Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Otto Vogl (64)
- History of Polymer Science (49)
- Photographs of polymer scientists (46)
- Scientific memoirs (46)
- 05. Who Was Who in Polymer Science (27)
-
- 06. Who is Who in Polymer Science (22)
- Polymer Science (15)
- 09. Jane C. Vogl, Editor of Otto Vogl Publications, Books I-XII (12)
- Jane C. Vogl (12)
- Publications (12)
- Memoirs (3)
- Photographs (3)
- 07. Selected Conferences on Polymer Science (1)
- 08. Centers of Polymer Science (1)
- 10. Otto Vogl Museum Exhibit, University Office, and Home Office (1)
- 2008 (1)
- Asia (1)
- Cell cycle (1)
- Centers of polymer science research (1)
- Chemotherapy (1)
- Drug penetration (1)
- Europe (1)
- Government polymer science research (1)
- Industry polymer science research (1)
- Museum Exhibit (1)
- Pharmacokinetics and Tumor growth model (1)
- Polymer Science Conferences (1)
- Stadtmuseum Traiskirchen Austria (1)
- United States (1)
- University polymer science research (1)
Articles 1 - 30 of 77
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Centers Of Polymer Science: Introduction, Otto Vogl
Centers Of Polymer Science: Introduction, Otto Vogl
Otto Vogl
Centers of Polymer Science describes polymer research activities taking place in Europe, Asia, and Australia primarily during the years between 1980 and 2000. This series of articles shows and records the activity in Polymer Science in this part of polymer history.
Book I, Otto Vogl: Papers And Patents, 1948-1970, Jane C. Vogl
Book I, Otto Vogl: Papers And Patents, 1948-1970, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book Ii, Otto Vogl: Papers And Patents, 1970-1977, Jane C. Vogl
Book Ii, Otto Vogl: Papers And Patents, 1970-1977, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book Iii, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1977-1979, Jane C. Vogl
Book Iii, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1977-1979, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book Iv, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1979-1981, Jane C. Vogl
Book Iv, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1979-1981, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book V, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1981-1984, Jane C. Vogl
Book V, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1981-1984, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Integrating Cell Cycle Progression, Drug Penetration And Energy Metabolism To Identify Improved Cancer Therapeutic Strategies, Raja Venkatasubramanian, Michael A. Henson, Neil S. Forbes
Integrating Cell Cycle Progression, Drug Penetration And Energy Metabolism To Identify Improved Cancer Therapeutic Strategies, Raja Venkatasubramanian, Michael A. Henson, Neil S. Forbes
Michael A Henson
The effectiveness of chemotherapeutic drugs in tumors is reduced by multiple effects including drug diffusion and variable susceptibility of local cell populations. We hypothesized that quantifying the interactions between drugs and tumor microenvironments could be used to identify more effective anti-cancer strategies. To test this hypothesis we created a mathematical model that integrated intracellular metabolism, nutrient and drug diffusion, cell-cycle progression, cellular drug effects, and drug pharmacokinetics. To our knowledge, this is the first model that combines these elements and has coupled them to experimentally derived parameters. Drug cytotoxicity was assumed to be cell-cycle phase specific, and progression through the …
Book Vi, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1984-1986, Jane C. Vogl
Book Vi, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1984-1986, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book Vii, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1987-1989, Jane C. Vogl
Book Vii, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1987-1989, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book Viii, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1989-1992, Jane C. Vogl
Book Viii, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1989-1992, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book Ix, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1993-1995, Jane C. Vogl
Book Ix, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1993-1995, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book X, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1996-1998, Jane C. Vogl
Book X, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1996-1998, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Book Xi, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1999-2000, Jane C. Vogl
Book Xi, Otto Vogl: Publications, 1999-2000, Jane C. Vogl
Otto Vogl
Books I-XII include citations to Otto Vogl's publications and patents. Printed versions of these twelve volumes are also available in the Integrated Sciences and Engineering Library of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. MA, Lederle Graduate Research Center. The printed volumes include the full reprints of all cited publications.
