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Dive into the research topics where Christopher A. Mills is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher A. Mills.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2009

Stem cell differentiation by functionalized micro- and nanostructured surfaces.

Elena Martínez; Anna Lagunas; Christopher A. Mills; Santiago Rodríguez-Segui; M Estévez; Sabine Oberhansl; Jordi Comelles; J. Samitier

New fabrication technologies and, in particular, new nanotechnologies have provided biomaterial and biomedical scientists with enormous possibilities when designing customized supports and scaffolds with controlled nanoscale topography and chemistry. The main issue now is how to effectively design these components and choose the appropriate combination of structure and chemistry to tailor towards applications as challenging and complex as stem cell differentiation. Occasionally, an incomplete knowledge of the fundamentals of biological differentiation processes has hampered this issue. However, the recent technological advances in creating controlled cellular microenvironments can be seen as a powerful tool for furthering fundamental biology studies. This article reviews the main strategies followed to achieve solutions to this challenge, particularly emphasizing the working hypothesis followed by the authors to elucidate the mechanisms behind the observed effects of structured surfaces on cell behavior.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Hybrid Graphene‐Metal Oxide Solution Processed Electron Transport Layers for Large Area High‐Performance Organic Photovoltaics

Michail J. Beliatis; Keyur K. Gandhi; Lynn J. Rozanski; Rhys Rhodes; Liam McCafferty; Mohammad R. Alenezi; Abdullah S. Alshammari; Christopher A. Mills; K. D. G. Imalka Jayawardena; Simon J. Henley; S. Ravi P. Silva

Solution processed core-shell nano-structures of metal oxide-reduced graphene oxide (RGO) are used as improved electron transport layers (ETL), leading to an enhancement in photocurrent charge transport in PCDTBT:PC70 BM for both single cell and module photovoltaic devices. As a result, the power conversion efficiency for the devices with RGO-metal oxides for ETL increases 8% in single cells and 20% in module devices.


Annals of Anatomy-anatomischer Anzeiger | 2009

Mesenchymal stem cell differentiation on microstructured poly (methyl methacrylate) substrates

Elisabeth Engel; Elena Castro Martínez; Christopher A. Mills; Miriam Funes; Josep A. Planell; J. Samitier

Recent studies on 2D substrates have revealed the importance of surface properties in affecting cell behaviour. In particular, surface topography appears to influence and direct cell migration. The development of new technologies of hot embossing and micro-imprinting has made it possible to study cell interactions with controlled micro features and to determine how these features can affect cell behaviour. Several studies have been carried out on the effect of microstructures on cell adhesion, cell guidance and cell proliferation. However, there is still a lack of knowledge on how these features affect mesenchymal stem cell differentiation. This study was designed to evaluate whether highly controlled microstructures on PMMA could induce rMSC differentiation into an osteogenic lineage. Structured PMMA was seeded with rMSC and cell number; cell morphology and cell differentiation were evaluated. Results confirm that microstructures not only affect cell proliferation and alignment but also have a synergistic effect with osteogenic medium on rMSC differentiation into mature osteoblasts.


Small | 2009

Complex microstructured 3D surfaces using chitosan biopolymer.

Javier Fernández; Christopher A. Mills; J. Samitier

A technique for producing micrometer-scale structures over large, nonplanar chitosan surfaces is described. The technique makes use of the rheological characteristics (deformability) of the chitosan to create freestanding, three-dimensional scaffolds with controlled shapes, incorporating defined microtopography. The results of an investigation into the technical limits of molding different combinations of shapes and microtopographies are presented, highlighting the versatility of the technique when used irrespectively with inorganic or delicate organic moulds. The final, replicated scaffolds presented here are patterned with arrays of one-micrometer-tall microstructures over large areas. Structural integrity is characterized by the measurement of structural degradation. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells cultured on a tubular scaffold show that early cell growth is conditioned by the microtopography and indicate possible uses for the structures in biomedical applications. For those applications requiring improved chemical and mechanical resistance, the structures can be replicated in poly(dimethyl siloxane).


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Graphene oxide hole transport layers for large area, high efficiency organic solar cells

Christopher Smith; Rhys Rhodes; Michail J. Beliatis; K. D. G. Imalka Jayawardena; Lynn J. Rozanski; Christopher A. Mills; S. Ravi P. Silva

Graphene oxide (GO) is becoming increasingly popular for organic electronic applications. We present large active area (0.64 cm2), solution processable, poly[[9-(1-octylnonyl)-9H-carbazole-2,7-diyl]-2,5-thiophenediyl-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole-4,7-diyl-2,5-thiophenediyl]:[6,6]-Phenyl C71 butyric acid methyl ester (PCDTBT:PC70BM) organic photovoltaic (OPV) solar cells, incorporating GO hole transport layers (HTL). The power conversion efficiency (PCE) of ∼5% is the highest reported for OPV using this architecture. A comparative study of solution-processable devices has been undertaken to benchmark GO OPV performance with poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) HTL devices, confirming the viability of GO devices, with comparable PCEs, suitable as high chemical and thermal stability replacements for PEDOT:PSS in OPV.


