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Search: WFRF:(Hamedi Mahiar)

  • Result 1-10 of 76
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1.
  • Asplund, Maria, et al. (author)
  • Construction of wire electrodesand 3D woven logicas a potential technology forneuroprosthetic implants
  • 2008
  • In: IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering. - 0018-9294 .- 1558-2531.
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • New strategies to improve neuron coupling to neuroelectronic implants are needed. In particular, tomaintain functional coupling between implant and neurons, foreign body response like encapsulation must meminimized. Apart from modifying materials to mitigate encapsulation it has been shown that with extremely thinstructures, encapsulation will be less pronounced. We here utilize wire electrochemical transistors (WECTs) usingconducting polymer coated fibers. Monofilaments down to 10 μm can be successfully coated and weaved intocomplex networks with built in logic functions, so called textile logic. Such systems can control signal patterns at alarge number of electrode terminals from a few addressing fibres. Not only is fibre size in the range where lessencapsulation is expected but textiles are known to make successful implants because of their soft and flexiblemechanical properties. Further, textile fabrication provides versatility and even three dimensional networks arepossible. Three possible architectures for neuroelectronic systems are discussed. WECTs are sensitive to dehydrationand materials for better durability or improved encapsulation is needed for stable performance in biologicalenvironments.
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3.
  • Asplund, Maria, 1978-, et al. (author)
  • Wire electronics and woven logic, as a potential technology for neuroelectronic implants
  • Other publication (pop. science, debate, etc.)abstract
    • New strategies to improve neuron coupling to neuroelectronic implants are needed. In particular, to maintain functional coupling between implant and neurons, foreign body response like encapsulation must me minimized. Apart from modifying materials to mitigate encapsulation it has been shown that with extremely thin structures, encapsulation will be less pronounced. We here utilize wire electrochemical transistors (WECTs) using conducting polymer coated fibers. Monofilaments down to 10 μm can be successfully coated and weaved into complex networks with built in logic functions, so called textile logic. Such systems can control signal patterns at a large number of electrode terminals from a few addressing fibres. Not only is fibre size in the range where less encapsulation is expected but textiles are known to make successful implants because of their soft and flexible mechanical properties. Further, textile fabrication provides versatility and even three dimensional networks are possible. Three possible architectures for neuroelectronic systems are discussed. WECTs are sensitive to dehydration and materials for better durability or improved encapsulation is needed for stable performance in biological environments.
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4.
  • Benselfelt, Tobias, et al. (author)
  • Electrochemically Controlled Hydrogels with Electrotunable Permeability and Uniaxial Actuation
  • 2023
  • In: Advanced Materials. - : WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH. - 0935-9648 .- 1521-4095. ; 35:45
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The unique properties of hydrogels enable the design of life-like soft intelligent systems. However, stimuli-responsive hydrogels still suffer from limited actuation control. Direct electronic control of electronically conductive hydrogels can solve this challenge and allow direct integration with modern electronic systems. An electrochemically controlled nanowire composite hydrogel with high in-plane conductivity that stimulates a uniaxial electrochemical osmotic expansion is demonstrated. This materials system allows precisely controlled shape-morphing at only -1 V, where capacitive charging of the hydrogel bulk leads to a large uniaxial expansion of up to 300%, caused by the ingress of & AP;700 water molecules per electron-ion pair. The material retains its state when turned off, which is ideal for electrotunable membranes as the inherent coupling between the expansion and mesoporosity enables electronic control of permeability for adaptive separation, fractionation, and distribution. Used as electrochemical osmotic hydrogel actuators, they achieve an electroactive pressure of up to 0.7 MPa (1.4 MPa vs dry) and a work density of & AP;150 kJ m-3 (2 MJ m-3 vs dry). This new materials system paves the way to integrate actuation, sensing, and controlled permeation into advanced soft intelligent systems. The unique properties of hydrogels enable the design of life-like soft intelligent systems. This work demonstrates how the swelling of hydrogels from cellulose nanofibrils and carbon nanotubes can be electrochemically controlled to achieve electrochemical osmotic actuation. This new materials system paves the way for integrated actuation, sensing, and controlled permeation in electrotunable separation membranes or soft actuators.image
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5.
