30 results on '"Ingo Scholz"'
Search Results
2. Cognitive profiles in persons with depressive disorder and Alzheimer’s disease
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Charlotte Steindel, Matthias W. Riepe, Claudia Lanza, Ingo Scholz, and Karolina Sejunaite
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cognition ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,neuropsychology ,Disease ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Episodic memory ,Biological Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Recall ,AcademicSubjects/SCI01870 ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Neuropsychology ,biomarkers ,Cognition ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,depression ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Original Article ,AcademicSubjects/MED00310 ,Observational study ,business ,Alzheimer’s disease ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Alzheimer’s disease and depressive disorder are frequent in old age. Both may be associated with depressed mood and cognitive impairment. Therefore, finding a strategy to clarify the diagnosis underlying subjective complaints of impaired cognition and depressed mood in older persons is of utmost interest. We conducted a cross-sectional retrospective observational clinical cohort study using patient records from 2014 to 2018. From 3758 patients, we included patients aged 60 years and older with a Mini-Mental-Status Examination score of 24 and above. Final analysis included all patients in whom Alzheimer’s disease biomarker analysis was performed (cerebrospinal fluid markers of Alzheimer’s disease or positron emission tomography imaging; n = 179) and patients with depressive disorder in whom Alzheimer’s disease was ruled out by analysis of biomarkers suggestive of Alzheimer’s disease (n = 70). With case–control matching for age, education and gender, performance of patients with Alzheimer’s disease was worse in acquisition, consolidation and recall of verbal information and false-positive answers. None of the results, however, sufficed to differentially diagnose individual patients with Alzheimer’s disease or depressive disorder. With more severe symptoms of depression, patients with biomarker-verified Alzheimer’s disease performed worse in executive testing but were not additionally impaired in verbal episodic memory performance. We conclude that distinguishing between Alzheimer’s disease and depressive disorder is unreliable on clinical grounds and behavioural testing alone. Diagnosing the cause of subjective complaints about deteriorating cognitive function or depressed mood requires additional biomarker assessment, whereas cognitive assessment is needed to define appropriate targets of symptomatic treatment in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and depressive disorder., Both Alzheimer’s disease and depressive disorder may be associated with depressed mood and cognitive impairment. Distinguishing between the two conditions on clinical and behavioural grounds alone is unreliable. Diagnosing the cause of subjective complaints about deteriorating cognitive function or depressed mood requires additional biomarker assessment., Graphical Abstract
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- 2020
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3. On the conundrum of cognitive impairment due to depressive disorder in older patients
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Claudia Lanza, Matthias W. Riepe, Ingo Scholz, Karolina Sejunaite, and Charlotte Steindel
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Social Sciences ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Biochemistry ,Geriatric Depression ,Cohort Studies ,Cognition ,Learning and Memory ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Medicine ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Cognitive Impairment ,Aged, 80 and over ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cognitive Neurology ,Depression ,Neuropsychology ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Neuropsychological test ,Middle Aged ,Executive functions ,Neurology ,Memory Recall ,Female ,Research Article ,Cohort study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Science ,Geriatric Psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Memory ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Medical history ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Neuropsychological Testing ,Aged ,Depressive Disorder ,030214 geriatrics ,Mood Disorders ,business.industry ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Case-Control Studies ,Cognitive Science ,Dementia ,business ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
ObjectivesDepressive symptoms and cognitive impairment often concur in older persons. Differentiating the cause of cognitive impairment in older persons with Depressive Disorder (DD) from other diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is challenging. The goal of this study was to characterize cognitive impairment in older persons with DD.DesignCross-sectional retrospective observational clinical cohort study using patient records from 2014 to 2018.SettingGerontopsychiatric services of Ulm University at Bezirkskrankenhaus Günzburg serving as primary psychiatric care institution and tertiary referral center for psychiatric care for older persons.PartcipantsDD was diagnosed according to ICD-10 criteria. When indicated by the medical history or neuropsychological assessment further diagnostic procedures were initiated. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tap was routinely the first additional procedure. If patients did not consent to CSF tap or contraindications were present, 18F-fluordesoxyglucose-PET (FDG-PET) or Amyloid-PET (Am-PET) were performed.Materials and methodsExtensive neuropsychological test battery to assess cognitive profile.Results457 subjects were diagnosed with DD (DD-all; age 50-94; 159 males, 298 females). Biomarkers were assessed in 176 persons; in 90 of these subjects AD-biomarkers were negative (DD-BM-; age 54-89; 40 males, 50 females), and in 86 subjects at least one biomarker was compatible with AD (DD-BM+; age 60-90; 31 males, 55 females). Cognitive performance was below healthy controls (HC; n = 56; age 50-80; 30 males, 26 females) for all groups of patients with DD. With case-control matching of HC and DD-BM- we find that executive functions are impaired in about one out of three and delayed recall in about two out of three patients with DD.ConclusionCognitive impairment is frequent in older persons with DD. Cognitive profile in older patients with DD without and with biomarkers of AD is not distinguishable. Therefore, cognitive impairment due to DD should be diagnosed after exclusion of comorbid AD.
