5 resultados para CTAB

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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Here, we present the adaptation and optimization of (i) the solvothermal and (ii) the metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) approach as simple methods for the high-yield synthesis of MQ2 (M=Mo, W, Zr; Q = O, S) nanoparticles. Extensive characterization was carried out using X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning and transmission electron micros¬copy (SEM/TEM) combined with energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDXA), Raman spectroscopy, thermal analyses (DTA/TG), small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and BET measurements. After a general introduction to the state of the art, a simple route to nanostructured MoS2 based on the decomposition of the cluster-based precursor (NH4)2Mo3S13∙xH2O under solvothermal conditions (toluene, 653 K) is presented. Solvothermal decomposition results in nanostructured material that is distinct from the material obtained by decomposition of the same precursor in sealed quartz tubes at the same temperature. When carried out in the presence of the surfactant cetyltrimethyl¬ammonium bromide (CTAB), the decomposition product exhibits highly disordered MoS2 lamellae with high surface areas. The synthesis of WS2 onion-like nanoparticles by means of a single-step MOCVD process is discussed. Furthermore, the results of the successful transfer of the two-step MO¬CVD based synthesis of MoQ2 nanoparticles (Q = S, Se), comprising the formation of amorphous precursor particles and followed by the formation of fullerene-like particles in a subsequent annealing step to the W-S system, are presented. Based on a study of the temperature dependence of the reactions a set of conditions for the formation of onion-like structures in a one-step reaction could be derived. The MOCVD approach allows a selective synthesis of open and filled fullerene-like chalcogenide nanoparticles. An in situ heating stage transmission electron microscopy (TEM) study was employed to comparatively investigate the growth mechanism of MoS2 and WS2 nanoparticles obtained from MOCVD upon annealing. Round, mainly amorphous particles in the pristine sample trans¬form to hollow onion-like particles upon annealing. A significant difference between both compounds could be demonstrated in their crystallization conduct. Finally, the results of the in situ hea¬ting experiments are compared to those obtained from an ex situ annealing process under Ar. Eventually, a low temperature synthesis of monodisperse ZrO2 nanoparticles with diameters of ~ 8 nm is introduced. Whereas the solvent could be omitted, the synthesis in an autoclave is crucial for gaining nano-sized (n) ZrO2 by thermal decomposition of Zr(C2O4)2. The n-ZrO2 particles exhibits high specific surface areas (up to 385 m2/g) which make them promising candidates as catalysts and catalyst supports. Co-existence of m- and t-ZrO2 nano-particles of 6-9 nm in diameter, i.e. above the critical particle size of 6 nm, demonstrates that the particle size is not the only factor for stabilization of the t-ZrO2 modification at room temperature. In conclusion, synthesis within an autoclave (with and without solvent) and the MOCVD process could be successfully adapted to the synthesis of MoS2, WS2 and ZrO2 nanoparticles. A comparative in situ heating stage TEM study elucidated the growth mechanism of MoS2 and WS2 fullerene-like particles. As the general processes are similar, a transfer of this synthesis approach to other layered transition metal chalcogenide systems is to be expected. Application of the obtained nanomaterials as lubricants (MoS2, WS2) or as dental filling materials (ZrO2) is currently under investigation.

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The physicochemical properties of nanoparticles make them suitable for biomedical applications. Due to their ‘straight-forward’ synthesis, their known biocompatibility, their strong optical properties, their ability for targeted drug delivery and their uptake potential into cells gold nanoparticles are highly interesting for biomedical applications. In particular, the therapy of brain diseases (neurodegenerative diseases, ischemic stroke) is a challenge for contemporary medicine and gold nanoparticles are currently being studied in the hope of improving drug delivery to the brain.rnIn this thesis three major conclusions from the generated data are emphasized.rn1. After improvement of the isolation protocol and culture conditions, the formation of a monolayer of porcine brain endothelial cells on transwell filters lead to a reproducible and tight in vitro monoculture which exhibited in vivo blood brain barrier (BBB) characteristics. The transport of nanoparticles across the barrier was studied using this model.rn2. Although gold nanoparticles are known to be relatively bioinert, contaminants of the nanoparticle synthesis (i.e. CTAB or sodium citrate) increased the cytotoxicity of gold nanoparticles, as shown by various publications. The results presented in this thesis demonstrate that contaminants of the nanoparticle synthesis such as sodium citrate increased the cytotoxicity of the gold nanoparticles in endothelial cells but in a more dramatic manner in epithelial cells. Considering the increased uptake of these particles by epithelial cells compared to endothelial cells it was demonstrated that the observed decrease of cell viability appeared to be related to the amount of internalized gold nanoparticles in combination with the presence of the contaminant.rn3. Systematically synthesized gold nanoparticles of different sizes with a variety of surface modifications (different chemical groups and net charges) were investigated for their uptake behaviour and functional impairment of endothelial cells, one of the major cell types making up the BBB. The targeting of these different nanoparticles to endothelial cells from different parts of the body was investigated in a comparative study of human microvascular dermal and cerebral endothelial cells. In these experiments it was demonstrated that different properties of the nanoparticles resulted in a variety of uptake patterns into cells. Positively charged gold nanoparticles were internalized in high amounts, while PEGylated nanoparticles were not taken up by both cell types. Differences in the uptake behavior were also demonstrated for neutrally charged particles of different sizes, coated with hydroxypropylamine or glucosamine. Endothelial cells of the brain specifically internalized 35nm neutrally charged hydroxypropylamine-coated gold nanoparticles in larger amounts compared to dermal microvascular endothelial cells, indicating a "targeting" for brain endothelial cells. Co-localization studies with flotillin-1 and flotillin-2 showed that the gold nanoparticles were internalized by endocytotic pathways. Furthermore, these nanoparticles exhibited transcytosis across the endothelial cell barrier in an in vitro BBB model generated with primary porcine brain endothelial cells (1.). In conclusion, gold nanoparticles with different sizes and surface characteristics showed different uptake patterns in dermal and cerebral endothelial cells. In addition, gold nanoparticles with a specific size and defined surface modification were able to cross the blood-brain barrier in a porcine in vitro model and may thus be useful for controlled delivery of drugs to the brain.

