926 resultados para atomic force microscopy (AFM)
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The aim of my dissertation is to provide new knowledge and applications of microfluidics in a variety of problems, from materials science, devices, and biomedicine, where the control on the fluid dynamics and the local concentration of the solutions containing the relevant molecules (either materials, precursors, or biomolecules) is crucial. The control of interfacial phenomena occurring in solutions at dierent length scales is compelling in nanotechnology for devising new sensors, molecular electronics devices, memories. Microfluidic devices were fabricated and integrated with organic electronics devices. The transduction involves the species in the solution which infills the transistor channel and confined by the microfluidic device. This device measures what happens on the surface, at few nanometers from the semiconductor channel. Soft-lithography was adopted to fabricate platinum electrodes, starting from platinum carbonyl precursor. I proposed a simple method to assemble these nanostructures in periodic arrays of microstripes, and form conductive electrodes with characteristic dimension of 600 nm. The conductivity of these sub-microwires is compared with the values reported in literature and bulk platinum. The process is suitable for fabricating thin conductive patterns for electronic devices or electrochemical cells, where the periodicity of the conductive pattern is comparable with the diusion length of the molecules in solution. The ordering induced among artificial nanostructures is of particular interest in science. I show that large building blocks, like carbon nanotubes or core-shell nanoparticles, can be ordered and self-organised on a surface in patterns due to capillary forces. The eective probability of inducing order with microfluidic flow is modeled with finite element calculation on the real geometry of the microcapillaries, in soft-lithographic process. The oligomerization of A40 peptide in microconfined environment represents a new investigation of the extensively studied peptide aggregation. The added value of the approach I devised is the precise control on the local concentration of peptides together with the possibility to mimick cellular crowding. Four populations of oligomers where distinguished, with diameters ranging from 15 to 200 nm. These aggregates could not be addresses separately in fluorescence. The statistical analysis on the atomic force microscopy images together with a model of growth reveal new insights on the kinetics of amyloidogenesis as well as allows me to identify the minimum stable nucleus size. This is an important result owing to its implications in the understanding and early diagnosis and therapy of the Alzheimer’s disease
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Festkörperunterstützte Lipid-Modellmembranen auf Goldzur Rekonstitution von Membranproteinen Ziel der Arbeit war der Aufbau von Lipid-Modellmembranen auf Goldelektroden in welchen die funktionelle Aktivität von rekonstituierten Membranproteinen über elektrochemische Methoden nachgewiesen werden kann.Im Rahmen der Arbeit wurden Lipidbilayer mit und ohne hydrophile Ethylenglykol-Spacer durch Kombination von Selbstorganisation, Langmuir-Blodgett-Kuhn-Techniken und Vesikelfusion aufgebaut. Dabei dienten Thiolipide zur Verankerung der Membranen auf der Goldelektrode und es wurden diverse Wege verfolgt, deren Ankerdichte auf dem Substrat einzustellen.Eine Studie zum Aufbau von festkörperunterstützten Lipidbilayern durch Fusion von Vesikeln auf binäre Alkanthiol-/Hydroxythiol-Monolagen mit definierter Oberflächenenergie zeigte, daß eine minimale Grenzflächenenergie (Monolayer/Wasser) existiert, unterhalb welcher die Fusion nicht mehr zu einer zusätzlichen Monolage, sondern lediglich zur Ausbildung von adsorbierten oder teilgespreiteten Vesikeln führt.Zur Charakterisierung der Membranen wurden Oberflächenplasmonenresonanz, Impedanzspektroskopie, zyklische Voltammetrie, elektrochemische reduktive Desorption, Rasterkraftmikroskopie und Kontaktwinkelmessungen herangezogen.In die Modellmembranen wurden Membranproteine (Porin, Annexin V, H+-ATPase) sowie ganze Membranfragmente (Bande 3 aus roten Blutzellen) rekonstituiert und mittels elektrochemischer Methoden auf ihre funktionelle Aktivität überprüft.
