DNA tumour viruses : virology, pathogenesis and vaccines / / edited by Sally Roberts |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | [Place of publication not identified] : , : Caister Academic Press, , [2018] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (266 pages) |
Disciplina | 579.24 |
Soggetto topico | DNA viruses |
ISBN | 1-910190-80-2 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910795540703321 |
[Place of publication not identified] : , : Caister Academic Press, , [2018] | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
DNA tumour viruses : virology, pathogenesis and vaccines / / edited by Sally Roberts |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | [Place of publication not identified] : , : Caister Academic Press, , [2018] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (266 pages) |
Disciplina | 579.24 |
Soggetto topico | DNA viruses |
ISBN | 1-910190-80-2 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910828362403321 |
[Place of publication not identified] : , : Caister Academic Press, , [2018] | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Fields virology : DNA viruses / / Peter M. Howley [and three others] editors |
Edizione | [Seventh edition.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Philadelphia : , : Wolters Kluwer, , 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (739 pages) : illustrations |
Disciplina | 579.24 |
Soggetto topico |
DNA viruses
Virus diseases |
ISBN | 1-9751-1258-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910794540603321 |
Philadelphia : , : Wolters Kluwer, , 2022 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Fields virology : DNA viruses / / Peter M. Howley [and three others] editors |
Edizione | [Seventh edition.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Philadelphia : , : Wolters Kluwer, , 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (739 pages) : illustrations |
Disciplina | 579.24 |
Soggetto topico |
DNA viruses
Virus diseases |
ISBN | 1-9751-1258-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910827369503321 |
Philadelphia : , : Wolters Kluwer, , 2022 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Metal oxide nanoparticles . Volume 1 & 2 : formation, functional properties, and interfaces / / edited by Oliver Diwald, Thomas Berger |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hoboken, New Jersey ; ; Chichester, England : , : John Wiley & Sons Ltd., , [2022] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (894 pages) |
Disciplina | 579.24 |
Soggetto topico | Metal nanoparticles |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-119-43676-1
1-119-43678-8 1-119-43679-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Preface -- Part I Introduction -- Chapter 1 Metal Oxides and Specific Functional Properties at the Nanoscale -- 1.1 A Cross‐Sectional Topic in Materials Science and Technology -- 1.2 Metal Oxides: Bonding and Characteristic Features -- 1.3 Regimes of Size‐Dependent Property Changes and Confinement Effects -- 1.4 Distribution of Nanoparticle Properties -- 1.5 Structure and Morphology -- 1.5.1 Confinement and Structural Disorder -- 1.5.2 Surface Free Energy Contributions and Metastability -- 1.5.3 Shape -- 1.6 Electronic Structure and Defects -- 1.6.1 Size‐Dependent Defect Formation Energies and Their Impact on Surface Reactivity -- 1.7 Surface Chemistry -- 1.8 Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Ensembles as Dynamic Systems -- 1.9 Organization of This Book -- References -- Chapter 2 Application of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and their Economic Impact -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Nanomaterials and Nanoobjects -- 2.1.2 Selection of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 2.2 Scientific and Patent Landscape -- 2.3 Types of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles, Properties, and Application Overview -- 2.4 Use Forms of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and Related Processing -- 2.4.1 Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Powders for Ceramics -- 2.4.2 Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Dispersions -- 2.4.3 Composites -- 2.4.3.1 Polymer Based Composites (Bulk and Coatings) -- 2.4.3.2 Metal Reinforcement -- 2.4.4 Combination with Powders of Micrometer Sized Particles -- 2.5 Application Fields of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 2.5.1 Agriculture -- 2.5.2 Sensors and Analytics -- 2.5.3 Automotive -- 2.5.4 Biomedicine/Dental -- 2.5.4.1 Therapy -- 2.5.5 Catalysis -- 2.5.6 Consumer Products: Cosmetics, Food, Textiles -- 2.5.7 Construction -- 2.5.8 Electronics and Magnetics -- 2.5.9 Energy -- 2.5.10 Environment, Resource Efficiency, Processing.
