https://www.selleckchem.com/products/zx703.html Characterization of suspended nanoparticles in their native environment plays a central role in a wide range of fields, from medical diagnostics and nanoparticle-enhanced drug delivery to nanosafety and environmental nanopollution assessment. Standard optical approaches for nanoparticle sizing assess the size via the diffusion constant and, as a consequence, require long trajectories and that the medium has a known and uniform viscosity. However, in most biological applications, only short trajectories are available, while simultaneously, the medium viscosity is unknown and tends to display spatiotemporal variations. In this work, we demonstrate a label-free method to quantify not only size but also refractive index of individual subwavelength particles using 2 orders of magnitude shorter trajectories than required by standard methods and without prior knowledge about the physicochemical properties of the medium. We achieved this by developing a weighted average convolutional neural network to analyze holographic images of single particles, which was successfully applied to distinguish and quantify both size and refractive index of subwavelength silica and polystyrene particles without prior knowledge of solute viscosity or refractive index. We further demonstrate how these features make it possible to temporally resolve aggregation dynamics of 31 nm polystyrene nanoparticles, revealing previously unobserved time-resolved dynamics of the monomer number and fractal dimension of individual subwavelength aggregates.In recent years, several organocatalytic asymmetric hydroarylations of activated, electron-poor olefins with activated, electron-rich arenes have been described. In contrast, only a few approaches that can handle unactivated, electronically neutral olefins have been reported and invariably require transition metal catalysts. Here we show how an efficient and highly enantioselective catalytic asymmetric intramol