  • Benselfelt, Tobias, et al. (author)
  • Electrochemically Controlled Hydrogels with Electrotunable Permeability and Uniaxial Actuation
  • 2023
  • In: Advanced Materials. - : Wiley. - 0935-9648 .- 1521-4095. ; 35:45
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The unique properties of hydrogels enable the design of life-like soft intelligent systems. However, stimuli-responsive hydrogels still suffer from limited actuation control. Direct electronic control of electronically conductive hydrogels can solve this challenge and allow direct integration with modern electronic systems. An electrochemically controlled nanowire composite hydrogel with high in-plane conductivity that stimulates a uniaxial electrochemical osmotic expansion is demonstrated. This materials system allows precisely controlled shape-morphing at only −1 V, where capacitive charging of the hydrogel bulk leads to a large uniaxial expansion of up to 300%, caused by the ingress of ≈700 water molecules per electron–ion pair. The material retains its state when turned off, which is ideal for electrotunable membranes as the inherent coupling between the expansion and mesoporosity enables electronic control of permeability for adaptive separation, fractionation, and distribution. Used as electrochemical osmotic hydrogel actuators, they achieve an electroactive pressure of up to 0.7 MPa (1.4 MPa vs dry) and a work density of ≈150 kJ m−3 (2 MJ m−3 vs dry). This new materials system paves the way to integrate actuation, sensing, and controlled permeation into advanced soft intelligent systems.
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6.
  • Benselfelt, Tobias, et al. (author)
  • Ion-induced assemblies of highly anisotropic nanoparticles are governed by ion-ion correlation and specific ion effects
  • 2019
  • In: Nanoscale. - : Royal Society of Chemistry. - 2040-3364 .- 2040-3372. ; 11:8, s. 3514-3520
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Ion-induced assemblies of highly anisotropic nanoparticles can be explained by a model consisting of ion-ion correlation and specific ion effects: dispersion interactions, metal-ligand complexes, and local acidic environments. Films of cellulose nanofibrils and montmorillonite clay were treated with different ions, and their subsequent equilibrium swelling in water was related to important parameters of the model in order to investigate the relative importance of the mechanisms. Ion-ion correlation was shown to be the fundamental attraction, supplemented by dispersion interaction for polarizable ions such as Ca2+ and Ba2+, or metal-ligand complexes for ions such as Cu2+, Al3+ and Fe3+. Ions that form strong complexes induce local acidic environments that also contribute to the assembly. These findings are summarized in a comprehensive semi-quantitative model and are important for the design of nanomaterials and for understanding biological systems where specific ions are involved.
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7.
  • Björk, Per, et al. (author)
  • Biomolecular nanowires decorated by organic electronic polymers
  • 2010
  • In: JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY. - : Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). - 0959-9428 .- 1364-5501. ; 20:12, s. 2269-2276
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We demonstrate the shaping and forming of organic electronic polymers into designer nanostructures using biomacromolecules. In order to create nanowires, nanohelixes and assemblies of these, we coordinate semiconducting or metallic polymers to biomolecular polymers in the form of DNA and misfolded proteins. Optoelectronic and electrochemical devices utilizing these shaped materials are discussed.
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8.
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9.
  • Chondrogiannis, Georgios, et al. (author)
  • Nitrocellulose-bound achromopeptidase for point-of-care nucleic acid tests
  • 2021
  • In: Scientific Reports. - : Springer Nature. - 2045-2322. ; 11:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Enzymes are the cornerstone of modern biotechnology. Achromopeptidase (ACP) is a well-known enzyme that hydrolyzes a number of proteins, notably proteins on the surface of Gram-positive bacteria. It is therefore used for sample preparation in nucleic acid tests. However, ACP inhibits DNA amplification which makes its integration difficult. Heat is commonly used to inactivate ACP, but it can be challenging to integrate heating into point-of-care devices. Here, we use recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) together with ACP, and show that when ACP is immobilized on nitrocellulose paper, it retains its enzymatic function and can easily and rapidly be activated using agitation. The nitrocellulose-bound ACP does, however, not leak into the solution, preventing the need for deactivation through heat or by other means. Nitrocellulose-bound ACP thus opens new possibilities for paper-based Point-of-Care (POC) devices.