2.5.11 Oil Field Chemicals and Petroleum Industries -- 2.5.12 Optics/Optoelectronics and Photonics -- 2.6 Economic Impact -- 2.7 Conclusions and Outlook -- Abbreviations -- References -- Part II Particle Synthesis: Principles of Selected Bottom‐up Strategies -- Chapter 3 Nanoparticle Synthesis in the Gas Phase -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Some Key Issues of Particle Formation in the Gas Phase and in Liquids -- 3.3 Gas Phase Chemistry, Particle Dynamics, and Agglomeration -- 3.4 Gas‐to‐Particle Conversion -- 3.4.1 Physical Processes -- 3.4.2 Chemical Processes -- 3.5 Particle‐to‐Particle Conversion -- 3.5.1 Approaches and Precursors -- 3.5.2 Particle Formation -- 3.5.3 Experimental Realization -- 3.5.4 Spray Pyrolysis and Flame‐Assisted Spray Pyrolysis -- 3.6 Gas Phase Functionalization Approaches -- References -- Chapter 4 Liquid‐Phase Synthesis of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 General Aspects -- 4.2.1 Liquid‐Phase Chemistry -- 4.2.2 Nucleation, Growth, and Crystallization -- 4.3 Synthetic Procedures -- 4.3.1 (Co)Precipitation -- 4.3.2 Sol-Gel Processing -- 4.3.3 Polyol‐Mediated Synthesis/Pechini Method -- 4.3.4 Hot‐Injection Method -- 4.3.5 Hydrothermal/Solvothermal Processing -- 4.3.6 Microwave‐Assisted Synthesis -- 4.3.7 Sonication‐Assisted Synthesis -- 4.3.8 Synthesis in Confined Spaces -- 4.4 Summary -- References -- Chapter 5 Controlled Impurity Admixture: From Doped Systems to Composites -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Liquid‐Phase Synthesis of Doped Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 5.3 Gas‐Phase Synthesis of Doped Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 5.4 Solid‐State Synthesis of Doped Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 5.5 Phase Segregation: Formation of Heterostructures -- 5.6 Core/Shell and Heteromultimers -- 5.7 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- Part III Nanoparticle Formulation: A Selection of Processing and Application Routes. Chapter 6 Colloidal Processing -- 6.1 Towards Complex Shaped and Compositionally Well‐Defined Ceramics: The Need for Colloidal Processing -- 6.2 Colloidal Processing Fundamentals -- 6.2.1 Interparticle Forces -- 6.2.1.1 Electric Double Layer Forces -- 6.2.1.2 Polymer‐Induced Forces -- 6.2.2 Forming and Consolidation Techniques -- 6.2.2.1 Drained Casting Techniques -- 6.2.2.2 Tape‐Casting Techniques -- 6.2.2.3 Constant Volume Techniques -- 6.2.2.4 Drying and Cracking -- 6.3 Rheology of Suspensions -- 6.4 Electrostatic Heteroaggregation of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 6.4.1 Modification of Colloidal Stability by Heteroaggregation -- 6.4.2 Structure Evolution upon Heteroaggregation -- 6.4.3 Rheological Properties of Heterocolloids -- 6.4.4 Functional Properties of Heteroaggregates -- 6.5 Ice‐Templating‐Enabled Porous Ceramic Structures: Impact of Nanoparticles -- 6.5.1 Ice‐Templating of Colloidal Particles -- 6.5.2 Capabilities of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles in Ice‐Templating -- 6.5.2.1 Optimization of the Mechanical Properties of Green Bodies and Sintered Parts -- 6.5.2.2 Hierarchical Porosity and High Surface Area Materials -- 6.5.2.3 Triple Phase Boundaries Between Percolating Solid Networks and a Hierarchical Pore System -- 6.6 From Colloidal Processing to Nanoparticle Assembly -- Nomenclature -- List of Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 7 Fabrication of Metal Oxide Nanostructures by Materials Printing -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Traditional Coating and Printing Techniques -- 7.3 Inkjet Printing -- 7.3.1 A Brief Introduction into IJP Technology and the Process Scheme -- 7.3.2 Functional Ink Formulation Issues -- 7.3.3 Drop Generation -- 7.3.4 Drop Interaction with the Substrate -- 7.3.5 Drop Drying and Pattern Formation -- 7.3.6 Printing Quality -- 7.3.7 Equipment and Printing Devices -- 7.4 Printing of Metal Oxide Structures: The Materials Aspect. 