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result(s) for
"Eapen, Jacob"
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Thermal conductance of nanofluids: is the controversy over?
by
Keblinski, Pawel
,
Eapen, Jacob
,
Prasher, Ravi
in
Characterization and Evaluation of Materials
,
Chemistry and Materials Science
,
Composite materials
2008
Over the last decade nanofluids (colloidal suspensions of solid nanoparticles) sparked excitement as well as controversy. In particular, a number of researches reported dramatic increases of thermal conductivity with small nanoparticle loading, while others showed moderate increases consistent with the effective medium theories on well-dispersed conductive spheres. Accordingly, the mechanism of thermal conductivity enhancement is a hotly debated topic. We present a critical analysis of the experimental data in terms of the potential mechanisms and show that, by accounting for linear particle aggregation, the well established effective medium theories for composite materials are capable of explaining the vast majority of the reported data without resorting to novel mechanisms such as Brownian motion induced nanoconvection, liquid layering at the interface, or near-field radiation. However, particle aggregation required to significantly enhance thermal conductivity, also increases fluid viscosity rendering the benefit of nanofluids to flow based cooling applications questionable.
Journal Article
Superionic-like diffusion in yttrium dihydride
2025
For the next-generation high temperature microreactors, yttrium dihydride (YH
2
) is an attractive solid state neutron moderator. Despite a number of recent investigations, the mechanism of hydrogen transport remains poorly understood. Experimental evaluations of diffusivity are inconclusive with large variations in diffusivities and activation energies. In this work, we perform ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations on YH
2
for temperatures spanning 300 K to 1200 K. Our main finding is that YH
2
shows a superionic-like behavior with hydrogen atoms hopping from one native site to another above a characteristic temperature of 800 K. This correlated motion results in quasi-one-dimensional string-like displacements that enable the hydrogen atoms to diffuse rapidly. We confirm that the octahedral sites are mostly unoccupied, although channeling through them is the most favored pathway between lattice hops above 800 K. At the highest temperature of 1200 K, the string relaxation time is merely of the order of a few picoseconds, which indicates a liquid-like diffusive behavior. Based on the formation of spontaneous thermal vacancies, an order-disorder crossover temperature
T
α
~ 800 K is established for YH
2
with an activation energy of 0.83 eV for hydrogen diffusion in the superionic-like state.
Journal Article
The immunome of mobilized peripheral blood stem cells is predictive of long-term outcomes and therapy-related myeloid neoplasms in patients with multiple myeloma undergoing autologous stem cell transplant
by
Weivoda, Megan
,
Greiner, Carl
,
Zanwar, Saurabh
in
Multiple myeloma
,
Stem cell transplantation
,
Tumors
2023
Upfront autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) is the standard of care for newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (MM) patients. However, relapse is ubiquitous and therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (t-MN) post-ASCT are commonly associated with poor outcomes. We hypothesized that the enrichment of abnormal myeloid progenitors and immune effector cells (IEC) in the peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) is associated with a higher risk of relapse and/or development of t-MN. We performed a comprehensive myeloid and lymphoid immunophenotyping on PBSCs from 54 patients with MM who underwent ASCT. Median progression-free (PFS), myeloid neoplasm-free (MNFS), and overall survival (OS) from ASCT were 49.6 months (95% CI: 39.5-Not Reached), 59.7 months (95% CI: 55–74), and 75.6 months (95% CI: 62–105), respectively. Abnormal expression of CD7 and HLA-DR on the myeloid progenitor cells was associated with an inferior PFS, MNFS, and OS. Similarly, enrichment of terminally differentiated (CD27/CD28-, CD57/KLRG1+) and exhausted (TIGIT/PD-1+) T-cells, and inhibitory NK-T like (CD159a+/CD56+) T-cells was associated with inferior PFS, MNFS, and OS post-transplant. Our observation of abnormal myeloid and IEC phenotype being present even before ASCT and maintenance therapy suggests an early predisposition to t-MN and inferior outcomes for MM, and has the potential to guide sequencing of future treatment modalities.
Journal Article
Ion Hopping and Constrained Li Diffusion Pathways in the Superionic State of Antifluorite Li2O
2017
Li2O belongs to the family of antifluorites that show superionic behavior at high temperatures. While some of the superionic characteristics of Li2O are well-known, the mechanistic details of ionic conduction processes are somewhat nebulous. In this work, we first establish an onset of superionic conduction that is emblematic of a gradual disordering process among the Li ions at a characteristic temperature Tα (~1000 K) using reported neutron diffraction data and atomistic simulations. In the superionic state, the Li ions are observed to portray dynamic disorder by hopping between the tetrahedral lattice sites. We then show that string-like ionic diffusion pathways are established among the Li ions in the superionic state. The diffusivity of these dynamical string-like structures, which have a finite lifetime, shows a remarkable correlation to the bulk diffusivity of the system.
