932 resultados para ATOMIC FORCE MISCROSCOPY
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The aim of this work is to investigate the evaporation dynamics of water microdrops deposited on atomic force microscope cantilevers, which were employed as sensitive stress, mass and temperature sensors with high time resolution. The technique has some advantages with respect to video-microscope imaging and ultra-precision weighting with electronic microbalances or quartz crystal microbalances, since it allows to measure more drop parameters simultaneously for smaller drop sizes. On hydrophobic surfaces a single measurement with a silicon cantilever provides data for the drop mass, contact angle and radius until very close to complete evaporation. On hydrophilic surfaces, it is as well possible to measure drop mass and inclination of the cantilever. The technique further allows to detect differences between water microdrops evaporating from clean hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces. On hydrophilic surfaces the cantilever inclination is negative at the end of the evaporation process. Negative inclination mostly occurs when drops are pinned. This effect can not be detected with any of the other well-established methods. The evidence arises that on the hydrophilic surface a thin water film forms, while this is not the case for the hydrophobic surface. Metal coated cantilevers can be used as thermometers, and allow to precisely measure the temperature of an evaporating microdrop. This can be relevant for further applications of cantilevers as calorimetric sensors for chemical reactions taking place in drops on their surface. The applicability of Young’s equation was verified for microdrops. It was shown that Young’s equation can not be applied to microscopic drops due to their fast evaporation. A study on evaporation of microdrops in saturated vapor atmosphere was performed to estimate evaporation times and compare them with a theory developed, which relates the initial drop volume with the overall evaporation time.
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III-nitrides are wide-band gap materials that have applications in both electronics and optoelectronic devices. Because to their inherent strong polarization properties, thermal stability and higher breakdown voltage in Al(Ga,In)N/GaN heterostructures, they have emerged as strong candidates for high power high frequency transistors. Nonetheless, the use of (Al,In)GaN/GaN in solid state lighting has already proved its success by the commercialization of light-emitting diodes and lasers in blue to UV-range. However, devices based on these heterostructures suffer problems associated to structural defects. This thesis primarily focuses on the nanoscale electrical characterization and the identification of these defects, their physical origin and their effect on the electrical and optical properties of the material. Since, these defects are nano-sized, the thesis deals with the understanding of the results obtained by nano and micro-characterization techniques such as atomic force microscopy(AFM), current-AFM, scanning kelvin probe microscopy (SKPM), electron beam induced current (EBIC) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). This allowed us to probe individual defects (dislocations and cracks) and unveil their electrical properties. Taking further advantage of these techniques,conduction mechanism in two-dimensional electron gas heterostructures was well understood and modeled. Secondarily, origin of photoluminescence was deeply investigated. Radiative transition related to confined electrons and photoexcited holes in 2DEG heterostructures was identified and many body effects in nitrides under strong optical excitations were comprehended.
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By pulling and releasing the tension on protein homomers with the Atomic Force Miscroscope (AFM) at different pulling speeds, dwell times and dwell distances, the observed force-response of the protein can be fitted with suitable theoretical models. In this respect we developed mathematical procedures and open-source computer codes for driving such experiments and fitting Bell’s model to experimental protein unfolding forces and protein folding frequencies. We applied the above techniques to the study of proteins GB1 (the B1 IgG-binding domain of protein G from Streptococcus) and I27 (a module of human cardiac titin) in aqueous solutions of protecting osmolytes such as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), glycerol and trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO). In order to get a molecular understanding of the experimental results we developed an Ising-like model for proteins that incorporates the osmophobic nature of their backbone. The model benefits from analytical thermodynamics and kinetics amenable to Monte-Carlo simulation. The prevailing view used to be that small protecting osmolytes bridge the separating beta-strands of proteins with mechanical resistance, presumably shifting the transition state to significantly higher distances that correlate with the molecular size of the osmolyte molecules. Our experiments showed instead that protecting osmolytes slow down protein unfolding and speed-up protein folding at physiological pH without shifting the protein transition state on the mechanical reaction coordinate. Together with the theoretical results of the Ising-model, our results lend support to the osmophobic theory according to which osmolyte stabilisation is a result of the preferential exclusion of the osmolyte molecules from the protein backbone. The results obtained during this thesis work have markedly improved our understanding of the strategy selected by Nature to strengthen protein stability in hostile environments, shifting the focus from hypothetical protein-osmolyte interactions to the more general mechanism based on the osmophobicity of the protein backbone.