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- 2020
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4. Improved decoupling during symmetry-based C9-TOBSY sequences
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Matthias Ernst, Jacco D. van Beek, Kong Ooi Tan, Beat H. Meier, and Ingo Scholz
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Floquet theory ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Sequence ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Biophysics ,010402 general chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Topology ,Interference (wave propagation) ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Resonance (particle physics) ,Symmetry (physics) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Pulse (physics) ,Amplitude ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Decoupling (electronics) - Abstract
Spin diffusion type polarization transfer among heteronuclei e.g. 13C or 15N plays an important role in many solid state NMR experiments for structure determination of proteins. In such experiments chemical shift compensation is provided by the proton bath (‘proton driven’) which can be improved by radio frequency irradiation of the protons. Here we address the problem that the polarization transfer rates depend not only on the intermolecular distance but also on the chemical shift difference of the two spins. We introduce rf modulation schemes that allow eliminating the chemical shift dependence to a large extent over a predefined range. At the same time the rate constants are maximized.
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- 2014
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5. PAIN with and without PAR: variants for third-spin assisted heteronuclear polarization transfer
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Vipin Agarwal, Anja Böckmann, Matthias Ernst, Mariana Sardo, Beat H. Meier, and Ingo Scholz
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ESCHERICHIA-COLI THIOREDOXIN ,Solid-state NMR ,Heteronuclear correlation ,PAIN-CP ,RESORT ,Heteronuclear RESORT ,Proton ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Molecular physics ,Homonuclear molecule ,3D STRUCTURE DETERMINATION ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,AMYLOID FIBRILS ,Computer Simulation ,NUCLEAR-MAGNETIC-RESONANCE ,Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular ,Spectroscopy ,Spins ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Ubiquitin ,Cross polarization ,CORRELATION SPECTROSCOPY ,Polarization (waves) ,3. Good health ,0104 chemical sciences ,SOLID-STATE NMR ,ANGLE-SPINNING NMR ,Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance ,Heteronuclear molecule ,PROTEIN-STRUCTURE DETERMINATION ,ROTATING SOLIDS ,CROSS-POLARIZATION ,Spin Labels ,Protons ,Crystallization ,Heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectroscopy - Abstract
In this article, we describe third-spin assisted heteronuclear recoupling experiments, which play an increasingly important role in measuring long-range heteronuclear couplings, in particular (15)N-(13)C, in proteins. In the proton-assisted insensitive nuclei cross polarization (PAIN-CP) experiment (de Paepe et al. in J Chem Phys 134:095101, 2011), heteronuclear polarization transfer is always accompanied by homonuclear transfer of the proton-assisted recoupling (PAR) type. We present a phase-alternating experiment that promotes heteronuclear (e.g. (15)N → (13)C) polarization transfer while simultaneously minimizing homonuclear (e.g.(13)C → (13)C) transfer (PAIN without PAR). This minimization of homonuclear polarization transfer is based on the principle of the resonant second-order transfer (RESORT) recoupling scheme where the passive proton spins are irradiated by a phase-alternating sequence and the modulation frequency is matched to an integer multiple of the spinning frequency. The similarities and differences between the PAIN-CP and this het-RESORT experiment are discussed here.
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- 2013
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6. Slippery surfaces of pitcher plants: Nepenthes wax crystals minimize insect attachment via microscopic surface roughness
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Florian Hischen, Lars Dolge, M. Bückins, Markus Riederer, T. Erlinghagen, Sarah L. Hoffmann, Ingo Scholz, Michael Riedel, Agnes Weth, Joachim Mayer, and Werner Baumgartner
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Insecta ,Materials science ,Surface Properties ,Physiology ,Surface finish ,Aquatic Science ,Microscopy, Atomic Force ,Models, Biological ,Epicuticular wax ,Botany ,Surface roughness ,Animals ,Composite material ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Wax ,biology ,Adhesiveness ,Adhesion ,biology.organism_classification ,Nepenthes alata ,Peristome ,Sarraceniaceae ,Waxes ,Insect Science ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Adhesive ,Crystallization - Abstract
SUMMARY Pitcher plants of the genus Nepenthes efficiently trap and retain insect prey in highly specialized leaves. Besides a slippery peristome which inhibits adhesion of insects they employ epicuticular wax crystals on the inner walls of the conductive zone of the pitchers to hamper insect attachment by adhesive devices. It has been proposed that the detachment of individual crystals and the resulting contamination of adhesive organs is responsible for capturing insects. However, our results provide evidence in favour of a different mechanism, mainly based on the stability and the roughness of the waxy surface. First, we were unable to detect a large quantity of crystal fragments on the pads of insects detached from mature pitcher surfaces of Nepenthes alata. Second, investigation of the pitcher surface by focused ion beam treatment showed that the wax crystals form a compact 3D structure. Third, atomic force microscopy of the platelet-shaped crystals revealed that the crystals are mechanically stable, rendering crystal detachment by insect pads unlikely. Fourth, the surface profile parameters of the wax layer showed striking similarities to those of polishing paper with low grain size. By measuring friction forces of insects on this artificial surface we demonstrate that microscopic roughness alone is sufficient to minimize insect attachment. A theoretical model shows that surface roughness within a certain length scale will prevent adhesion by being too rough for adhesive pads but not rough enough for claws.
