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  • their effect on the current production in organic electrochemical transistors (OECT) devices were studied. Different weight fraction blends of the charge conductive polymer (poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl, P3HT) and an ion conductive ROMP based polymer with oligomeric ethylene oxide sidechains were studied at weight fractions of 1.00, 0.95, 0.85, 0.75, 0.65, 0.40, and 0.20 with respect to P3HT. A solution of 100 mM potassium hexafluorophosphate (KPF6)  was used to dope the OECT. Transconductance was

  • said. The second annual event on March 6, 2018, will feature Pamela Ronald, Ph.D., a renowned scientist who researches genetically-modified organisms. Ronald will speak about genetic science in food, an issue she knows intimately as her spouse is an organic farmer. More details about the event to come. Read Previous Lutes learn self defense from Karate Club Read Next Local and international film critics lose their marbles — in a good way — over Lute’s live-action short film COMMENTS*Note: All

  • .] – who might not know quite what they wanna do, but they can try different things on, so they set themselves up for success. Meet the Professors More Stories Visit About As a PLU chemistry student, you’ll work closely with professors who have expertise in all major branches of chemistry — from organic and biochemistry to polymer and analytical chemistry. You’ll get hands- on experience with state-of- the-art scientific instruments, have opportunities to do research and can earn an American Chemical

  • applications, including electrochemical, bio-organic/pharmaceutical, and industrial processes. In recent years, the vast majority of RTILs studied have been the imidazolium species. Presented in this capstone is the optimized synthesis of recently-described 1,3,4-alkyl-1,2,3-triazolium-based RTILs. which are facilely afforded (yields> 85%) via the [3+2] copper-catalyzed “Click” reaction between an azide and terminal alkyne. The complete synthesis time has been reduced from days to a few hours. Despite RTIL

  • Ronald and colleagues received the Tech Award for innovative use of technology to benefit humanity. In 2014 she was named one of the world’s most influential scientific minds by Thomson Reuters, in 2015 was selected by Scientific American as one of the world’s 100 most influential people in biotechnology and in 2016 was named one of the 50 innovators and visionaries who will lead us toward a more sustainable future by Grist magazine. Ronald is co-author of Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics

  • every night, and I roomed with Alan twice. Doug was a great student. He helped me study the night before every Organic Chemistry test, making sure I managed to pass while he got his A. He was also an Academic All-American in basketball. After finishing seventh in his class at the University of Washington Medical School, he held a residency at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, and spent much of his career at a branch of the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz. Doug was one of the most avid students of pop

  • Botryococcus braunii race B is a green colonial microalga that produces high quantities of organic hydrocarbon terpenes. One such hydrocarbon is botryococcene, whose structure consists of three terpene units and a branched terminal end alkene. Due to its abundance and the low carbon footprint of its production, botryococcene is an excellent candidate for investigation of its use as a precursor in the production of biofuels. E. coli have been genetically altered for the synthesis of botryococcene due to the

  • ” understanding of it had shifted to a more holistic (and neurological) “disorder” by 1827. Then the physician Marshall Hall defined it as affecting “…all the several [systems] which constitute the animal frame,—the organs of animal and of organic life; the different sets of muscles..; the functions of the head, the heart, the stomach,” (OED). The continuity between the definitions is that the term “hysteria” was leveled near exclusively at women. Given its setting in the late 1810s, in Sanditon, Esther’s

  • and nonfiction focusing on fathers and sons, love, and friendship. He has compiled an anthology of AIDS memoirs that lays out a vital literacy and cultural history. And he is currently at work on Son: Life and Letters, a collection of and about his fifty-one years of correspondence with his father. Tom’s projects are always organic to who he is and what he values in the world. On the last day of class last semester, a student in Tom’s British Traditions in Literature waited after class to thank

  • Anatomy and Physiology I (4) BIOL 206: Human Anatomy and Physiology II (4) BIOL 225: Molecules, Cells, and Organisms (4) BIOL 226: Genes, Evolution, Diversity, and Ecology (4) Two courses from: CHEM 105: Chemistry of Life (4) CHEM 115: General Chemistry I (4) CHEM 116: General Chemistry II (4) CHEM 331: Organic Chemistry I (4) CHEM 333: Organic Chemistry I Lab (1) STAT 231: Introductory Statistics (4) OR STAT 232: Introductory Statistics for Psychology Majors (4) KINS 277: Foundations of Kinesiology