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: Faculty Of The Polymer Science & Engineering Department At The University Of Massachusetts Amherst, Otto Vogl
Otto Vogl
Richards S. Stein
Otto Vogl
Robert W. Lenz
MacKnight, William
Karasz, Frank. E.
Farris, Richard
MacCarthy, Thomas
Hsu, Shaw Lin
Green Gasoline By Catalytic Fast Pyrolysis Of Solid Biomass Derived Compounds, George W. Huber, A. Corma, L. Sauvanaud, P. O'Conner
Green Gasoline By Catalytic Fast Pyrolysis Of Solid Biomass Derived Compounds, George W. Huber, A. Corma, L. Sauvanaud, P. O'Conner
George W. Huber
A fuelling success: High-quality aromatic fuel additives can be produced directly from solid biomass feedstocks by catalytic fast pyrolysis in a single catalytic reactor at short residence times. High heating rates and catalyst-to-feed ratios are needed to ensure that pyrolized biomass compounds enter the pores of the ZSM5 catalyst and that thermal decomposition is avoided. Product selectivity is a function of the active site and pore structure of the catalyst.
Current-Induced Stabilization Of Surface Morphology In Stressed Solids, Dimitrios Maroudas, M. R. Gungor, V. Tomar
Current-Induced Stabilization Of Surface Morphology In Stressed Solids, Dimitrios Maroudas, M. R. Gungor, V. Tomar
Dimitrios Maroudas
We examine the surface morphological evolution of a conducting crystalline solid under the simultaneous action of an electric field and mechanical stress based on a fully nonlinear model and combining linear stability theory with self-consistent dynamical simulations. We demonstrate that electric current, through surface electromigration, can stabilize the surface morphology of the stressed solid against cracklike surface instabilities. The results also have more general implications for the morphological response of solid surfaces under the simultaneous action of multiple external forces.
Mean Field Kinetic Theory For A Lattice Gas Model Of Fluids Confined In Porous Materials, Peter A. Monson
Mean Field Kinetic Theory For A Lattice Gas Model Of Fluids Confined In Porous Materials, Peter A. Monson
Peter A. Monson
We consider the mean field kinetic equations describing the relaxation dynamics of a lattice model of a fluid confined in a porous material. The dynamical theory embodied in these equations can be viewed as a mean field approximation to a Kawasaki dynamics Monte Carlo simulation of the system, as a theory of diffusion, or as a dynamical density functional theory. The solutions of the kinetic equations for long times coincide with the solutions of the static mean field equations for the inhomogeneous lattice gas. The approach is applied to a lattice gas model of a fluid confined in a finite …
Millisecond Autothermal Steam Reforming Of Cellulose For Synthetic Biofuels By Reactive Flash Volatilization, Paul J. Dauenhauer, Lanny D. Schmidt, Joshua L. Colby
Millisecond Autothermal Steam Reforming Of Cellulose For Synthetic Biofuels By Reactive Flash Volatilization, Paul J. Dauenhauer, Lanny D. Schmidt, Joshua L. Colby
Paul J. Dauenhauer
Three biomass-to-liquid process steps (volatilization of cellulose, tar-cleaning of organic products, and water-gas-shift of the gaseous effluent) have been integrated into a single autothermal catalytic reactor for the production of high quality synthesis gas at millisecond residence times ([similar]30 ms). Particles of cellulose ([similar]300 μm) were directly impinged upon the hot, catalytic bed of Rh–Ce/γ-Al2O3 catalyst on 1.3 mm α-Al2O3 spheres in the presence of O2, N2, and steam in a continuous flow fixed-bed reactor at 500–1100 °C. Complete conversion to gases was observed for all experimental parameters including N2/O2, S/C, the total flow rate of cellulose, and the fuel-to-oxygen …
Coarse Molecular-Dynamics Analysis Of An Order-To-Disorder Transformation Of A Krypton Monolayer On Graphite, Dimitrios Maroudas, I. G. Kevrekidis, V. A. Fonoberov, M. Arienti, M. A. Amat
Coarse Molecular-Dynamics Analysis Of An Order-To-Disorder Transformation Of A Krypton Monolayer On Graphite, Dimitrios Maroudas, I. G. Kevrekidis, V. A. Fonoberov, M. Arienti, M. A. Amat
Dimitrios Maroudas
The thermally induced order-to-disorder transition of a monolayer of krypton (Kr) atoms adsorbed on a graphite surface is studied based on a coarse molecular-dynamics (CMD) approach for the bracketing and location of the transition onset. A planar order parameter is identified as a coarse variable, ψ, that can describe the macroscopic state of the system. Implementation of the CMD method enables the construction of the underlying effective free-energy landscapes from which the transition temperature, Tt, is predicted. The CMD prediction of Tt is validated by comparison with predictions based on conventional molecular-dynamics (MD) techniques. The conventional MD computations include the …