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- 2010
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7. NMR polarization transfer by second-order resonant recoupling: RESORT
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Beat H. Meier, Matthias Ernst, and Ingo Scholz
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Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases ,Spins ,Chemistry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Polarization (waves) ,Molecular physics ,Homonuclear molecule ,symbols.namesake ,Dipole ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Heteronuclear molecule ,Residual dipolar coupling ,symbols ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics) ,Magnetic dipole–dipole interaction - Abstract
We describe a resonant second-order dipolar recoupling condition for magic-angle spinning (MAS) solid-state NMR where the active spins are irradiated by continuous-wave irradiation and the passive spins by a phase-alternating sequence. The phase-modulation frequency is matched to an integer multiple of the MAS frequency to produce a second-order homonuclear dipolar coupling Hamiltonian that promotes broadband homonuclear zero-quantum polarization transfer on the spin-locked active spins. The recoupling sequence is based on second-order cross terms between two heteronuclear dipolar couplings. Similarities and differences to the proton-assisted recoupling sequence are discussed.
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- 2010
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8. MIRROR-CP: A proton-only experiment for the measurement of 13C spin diffusion
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Ingo Scholz, Matthias Ernst, and Beat H. Meier
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Condensed matter physics ,Spin polarization ,Spins ,Chemistry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Polarization (waves) ,Electromagnetic coil ,Spin diffusion ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Magnetization transfer ,Irradiation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Insensitive nuclei enhanced by polarization transfer ,Atomic physics - Abstract
Spin-diffusion measurements are applied in many solid-state NMR experiments. They require the preparation of non-equilibrium polarization on one spin species (S spins) which is often done through polarization transfer from a second spin species (I-spin). Such experiments involve radio-frequency irradiation at the Larmor frequencies of both spins. Here, we describe a method to generate and detect S-spin ( 13 C) difference polarization via the I spins ( 1 H) without S-spin pulses. No coil tuned to the S-spin ( 13 C) resonance frequency is needed. On the basis of such a transfer step, S-spin spin diffusion can be measured in a single-channel I-spin ( 1 H) experiment.
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- 2009
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9. Ultrastructure and physical properties of an adhesive surface, the toe pad epithelium of the tree frog, Litoria caerulea White
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Joanna Smith, Ingo Scholz, W. J. P. Barnes, and Werner Baumgartner
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Materials science ,Friction ,Surface Properties ,Physiology ,Aquatic Science ,Microscopy, Atomic Force ,Epithelium ,law.invention ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Biomimetics ,Dimple ,law ,Elastic Modulus ,Animals ,Composite material ,Molecular Biology ,Elastic modulus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nanopillar ,biology ,Adhesiveness ,Anatomy ,Toes ,Litoria caerulea ,Nanoindentation ,Microstructure ,biology.organism_classification ,Insect Science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Adhesive ,Anura ,Electron microscope ,Research Article - Abstract
SUMMARY Knowledge of both surface structure and physical properties such as stiffness and elasticity are essential to understanding any adhesive system. In this study of an adhesion surface in the tree frog, Litoria caerulea White, a variety of techniques including atomic force microscopy were used to investigate the microstructure and properties of an epithelium that adheres through wet adhesion. Litoria toe pads consist of a hexagonal array of flat-topped epithelial cells, separated by mucus-filled channels. Under an atomic force microscope, this `flat' surface is highly structured at the nanoscale, consisting of a tightly packed array of columnar nanopillars (described as hemidesmosomes by previous authors), 326±84 nm in diameter, each of which possesses a central dimple 8±4 nm in depth. In fixed tissue (transmission electron microscopy), the nanopillars are approximately as tall as they are broad. At the gross anatomical level, larger toe pads may be subdivided into medial and lateral parts by two large grooves. Although the whole toe pad is soft and easily deformable, the epithelium itself has an effective elastic modulus equivalent to silicon rubber (mean Eeff=14.4±20.9 MPa; median Eeff=5.7 MPa), as measured by the atomic force microscope in nanoindentation mode. The functions of these structures are discussed in terms of maximising adhesive and frictional forces by conforming closely to surface irregularities at different length scales and maintaining an extremely thin fluid layer between pad and substrate. The biomimetic implications of these findings are reviewed.
