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  1. Abstract Proton‐exchange membrane fuel cell vehicles offer a low‐carbon alternative to traditional oil fuel vehicles, but their performances still need improvement to be competitive. Raising their operating temperature to 120 °C will enhance their efficiency but is currently unfeasible due to the poor mechanical properties at high temperatures of the state‐of‐the‐art proton‐exchange membranes consisting of perfluorosulfonic acid (PFSA) ionomers. To address this issue, xx designed composite membranes made of two networks: a mat of hybrid fibers to maintain the mechanical properties filled with a matrix of PFSA‐based ionomer to ensure the proton conductivity. The hybrid fibers obtained by electrospinning are composed of intermixed domains of sulfonated silica and a fluorinated polymer. The inter‐fiber porosity is then filled with a PFSA ionomer to obtain dense composite membranes with a controlled fibers‐to‐ionomer ratio. At 80 °C, these obtained composite membranes show comparable performances to a pure PFSA commercial membrane. At 120 °C however, the tensile strength of the PFSA membrane drastically drop down to 0.2 MPa, while it is maintained at 7.0 MPa for the composite membrane. In addition, the composite membrane shows a good conductivity of up to 0.1 S cm −1 at 120 °C/90% RH, which increases with the ionomer content. 
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  2. Abstract An efficient strategy for the synthesis of large libraries of conformationally defined peptides is reported, using dynamic combinatorial chemistry as a tool to graft amino acid side chains on a well‐ordered 3D (3‐dimension) peptide backbone. Combining rationally designed scaffolds with combinatorial side chains selection represents an alternative method to access peptide libraries for structures that are not genetically encodable. This method would allow a breakthrough for the discovery of protein mimetic for unconventional targets for which little is known. 
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  3. Precise control over the production of carbon monoxide (CO) is essential to exploit the therapeutic potential of this molecule. The development of photoactive CO-releasing molecules (PhotoCORMs) is therefore a promising route for future clinical applications. Herein, a tricarbonyl-rhenium( i ) complex ( 1-TPP ), which incorporates a phosphine moiety as ancilliary ligand for boosting the photochemical reactivity, and a pyridyltriazole bidentate ligand with appended 2-phenylbenzoxazole moiety for the purpose of photoluminescence, was synthesized and characterized from a chemical and crystallographic point of view. Upon irradiation in the near-UV range, complex 1-TPP underwent fast photoreaction, which was monitored through changes of the UV-vis absorption and phosphorescence spectra. The photoproducts ( i.e. the dicarbonyl solvento complex 2 and one CO molecule) were identified using FTIR, 1 H NMR and HRMS. The results were interpreted on the basis of DFT/TD-DFT calculations. The effective photochemical release of CO associated with clear optical variations (the emitted light passed from green to orange-red) could make 1-TPP the prototype of new photochemically-active agents, potentially useful for integration in photoCORM materials. 
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  4. MnO 2 has been proposed as an electrode material in electrochemical energy storage devices. However, poor cycle life, especially in aqueous electrolytes, remains a detriment to commercialization. Prior studies have suggested a number of explanations for this capacity loss; however, experiments aimed at elucidating the details of the degradation process (es) are sparse. We describe here a microtube-membrane construct that allows for electrodeposition of monodisperse MnO 2 microparticles distributed across the membrane surface, and for subsequent electrochemical cycling of these MnO 2 particles. This allowed for a detailed analysis of the effect of cycling on the MnO 2 , by simply imaging the membrane surface before and after cycling. When an aqueous electrolyte was used, gross changes in particle shape, size and morphology were observed over the course of 500 cycles. Partial dissolution occurred as well. No such changes were observed when the MnO 2 particles were cycled (up to 500 times) in a propylene carbonate electrolyte solution. 
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  5. Abstract Almost all commercial proteins are purified using ammonium sulfate precipitation. Protein-polymer conjugates are synthesized from pure starting materials, and the struggle to separate conjugates from polymer, native protein, and from isomers has vexed scientists for decades. We have discovered that covalent polymer attachment has a transformational effect on protein solubility in salt solutions. Here, protein-polymer conjugates with a variety of polymers, grafting densities, and polymer lengths are generated using atom transfer radical polymerization. Charged polymers increase conjugate solubility in ammonium sulfate and completely prevent precipitation even at 100% saturation. Atomistic molecular dynamic simulations show the impact is driven by an anti-polyelectrolyte effect from zwitterionic polymers. Uncharged polymers exhibit polymer length-dependent decreased solubility. The differences in salting-out are then used to simply purify mixtures of conjugates and native proteins into single species. Increasing protein solubility in salt solutions through polymer conjugation could lead to many new applications of protein-polymer conjugates. 
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