Asymptotic Analysis Of The Selective Dip Coating Of Power-Law Fluids, N Tiwari, Jm Davis
Asymptotic Analysis Of The Selective Dip Coating Of Power-Law Fluids, N Tiwari, Jm Davis
Jeffrey M. Davis
The dip coating of a chemically micropatterned surface bearing alternating wetting and nonwetting vertical strips is analyzed for a non-Newtonian power-law fluid. Asymptotic matching is used to determine the thickness of liquid films deposited on the O(10 μm) strips at small capillary and Bond numbers. The chemical patterning that confines the fluid laterally induces a significant transverse curvature of the free-surface. The streamwise variation in this transverse curvature along the strip provides an additional contribution to the capillary pressure gradient that is not present for uniform surfaces. Consequently, the difference in the thickness of the deposited liquid film relative to …
Understanding Capillary Condensation And Hysteresis In Porous Silicon: Network Effects Within Independent Pores, Peter A. Monson, Sergej Naumov, Alexey Khokhlov, Rustem Valiullin, Jörg Kärger
Understanding Capillary Condensation And Hysteresis In Porous Silicon: Network Effects Within Independent Pores, Peter A. Monson, Sergej Naumov, Alexey Khokhlov, Rustem Valiullin, Jörg Kärger
Peter A. Monson
The ability to exert a significant degree of pore structure control in porous silicon materials has made them attractive materials for the experimental investigation of the relationship between pore structure, capillary condensation, and hysteresis phenomena. Using both experimental measurements and a lattice gas model in mean field theory, we have investigated the role of pore size inhomogeneities and surface roughness on capillary condensation of N2 at 77 K in porous silicon with linear pores. Our results resolve some puzzling features of earlier experimental work. We find that this material has more in common with disordered materials such as Vycor glass …
Synthesis And Characterization Of Amphiphilic O-Phenylene Ethynylene Oligomers, Morris M. Slutsky, Jason S. Phillip, Gregory N. Tew
Synthesis And Characterization Of Amphiphilic O-Phenylene Ethynylene Oligomers, Morris M. Slutsky, Jason S. Phillip, Gregory N. Tew
Gregory N. Tew
We have previously reported the synthesis of short o-phenylene ethynylene oligomers with polar triethylene glycol side chains which adopt a helical conformation in solution with three residues per turn. Two new oligomers have been synthesized, a hexamer and a nonamer, incorporating a repeated triad motif of polar–nonpolar–polar sidechains in order to create a hydrophobic stripe in the folded conformation which we report here for the first time. Helical folding in solution was observed and, unlike the previously-reported oligomers, these new oligomers are ordered solids at room temperature. Although these oligomers were designed to assemble into helical bundle-like structures, no evidence …
Extending Helicity—Capturing The Helical Character Of Longer Ortho-Phenylene Ethynylene Oligomers, Ticora V. Jones, Morris M. Slutsky, Gregory N. Tew
Extending Helicity—Capturing The Helical Character Of Longer Ortho-Phenylene Ethynylene Oligomers, Ticora V. Jones, Morris M. Slutsky, Gregory N. Tew
Gregory N. Tew
Antimicrobial peptides are small cationic amphiphiles that play an important role in the innate immune system. Given their broad specificity, they appear to be ideal therapeutic agents. As a result, over the last decade, there has been considerable interest in developing them as intravenously administered antibiotics. However, it has proven difficult to accomplish this goal with peptide-based structures. Although it has been possible to solve some relatively simple problems such as susceptibility to proteolysis, more severe problems have included the expense of the materials, toxicity, limited efficacy, and limited tissue distribution. In an effort to overcome these problems, we developed …
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: R, Otto Vogl
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: R, Otto Vogl
Otto Vogl
Raetzsch, Manfred
Ranby, Bengt
Rempp, Paul;
Reneker, Darrell;
Riess, Gerard;
Ringsdorf, Helmut
Rizzardo, Ezio
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: F, Otto Vogl
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: F, Otto Vogl
Otto Vogl
Feng, Xinde
Fischer, Erhard
Fles, Dragomir
Flodin, Per
Flory, Paul
Fox, Daniel
Fox, Robert
Franta, Emile
Freitag, Dieter
Frenkel, S.