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10.
  • Chondrogiannis, Georgios, et al. (author)
  • Paper-Based Bacterial Lysis Enables Sample-to-Answer Home-based DNA Testing
  • 2023
  • In: Advanced Materials Technologies. - : Wiley. - 2365-709X. ; 8:4, s. 2201004-
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Nucleic acid amplification testing (NAAT) is the gold standard for infectious disease diagnostics. Currently NAATs are mainly limited to centralized laboratories, while paper-based antigen tests are used for rapid home-based diagnostics. DNA extraction, the initial sample preparation step in NAATs, remains a bottleneck that hinders its development toward home-based kits. This step requires the use of compounds detrimental to the enzymes in downstream DNA amplification. Here, this work overcomes this bottleneck by immobilizing the enzyme achromopeptidase (ACP) on nitrocellulose, to both store and enable the separation of the enzymes from the other steps. This work provides proof-of-concept that immobilized ACP is effective at lysis and release of amplifiable DNA from gram-positive Staphylococcus epidermidis and enables the use of the lysate directly for DNA amplification, without the need for heat deactivation of the enzyme. This sample preparation method requires only incubation at 37 °C and mild agitation, which allows to implement it with fully disposable and affordable equipment. Consequently, this work enables to combine the paper-based DNA extraction method with the isothermal recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) followed by lateral flow detection to demonstrate a sample-to-answer NAAT packaged as an instrument free self-test kit expanding the capabilities of home-testing beyond antigen tests. 
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  • Result 1-10 of 76
Type of publication
journal article (59)
other publication (7)
doctoral thesis (4)
conference paper (3)
artistic work (2)
licentiate thesis (2)
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research review (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (58)
other academic/artistic (17)
pop. science, debate, etc. (1)
Author/Editor
Hamedi, Mahiar (58)
Inganäs, Olle (15)
Wågberg, Lars, 1956- (13)
Ouyang, Liangqi (11)
Herland, Anna (11)
Benselfelt, Tobias (7)
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Piper, Andrew (6)
Wågberg, Lars (5)
Forchheimer, Robert (5)
Muller, Christian (5)
Berggren, Magnus (4)
Björk, Per (4)
von Holst, Hans (3)
Pettersson, Torbjörn (3)
Crispin, Xavier (3)
Granberg, Hjalmar (3)
Aili, Daniel (3)
Müller, Christian, 1 ... (3)
Elfwing, Anders (3)
Li, Jian (3)
Beidaghi, Majid (3)
Asplund, Maria (3)
Erlandsson, Johan (3)
Li, Hailong (3)
Shakya, Jyoti (3)
Hajian, Alireza (3)
Engquist, Isak (2)
Rising, Anna (2)
Johansson, Jan (2)
Gabrielsson, Roger (2)
Skrifvars, Mikael (2)
Hummel, Michael (2)
Tai, Feng-I (2)
Zeglio, Erica (2)
Marcilla, Rebeca (2)
Li, Lengwan (2)
Gogotsi, Yury (2)
Berglund, Lars A. (2)
Sixta, Herbert (2)
Subramaniyam, Chandr ... (2)
Konradsson, Peter (2)
Åslund, Andreas (2)
Askarieh, Glareh (2)
Karabulut, Erdem (2)
Rissanen, Marja (2)
Lindström, Stefan (2)
Jain, Saumey (2)
Rothemund, Philipp (2)
Winkler, Thomas E. (2)
Keplinger, Christoph (2)
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University
Royal Institute of Technology (66)
Linköping University (27)
Karolinska Institutet (9)
RISE (5)
Stockholm University (4)
Mid Sweden University (3)
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Chalmers University of Technology (3)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (3)
Uppsala University (2)
University of Borås (1)
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Language
English (76)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (57)
Engineering and Technology (28)
Medical and Health Sciences (5)

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