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- 2009
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10. Low-power cross polarization in fast magic-angle spinning NMR experiments
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Matthias Ernst, Beat H. Meier, Theofanis Manolikas, Adam Lange, and Ingo Scholz
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Dipole ,Amplitude ,Heteronuclear molecule ,Chemistry ,Cross polarization ,Analytical chemistry ,Magic angle spinning ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Polarization (waves) ,Spinning ,Molecular physics ,Homonuclear molecule - Abstract
We describe a low-power approach for heteronuclear cross-polarization (CP) at high magic-angle spinning (MAS) frequencies. It is based on second-order CP at the n = 0 Hartmann–Hahn condition. The mechanism for the polarization transfer in the low-power CP experiment relies on second-order cross terms between homonuclear and heteronuclear dipolar couplings. At a MAS frequency of 65 kHz, rf-field amplitudes below 10 kHz are sufficient to efficiently transfer polarization from 1 H to 13 C. The low-rf field requirements of this approach make it well suited for the investigation of proteins and other temperature-sensitive samples without the risk of sample heating and degradation.
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- 2009
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11. MIRROR recoupling and its application to spin diffusion under fast magic-angle spinning
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Matthias Ernst, Beat H. Meier, Theofanis Manolikas, Matthias Huber, and Ingo Scholz
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Condensed Matter::Quantum Gases ,Spins ,Chemistry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Polarization (waves) ,Homonuclear molecule ,Dipole ,symbols.namesake ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Heteronuclear molecule ,Physics::Atomic and Molecular Clusters ,Spin diffusion ,Magic angle spinning ,symbols ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Atomic physics ,Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics) - Abstract
We introduce a second-order dipolar recoupling condition for magic-angle spinning NMR where the isotropic chemical-shift difference of two homonuclear S spins is matched by the rf-irradiation amplitude, or, alternatively, phase-modulation frequency, on a heteronuclear spin. The experiment can be looked at as a mixed rotational and rotary-resonance condition (MIRROR). The effective MIRROR Hamiltonian promotes homonuclear zero-quantum polarization transfer and heteronuclear zero-quantum and double-quantum polarization transfer. The MIRROR recoupling condition is applied to obtain enhanced polarization transfer through spin diffusion (MIRROR-SD) and to establish through-space neighborhood of spins at high MAS frequencies.
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- 2008
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12. Electrification of powertrain systems — battery, fuel cell or both?
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Axel Riemann, Wolfgang Steiger, and Ingo Scholz
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Battery (electricity) ,business.industry ,Powertrain ,Automotive engineering ,Electrification ,Internal combustion engine ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Range (aeronautics) ,Automotive Engineering ,Alternative energy ,Fuel cells ,Environmental science ,Electric power ,business - Abstract
The increasing electrification of powertrain systems is driven by the idea of using electric power as an alternative energy source. Fuel cells combined with electric traction are one example. Batteries will have a sufficient energy density for a maximum mileage of 200 km, sufficient for driving even in the largest of conurbations. In urban surroundings, a market for fuel cells as a range extender may develop. For mobility with distances of more than 400 km, there is no real alternative to the internal combustion engine powered by liquid hydrocarbons, as Volkswagen engineers predict.
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- 2008
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13. The CCS combustion system from Volkswagen
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Ulf Stolte, Stefan Schmerbeck, Ingo Scholz, and Wolfgang Steiger
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Engineering ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Pollutant emissions ,Combustion system ,Diesel combustion ,Diesel engine ,Automotive engineering ,Reduction (complexity) ,Diesel fuel ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Automotive Engineering ,Environmental science ,Gasoline ,business ,Cetane number ,Petrol engine - Abstract
Due to changing economic, technical and social environments and resulting customer demands, future vehicle drive systems will be required to have lower pollutant emissions and greater efficiency, leading to a CO2 reduction. Combining the advantages of the petrol and diesel combustion processes is a way of achieving these objectives. In the Group Research — Drive Systems of Volkswagen AG, this implementation is referred to as the Combined Combustion System CCS.