7.4.1 Insulating Metal Oxides -- 7.4.2 Semiconducting Metal Oxides -- 7.4.3 Conducting Metal Oxides -- 7.5 Examples for Complex Printed Functional Structures: The Device Aspect -- 7.5.1 Printed Photoelectrochemical Cell -- 7.5.2 Flexible pH Sensors by Large Scale Layer‐by‐layer Inkjet Printing -- 7.6 Conclusions and Outlook -- References -- Chapter 8 Nanoscale Sintering -- 8.1 Background -- 8.2 Challenges and New Aspects of Nanoparticle Material Sintering -- 8.3 Questionable Nature of Existing Sintering Theories -- 8.4 3D Reconstruction -- 8.4.1 Focused Ion Beam Cross‐Sectioning and SEM Imaging -- 8.4.2 X‐ray Microtomography -- 8.5 Functions of Pores -- 8.6 Sintering of Small Features -- 8.6.1 New Sintering Questions -- 8.6.2 Role of Pore Number in Small Feature Sintering -- 8.6.3 Grain Boundary Diffusion vs. Grain Boundary Migration in Small Feature Sintering -- 8.6.4 Ceramic Type Effect on Small Feature Sintering -- 8.6.5 Atmosphere Effect on Small Feature Sintering -- 8.7 Summary -- Acknowledgment -- References -- Part IV Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Characterization at Different Length Scales -- Chapter 9 Structure: Scattering Techniques -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.1.1 Scattering and Diffraction -- 9.1.2 What to Learn from a Diffraction Experiment? -- 9.2 Theoretical Background -- 9.2.1 Crystal Lattice, Planes, and Bragg's Law -- 9.2.1.1 Crystal Planes and Interplanar Distance -- 9.2.1.2 The Reciprocal Lattice -- 9.2.1.3 Bragg's Law -- 9.2.2 The Intensity of a Bragg Peak -- 9.2.3 The Profile of a Bragg Peak -- 9.2.3.1 Instrumental Broadening -- 9.2.3.2 Sample Broadening -- 9.2.3.3 Analytical Description of Peak Shapes -- 9.3 Experimental Setup -- 9.3.1 Single vs. Polycrystalline Samples -- 9.3.2 Powder Diffraction Methods -- 9.3.2.1 Reflection Geometry -- 9.3.2.2 Transmission Geometry -- 9.3.2.3 Grazing Incident Diffraction (GID). 9.3.2.4 Sample Preparation -- 9.4 Some Selected Applications -- 9.4.1 Qualitative Phase Analysis -- 9.4.2 Quantitative Phase Analysis - The Rietveld Method -- 9.4.3 Microstructure Analysis: Size and Strain -- 9.5 X‐ray Diffraction on Magnetite Nanoparticles -- 9.6 Conclusion -- Nomenclature -- List of Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 10 Morphology, Structure, and Chemical Composition: Transmission Electron Microscopy and Elemental Analysis -- 10.1 Size, Shape, and Composition of Oxide Nanoparticles -- 10.2 Interaction of the Incident Electrons with a Specimen -- 10.3 The Transmission Electron Microscope -- 10.3.1 Microscope Design and Operation Modes -- 10.3.2 Contrast Type and Image Formation -- 10.3.3 Resolution Limits of TEM Images -- 10.4 Imaging and Analysis of Morphology -- 10.4.1 Sample Preparation -- 10.4.2 Shape Retrieving -- 10.4.2.1 Aligned Nanocrystals -- 10.4.2.2 Randomly Oriented Nanocrystals -- 10.4.3 Particle Size Determination -- 10.5 Crystallographic Phase Identification - Electron Diffraction -- 10.5.1 Bragg Condition - Kinematical and Dynamical Diffraction -- 10.5.2 Selected Area Electron Diffraction (SAED) -- 10.5.3 Nanodiffraction -- 10.6 Chemical Composition Mapping - EDX and EELS Nanospectroscopy -- 10.6.1 Correlating Image with Spectroscopic EDX and EELS Information - Data Cubes -- 10.6.2 Composition Mapping with EDX Spectroscopy -- 10.6.3 Chemical State Imaging with EELS Spectroscopy -- Nomenclature -- List of Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 11 Electronic and Chemical Properties: X‐Ray Absorption and Photoemission -- 11.1 Introduction and Scope of the Chapter -- 11.2 Basics of X‐rays - Matter Interaction -- 11.3 X‐Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) -- 11.3.1 Theoretical Background -- 11.3.2 Features and Analysis of X‐ray Photoelectron Spectra. 11.3.3 XPS Investigation of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and Metal Oxide Colloidal Suspensions. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910555072003321 |