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It is investigated that the association of linear cationic model polyelectrolytes with oppositely charged pyrenetetrasulfonate (PY) in aqueous solution. For this purpose water soluble ionenes were prepared via Menschutkin reaction from 1-4-diazabicyclo [2.2.2] octane and e.g. 1,6-dibromohexane and 1,4 dibromotransbuten. The complex formation between dye molecules PY and oppositely charged ionenes (PD4, PD6, PD4-2 and PD4coPD6) of different chemical structures in aqueous solution was studied by light scattering (LS), small angle neutron scattering (SANS), UV-Vis, fluorescence spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Spectrophotometric titration results revealed that PY molecules were bind to ionenes cooperative process due to π-π interaction. Cooperative binding constant KD was determined as 6.4 x 10^6 M^-1 (+ or - 10^5 M^-1). It was found that binding mode and geometry of PY is predominantly depending on inter-charge distances of corresponding ionenes. Resultant complexes have exhibited size and structure variation as a function of charge ratio (L), ionic strength, inter-charge distances. Spherical dye-ionene complexes of which radius of gyration ranging between (RG) 50 and 190 nm have been observed in PD4-PY system while this was not possible with a different ionene (PD6) or either case ionene excess. It was found that most of the PD4-PY complexes had RG / RH ~ 0.78. Based on the AFM and LS results, spherical complexes have certain colloidal stability and their size can effectively controlled by changing the L.
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Aromatische Amide mit p-Verknüpfung bilden die wohl steifste und härteste Klasse organischer Moleküle. Ihre Oligomere und Polymere sind Materialien mit extremer Stabilität und chemischer Robustheit. Die vorliegende Arbeit beschreibt die Synthese wohldefinierter Oligo-(p-benzamid)e (OPBA) bis zum Hepta-(p-benzamid), deren Kristallstruktur und thermisches Verhalten eingehend untersucht werden. Ihre besondere Steifigkeit wird im Folgenden genutzt, um Stab-Knäuel-Copolymere mit wohldefiniertem OPBA-Stab-Block herzustellen. Das Aggregationsverhalten dieser Copolymere wird näher beschrieben und die Aggregate mittels Rasterkraftmikroskopie (RKM) visualisiert und charakterisiert. Ein Schwerpunkt der durchgeführten Forschung befasst sich mit dem Einflu"s chemischer Variationen von Knäuel- und Stabblock auf die Aggregation. Ausgehend von PEG-OPBA-Copolymeren wird gezeigt, wie sich über kontrolliert radikalische Polymerisation responsive Triblöcke herstellen lassen. Das Verhalten dieser Triblöcke in wässriger Lösung wird eingehender untersucht und anhand von Lichstreu- und RKM-Untersuchungen ein Modell entwickelt, welches dieses Verhalten beschreibt. Neben den OPBA beschäftigt sich die Arbeit mit der Synthese wohldefinierter Oligo-p-phenylen-terephthalamide (OPTA). Der Aufbau PEG-basierter Stab-Knäuel-Copolymere mit monodispersem OPTA-Block wird beschrieben und ihre Aggregate mittels RKM dargestellt. Die Copolymere werden verwendet, um verbesserte Haftungseigenschaften an Twaron-Fasern gegenüber reinem PEG zu demonstrieren.
