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  1. null (Ed.)
    Symmetry-dependent properties such as ferroelectricity are suppressed at room temperature in Pb-free ABO 3 perovskites due to antiferrodistortive dynamics (octahedral rotations/tilts), resulting in the preferential stabilization of centrosymmetric crystals. For this reason, defect engineering (Ca doping, oxygen vacancy, etc. ) has been leveraged to break the symmetry of these crystals by inducing symmetry/structural transitions to modify the local A/B-site environment. This work demonstrates the use of in situ / ex situ photoluminescence spectroscopy to systematically detect symmetry/structural transformations in prototypical ferroelectric ABO 3 perovskites. These baseline optical responses are compared to recently synthesized Ca x Sr 1−x NbO 3 (CSNO) nanocrystals, which undergoes similar ferroelectric/structural phase transitions. Furthermore, the resultant PL response is corroborated with X-ray diffraction (XRD) and absorption spectroscopy (XAS) measurements to confirm the structural changes. This ability to directly monitor the local site symmetry within ABO 3 perovskites via photoluminescence spectroscopy can be used to screen for temperature- and defect-induced ferroelectric transitions. 
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Heat management in catalysis is limited by each material's heat transfer efficiencies, resulting in energy losses despite current thermal engineering strategies. In contrast, induction heating of magnetic nanoparticles (NPs) generates heat at the surface of the catalyst where the reaction occurs, reducing waste heat via dissipation. However, the synthesis of magnetic NPs with optimal heat generation requires interfacial ligands, such as oleic acid, which act as heat sinks. Surface treatments using tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAOH) or pyridine are used to remove these ligands before applications in hydrophilic media. In this study, Fe3O4 NPs are surface treated to study the effect of induction heating on the catalytic oxidation of 1‐octanol. Whereas TMAOH was unsuccessful in removing oleic acid, pyridine treatment resulted in a roughly 2.5‐fold increase in heat generation and product yield. Therefore, efficient surfactant removal has profound implications in induction heating catalysis by increasing the heat transfer and available surface sites. 
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  3. Graphical abstract [Formula: see text] 
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  4. Abstract

    Most cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) are unstructured and susceptible to proteolytic degradation. One alternative is to incorporate D‐chirality amino acids into unstructured CPPs to allow for enhanced uptake and intracellular stability. This work investigates CPP internalization using a series of time, concentration, temperature, and energy dependent studies, resulting in a three‐fold increase in uptake and 50‐fold increase in stability of D‐chirality peptides over L‐chirality counterparts. CPP internalization occurred via a combination of direct penetration and endocytosis, with a percentage of internalized CPP expelling from cells in a time‐dependent manner. Mechanistic studies identified that cells exported the intact internalized D‐chirality CPPs via an exocytosis independent pathway, analogous to a direct penetration method out of the cells. These findings highlight the potential of a D‐chirality CPP as bio‐vector in therapeutic and biosensing applications, but also identify a new expulsion method suggesting a relationship between uptake kinetics, intracellular stability, and export kinetics.

     
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  5. Abstract

    Cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) have emerged as powerful tools for delivering bioactive cargoes, such as biosensors or drugs to intact cells. One limitation of CPPs is their rapid degradation by intracellular proteases. β‐hairpin “protectides” have previously been demonstrated to be long‐lived under cytosolic conditions due to their secondary structure. The goal of this work was to demonstrate that arginine‐rich β‐hairpin peptides function as both protectides and as CPPs. Peptides exhibiting a β‐hairpin motif were found to be rapidly internalized into cells with their uptake efficiency dependent on the number of arginine residues in the sequence. Cellular internalization of the β‐hairpin peptides was compared to unstructured, scrambled sequences and to commercially available, arginine‐rich CPPs. The unstructured peptides displayed greater uptake kinetics compared to the structured β‐hairpin sequences; however, intracellular stability studies revealed that the β‐hairpin peptides exhibited superior stability under cytosolic conditions with a 16‐fold increase in peptide half‐life. This study identifies a new class of long‐lived CPPs that can overcome the stability limitations of peptide‐based reporters or bioactive delivery mechanisms in intact cells.

     
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