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- 2008
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14. Das CCS-Brennverfahren von Volkswagen
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Ulf Stolte, Stefan Schmerbeck, Ingo Scholz, and Wolfgang Steiger
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Political science ,Automotive Engineering ,Humanities - Abstract
Veranderte wirtschaftliche, technische und soziale Rahmenbedingungen, gesellschaftliche Trends und daraus resultierende Kundenwunsche erfordern von zukunftigen Fahrzeugantrieben niedrigere Schadstoff-Emissionen und eine hohere Effizienz, was eine Reduktion des CO2-Ausstoses zur Folge hat. Durch die Kombination der Vorteile des Otto- und Dieselbrennverfahrens sollen diese Ziele erreicht werden. Die technische Umsetzung wird in der Konzernforschung Antriebe der Volkswagen AG als CCS-Brennverfahren bezeichnet.
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- 2008
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15. Micromechanics of smooth adhesive organs in stick insects: pads are mechanically anisotropic and softer towards the adhesive surface
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Ingo Scholz, Werner Baumgartner, and Walter Federle
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Carausius morosus ,Insecta ,Materials science ,Physiology ,Modulus ,Arthropod cuticle ,Nanotechnology ,Microscopy, Atomic Force ,Models, Biological ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Indentation ,Animals ,Composite material ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Cuticle (hair) ,biology ,Adhesiveness ,Micromechanics ,Extremities ,biology.organism_classification ,Elasticity ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Adhesive ,Layer (electronics) - Abstract
Animals have evolved adhesive structures on their legs to cling to the substrate during locomotion. Here we characterise the ultrastructure and mechanical properties of adhesive pads in Carausius morosus (Phasmatodea) using atomic force microscopy (AFM) as well as transmission and scanning electron microscopy (TEM, SEM). The smooth adhesive arolium has a soft cuticle consisting of principal rods, which branch into finer fibres near the surface. Indentation experiments showed that the pad material consists of distinct layers with different mechanical properties. The 100-300 nm thick outermost layer consisting of the cuticulin envelope and the epicuticle is extremely soft and resilient (mean effective Young's modulus 12 kPa), while the subjacent procuticle is a much stiffer material (mean effective Young's modulus 625 kPa). AFM contact mode imaging revealed that the cuticle is mechanically anisotropic, which can be explained by its fibrillar inner structure. We propose that the described layered structure of smooth adhesive pads, consisting of materials decreasing in stiffness towards the outer surface, represents a superior design to conform and adhere to substrates with roughnesses at different length scales. This design principle could be easily implemented in technical adhesives, and thus has a potential to inspire biomimetic applications.
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- 2008
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16. Cribellate thread production in spiders: Complex processing of nano-fibres into a functional capture thread
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Peter Kappel, Werner Baumgartner, Ingo Scholz, Anna-Christin Joel, and Hana Adamova
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Polymer science ,biology ,Uloboridae ,Silk ,Spiders ,General Medicine ,Thread (computing) ,biology.organism_classification ,Models, Biological ,Uloborus plumipes ,SILK ,Insect Science ,Animals ,Spider silk ,Female ,Calamistrum ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Spider silk production has been studied intensively in the last years. However, capture threads of cribellate spiders employ an until now often unnoticed alternative of thread production. This thread in general is highly interesting, as it not only involves a controlled arrangement of three types of threads with one being nano-scale fibres (cribellate fibres), but also a special comb-like structure on the metatarsus of the fourth leg (calamistrum) for its production. We found the cribellate fibres organized as a mat, enclosing two parallel larger fibres (axial fibres) and forming the typical puffy structure of cribellate threads. Mat and axial fibres are punctiform connected to each other between two puffs, presumably by the action of the median spinnerets. However, this connection alone does not lead to the typical puffy shape of a cribellate thread. Removing the calamistrum, we found a functional capture thread still being produced, but the puffy shape of the thread was lost. Therefore, the calamistrum is not necessary for the extraction or combination of fibres, but for further processing of the nano-scale cribellate fibres. Using data from Uloborus plumipes we were able to develop a model of the cribellate thread production, probably universally valid for cribellate spiders.
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- 2015
17. Evaluating the quality of light fields computed from hand-held camera images
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Heinrich Niemann and Ingo Scholz
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business.industry ,Computer science ,Camera matrix ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Image-based modeling and rendering ,Camera interface ,Motion field ,Image-based lighting ,Artificial Intelligence ,Camera auto-calibration ,Computer Science::Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer graphics (images) ,Signal Processing ,Structure from motion ,Pinhole camera model ,Computer vision ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Software ,Stereo camera ,Light field ,Camera resectioning - Abstract
Given an image sequence recorded by a hand-held camera we examine the computation of a light field without any further input data. Using structure-from-motion algorithms and optimization techniques camera motion and a 3-D reconstruction of the scene are established. The light field is completed by computing local depth information for each input image. During experimental evaluation a special focus is set on the effects of falsely estimated intrinsic parameters as well as different depth representations on the quality of the resulting light fields.