Hoboken, New Jersey ; ; Chichester, England : , : John Wiley & Sons Ltd., , [2022] | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Metal oxide nanoparticles . Volume 1 & 2 : formation, functional properties, and interfaces / / edited by Oliver Diwald, Thomas Berger |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hoboken, New Jersey ; ; Chichester, England : , : John Wiley & Sons Ltd., , [2022] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (894 pages) |
Disciplina | 579.24 |
Soggetto topico | Metal nanoparticles |
ISBN |
1-119-43676-1
1-119-43678-8 1-119-43679-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Preface -- Part I Introduction -- Chapter 1 Metal Oxides and Specific Functional Properties at the Nanoscale -- 1.1 A Cross‐Sectional Topic in Materials Science and Technology -- 1.2 Metal Oxides: Bonding and Characteristic Features -- 1.3 Regimes of Size‐Dependent Property Changes and Confinement Effects -- 1.4 Distribution of Nanoparticle Properties -- 1.5 Structure and Morphology -- 1.5.1 Confinement and Structural Disorder -- 1.5.2 Surface Free Energy Contributions and Metastability -- 1.5.3 Shape -- 1.6 Electronic Structure and Defects -- 1.6.1 Size‐Dependent Defect Formation Energies and Their Impact on Surface Reactivity -- 1.7 Surface Chemistry -- 1.8 Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Ensembles as Dynamic Systems -- 1.9 Organization of This Book -- References -- Chapter 2 Application of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and their Economic Impact -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Nanomaterials and Nanoobjects -- 2.1.2 Selection of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 2.2 Scientific and Patent Landscape -- 2.3 Types of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles, Properties, and Application Overview -- 2.4 Use Forms of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and Related Processing -- 2.4.1 Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Powders for Ceramics -- 2.4.2 Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Dispersions -- 2.4.3 Composites -- 2.4.3.1 Polymer Based Composites (Bulk and Coatings) -- 2.4.3.2 Metal Reinforcement -- 2.4.4 Combination with Powders of Micrometer Sized Particles -- 2.5 Application Fields of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 2.5.1 Agriculture -- 2.5.2 Sensors and Analytics -- 2.5.3 Automotive -- 2.5.4 Biomedicine/Dental -- 2.5.4.1 Therapy -- 2.5.5 Catalysis -- 2.5.6 Consumer Products: Cosmetics, Food, Textiles -- 2.5.7 Construction -- 2.5.8 Electronics and Magnetics -- 2.5.9 Energy -- 2.5.10 Environment, Resource Efficiency, Processing.
2.5.11 Oil Field Chemicals and Petroleum Industries -- 2.5.12 Optics/Optoelectronics and Photonics -- 2.6 Economic Impact -- 2.7 Conclusions and Outlook -- Abbreviations -- References -- Part II Particle Synthesis: Principles of Selected Bottom‐up Strategies -- Chapter 3 Nanoparticle Synthesis in the Gas Phase -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Some Key Issues of Particle Formation in the Gas Phase and in Liquids -- 3.3 Gas Phase Chemistry, Particle Dynamics, and Agglomeration -- 3.4 Gas‐to‐Particle Conversion -- 3.4.1 Physical Processes -- 3.4.2 Chemical Processes -- 3.5 Particle‐to‐Particle Conversion -- 3.5.1 Approaches and Precursors -- 3.5.2 Particle Formation -- 3.5.3 Experimental Realization -- 3.5.4 Spray Pyrolysis and Flame‐Assisted Spray Pyrolysis -- 3.6 Gas Phase Functionalization Approaches -- References -- Chapter 4 Liquid‐Phase Synthesis of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 General Aspects -- 4.2.1 