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Membranen spielen eine essentielle Rolle bei vielen wichtigen zellulären Prozessen. Sie ermöglichen die Erzeugung von chemischen Gradienten zwischen dem Zellinneren und der Umgebung. Die Zellmembran übernimmt wesentliche Aufgaben bei der intra- und extrazellulären Signalweiterleitung und der Adhäsion an Oberflächen. Durch Prozesse wie Endozytose und Exozytose werden Stoffe in oder aus der Zelle transportiert, eingehüllt in Vesikel, welche aus der Zellmembran geformt werden. Zusätzlich bietet sie auch Schutz für das Zellinnere. Der Hauptbestandteil einer Zellmembran ist die Lipiddoppelschicht, eine zweidimensionale fluide Matrix mit einer heterogenen Zusammensetzung aus unterschiedlichen Lipiden. In dieser Matrix befinden sich weitere Bausteine, wie z.B. Proteine. An der Innenseite der Zelle ist die Membran über Ankerproteine an das Zytoskelett gekoppelt. Dieses Polymernetzwerk erhöht unter anderem die Stabilität, beeinflusst die Form der Zelle und übernimmt Funktionenrnbei der Zellbewegung. Zellmembranen sind keine homogenen Strukturen, je nach Funktion sind unterschiedliche Lipide und Proteine in mikrsokopischen Domänen angereichert.Um die grundlegenden mechanischen Eigenschaften der Zellmembran zu verstehen wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit das Modellsystem der porenüberspannenden Membranen verwendet.Die Entwicklung der porenüberspannenden Membranen ermöglicht die Untersuchung von mechanischen Eigenschaften von Membranen im mikro- bis nanoskopischen Bereich mit rasterkraftmikroskopischen Methoden. Hierbei bestimmen Porosität und Porengröße des Substrates die räumliche Auflösung, mit welcher die mechanischen Parameter untersucht werdenrnkönnen. Porenüberspannende Lipiddoppelschichten und Zellmembranen auf neuartigen porösen Siliziumsubstraten mit Porenradien von 225 nm bis 600 nm und Porositäten bis zu 30% wurden untersucht. Es wird ein Weg zu einer umfassenden theoretischen Modellierung der lokalen Indentationsexperimente und der Bestimmung der dominierenden energetischen Beiträge in der Mechanik von porenüberspannenden Membranen aufgezeigt. Porenüberspannende Membranen zeigen eine linear ansteigende Kraft mit zunehmender Indentationstiefe. Durch Untersuchung verschiedener Oberflächen, Porengrößen und Membranen unterschiedlicher Zusammensetzung war es für freistehende Lipiddoppelschichten möglich, den Einfluss der Oberflächeneigenschaften und Geometrie des Substrates, sowie der Membranphase und des Lösungsmittels auf die mechanischen Eigenschaften zu bestimmen. Es ist möglich, die experimentellen Daten mit einem theoretischen Modell zu beschreiben. Hierbei werden Parameter wie die laterale Spannung und das Biegemodul der Membran bestimmt. In Abhängigkeit der Substrateigenschaften wurden für freitragende Lipiddoppelschichten laterale Spannungen von 150 μN/m bis zu 31 mN/m gefunden für Biegemodulde zwischen 10^(−19) J bis 10^(−18) J. Durch Kraft-Indentations-Experimente an porenüberspannenden Zellmembranen wurde ein Vergleich zwischen dem Modell der freistehenden Lipiddoppelschichten und nativen Membranen herbeigeführt. Die lateralen Spannungen für native freitragende Membranen wurden zu 50 μN/m bestimmt. Weiterhin konnte der Einfluss des Zytoskeletts und der extrazellulä-rnren Matrix auf die mechanischen Eigenschaften bestimmt und innerhalb eines basolateralen Zellmembranfragments kartiert werden, wobei die Periodizität und der Porendurchmesser des Substrates das räumliche Auflösungsvermögen bestimmen. Durch Fixierung der freistehenden Zellmembran wurde das Biegemodul der Membran um bis zu einem Faktor 10 erhöht. Diese Arbeit zeigt wie lokal aufgelöste, mechanische Eigenschaften mittels des Modellsystems der porenüberspannenden Membranen gemessen und quantifiziert werden können. Weiterhin werden die dominierenden energetischen Einflüsse diskutiert, und eine Vergleichbarkeit zurnnatürlichen Membranen hergestellt.rn