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Plasmonic nanoparticles exhibit strong light scattering efficiency due to the oscillations of their conductive electrons (plasmon), which are excited by light. For rod-shaped nanoparticles, the resonance position is highly tunable by the aspect ratio (length/width) and the sensitivity to changes in the refractive index in the local environment depends on their diameter, hence, their volume. Therefore, rod-shaped nanoparticles are highly suitable as plasmonic sensors.rnWithin this thesis, I study the formation of gold nanorods and nanorods from a gold-copper alloy using a combination of small-angle X-ray scattering and optical extinction spectroscopy. The latter represents one of the first metal alloy nanoparticle synthesis protocols for producing rod-shaped single crystalline gold-copper (AuxCu(1-x)) alloyed nanoparticles. I find that both length and width independently follow an exponential growth behavior with different time-constants, which intrinsically leads to a switch between positive and negative aspect ratio growth during the course of the synthesis. In a parameter study, I find linear relations for the rate constants as a function of [HAuCl4]/[CTAB] ratio and [HAuCl4]/[seed] ratio. Furthermore, I find a correlation of final aspect ratio and ratio of rate constants for length and width growth rate for different [AgNO3]/[HAuCl4] ratios. I identify ascorbic acid as the yield limiting species in the reaction by the use of spectroscopic monitoring and TEM. Finally, I present the use of plasmonic nanorods that absorb light at 1064nm as contrast agents for photoacoustic imaging (BMBF project Polysound). rnIn the physics part, I present my automated dark-field microscope that is capable of collecting spectra in the range of 450nm to 1750 nm. I show the characteristics of that setup for the spectra acquisition in the UV-VIS range and how I use this information to simulate measurements. I show the major noise sources of the measurements and ways to reduce the noise and how the combination of setup charactersitics and simulations of sensitivity and sensing volume can be used to select appropriate gold rods for single unlabeled protein detection. Using my setup, I show how to estimate the size of gold nano-rods directly from the plasmon linewidth measured from optical single particle spectra. Then, I use this information to reduce the distribution (between particles) of the measured plasmonic sensitivity S by 30% by correcting for the systematic error introduced from the variation in particle size. I investigate the single particle scattering of bowtie structures — structures consisting of two (mostly) equilateral triangles pointing one tip at each other. I simulate the spectra of the structures considering the oblique illumination angle in my setup, which leads to additional plasmon modes in the spectra. The simulations agree well with the measurements form a qualitative point of view.rn