Liquid‐Phase Chemistry -- 4.2.2 Nucleation, Growth, and Crystallization -- 4.3 Synthetic Procedures -- 4.3.1 (Co)Precipitation -- 4.3.2 Sol-Gel Processing -- 4.3.3 Polyol‐Mediated Synthesis/Pechini Method -- 4.3.4 Hot‐Injection Method -- 4.3.5 Hydrothermal/Solvothermal Processing -- 4.3.6 Microwave‐Assisted Synthesis -- 4.3.7 Sonication‐Assisted Synthesis -- 4.3.8 Synthesis in Confined Spaces -- 4.4 Summary -- References -- Chapter 5 Controlled Impurity Admixture: From Doped Systems to Composites -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Liquid‐Phase Synthesis of Doped Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 5.3 Gas‐Phase Synthesis of Doped Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 5.4 Solid‐State Synthesis of Doped Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 5.5 Phase Segregation: Formation of Heterostructures -- 5.6 Core/Shell and Heteromultimers -- 5.7 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- Part III Nanoparticle Formulation: A Selection of Processing and Application Routes. Chapter 6 Colloidal Processing -- 6.1 Towards Complex Shaped and Compositionally Well‐Defined Ceramics: The Need for Colloidal Processing -- 6.2 Colloidal Processing Fundamentals -- 6.2.1 Interparticle Forces -- 6.2.1.1 Electric Double Layer Forces -- 6.2.1.2 Polymer‐Induced Forces -- 6.2.2 Forming and Consolidation Techniques -- 6.2.2.1 Drained Casting Techniques -- 6.2.2.2 Tape‐Casting Techniques -- 6.2.2.3 Constant Volume Techniques -- 6.2.2.4 Drying and Cracking -- 6.3 Rheology of Suspensions -- 6.4 Electrostatic Heteroaggregation of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles -- 6.4.1 Modification of Colloidal Stability by Heteroaggregation -- 6.4.2 Structure Evolution upon Heteroaggregation -- 6.4.3 Rheological Properties of Heterocolloids -- 6.4.4 Functional Properties of Heteroaggregates -- 6.5 Ice‐Templating‐Enabled Porous Ceramic Structures: Impact of Nanoparticles -- 6.5.1 Ice‐Templating of Colloidal Particles -- 6.5.2 Capabilities of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles in Ice‐Templating -- 6.5.2.1 Optimization of the Mechanical Properties of Green Bodies and Sintered Parts -- 6.5.2.2 Hierarchical Porosity and High Surface Area Materials -- 6.5.2.3 Triple Phase Boundaries Between Percolating Solid Networks and a Hierarchical Pore System -- 6.6 From Colloidal Processing to Nanoparticle Assembly -- Nomenclature -- List of Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 7 Fabrication of Metal Oxide Nanostructures by Materials Printing -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Traditional Coating and Printing Techniques -- 7.3 Inkjet Printing -- 7.3.1 A Brief Introduction into IJP Technology and the Process Scheme -- 7.3.2 Functional Ink Formulation Issues -- 7.3.3 Drop Generation -- 7.3.4 Drop Interaction with the Substrate -- 7.3.5 Drop Drying and Pattern Formation -- 7.3.6 Printing Quality -- 7.3.7 Equipment and Printing Devices -- 7.4 Printing of Metal Oxide Structures: The Materials Aspect. 7.4.1 Insulating Metal Oxides -- 7.4.2 Semiconducting Metal Oxides -- 7.4.3 Conducting Metal Oxides -- 7.5 Examples for Complex Printed Functional Structures: The Device Aspect -- 7.5.1 Printed Photoelectrochemical Cell -- 7.5.2 Flexible pH Sensors by Large Scale Layer‐by‐layer Inkjet Printing -- 7.6 Conclusions and Outlook -- References -- Chapter 8 Nanoscale Sintering -- 8.1 Background -- 8.2 Challenges and New Aspects of Nanoparticle Material Sintering -- 8.3 Questionable Nature of Existing Sintering Theories -- 8.4 3D Reconstruction -- 8.4.1 Focused Ion Beam Cross‐Sectioning and SEM Imaging -- 8.4.2 X‐ray Microtomography -- 8.5 Functions of Pores -- 8.6 Sintering of Small Features -- 8.6.1 New Sintering Questions -- 8.6.2 Role of Pore Number in Small Feature Sintering -- 8.6.3 Grain Boundary Diffusion vs. Grain Boundary