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As the elastic response of cell membranes to mechanical stimuli plays a key role in various cellular processes, novel biophysical strategies to quantify the elasticity of native membranes under physiological conditions at a nanometer scale are gaining interest. In order to investigate the elastic response of apical membranes, elasticity maps of native membrane sheets, isolated from MDCK II (Madine Darby Canine kidney strain II) epithelial cells, were recorded by local indentation with an Atomic Force Microscope (AFM). To exclude the underlying substrate effect on membrane indentation, a highly ordered gold coated porous array with a pore diameter of 1.2 μm was used to support apical membranes. Overlays of fluorescence and AFM images show that intact apical membrane sheets are attached to poly-D-lysine coated porous substrate. Force indentation measurements reveal an extremely soft elastic membrane response if it is indented at the center of the pore in comparison to a hard repulsion on the adjacent rim used to define the exact contact point. A linear dependency of force versus indentation (-dF/dh) up to 100 nm penetration depth enabled us to define an apparent membrane spring constant (kapp) as the slope of a linear fit with a stiffness value of for native apical membrane in PBS. A correlation between fluorescence intensity and kapp is also reported. Time dependent hysteresis observed with native membranes is explained by a viscoelastic solid model of a spring connected to a Kelvin-Voight solid with a time constant of 0.04 s. No hysteresis was reported with chemically fixated membranes. A combined linear and non linear elastic response is suggested to relate the experimental data of force indentation curves to the elastic modulus and the membrane thickness. Membrane bending is the dominant contributor to linear elastic indentation at low loads, whereas stretching is the dominant contributor for non linear elastic response at higher loads. The membrane elastic response was controlled either by stiffening with chemical fixatives or by softening with F-actin disrupters. Overall, the presented setup is ideally suitable to study the interactions of the apical membrane with the underlying cytoskeleton by means of force indentation elasticity maps combined with fluorescence imaging.
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Questo lavoro costituisce un'interfaccia tra la fisica dei materiali e la biologia; sfruttando le particolari proprietà del polimero conduttore poli(3,4-etilenediossitiofene) drogato con poli(stirene sulfonato) (PSS), o PEDOT:PSS, sono stati sviluppati e realizzati substrati per colture cellulari. Tale composto è infatti un polimero organico biocompatibile, caratterizzato da proprietà fisiche che ben si prestano ad applicazioni in campo biologico. Vengono inizialmente descritte le caratteristiche generali e gli schemi di classificazione dei polimeri, per analizzare quindi in dettaglio i polimeri conduttori e la loro modalità di drogaggio. Si presenta quindi il PEDOT:PSS, del quale vengono descritte le proprietà, in particolare ci si sofferma sulle quelle termiche, meccaniche ed elettriche. Il primo capitolo si conclude con la presentazione delle applicazioni bioelettroniche del PEDOT:PSS, illustrando le principali applicazioni nella ricerca biologica e descrivendo le caratteristiche che ne hanno fatto uno dei composti più utilizzati per questo tipo di applicazioni. Nel secondo capitolo, per la parte sperimentale, sono stati descritti approfonditamente gli strumenti e i materiali utilizzati; in particolare vengono spiegati dettagliatamente il procedimento di spin-coating per la produzione di film sottili e le tecniche AFM (Atomic Force Microscopy) per l'analisi della morfologia superficiale. Nel terzo capitolo vengono esposte le tecniche sperimentali impiegate: è stata sviluppata una procedura di produzione ripetibile, grazie alla quale sono stati realizzati dei campioni, per i quali poi è stata misurata la rugosità. I risultati conseguiti sono stati infine correlati con l'analisi della proliferazione cellulare, illustrata chiaramente dalle immagini ottenute al microscopio ottico, che rivelano l'adesione e la moltiplicazione cellulare sui substrati di PEDOT:PSS.
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Nel primo capitolo viene introdotto lo studio eff�ettuato e descritto un metodo di misure successivo alla caratterizzazione della super�ficie. Nel secondo capitolo vengono descritti i campioni analizzati e, nello speci�fico, la crescita attraverso MaCE dei nanofi�li di silicio. Nel terzo capitolo viene descritto lo strumento AFM utilizzato e la teoria della caratterizzazione alla base dello studio condotto. Nella quarta sezione vengono descritti i risultati ottenuti mentre nelle conclusioni viene tratto il risultato dei valori ottenuti di RMS roughness e roughness exponent.