Veterinary Record | 2004

Current and future uses of breath analysis as a diagnostic tool

C.A. Wyse; Tom Preston; P.S. Yam; D. G. M. Sutton; R. M. Christley; J. W. Hotchkiss; Christopher A. Mills; Andrew Glidle; David R. S. Cumming; Jonathan M. Cooper; S. Love

The analysis of exhaled breath is a potentially useful method for application in veterinary diagnostics. Breath samples can be easily collected from animals by means of a face mask or collection chamber with minimal disturbance to the animal. After the administration of a 13C-labelled compound the recovery of 13C in breath can be used to investigate gastrointestinal and digestive functions. Exhaled hydrogen can be used to assess orocaecal transit time and malabsorption, and exhaled nitric oxide, carbon monoxide and pentane can be used to assess oxidative stress and inflammation. The analysis of compounds dissolved in the aqueous phase of breath (the exhaled breath condensate) can be used to assess airway inflammation. This review summarises the current status of breath analysis in veterinary medicine, and analyses its potential for assessing animal health and disease.


Langmuir | 2008

Inverted microcontact printing on polystyrene-block-poly(tert-butyl acrylate) films: a versatile approach to fabricate structured biointerfaces across the length scales.

A. Embrechts; Chuan Liang Feng; Christopher A. Mills; Michael Lee; Ilona Bredebusch; Jürgen Schnekenburger; Wolfram Domschke; G. Julius Vancso; Holger Schönherr

The combination of the recently introduced soft lithographic technique of inverted microcontact printing (i-muCP) and spin-coated films of polystyrene- block-poly( tert-butyl acrylate) (PS 690- b-P tBA 1210) as a reactive platform is shown to yield a versatile approach for the facile fabrication of topographically structured and chemically patterned biointerfaces with characteristic spacings and distances that cross many orders of magnitude. The shortcomings of conventional muCP in printing of small features with large spacings, due to the collapse of small or high aspect ratio stamp structures, are circumvented in i-muCP by printing reactants using a featureless elastomeric stamp onto a topographically structured reactive polymer film. Prior to molecular transfer, the substrate-supported PS 690- b-P tBA 1210 films were structured by imprint lithography resulting in lateral and vertical feature sizes between >50 microm-150 nm and >1.0 microm-18 nm, respectively. Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) and water contact angle measurements provided evidence for the absence of surface chemical transformations during the imprinting step. Following the previously established hydrolysis and activation protocol with trifluoroacetic acid and N-hydroxysuccinimide, amino end-functionalized poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG-NH 2), as well as bovine serum albumin and fibronectin as model proteins, were successfully transferred by i-muCP and coupled covalently. As shown, i-muCP yields increased PEG coverages and thus improved performance in suppressing nonspecific adsorption of proteins by exploiting the high local concentrations in the micro- and nanocontacts during molecular transfer. The i-muCP strategy provides access to versatile biointerface platforms patterned across the length scales, as shown for guided cancer cell adhesion, which opens the pathway for systematic cell-surface interaction studies.


Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2003

Microsystems for optical gas sensing incorporating the solvatochromic dye Nile Red

Dong Li; Christopher A. Mills; Jonathan M. Cooper

Abstract An optical gas sensor has been developed based on the fluorescence emission of the solvatochromic dye, Nile Red, immobilised within various polymers with different physical properties. Microsystems, made either in SU-8/glass or microstructure glass (MSG) substrates, were used to host the environmentally sensitive fluorescent dye within the polymer matrices. The MSG devices have been found to have superior sensitivity to analytes (up to seven times greater) and recovery times (up to 50% faster) than analogous structures made in SU-8. Measurement of the fluorescence at two separate wavelengths confirmed the ability of the MSG sensor array to produce a “fingerprint” response for separate analytes with a high degree of repeatability (the standard deviation of the average response to a given analyte was


Journal of Applied Physics | 2009

Characterization of thick film poly(triarylamine) semiconductor diodes for direct x-ray detection

Akarin Intaniwet; Christopher A. Mills; Maxim Shkunov; Heiko Thiem; Joseph L. Keddie; P.J. Sellin

Thick film (≥5 μm thick) semiconducting polymer diodes incorporating poly(triarylamine) (PTAA) have been produced and applied as direct x-ray detectors. Experiments determined that a rectifying diode behavior persists when increasing the thickness of the active layer above typical thin film thicknesses (<1 μm), and the electrical conduction mechanism of the diodes has been identified. Direct current and photoconductivity measurements on indium tin oxide/poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)/poly(styrenesulfonate)/PTAA/metal diodes confirm that carrier conduction occurs via a Poole–Frenkel mechanism. The energy band structure of diodes (having gold or aluminum top electrodes) has been elucidated and used to explain the resulting electrical characteristics. Theoretical calculations show that, upon irradiation with x-rays, the diode quantum efficiency increases with increasing polymer film thickness. The diodes produced here display characteristics similar to their thin film analogs, meaning that they may be oper...


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

Triboelectric nanogenerators: providing a fundamental framework

R.D.I.G. Dharmasena; K.D.G.I. Jayawardena; Christopher A. Mills; J. H. B. Deane; J.V. Anguita; Robert A. Dorey; S. R. P. Silva

A new model which comprehensively explains the working principles of contact-mode triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs) based on Maxwells equations is presented. Unlike previous models which are restricted to known simple geometries and derived using the parallel plate capacitor model, this model is generic and can be modified to a wide range of geometries and surface topographies. We introduce the concept of a distance-dependent electric field, a factor not taken into account in previous models, to calculate the current, voltage, charge, and power output under different experimental conditions. The versatility of the model is demonstrated for non-planar geometry consisting of a convex–concave surface. The theoretical results show excellent agreement with experimental TENGs. Our model provides a complete understanding of the working principles of TENGs, and accurately predicts the output trends, which enables the design of more efficient TENG structures.

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J. Samitier

University of Barcelona

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