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- 2005
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18. Determination of the Young's modulus of the epicuticle of the smooth adhesive organs of Carausius morosus by tensile testing
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Joachim Mayer, Werner Baumgartner, Stefan Backhaus, Daesung Park, Ingo Scholz, and Michael Bennemann
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Carausius morosus ,Insecta ,Cuticle ,Materials science ,Surface Properties ,Physiology ,Modulus ,Nanotechnology ,Young's modulus ,Aquatic Science ,symbols.namesake ,Hardness ,Elastic Modulus ,Tensile Strength ,Ultimate tensile strength ,Animals ,Composite material ,Molecular Biology ,Elastic modulus ,Research Articles ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Tensile testing ,Stick insects ,biology ,Adhesiveness ,Extremities ,biology.organism_classification ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Arolium ,Insect Science ,Adhesion ,symbols ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Adhesive ,Contact area ,Finite element simulation - Abstract
Adhesive organs like arolia of insects allow these animals to climb on different substrates by creating high adhesion forces. According to the Dahlquist criterion, adhesive organs must be very soft exhibiting an effective Young's modulus of below 100 kPa to adhere well to substrates. Such a low effective Young's modulus allows the adhesive organs to make almost direct contact to the substrate and results in van der Waals forces beside capillary forces. In previous studies the effective Young's moduli of adhesive organs were determined using indentation tests yielding their structure to be very soft indeed. However, adhesive organs show a layered structure, thus the measured values comprise the effective Young's moduli of several layers of the adhesive organs. In this study, a new approach is illustrated to measure the Young's modulus of the outermost layer of the arolium, i.e. of the epicuticle, of the stick insect Carausius morosus. As a result of the epicuticle being supported by upright fibres tensile tests allow the determination of the Young's modulus of the epicuticle hardly affected by subjacent layers. In our tensile tests arolia of stick insects adhering on a latex membrane were stretched by stretching the membrane while the elongation of the contact area between an arolium and the membrane was recorded. For analysis mathematical models of the mechanical system were developed. When fed with the observed elongations, these models yield estimates for the Young's modulus of the epicuticle of about a hundred megapascal. Thus in arolia a very thin layer (~225 nm) of a rather stiff material, which is less susceptible to abrasion, makes contact to the substrates while the inner fibrous structure of arolia is responsible for their softness.
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- 2014
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19. Functional morphology of the adhesive organs of stick insects ( Carausius morosus )
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Werner Baumgartner, Ingo Scholz, and Michael Bennemann
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Carausius morosus ,Materials science ,biology ,Scanning electron microscope ,fungi ,Nanotechnology ,Adhesion ,biology.organism_classification ,Transmission electron microscopy ,Functional morphology ,Ultrastructure ,Biophysics ,Confocal laser scanning microscopy ,Adhesive - Abstract
Adhesive organs enable insects to cling to various substrates. During locomotion, a very fast but reliable change of adhesion and detachment is realised. To reveal the detailed underlying mechanisms of this impressive performance, we analysed the ultrastructure of adhesive organs of the stick insect C. morosus using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM).
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- 2011
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20. ChemInform Abstract: Operator-Based Floquet Theory in Solid-State NMR
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Ingo Scholz, Matthias Ernst, and Jacco D. van Beek
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Floquet theory ,Range (mathematics) ,Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance ,Chemistry ,Operator (physics) ,Quantum mechanics ,General Medicine ,Perturbation theory - Abstract
This article reviews the application of operator-based Floquet theory in solid-state NMR. Basic expressions for calculating effective Hamiltonians based on van Vleck perturbation theory are reviewed for problems with a single frequency or multiple incommensurate frequencies. Such a treatment allows calculation of effective Hamiltonians for resonant and non-resonant problems. Examples from literature are given for single-mode to triple-mode Floquet problems, covering a wide range of applications in solid-state NMR under magic-angle spinning and radio-frequency irradiation of a single nucleus or multiple nuclei.
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- 2010
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21. Operator-based Floquet theory in solid-state NMR
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Ingo Scholz, Jacco D. van Beek, and Matthias Ernst
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Floquet theory ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Radiation ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Rotation ,Operator (physics) ,General Chemistry ,Range (mathematics) ,Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance ,Quantum mechanics ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Magic angle spinning ,Perturbation theory ,Instrumentation - Abstract
This article reviews the application of operator-based Floquet theory in solid-state NMR. Basic expressions for calculating effective Hamiltonians based on van Vleck perturbation theory are reviewed for problems with a single frequency or multiple incommensurate frequencies. Such a treatment allows calculation of effective Hamiltonians for resonant and non-resonant problems. Examples from literature are given for single-mode to triple-mode Floquet problems, covering a wide range of applications in solid-state NMR under magic-angle spinning and radio-frequency irradiation of a single nucleus or multiple nuclei.
