Michael Barrow
University of Liverpool
24 Papers
107 Citations
Michael Barrow is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mesenchymal stem cell & Iron oxide nanoparticles. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 24 publications.
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Papers
Non-invasive imaging reveals conditions that impact distribution and persistence of cells after in vivo administration
Lauren Scarfe,Arthur Taylor,Jack Sharkey,Rachel Harwood,Michael Barrow,Joan Comenge,Lydia Beeken,Cai Astley,Ilaria Santeramo,Claire Hutchinson,Lorenzo Ressel,Jon Smythe,Eric Austin,Raphaël Lévy,Matthew J. Rosseinsky,Dave J. Adams,Harish Poptani,Brian Kevin Park,Patricia Murray,Bettina Wilm +19 more
TL;DR: The observation that the hUC-MSCs but not the human bone marrow (hBM)-derived MSCs persisted for a period in some animals suggests that therapies with these cells should proceed with caution, and a thorough understanding of cell biodistribution and fate post administration is required.
Frozen polymerization for aligned porous structures with enhanced mechanical stability, conductivity, and as stationary phase for HPLC
TL;DR: In this article, a directional freezing and frozen polymerization method was developed to prepare crosslinked aligned porous polymers with improved mechanical stability, where the solvent is removed under vacuum at room temperature to produce aligned porous structure.
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Aligned porous stimuli-responsive hydrogels via directional freezing and frozen UV initiated polymerization
Michael Barrow,Haifei Zhang +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Oligo-ethylene glycol methacrylates and dimethylamino ethyl methacelate monomers are used to produce temperature and pH-responsive hydrogels.
Macroporous metal–organic framework microparticles with improved liquid phase separation
Adham Ahmed,Nicola Hodgson,Michael Barrow,Rob Clowes,Craig M. Robertson,Alexander Steiner,Paul McKeown,Darren Bradshaw,Peter Myers,Haifei Zhang +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, an etching mechanism is suggested for the formation of macroporous HKUST-1 particles, which present a high surface area and high macropore volume with the HKUST 1 characteristic pattern.
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pH-Directed Aggregation to Control Photoconductivity in Self-Assembled Perylene Bisimides
Emily R. Draper,Emily R. Draper,Benjamin J. Greeves,Michael Barrow,Ralf Schweins,Martijn A. Zwijnenburg,Dave J. Adams,Dave J. Adams +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the packing of a single PBI functionalized with an amino acid was controlled by a subtle change in pH. And they showed that films formed from the self-assembled structures have very different photoconductive properties.
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