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Cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) has been used to enhance the selectivity of CO2 electrochemical reduction. Traditionally, this selectivity was attributed to repulsion of water molecules due to a CTAB self-assembled monolayer, which forms under negative potential and disassembles at positive voltage due to electrostatic repulsions. In this report, using in operando interface sensitivity sum frequency generation spectroscopy, we investigated the self-assembly behavior of CTAB across a broad electrochemical potential range. We observed that CTAB molecules form a stable monolayer at the Stern layer over the entire potential scan, even when the electrodes are positively charged. Rather than disassembling, the CTAB molecules reorient themselves to balance the electrostatic interactions and the non-covalent hydrophobic effects, the latter being the primary driving force maintaining the monolayer at a positive potential. This finding contrasts the traditional view that CTAB monolayers are absent when the electrodes are positively charged, indicating a stable and ordered monolayer with respect to the electrostatic repulsions at liquid/electrode interfaces. The balance between non-covalent and electrostatic interactions offers a facile and reversible electrochemical method to control the local environment and dominating interactions at the Stern layer of the electrode surface, thus providing a means for engineering a micro-electrochemical environment.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
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Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2026
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Abstract Climate change is closely monitored and numerous studies reports increasing air temperature and weather extremes across the globe. As a direct consequence of the increase of global temperature, the increased heat stress is becoming a global threat to public health. While most climate change and epidemiological studies focus on air temperature to explain the increasing risks, heat strain can be predicted using comprehensive indices such as Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI). The Asia–Pacific region is prone to thermal stress and the high population densities in the region impose high health risk. This study evaluated the air temperature and UTCI trends between 1990 and 2019 and found significant increasing trends for air temperature for the whole region while the increases of UTCI are not as pronounced and mainly found in the northern part of the region. These results indicate that even though air temperature is increasing, the risks of heat stress when assessed using UTCI may be alleviated by other factors. The associations between El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and heat stress was evaluated on a seasonal level and the strongest regional responses were found during December-January (DJF) and March–May (MAM).more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
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Agrawal, Shipra; Roth, Aaron (Ed.)
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Traditional design galleries enable users to search for examples based on surface attributes (e.g., color or style), and largely obscure underlying principles (e.g., hierarchy or readability). We conducted three studies to explore how galleries could be constructed to help novices learn key design principles. Study 1 revealed that novices gain perspective by observing how designs evolve throughout a process. Study 2 found that novices are better at identifying design issues when viewing iterations that show improvements for just one principle at a time, rather than multiple. Building on these insights, we created ProcessGallery, a tool that enables users to browse contrasting pairs of early-and-late iterations of designs that highlight key improvements organized by design principles. In Study 3, a within-subjects experiment, sixteen participants iterated on a seed design after viewing examples in ProcessGallery versus a traditional gallery. Using ProcessGallery, participants found more appropriate examples, assessed designs better, and preferred ProcessGallery for learning compared to a traditional gallery.more » « less
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