- Published
- 2010
22. OLG Frankfurt, Beschluss vom 4.5.2006 – 20 W 158/06, Anwendbarkeit des Schuldverschreibungsgesetzes auf Genussscheine mit Verlustbeteiligung (Anmerkung Ingo Scholz/Nikola Breu)
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Ingo Scholz and Nikola Breu
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- 2007
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23. Depth map compression for unstructured lumigraph rendering
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Andre Kaup, Audrey Guenegues, Ulrich Fecker, and Ingo Scholz
- Subjects
business.industry ,Computer science ,Image quality ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Image processing ,Image-based modeling and rendering ,Real-time rendering ,3D rendering ,Rendering (computer graphics) ,Depth map ,Computer graphics (images) ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Light field ,Data compression ,Image compression - Abstract
Image-based rendering techniques require capturing an object or scene from many viewpoints. Often, depth maps are used in addition to the original images for rendering new iews for novel viewpoints not coinciding with one of the original camera positions. Due to the high amount of data, efficient compression is necessary. When the data is stored or transmitted, it is not only desirable to compress the image data but also the depth information. In this paper, the case of sequences recorded with a single, hand-held camera is investigated. These sequences are used for unstructured lumigraph rendering. In addition, the case of multi-view video sequences is analyzed. For both cases, depth maps are compressed using H.264/AVC, and the achievable data rates are studied. For the case of unstructured lumigraph rendering, the effect of depth map compression on the quality of rendered images is analyzed in a second step.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Electrophoresis in gel channels
- Author
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Torsten Müller, Thomas Schnelle, Maila Reh, Rolf Hagedorn, Kristian Lange, and Ingo Scholz
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Free-flow electrophoresis ,Phenol red ,Electrophoresis, Agar Gel ,Chromatography ,Extinction ratio ,Isoelectric focusing ,Biomolecule ,Diffusion ,Microchemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Buffers ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Biochemistry ,Electromigration ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Electrophoresis ,chemistry ,Mathematics - Abstract
We describe a novel approach to generate dynamic pH gradients suited to fractionate or purify samples of biomolecules or particles such as proteins and viruses in tiny volumes. The method combines diffusion and electromigration between micro-scaled channels embedded in hydrogel. For the used geometry and in accordance with numerical calculations the gel-channel system reaches a tuneable, steady-state pH gradient after a few minutes. For quantification of experimentally generated pH-profiles, the concentration independent extinction ratio of phenol red at two wavelengths is used. The proposed electrophoretic flow-cell is simple and flexible since no Immobilines are required to establish the pH gradient.
- Published
- 2005
25. Globally Consistent 3-D Reconstruction by Utilizing Loops in Camera Movement
- Author
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Ingo Scholz and Heinrich Niemann
- Subjects
Computer science ,Calibration (statistics) ,business.industry ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Image processing ,Iterative reconstruction ,Tracking (particle physics) ,Camera auto-calibration ,Pinhole camera model ,Point (geometry) ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Camera resectioning - Abstract
A common approach to 3-D reconstruction from image sequences is to track point features through the images, followed by an estimation of camera parameters and scene geometry. For long sequences, the latter is done by applying a factorization method followed by an image-by-image calibration. In this contribution we propose to integrate the tracking and calibration steps and to feed back already known camera parameters to both tracking and calibration. For loop-like camera motion, reconstruction can thus be optimized by using loop-closing algorithms known from robot navigation.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Glanzlichtsubstitution durch Lichtfelder Unsichtbares wird sichtbar
- Author
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Heinrich Niemann, Florian Vogt, Dietrich Paulus, Ingo Scholz, and Christoph Schick
- Abstract
In diesem Artikel wird eine neue Technik zur Glanzlichtsubstitution vorgestellt. Ausgehend von einer Farbbildsequenz, die mit einer handgefuhrten Kamera aufgezeichnet wird, wird zunachst ein so genanntes Lichtfeld erzeugt. Auserdem wird fur jedes Bild der Sequenz eine Glanzlichtmaske berechnet. Diese wird anschliesend als Vertrauenskarte im Lichtfeld benutzt. Dadurch werden Farbpixel an den markierten Glanzlichtstellen durch Pixel aus anderen Bildern ersetzt, bei denen diese Pixel nicht durch Glanzlichter uberbelichtet waren. Diese Methode erhoht die Bildqualitat. Eine Anwendung des Verfahrens auf endoskopische Bilder und Evaluation auf realen und auf synthetischen Daten beschliest den Beitrag.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Placing Arbitrary Objects in a Real Scene Using a Color Cube for Pose Estimation
- Author
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Jochen Schmidt, Heinrich Niemann, and Ingo Scholz
- Subjects