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Zusammenfassung: Es sollten zum einen strukturell fixierte, perlenkettenartige Polyelektrolyte dargestellt werden. Dazu wurde lineares Poly-2-vinylpyridin(PVP) mit vinylfunktionalisierten, hydrophoben Quaternisierungsagentien zu einer Polyseife umgesetzt. Bei der Quaternisierungsreaktion ließ sich der Gehalt an hydrophoben Gruppen variieren, wodurch Polyseifen mit unterschiedlichen Ladungsdichten zugänglich wurden. Trotz vielfältiger Versuche war es dennoch nicht möglich, eine polymerisationsfähige Polyseife herzustellen, welche in wäßriger Lösung intramolekular micellisiert und die Überstruktur einer Perlenkette annimmt. Durch die Herstellung hochreiner PVP-Makromonomere konnten zylindrische Bürsten hergestellt werden. Durch Umsetzung der PVP-Bürsten mit Methyltosylat sind unter milden Reaktionsbedingungen nahezu vollständig umgesetzte positiv geladene Polyelektrolyte zugänglich. Durch eine Sulfonierung von Polystyrol-Polymakromonomeren wurden negativ geladene zylindrische Polyelektrolyte erhalten.Das Verhalten dieser Polyelektrolyte in verdünnter wäßriger Lösung wurde mit der statischen und der dynamischen Lichtstreuung untersucht. Dabei deuten die statischen Messungen darauf hin, daß deren Verhalten in verdünnter wäßriger Lösung maßgeblich durch die osmotische Aktivität der Gegenionen bestimmt wird.Durch eine Quaternisierung der PVP-Bürsten mit langkettigen Reagentien konnten hochverzweigte Polyelektrolytarchitekturen hergestellt werden. Dabei läßt sich die Tatsache, daß eine Quaternisierung mit solchen Reagentien einen nur unwesentlichen Einfluß auf die Struktur der Bürste hat, nicht durch einfache Überlegungen erklären. Dennoch scheinen die langkettigen Seitenketten die Ausbildung geordneter Strukturen innerhalb von Domänen an der Oberfläche zu induzieren.
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This thesis individuates and characterizes irreversible transformations occurring in specific organic and oligomeric/polymeric thin films. These transformations are dewetting in discotic liquid crystals thin films and dewetting and smoothing in oligomeric and polyemeric films. Irreversible transformations are extensively characterized by means of optical and atomic force microscopy. In the case of discotic liquid crystals films the morphological characterization is performed sinchronically with electrical measurements of current during dewetting.
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Organic electronics has grown enormously during the last decades driven by the encouraging results and the potentiality of these materials for allowing innovative applications, such as flexible-large-area displays, low-cost printable circuits, plastic solar cells and lab-on-a-chip devices. Moreover, their possible field of applications reaches from medicine, biotechnology, process control and environmental monitoring to defense and security requirements. However, a large number of questions regarding the mechanism of device operation remain unanswered. Along the most significant is the charge carrier transport in organic semiconductors, which is not yet well understood. Other example is the correlation between the morphology and the electrical response. Even if it is recognized that growth mode plays a crucial role into the performance of devices, it has not been exhaustively investigated. The main goal of this thesis was the finding of a correlation between growth modes, electrical properties and morphology in organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs). In order to study the thickness dependence of electrical performance in organic ultra-thin-film transistors, we have designed and developed a home-built experimental setup for performing real-time electrical monitoring and post-growth in situ electrical characterization techniques. We have grown pentacene TFTs under high vacuum conditions, varying systematically the deposition rate at a fixed room temperature. The drain source current IDS and the gate source current IGS were monitored in real-time; while a complete post-growth in situ electrical characterization was carried out. At the end, an ex situ morphological investigation was performed by using the atomic force microscope (AFM). In this work, we present the correlation for pentacene TFTs between growth conditions, Debye length and morphology (through the correlation length parameter). We have demonstrated that there is a layered charge carriers distribution, which is strongly dependent of the growth mode (i.e. rate deposition for a fixed temperature), leading to a variation of the conduction channel from 2 to 7 monolayers (MLs). We conciliate earlier reported results that were apparently contradictory. Our results made evident the necessity of reconsidering the concept of Debye length in a layered low-dimensional device. Additionally, we introduce by the first time a breakthrough technique. This technique makes evident the percolation of the first MLs on pentacene TFTs by monitoring the IGS in real-time, correlating morphological phenomena with the device electrical response. The present thesis is organized in the following five chapters. Chapter 1 makes an introduction to the organic electronics, illustrating the operation principle of TFTs. Chapter 2 presents the organic growth from theoretical and experimental points of view. The second part of this chapter presents the electrical characterization of OTFTs and the typical performance of pentacene devices is shown. In addition, we introduce a correcting technique for the reconstruction of measurements hampered by leakage current. In chapter 3, we describe in details the design and operation of our innovative home-built experimental setup for performing real-time and in situ electrical measurements. Some preliminary results and the breakthrough technique for correlating morphological and electrical changes are presented. Chapter 4 meets the most important results obtained in real-time and in situ conditions, which correlate growth conditions, electrical properties and morphology of pentacene TFTs. In chapter 5 we describe applicative experiments where the electrical performance of pentacene TFTs has been investigated in ambient conditions, in contact to water or aqueous solutions and, finally, in the detection of DNA concentration as label-free sensor, within the biosensing framework.