Migration in Small Feature Sintering -- 8.6.4 Ceramic Type Effect on Small Feature Sintering -- 8.6.5 Atmosphere Effect on Small Feature Sintering -- 8.7 Summary -- Acknowledgment -- References -- Part IV Metal Oxide Nanoparticle Characterization at Different Length Scales -- Chapter 9 Structure: Scattering Techniques -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.1.1 Scattering and Diffraction -- 9.1.2 What to Learn from a Diffraction Experiment? -- 9.2 Theoretical Background -- 9.2.1 Crystal Lattice, Planes, and Bragg's Law -- 9.2.1.1 Crystal Planes and Interplanar Distance -- 9.2.1.2 The Reciprocal Lattice -- 9.2.1.3 Bragg's Law -- 9.2.2 The Intensity of a Bragg Peak -- 9.2.3 The Profile of a Bragg Peak -- 9.2.3.1 Instrumental Broadening -- 9.2.3.2 Sample Broadening -- 9.2.3.3 Analytical Description of Peak Shapes -- 9.3 Experimental Setup -- 9.3.1 Single vs. Polycrystalline Samples -- 9.3.2 Powder Diffraction Methods -- 9.3.2.1 Reflection Geometry -- 9.3.2.2 Transmission Geometry -- 9.3.2.3 Grazing Incident Diffraction (GID). 9.3.2.4 Sample Preparation -- 9.4 Some Selected Applications -- 9.4.1 Qualitative Phase Analysis -- 9.4.2 Quantitative Phase Analysis - The Rietveld Method -- 9.4.3 Microstructure Analysis: Size and Strain -- 9.5 X‐ray Diffraction on Magnetite Nanoparticles -- 9.6 Conclusion -- Nomenclature -- List of Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 10 Morphology, Structure, and Chemical Composition: Transmission Electron Microscopy and Elemental Analysis -- 10.1 Size, Shape, and Composition of Oxide Nanoparticles -- 10.2 Interaction of the Incident Electrons with a Specimen -- 10.3 The Transmission Electron Microscope -- 10.3.1 Microscope Design and Operation Modes -- 10.3.2 Contrast Type and Image Formation -- 10.3.3 Resolution Limits of TEM Images -- 10.4 Imaging and Analysis of Morphology -- 10.4.1 Sample Preparation -- 10.4.2 Shape Retrieving -- 10.4.2.1 Aligned Nanocrystals -- 10.4.2.2 Randomly Oriented Nanocrystals -- 10.4.3 Particle Size Determination -- 10.5 Crystallographic Phase Identification - Electron Diffraction -- 10.5.1 Bragg Condition - Kinematical and Dynamical Diffraction -- 10.5.2 Selected Area Electron Diffraction (SAED) -- 10.5.3 Nanodiffraction -- 10.6 Chemical Composition Mapping - EDX and EELS Nanospectroscopy -- 10.6.1 Correlating Image with Spectroscopic EDX and EELS Information - Data Cubes -- 10.6.2 Composition Mapping with EDX Spectroscopy -- 10.6.3 Chemical State Imaging with EELS Spectroscopy -- Nomenclature -- List of Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 11 Electronic and Chemical Properties: X‐Ray Absorption and Photoemission -- 11.1 Introduction and Scope of the Chapter -- 11.2 Basics of X‐rays - Matter Interaction -- 11.3 X‐Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) -- 11.3.1 Theoretical Background -- 11.3.2 Features and Analysis of X‐ray Photoelectron Spectra. 11.3.3 XPS Investigation of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and Metal Oxide Colloidal Suspensions. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910831076903321 |
Hoboken, New Jersey ; ; Chichester, England : , : John Wiley & Sons Ltd., , [2022] | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Virus replication and genome interactions : proceedings of the seventh John Innes symposium, Norwich 1986 / edited by J. W. Davies ... [et al.] |
Autore | John Innes symposium : <7. : ; 1986 |
Pubbl/distr/stampa |
Cambridge : < |
Descrizione fisica | 337 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. |
Disciplina | 579.24 |
Soggetto topico | Virus a DNA |
ISBN | 0-948601-10-8 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNIBAS-000044820 |
John Innes symposium : <7. : ; 1986 | ||
Cambridge : <<The>> Company of biologists, 1987 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. della Basilicata | ||
|