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Transportprozesse von anisotropen metallischen Nanopartikeln wie zum Beispiel Gold-Nanostäbchen in komplexen Flüssigkeiten und/oder begrenzten Geometrien spielen eine bedeutende Rolle in einer Vielzahl von biomedizinischen und industriellen Anwendungen. Ein Weg zu einem tiefen, grundlegenden Verständnis von Transportmechanismen ist die Verwendung zweier leistungsstarker Methoden - dynamischer Lichtstreuung (DLS) und resonanzverstärkter Lichtstreuung (REDLS) in der Nähe einer Grenzfläche. In dieser Arbeit wurden nanomolare Suspensionen von Gold-Nanostäbchen, stabilisiert mit Cetyltrimethylammoniumbromid (CTAB), mit DLS sowie in der Nähe einer Grenzfläche mit REDLS untersucht. Mit DLS wurde eine wellenlängenabhängige Verstärkung der anisotropen Streuung beobachtet, welche sich durch die Anregung von longitudinaler Oberflächenplasmonenresonanz ergibt. Die hohe Streuintensität nahe der longitudinalen Oberflächenplasmonenresonanzfrequenz für Stäbchen, welche parallel zum anregenden optischen Feld liegen, erlaubte die Auflösung der translationalen Anisotropie in einem isotropen Medium. Diese wellenlängenabhängige anisotrope Lichtstreuung ermöglicht neue Anwendungen wie etwa die Untersuchung der Dynamik einzelner Partikel in komplexen Umgebungen mittels depolarisierter dynamischer Lichtstreuung. In der Nähe einer Grenzfläche wurde eine starke Verlangsamung der translationalen Diffusion beobachtet. Hingegen zeigte sich für die Rotation zwar eine ausgeprägte aber weniger starke Verlangsamung. Um den möglichen Einfluss von Ladung auf der festen Grenzfläche zu untersuchen, wurde das Metall mit elektrisch neutralem Polymethylmethacrylat (PMMA) beschichtet. In einem weiteren Ansatz wurde das CTAB in der Gold-Nanostäbchen Lösung durch das kovalent gebundene 16-Mercaptohexadecyltrimethylammoniumbromid (MTAB) ersetzt. Daraus ergab sich eine deutlich geringere Verlangsamung.

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Plasmonische Metallnanopartikel bündeln, verstärken und beeinflussen Licht auf nanoskopischer Ebene. Diese grundlegende Eigenschaft kommt von koheränten, kollektiven Schwingungen der Leitungsbandelektronen, die von einfallendem Licht resonant angeregt und lokalisierte Oberflächenplasmonenresonanz (LSPR) oder ‚Partikelplasmonen‘ genannt werden. Plasmonen in Metallnanopartikeln wurden bisher z.B. zur Erkennen von pathogenen Biomolekülen, bei der photothermischen Therapie und zur Verbesserung der Effizienz von Solarzellen verwendet. In dieser Arbeit werde ich meinen Fokus auf die Synthese und Funktionalisierung von Goldnanopartikeln zur Anwendung als Sensoren legen.rnrnKürzliche Verbesserungen in der nasschemischen Synthese haben zur Herstellung von Goldnanopartikel mit unterschiedlichen Formen und Größen geführt, die sich in ihren Sensoreigenschaften unterscheiden. Unter den unterschiedlichen Sensorgeometrien sind Goldnanostäbchen die bevorzugte Form zur Biomolekül-Sensorik durch LSPR. Nanostäbchen werden durch eine positiv geladene CTAB-Schicht stabilisiert, die Proteine bei neutralem pH-Wert anziehen kann. Die Adsorption und Desorption von Proteinen an der Nanopartikeloberfläche und damit die Bindungskinetiken von Proteinen kann auf Einzelmolekülebene erforscht werden. Ich zeige hier eine Studie mit hoher örtlicher und zeitlicher Auflösung um einzelne Bindungsereignisse von Fibronectin auf Goldnanostäbchen darzustellen.rnrnGoldnanostäbchen müssen mit spezifischen biologischen Erkennungselementen funktionalisiert werden um eine Analyterkennung oder Proteinwechselwirkung zu erreichen. Ich funktionalisiere Goldnanostäbchen mit kurzen DNA-Sequenzen (Aptamer-Sequenzen und NTA konjugierten Polihymidinen) und habe anhand diese unterschiedlich sensitiven Partikel eine Studie mit verschiedenen Analyten (oder Protein-Protein Wechselwirkungen) erfolgreich durchgeführt.rn rnPlasmonen von Nanopartikel-Clustern koppeln miteinander, was ihre Resonanzenergie ändert. Der kontrollierte Zusammenbau von Nanopartikeln zu Dimeren oder höher geordneten Strukturen wie ‚Core-Satellites‘ können dazu dienen ihre Sensitivität zu erhöhen. Diese Cluster bieten eine hohe Sensitivität auf Grund der Anwesenheit von plasmonischen Hotspots in der Lücke zwischen zwei Partikeln. Die Plasmonkopplung ist ein Phänomen, das abhängig vom Abstand zweier Partikel zueinander ist und bildet somit die Basis von sogenannten Plasmon-Linealen. Ich habe eine Strategie entwickelt um Dimere aus Hsp90 funktionalisierten Goldnanosphären zu bilden. Diese Technik wird nicht durch Ausbleichen oder das Blinken von Farbstoffen limitiert und ich zeige zum ersten Mal wie man dadurch dynamische Proteinkonformationen untersuchen kann.rn