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Der erste Teil der vorliegenden Dissertation beschäftigt sich mit der Eignung des ?,?-dithiolfunktionalisierten Poly(para-phenylenethinylen)s (PPE) als sogenannter âmolekularer Drahtâ für die molekulare Elektronik. Über die HECK-CASSAR-SONOGASHIRA-Reaktion wurden vollständig endfunktionalisierte, defektfreie Polymere mit durchschnittlichen Polymerisationsgraden von bis zu 45 Repetitionseinheiten synthetisiert. Die starke Aggregationsneigung der PPE, die die Anordnung der Polymerketten zwischen den Goldelektroden unterstützen soll, wurde mittels Rasterkraft- und Rastertunnelmikroskopie untersucht. Für die Untersuchungen zur Dotierbarkeit wurden ESR-, ENDOR-, UPS- und XPS-Messungen durchgeführt. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich das PPE reduzieren lässt.Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurden die PPE zur Synthese von Stäbchen-Knäuel-Diblockcopolymeren eingesetzt. Die Darstellung erfolgte nach der 'grafting onto'-Methode, indem monocarboxyl-endfunktionalisiertes PPE mit flexiblen monohydroxyl-endfunktionalisiertem Polyethylenglykol, Polydimethylsulfoxid bzw. Polytetrahydrofuran verestert wurde. Den Nachweis der Diblockcopolymerbildung erbrachten die 1H?NMR-Spektroskopie und die für Diblockcopolymere noch wenig angewandte MALDI-TOF-Massenspektrometrie. Mittels Rasterkraftmikroskopie und Computersimulationen zur Molekularmechanik und -dynamik wurden die Aggregationseigenschaften der Diblockcopolymere untersucht.
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The idea was to obtain nanowires in a chemical laboratory under convenient and simple conditions by employing templates. Thus it was possible to produce nanochains by interlinking of gold colloids synthesized by the two-phase-method of M. Brust with by making use of vanadiumoxide nanotubes as template. The length of the resulting nanowires is varying between 1100 nm and 200 nm with a diameter of about 16 nm. Due to a flexible linker the obtained nanowires are not completely rigid. These unique structural features could make them interesting objects for structuring and assembling in the nanoscale range. Another way to produce gold nanowires was realized by a two-step surface metallization procedure, using type I collagen fibres as a template. Gold colloids were used to label the collagen fibres by direct electrostatic interaction, followed by growth steps to enhance the size of the adsorbed colloidal gold crystals, resulting in a complete metallization of the template surface. The length of the resulting gold nanowires reaches several micrometers, with a diameter ~ 100 to 120 nm. To gain a deeper insight into the process of biomineralization the cooperative effect of self-assembled monolayers as substrate and a soluble counterpart on the nucleation and crystal growth of calcium phosphate was studied by diffusion techniques with a pH switch as initiator. As soluble component Perlucin and Nacrein were used. Both are proteins originally extracted from marine organisms, the first one from the Abalone shell and the second one from oyster pearls. Both are supposed to facilitate the calcium carbonate formation in vivo. Studies with Perlucin revealed that this protein shows a clear cooperative effect at a very low concentration with a hydrophobic surface promoting the calcium phosphate precipitation resulting in a sponge like structure of hydroxyapatite. The Perlucin molecule is very flexible and is unfolded by adsorbing to the hydrophobic surface and uncovers its active side. Hydrophilic surfaces did not have a deeper impact. Studies with Nacrein as additive have shown that the protein stabilizes octacalcium phosphate at room temperature on carboxylic self-assembled monolayer and at 34 °C on all other employed surfaces by interaction with the mineral. On the hydroxyl-, alkyl-, and amin-terminated self-assembled monolayers at room temperature the octacalcium phosphate get transformed to hydroxyapatite. Main analytical techniques which are used in this work are transmission electron microscopy, high resolution scanning electron microscopy, surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, Raman micro-spectroscopy and quartz crystal microbalance.