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Zusammenfassungrn Der Faltungsprozess des Hauptlichtsammelkomplexes des Photosystems II aus höheren Pflanzen (light harvesting complex II, LHCII) wurde bereits mehrfach untersucht, die Experimente hierzu fanden stets im Ensemble statt. Anhand der bislang veröffentlichten Faltungskinetiken des LHCII aus höheren Pflanzen lassen sich aber keine eindeutigen Aussagen bezüglich der Diversität der Faltungswege treffen. Daher sollten im Rahmen dieser Arbeit Faltungskinetiken einzelner LHCII-Moleküle während der Komplexbildung aufgenommen werden, um weitergehende Informationen zum Faltungsmechanismus zu erhalten und zur Frage, ob hier mehrere unterschiedliche Wege eingeschlagen werden.rnHierfür war zunächst die Etablierung einer Oberflächenimmobilisierung mit Glas als Trägermaterial notwendig. Nachdem Versuche, diese Immobilisierung über einen His6-tag oder über einen heterobifunktionellen Linker zu bewerkstelligen, nicht zum Erfolg geführt haben, konnte eine Immobilisierung des Biotin-markierten Proteins an Oberflächen-gebundenes Avidin erreicht werden. Die Qualität dieser Immobilisierung wurde hierbei sowohl über Bindungsversuche mit fluoreszenzfarbstoffmarkiertem Protein als auch über eine direkte Kontrolle der Oberflächenbeschaffenheit mittels Rasterkraftmikroskopie überprüft. Die für die folgenden Versuche optimale Belegungsdichte wurde im konfokalen Fluoreszenzmikroskop ermittelt. Zudem wurde sichergestellt, dass die Proteine vereinzelt auf der Oberfläche immobilisiert vorliegen.rnAuf dieser Basis wurden LHCII-Komplexe, die zuvor in vitro rekonstituiert wurden, immobilisiert und Versuche zur kontrollierten Denaturierung unternommen, um Zerfalls-kinetiken im Verfahren der internen Totalreflexionsfluoreszenzmikroskopie (total internal reflection fluorescence, TIRF) aufnehmen zu können. Hierbei traten Schwierigkeiten bezüglich der Lebensdauer der Komplexe unter Laser-Belichtung auf, da sich die Löschung der Fluoreszenz durch Zerstrahlung der Pigmente einerseits oder Dissoziation der LHCII andererseits nicht unterscheiden ließen. Auch durch verschiedene Maßnahmen zur Erhöhung der Lebensdauer konnte diese nicht in dem Maße gesteigert werden, wie es experimentell notwendig gewesen wäre.rnFür das eigentliche Hauptziel dieser Arbeit – die Aufzeichnung von Einzelmolekül-Faltungskinetiken – war die Entwicklung einer Methode zur Rekonstitution oberflächen-immobilisierter LHCII-Apoproteine notwendig. Dieses Ziel wurde mithilfe einer Detergenzmisch-Rekonstitution erreicht. Der Erfolg der Rekonstitution konnte experimentell sowohl im Fluorimeter anhand des komplexinternen Energietransfers auf einen kovalent an das Protein gebundenen Infrarot-Fluorophor als auch im TIRF-Verfahren direkt beobachtet werden. Auch hier konnte nach ca. 80 Sekunden ein Ausbleichen der Komplexe während der Belichtung durch den Anregungs-Laser beobachtet werden.rnIn Versuchen zur Beobachtung des Komplexbildungsvorganges zeigte sich, dass die Rekonstitution offenbar durch die Belichtung massiv gestört wird. Ein weiteres Problem war eine sehr starke Hintergrundfluoreszenz, ausgelöst durch die zur Rekonstitution notwendige Pigmentlösung, die trotz der TIRF-Anregung von ausschließlich oberflächengebundenem Material die Fluoreszenz der Komplexe überlagerte. Somit konnte die Rekonstitution oberflächenimmobilisierter LHCII-Proteine zwar in Vorher-Nachher-Aufnahmen gezeigt werden, der Faltungsprozess an sich konnte dagegen im Rahmen dieser Arbeit nicht aufgezeichnet werden.