business.industry ,Computer science ,Color image ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Image processing ,Cube mapping ,Rendering (computer graphics) ,Data cube ,Virtual image ,Computer Science::Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Pose ,Camera resectioning - Abstract
We describe an Augmented Reality system using the corners of a color cube for camera calibration. In the augmented image the cube is replaced by a computer generated virtual object. The cube is localized in an image by the CSC color segmentation algorithm. The camera projection matrix is estimated with a linear method that is followed by a nonlinear refinement step. Because of possible missclassifications of the segmented color regions and the minimum number of point correspondences used for calibration, the estimated pose of the cube may be very erroneous for some frames; therefore we perform outlier detection and treatment for rendering the virtual object in an acceptable manner.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Structural correlates of adhesion and friction in tree frog toe pads
- Author
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Walter Federle, W. Jon P. Barnes, and Ingo Scholz
- Subjects
Physiology ,Chemistry ,Tree frog ,Anatomy ,Adhesion ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Understanding two-pulse phase-modulated decoupling in solid-state NMR
- Author
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Matthias Ernst, Beat H. Meier, Paul Hodgkinson, and Ingo Scholz
- Subjects
Floquet theory ,Coupling ,Condensed matter physics ,Chemistry ,Proteins ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Decoupling (cosmology) ,Spin dynamics ,Molecular biophysics ,Spin echo (NMR) ,Homonuclear molecule ,Biological NMR ,Magic angle spinning ,symbols.namesake ,Laser linewidth ,Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance ,Organic compounds ,symbols ,Spin systems ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Atomic physics ,Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics) - Abstract
A theoretical description of the two-pulse phase-modulated (TPPM) decoupling sequence in magic-angle spinning NMR is presented using a triple-mode Floquet approach. The description is formulated in the radio-frequency interaction-frame representation and is valid over the entire range of possible parameters leading to the well-known results of continuous-wave (cw) decoupling and XiX decoupling in the limit of a phase change of 0 degrees and 180 degrees , respectively. The treatment results in analytical expressions for the heteronuclear residual coupling terms and the homonuclear spin-diffusion terms. It also allows the characterization of all resonance conditions that can contribute in a constructive or a destructive way to the residual linewidth. Some of the important resonance conditions are described for the first time since they are not accessible in previous treatments. The combination of the contributions from the residual couplings and the resonance conditions to the effective Hamiltonian, as obtained in a Floquet description, is shown to be required to describe the decoupling behavior over the full range of parameters. It is shown that for typical spin system and experimental parameters a (13)C linewidth of approximately 12 Hz can be obtained for TPPM decoupling in an organic solid or a protein. This is a major contribution to the experimentally observed linewidths of around 20 Hz and indicates that decoupling techniques are still one of the limiting factors in the achievable linewidths.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Operator-based triple-mode Floquet theory in solid-state NMR
- Author
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Ingo Scholz, Beat H. Meier, and Matthias Ernst
- Subjects
Physics ,Floquet theory ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Time Factors ,Condensed matter physics ,Cross polarization ,General Physics and Astronomy ,symbols.namesake ,Fourier transform ,Models, Chemical ,Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance ,Quantum mechanics ,symbols ,Magic angle spinning ,Quantum Theory ,Computer Simulation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics) ,Spinning - Abstract
Many solid-state NMR experiments exploit interference effects between time dependencies in the system Hamiltonian to design an effective time-independent Hamiltonian with the desired properties. Effective Hamiltonians can be designed such that they contain only selected parts of the full system Hamiltonian while all other parts are averaged to zero. A general theoretical description of such experiments has to accommodate several time-dependent perturbations with incommensurate frequencies. We describe an extension of the analytical operator-based Floquet description of NMR experiments to situations with three incommensurate frequencies. Experiments with three time dependencies are quite common in solid-state NMR. Examples include experiments which combine magic-angle spinning and radio-frequency irradiation on two nuclei or asynchronous multiple-pulse sequences on a single spin species. The Floquet description is general in the sense that the resulting effective Hamiltonians can be calculated without a detailed knowledge of the spin-system Hamiltonian and can be expressed fully as a function of the Fourier components of the time-dependent Hamiltonian. As a prototype experiment we treat the application of two continuous-wave (cw) radio-frequency fields under magic-angle spinning. Experiments that are included in such a description are Hartmann-Hahn cross polarization or rotary-resonance recoupling experiments with simultaneous cw decoupling.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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