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Over the last three decades, sensors based on the phenomenon of surface plasmon resonance have proven particularly suitable for real time thin film characterization, gas detection, biomolecular interaction examination and to supplement electrochemical methods. Systems based on prism coupling have been combined with fluorescence detection under the name of surface plasmon fluorescence spectroscopy to increase sensitivity even further. Alternatively, metal gratings can be employed to match photons for plasmon resonance. The real time monitoring of binding reactions not yet been reported in the combination of fluorescence detection and grating coupling. Grating-based systems promise more competitive products, because of reduced operating costs, and offer benefits for device engineering. This thesis is comprised of a comprehensive study of the suitability of grating coupling for fluorescence based analyte detection. Fundamental properties of grating coupled surface plasmon fluorescence spectroscopy are described, as well as issues related to the commercial realization of the method. Several new experimental techniques are introduced and demonstrated in order to optimize performance in certain areas and improve upon capabilities in respect to prism-based systems. Holographically fabricated gratings are characterized by atomic force microscopy and optical methods, aided by simulations and profile parameters responsible for efficient coupling are analyzed. The directional emission of fluorophores immobilized on a grating surface is studied in detail, including the magnitude and geometry of the fluorescence emission pattern for different grating constants and polarizations. Additionally, the separation between the minimum of the reflected intensity and the maximum fluorescence excitation position is examined. One of the key requirements for the commercial feasibility of grating coupling is the cheap and faithful mass production of disposable samples from a given master grating. The replication of gratings is demonstrated by a simple hot embossing method with good reproducibility to address this matter. The in-situ fluorescence detection of analyte immobilization and affinity measurements using grating coupling are described for the first time. The physical factors related to the sensitivity of the technique are assessed and the lower limit of detection of the technique is determined for an exemplary assay. Particular attention is paid to the contribution of bulk fluorophores to the total signal in terms of magnitude and polarization of incident and emitted light. Emission from the bulk can be a limiting factor for experiments with certain assay formats. For that reason, a novel optical method, based on the modulation of both polarization and intensity of the incident beam, is introduced and demonstrated to be capable of eliminating this contribution.
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This thesis presents a new method to explore the local mechanical properties such as bending modulus or surface tension of artificial and native pore-spanning membranes. Therefore the elastic response of a free-standing membrane to a local indentation by the means of atomic force microscopy is measured. Starting point are highly hexagonal ordered pores in alumina produced by electrochemical anodization of planar aluminium. The homogeneous pore radius can by tailored in the range of 10 nm up to 200 nm, but radius of 33 nm, 90 nm and 200 nm turned out to be best suited for investigation of the mechanical properties of pore-spanning native or artificial membranes. In this work artificial membrane systems consisting of DODAB as a bilayer in gel phase or DOTAP as a fluide membrane are spreaded by vesicle absorption on hexagonal structured pores after chemisorption of a 3-mercaptopropionic acid monolayer. Centrally indenting these nanodrums with an atomic force microscope tip yields force-indentation curves, which are quantitatively analyzed by solving the corresponding shape equations of continuum curvature elasticity. Since the measured response depends in a known way on the system geometry (pore size, tip radius) and on material parameters (bending modulus, lateral tension, adhesion), this opens the possibility to monitor local elastic properties of lipid membranes in a well-controlled setting. Additionally the locally distributed mechanical properties of pore-spanning artificial membranes are compared to those of native pore-spanning membranes. Therefore the basal membrane of MDCK II cells was prepared on porous alumina assays and their mechanical properties were analyzed by means of atomic force microscopy. Finally the elastic behavior such as the Young modulus of living MDCK II cells under various osmotic pressures is investigated. By changing the osmolarity in the extracellular region of MDCK II cells a volume change is induced according to hydration and dehydration of the cells, respectively. This volume change induces also a change in the elastic behavior of the cell, which is quantified by the means of force spectroscopy.