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In this work polymer brushes on both flat and curved substrates were prepared by grafting from and grafting to techniques. The brushes on flat substrates were patterned on the µm-scale with the use of an inkjet printer. Thus it was demonstrated that chemistry with an inkjet printer is feasible. The inkjet printer was used to deposit microdroplets of acid. The saponification of surface-immobilized ATRP initiators containing an ester bond occurred in these microdroplets. The changes in the monolayer of ester molecules due to saponification were amplified by SI-ATRP. It was possible to correlate the polymer brush thickness to effectiveness of saponification. The use of an inkjet printer allowed for simultaneously screening of parameters such as type of acid, concentration of acid, and contact time between acid and surface. A dip-coater was utilized in order to test the saponification independent of droplet evaporation. The advantage of this developed process is its versatility. It can be applied to all surface-immobilized initiators containing ester bonds. The technique has additionally been used to selectively defunctionalize the initiator molecules covering a microcantilever on one side of a cantilever. An asymmetric coating of the cantilever with polymer brushes was thus generated. An asymmetric coating allows the use of a microcantilever for sensing applications. The preparation of nanocomposites comprised of polyorganosiloxane microgel particles functionalized with poly(ethyl methacrylate) (PEMA) brushes and linear, but entangled, PEMA chains is described in the second major part of this thesis. Measurement of the interparticle distance was performed using scanning probe microscopy and grazing incidence small angle X-ray scattering. The matrix molecular weight at which the nanocomposite showed microphase separation was related to abrupt changes in inter-particle distance. Microphase separation occurred once the matrix molecular exceeded the molecular weight of the brushes. The trigger for the microphase separation was a contraction of the polymer brushes, as the measurements of inter-particle distance have revealed. The brushes became impenetrable for the matrix chains upon contraction and thus behaved as hard spheres. The contraction led to a loss of anchoring between particles and matrix, as shown by nanowear tests using an atomic force microscope. Polyorganosiloxane microgel particles were functionalized with 13C enriched poly(ethyl methacrylate) brushes. New synthetic pathways were developed in order to enrich not the entire brush with 13C, but only exclusively selected regions. 13C chemical shift anisotropy, an advanced NMR technique, can thus be used in order to gather information about the extended conformations in the 13C enriched regions of the PEMA chains immobilized on the µ-gel-g-PEMA particles. The third part of this thesis deals with the grafting to of polymeric fullerene materials on silicon substrates. Active ester chemistry was employed in order to prepare the polymeric fullerene materials and graft these materials covalently on amino-functionalized silicon substrates.rn
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CdTe and Cu(In,Ga)Se2 (CIGS) thin film solar cells are fabricated, electrically characterized and modelled in this thesis. We start from the fabrication of CdTe thin film devices where the R.F. magnetron sputtering system is used to deposit the CdS/CdTe based solar cells. The chlorine post-growth treatment is modified in order to uniformly cover the cell surface and reduce the probability of pinholes and shunting pathways creation which, in turn, reduces the series resistance. The deionized water etching is proposed, for the first time, as the simplest solution to optimize the effect of shunt resistance, stability and metal-semiconductor inter-diffusion at the back contact. In continue, oxygen incorporation is proposed while CdTe layer deposition. This technique has been rarely examined through R.F sputtering deposition of such devices. The above experiments are characterized electrically and optically by current-voltage characterization, scanning electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction and optical spectroscopy. Furthermore, for the first time, the degradation rate of CdTe devices over time is numerically simulated through AMPS and SCAPS simulators. It is proposed that the instability of electrical parameters is coupled with the material properties and external stresses (bias, temperature and illumination). Then, CIGS materials are simulated and characterized by several techniques such as surface photovoltage spectroscopy is used (as a novel idea) to extract the band gap of graded band gap CIGS layers, surface or bulk defect states. The surface roughness is scanned by atomic force microscopy on nanometre scale to obtain the surface topography of the film. The modified equivalent circuits are proposed and the band gap graded profiles are simulated by AMPS simulator and several graded profiles are examined in order to optimize their thickness, grading strength and electrical parameters. Furthermore, the transport mechanisms and Auger generation phenomenon are modelled in CIGS devices.