Fukui, Kenichi
Furukawa, Junji
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: Y, Otto Vogl
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: Y, Otto Vogl
Otto Vogl
Yamazaki, Noburo
Yamashita, Shinzo
Yuki, Heimei
Yu, Tongyin
Mechanism Of A Prototypical Synthetic Membraneactive Antimicrobial: Efficient Hole-Punching Via Interaction With Negative Intrinsic Curvature Lipids, Lihua Yanga, Vernita D. Gordon, Dallas R. Trinkle, Nathan W. Schmidt, Matthew A. Davis, Clarabelle Devries, Abhigyan Som, John E. Cronan Jr., Gregory N. Tew, Gerard C. L. Wong
Mechanism Of A Prototypical Synthetic Membraneactive Antimicrobial: Efficient Hole-Punching Via Interaction With Negative Intrinsic Curvature Lipids, Lihua Yanga, Vernita D. Gordon, Dallas R. Trinkle, Nathan W. Schmidt, Matthew A. Davis, Clarabelle Devries, Abhigyan Som, John E. Cronan Jr., Gregory N. Tew, Gerard C. L. Wong
Gregory N. Tew
Phenylene ethynylenes comprise a prototypical class of synthetic antimicrobial compounds that mimic antimicrobial peptides produced by eukaryotes and have broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity. We show unambiguously that bacterial membrane permeation by these antimicrobials depends on the presence of negative intrinsic curvature lipids, such as phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) lipids, found in high concentrations within bacterial membranes. Plate-killing assays indicate that a PE-knockout mutant strain of Escherichia coli drastically out-survives the wild type against the membrane-active phenylene ethynylene antimicrobials, whereas the opposite is true when challenged with traditional metabolic antibiotics. That the PE deletion is a lethal mutation in normative environments suggests that resistant …
Who Is Who In Polymer Science: U, Otto Vogl
Conformationally Rigid Proteomimetics: A Case Study In Designing Antimicrobial Aryl Oligomers, G. J. Gabriel, Gregory N. Tew
Conformationally Rigid Proteomimetics: A Case Study In Designing Antimicrobial Aryl Oligomers, G. J. Gabriel, Gregory N. Tew
Gregory N. Tew
The promise of proteomics to provide a vast library of protein structural data is exciting to scientists desiring an unprecedented understanding of the relationship between protein structure and function. This powerful knowledge will provide insight into the design rules for proteomimetics which are oligomers and polymers that can be more stable and inexpensive to produce than natural proteins, but still emulate the main biological function of the natural molecule. This Emerging Area article is intended to stimulate discussion on innovative strategies to design the next generation of proteomimetics. Specifically we will examine the design evolution of facially amphiphilic aryl oligomers, …
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: C, Otto Vogl
Who Was Who In Polymer Science: C, Otto Vogl
Otto Vogl
Cantow, Hans-Joachim
Champetier, George
Chapiro, Adolphe
Clark, Edward S.
Corradini, Paolo
Cruishank, Alex