ratio materials that exhibit reversible, light-induced unidirectional shape changes. In addition, we report rheological properties of these LbL assemblies in their equilibrium swollen states. Moreover, incorporation of dissimilar plasmonic nanostructures (solid gold nanoparticles and nanoshells) within different material strata enabled controlled shrinkage of specific regions of hydrogels at specific excitation wave...
88 citations
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TL;DR: The first AFM single capsule mechanical measurements on hydrogen-bonded polymeric multilayer microcapsules made of poly(vinylpyrrolidone)/poly(methacrylic acid) (PVPON/PMAA), as well as of capsules derived from these systems chemical crosslinking, found elastic modulus of 610 MPa for low pH (= 2) is typical for a highly stable, glass-like structure similar to electrostatically bound multilayers.
Abstract: We report here the first AFM single capsule mechanical measurements on hydrogen-bonded polymeric multilayer microcapsules made of poly(vinylpyrrolidone)/poly(methacrylic acid) (PVPON/PMAA) and of poly(-vinylpyrrolidone-co-NH-20)/poly(methacrylic acid) (PVPON-co-NH-20/PMAA), as well as of capsules derived from these systems chemical crosslinking. The stiffness of the non-crosslinked hydrogen-bonded capsules was found to be proportional to the square of the wall thickness which is in agreement with previous observations on other multilayer capsules and continuum mechanical theory. The found elastic modulus of 610 MPa for low pH (= 2) is typical for a highly stable, glass-like structure similar to electrostatically bound multilayers. At pH > 6, (PMAA) capsules obtained through chemical crosslinking of hydrogen-bonded (PVPON/PMAA) multilayers, or crosslinked (PVPON-co-NH-20/PMAA) capsules showed a sharp hundreds-fold stiffness decrease to ∼1 mN/m which was orders of magnitude lower than those reported earlier for polymeric multilayer systems. pH-Triggered softening was reversible and highly reproducible. Softening of both (PMAA) and (PVPON-co-NH-20/PMAA) crosslinked capsules resulted from increased PMAA ionization, and additional dissociation of intermolecular hydrogen bonds occurred in the case of (PVPON-co-NH-20/PMAA) crosslinked system.
87 citations
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TL;DR: Education about aging and knowledge of intergenerational extended contact improved attitudes toward older adults and aging knowledge, and brief, online ageism-reduction strategies can be an effective way to combat ageism.
Abstract: Background and objectives Ageism is of increasing concern due to the growing older population worldwide and youth-centered focus of many societies. Research design and methods The current investigation tested the PEACE (Positive Education about Aging and Contact Experiences) model for the first time. Two online experimental studies examined 2 key factors for reducing ageism: education about aging (providing accurate information about aging) and extended contact (knowledge of positive intergenerational contact) as well as their potential combined effect (education plus extended contact). Results and discussion In Study 1, 354 undergraduates in all 3 experimental conditions (vs. control participants) reported less negative attitudes toward older adults (delayed post-test) and greater aging knowledge (immediate and delayed post-tests), when controlling for pre-study attitudes. In Study 2, 505 national community participants (ages 18-59) in all experimental conditions (vs. control participants) reported less negative attitudes toward older adults (immediate post-test) and greater aging knowledge (immediate and delayed post-tests). In summary, across 2 online studies, education about aging and knowledge of intergenerational extended contact improved attitudes toward older adults and aging knowledge. Implications Thus, brief, online ageism-reduction strategies can be an effective way to combat ageism. These strategies hold promise to be tested in other settings, with other samples, and to be elaborated into more in-depth interventions that aim to reduce ageism in everyday culture.
87 citations
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TL;DR: This study is the first to demonstrate the self-polymerization of dopamine through plasma-activated water (PAW) under acidic environments and extends the applications of dopamine polymerization, particularly in biomedical and pharmaceutical sciences.
Abstract: An alkaline environment and the presence of oxygen are essential requirements for dopamine polymerization. In this study, we are the first to demonstrate the self-polymerization of dopamine through plasma-activated water (PAW) under acidic environments (pH < 5.5). Resulting poly(dopamine) (PDA) was characterized using Nanosizer, SEM, FTIR, UV–vis, 1H NMR, and fluorescence spectrophotometers and proved to have similar physical and chemical properties to those polymerized under a basic condition, except that the PDA particles formed in PAW were more stable and hardly aggregated at varied pHs. The PAW polymerization method avoids alkaline solutions and the presence of oxygen and thus extends the applications of dopamine polymerization, particularly in biomedical and pharmaceutical sciences.
87 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a low-cost, bi-stable piezoelectric energy harvester is proposed, analyzed, and experimentally tested for the purpose of broadband energy harvesting.
87 citations
Authors
Showing all 5536 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Paul M. Thompson | 183 | 2271 | 146736 |
Roger Jones | 138 | 998 | 114061 |
Georgios B. Giannakis | 137 | 1321 | 73517 |
Li-Jun Wan | 113 | 639 | 52128 |
Joel L. Lebowitz | 101 | 754 | 39713 |
David Smith | 100 | 994 | 42271 |
Derong Liu | 77 | 608 | 19399 |
Robert R. Clancy | 77 | 293 | 18882 |
Karl H. Schoenbach | 75 | 494 | 19923 |
Robert M. Gray | 75 | 371 | 39221 |
Jin Yu | 74 | 480 | 32123 |
Sheng Chen | 71 | 688 | 27847 |
Hui Wu | 71 | 347 | 19666 |
Amir H. Gandomi | 67 | 375 | 22192 |
Haibo He | 66 | 482 | 22370 |