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Antibody microarrays are of great research interest because of their potential application as biosensors for high-throughput protein and pathogen screening technologies. In this active area, there is still a need for novel structures and assemblies providing insight in binding interactions such as spherical and annulus-shaped protein structures, e.g. for the utilization of curved surfaces for the enhanced protein-protein interactions and detection of antigens. Therefore, the goal of the presented work was to establish a new technique for the label-free detection of bio-molecules and bacteria on topographically structured surfaces, suitable for antibody binding.rnIn the first part of the presented thesis, the fabrication of monolayers of inverse opals with 10 μm diameter and the immobilization of antibodies on their interior surface is described. For this purpose, several established methods for the linking of antibodies to glass, including Schiff bases, EDC/S-NHS chemistry and the biotin-streptavidin affinity system, were tested. The employed methods included immunofluorescence and image analysis by phase contrast microscopy. It could be shown that these methods were not successful in terms of antibody immobilization and adjacent bacteria binding. Hence, a method based on the application of an active-ester-silane was introduced. It showed promising results but also the need for further analysis. Especially the search for alternative antibodies addressing other antigens on the exterior of bacteria will be sought-after in the future.rnAs a consequence of the ability to control antibody-functionalized surfaces, a new technique employing colloidal templating to yield large scale (~cm2) 2D arrays of antibodies against E. coli K12, eGFP and human integrin αvβ3 on a versatile useful glass surface is presented. The antibodies were swept to reside around the templating microspheres during solution drying, and physisorbed on the glass. After removing the microspheres, the formation of annuli-shaped antibody structures was observed. The preserved antibody structure and functionality is shown by binding the specific antigens and secondary antibodies. The improved detection of specific bacteria from a crude solution compared to conventional “flat” antibody surfaces and the setting up of an integrin-binding platform for targeted recognition and surface interactions of eukaryotic cells is demonstrated. The structures were investigated by atomic force, confocal and fluorescence microscopy. Operational parameters like drying time, temperature, humidity and surfactants were optimized to obtain a stable antibody structure.
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Die Untersuchung der Adhäsionskräfte mit Colloid Probe Technik, einer Weiterentwicklung der Rasterkraftmikroskopie (Atomic Force Microscopy=AFM), an erzeugten Carrier- und Wirkstoffkristallen bei Laborbedingungen und unter Einfluss der Luftfeuchte zeigte, dass die Adhäsion von Tiotropiumbromid Monohydrat an Mannitol deutlich höher ist als an Lactose Monohydrat. Die Kohäsionskräfte des Wirkstoffes sind stärker als die Adhäsionskräfte an Carriermaterialien. Auf dieser Grundlage wurde die Hypothese aufgestellt, dass eine Mischung mit Mannitol als Carrier eine kleinere Feinpartikeldosis liefert als eine Mischung mit Lactose. Diese Theorie wurde an interaktiven Pulvermischungen unter Variation von verschiedenen Einflussfaktoren überprüft. Die binare und ternäre Lactose-basierte Mischung lieferte unabhängig vom Kapselmaterial (Gelatine- und Polyethylenkapsel) eine höhere Feinpartikeldosis als die entsprechenden Mannitol-basierten Formulierungen. Die ternäre Komponente bewirkte nur bei Mannitol-basierten Mischungen eine Verbesserung der Feinpartikeldosis. Die detaillierte Untersuchung der aerodynamischen Verteilung ternärer Mischungen zeigte, dass das Kapselmaterial nur unter dem Einfluss der Luftfeuchte und Permeabilität der Blisterverpackung die interpartikulären Wechselwirkungen beeinflusst. Mischungen mit Mannitol als Carrier lieferten unabhängig vom Kapselmaterial, von Luftfeuchte/Lagerungsbedingungen und Permeabilität der Blisterverpackung eine kleinere Feinpartikeldosis als Mischungen mit Lactose als Carrier. Die Carrierart, die Permeabilität der Blisterverpackung und die Luftfeuchte wurden als Haupteinflussfaktoren auf die aerodynamischen Eigenschaften identifiziert. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass AFM einen wertvollen Beitrag zum Verständnis der interpartikulären Wechselwirkungen leistet und aufgrund prädiktiver Eigenschaften hilfreich in der Entwicklung inhalativer Darreichungs-formen sein kann.