Journal Article
Normal ex vivo mesenchymal stem cell function combined with abnormal immune profiles sets the stage for informative cell therapy trials in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis patients
2022
Background
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic, progressive pulmonary disease characterized by aberrant tissue remodeling, formation of scar tissue within the lungs and continuous loss of lung function. The areas of fibrosis seen in lungs of IPF patients share many features with normal aging lung including cellular senescence. The contribution of the immune system to the etiology of IPF remains poorly understood. Evidence obtained from animal models and human studies suggests that innate and adaptive immune processes can orchestrate existing fibrotic responses. Currently, there is only modest effective pharmacotherapy for IPF. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs)-based therapies have emerged as a potential option treatment of IPF. This study characterizes the functionality of autologous MSCs for use as an IPF therapy and presents an attempt to determine whether the disease occurring in the lungs is associated with an alterated immune system.
Methods
Comprehensive characterization of autologous adipose-derived MSCs (aMSCs) from 5 IPF patient and 5 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (HC) was done using flow cytometry, PCR (ddPCR), multiplex Luminex xMAP technology, confocal microscopy self-renewal capacity and osteogenic differentiation. Additionally, multi-parameter quantitative flow cytometry of unmanipulated whole blood of 15 IPF patients and 87 (30 age- and gender-matched) HC was used to analyze 110 peripheral phenotypes to determine disease-associated changes in the immune system.
Results
There are no differences between autologous aMSCs from IPF patients and HC in their stem cell properties, self-renewal capacity, osteogenic differentiation, secretome content, cell cycle inhibitor marker levels and mitochondrial health. IPF patients had altered peripheral blood immunophenotype including reduced B cells subsets, increased T cell subsets and increased granulocytes demonstrating disease-associated alterations in the immune system.
Conclusions
Our results indicate that there are no differences in aMSC properties from IPF patients and HC, suggesting that autologous aMSCs may be an acceptable option for IPF therapy. The altered immune system of IPF patients may be a valuable biomarker for disease burden and monitoring therapeutic response,
Journal Article
Low Dimensional String-like Relaxation Underpins Superionic Conduction in Fluorites and Related Structures
2017
Among the superionic conductors that show a Faraday transition – the continuous increase in the ionic conductivity over a range of temperatures – the fluorite structures have enjoyed incisive examinations over the past four decades; yet the fundamental nature of superionicity has remained largely inconclusive. Departing from the traditional quasi-static defect framework, we provide weighty evidence for string-like dynamical structures that govern the fast ion conduction process in fluorites. We show that lower temperatures encourage the growth of longer but slowly relaxing strings and
vice-versa
– a direct manifestation of heterogeneous dynamics. Remarkably, the ionic conductivity is inversely correlated to the lifetime of the ions that participate in the strings and not explicitly to the ion population. Our analysis methodology, which resolves a long-standing disagreement on defect structures and the mechanism of ionic transport in
fcc
fluorite structures, is well-positioned to describe the dynamics of low dimensional conduction in a larger class of superionic conductors.
Journal Article
Differences in engraftment with day-1 compared with day-2 melphalan prior to stem cell infusion in myeloma patients receiving autologous stem cell transplant
2020
We conducted a retrospective study comparing posttransplant outcomes between myeloma patients receiving conditioning melphalan on day-2 vs day-1 for autologous stem cell transplant. Between January 2017 and December 2018, 201 patients received melphalan on day-2 and 166 on day-1 prior to stem cell infusion. Baseline disease and clinical characteristics between the two groups were similar. Although rates of hospitalization were similar between the cohorts, duration of hospital admission was longer for day-1 (median 7 days for day-1 vs 5 days for day-2, p = 0.003). Rates of fever were higher in the day-1 cohort (69% vs 49%, p = 0.0002). Time to platelet and neutrophil engraftment was significantly longer in the day-1 cohort (platelet engraftment median days 17 for day-1 vs 15 for day-2, p < 0.0001, neutrophil engraftment median days 16 for day-1 vs 16 for day-2, p = 0.025). Overall response rate was similar between the cohorts (99% for day-1, vs 100% for day-2). Day-2 melphalan infusions should be considered in preference for day-1 protocols, given the clinically significant delay in platelet and neutrophil engraftment and longer duration of hospitalization with day-1 infusions.
Journal Article
Decoding ionic conductivity and reordering in cation-disordered pyrochlores
The ordered structure A₂B₂O₆O’ in pyrochlores engenders twin rows of inequivalent anion sublattices each centred on alternating cations. While it is known that cation antisite disorder augments the ionic conductivity by several orders of magnitude, the local cation environment around the anions and the dynamic anion reordering during the cation disordering are not well-elucidated. Using atomistic simulations on Gd₂Zr₂O₇, we first show that the anions engage in concerted hops to the neighbouring tetrahedral sites mostly along with the 〈1 0 0〉 direction while completely avoiding the octahedral sites. While the initially vacant 8a sites start accommodating oxygen ions with increasing cation disorder, they show noticeable reluctance even at significant levels of disorder. We have also tracked both the distribution of available oxygen sites following random cation disorder, which is dependent only on cation disordering, and the probability of occupation of these sites. Interestingly, the available oxygen sites show a non-monotonic dependence on the number of B ions in the nearest neighbouring shell while the occupation probability of all the available oxygen sites increases monotonically. A tetrahedral oxygen site thus has a better probability of being occupied when it has a greater number of second neighbour B ions.
This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue ’Understanding fast-ion conduction in solid electrolytes’.
Journal Article