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Within this work, a particle-polymer surface system is studied with respect to the particle-surface interactions. The latter are governed by micromechanics and are an important aspect for a wide range of industrial applications. Here, a new methodology is developed for understanding the adhesion process and measure the relevant forces, based on the quartz crystal microbalance, QCM. rnThe potential of the QCM technique for studying particle-surface interactions and reflect the adhesion process is evaluated by carrying out experiments with a custom-made setup, consisting of the QCM with a 160 nm thick film of polystyrene (PS) spin-coated onto the quartz and of glass particles, of different diameters (5-20µm), deposited onto the polymer surface. Shifts in the QCM resonance frequency are monitored as a function of the oscillation amplitude. The induced frequency shifts of the 3rd overtone are found to decrease or increase, depending on the particle-surface coupling type and the applied oscillation (frequency and amplitude). For strong coupling the 3rd harmonic decreased, corresponding to an “added mass” on the quartz surface. However, positive frequency shifts are observed in some cases and are attributed to weak-coupling between particle and surface. Higher overtones, i.e. the 5th and 7th, were utilized in order to derive additional information about the interactions taking place. For small particles, the shift for specific overtones can increase after annealing, while for large particle diameters annealing causes a negative frequency shift. The lower overtones correspond to a generally strong-coupling regime with mainly negative frequency shifts observed, while the 7th appears to be sensitive to the contact break-down and the recorded shifts are positive.rnDuring oscillation, the motion of the particles and the induced frequency shift of the QCM are governed by a balance between inertial forces and contact forces. The adherence of the particles can be increased by annealing the PS film at 150°C, which led to the formation of a PS meniscus. For the interpretation, the Hertz, Johnson-Kendall-Roberts, Derjaguin-Müller-Toporov and the Mindlin theory of partial slip are considered. The Mindlin approach is utilized to describe partial slip. When partial slip takes place induced by an oscillating load, a part of the contact ruptures. This results in a decrease of the effective contact stiffness. Additionally, there are long-term memory effects due to the consolidation which along with the QCM vibrations induce a coupling increase. However, the latter can also break the contact, lead to detachment and even surface damage and deformation due to inertia. For strong coupling the particles appear to move with the vibrations and simply act as added effective mass leading to a decrease of the resonance frequency, in agreement with the Sauerbrey equation that is commonly used to calculate the added mass on a QCM). When the system enters the weak-coupling regime the particles are not able to follow the fast movement of the QCM surface. Hence, they effectively act as adding a “spring” with an additional coupling constant and increase the resonance frequency. The frequency shift, however, is not a unique function of the coupling constant. Furthermore, the critical oscillation amplitude is determined, above which particle detach. No movement is detected at much lower amplitudes, while for intermediate values, lateral particle displacement is observed. rnIn order to validate the QCM results and study the particle effects on the surface, atomic force microscopy, AFM, is additionally utilized, to image surfaces and measure surface forces. By studying the surface of the polymer film after excitation and particle removal, AFM imaging helped in detecting three different meniscus types for the contact area: the “full contact”, the “asymmetrical” and a third one including a “homocentric smaller meniscus”. The different meniscus forms result in varying bond intensity between particles and polymer film, which could explain the deviation between number of particles per surface area measured by imaging and the values provided by the QCM - frequency shift analysis. The asymmetric and the homocentric contact types are suggested to be responsible for the positive frequency shifts observed for all three measured overtones, i.e. for the weak-coupling regime, while the “full contact” type resulted in a negative frequency shift, by effectively contributing to the mass increase of the quartz..rnThe interplay between inertia and contact forces for the particle-surface system leads to strong- or weak-coupling, with the particle affecting in three mentioned ways the polymer surface. This is manifested in the frequency shifts of the QCM system harmonics which are used to differentiate between the two interaction types and reflect the overall state of adhesion for particles of different size.rn