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Nature leads, we follow. But nanotechnologists are in hot pursuit, in designing controllable structures that can mimic naturally occurring and artificially synthesized materials on a common platform. The supramolecular chemistry concerns the investigation of nature principles to produce fascinating complexed and functional molecular assemblies, as well as the utilization of these principles to generate novel devices and materials, potentially useful for sensing, catalysis, transport and other applications in medical or engineering science. The work presented in this thesis is a compilation of different synthetic methods to achieve inorganic-organic hybrid nanomaterials. Silicatein, a protein enzyme, which acts both as a catalyst and template for the formation of silica needles in marine sponges, has been used for the biosynthesis of semiconductor metal oxides on surfaces. Silicatein was immobilized on gold (111) surfaces using alkane thiol, as well as on a novel self-assembly of NTA on top of a “cushion” of reactive ester polymer has been successfully employed to make functionalised surfaces. The immobilization of silicatein on surfaces was monitored by surface plasmon spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Surface bound silicatein retains its biocatalytic activity, which was demonstrated by monitoring its hydrocatalytic activity to catalyse the synthesis of biosilica, biotitania, and biozirconia. The synthesis of semiconductor metal oxides was characterized using scanning electron microscopy. This hydrolytic biocatalyst is used to synthesize the gold nanoparticles. The gold nanoparticles are formed by reduction of tetrachloroaurate, AuCl4-, by the action of sulfhydryl groups hidden below the surface groups of the protein. The resulting gold nanoparticles which are stabilized by surface bound silicatein further aggregate to form Au nanocrystals. The shape of the nanocrystals obtained by using recombinant silicatein is controlled through chiral induction by the protein during the nucleation of the nanocrystals. As an extension of this work, TiO2 nanowires were functionalized using polymeric ligand which incorporates the nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) linker in the back bone to immobilize His-tagged silicatein onto the TiO2 nanowires. The surface bound protein not only retains its original hydrolytic properties, but also acts as a reductant for AuCl4- in the synthesis of hybrid TiO2/silicatein/Au nanocomposites. Functionalized, monocrystalline rutile TiO2 nanorods were prepared from TiCl4 in aqueous solution in the presence of dopamine. The surface bound organic ligand controls the morphology as well as the crystallinity and the phase selection of TiO2. The surface amine groups can be tailored further with functional molecules such as dyes. As an example, this surface functionality is used for the covalent binding of a fluorescent dye,4-chloro-7- nitrobenzylurazene (NBD) to the TiO2 nanorods. The polymeric ligands have been used successfully for the in-situ and post-functionalization of TiO2 nanoparticles. Besides to chelating dopamine anchor group the multifunctional ligand system presented here incorporates a modifier molecule which allows the binding of functional molecules (here the dyes pyrene, NBD, and Texas Red) as well as additional entities which allow tailoring the solubility of inorganic nanocrystals in different solvents. A novel method for the surface functionalization of fullerene-type MoS2 nanoparticles and subsequently binding these nanoparticles onto TiO2 nanowires has been reported using polymeric ligands. The procedure involves the complexation of IF-MoS2 with a combination of Ni2+ via an umbrella-type nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) and anchoring them to the sidewalls of TiO2 nanowires utilizing the hydroxyl groups of dopamine present in the main contents of polymeric ligand. A convenient method for the synthesis of Au/CdS nanocomposites has been presented, which were achieved through the novel method of thiol functionalization of gold colloids. The thermodynamically most stable phase of ZrO2 (cubic) has been obtained at much lower temperature (180°C). These nanoparticles are highly blue fluorescent, with a high surface area.
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Biologische Membranen sind Fettmolekül-Doppelschichten, die sich wie zweidimensionale Flüssigkeiten verhalten. Die Energie einer solchen fluiden Oberfläche kann häufig mit Hilfe eines Hamiltonians beschrieben werden, der invariant unter Reparametrisierungen der Oberfläche ist und nur von ihrer Geometrie abhängt. Beiträge innerer Freiheitsgrade und der Umgebung können in den Formalismus mit einbezogen werden. Dieser Ansatz wird in der vorliegenden Arbeit dazu verwendet, die Mechanik fluider Membranen und ähnlicher Oberflächen zu untersuchen. Spannungen und Drehmomente in der Oberfläche lassen sich durch kovariante Tensoren ausdrücken. Diese können dann z. B. dazu verwendet werden, die Gleichgewichtsposition der Kontaktlinie zu bestimmen, an der sich zwei aneinander haftende Oberflächen voneinander trennen. Mit Ausnahme von Kapillarphänomenen ist die Oberflächenenergie nicht nur abhängig von Translationen der Kontaktlinie, sondern auch von Änderungen in der Steigung oder sogar Krümmung. Die sich ergebenden Randbedingungen entsprechen den Gleichgewichtsbedingungen an Kräfte und Drehmomente, falls sich die Kontaktlinie frei bewegen kann. Wenn eine der Oberflächen starr ist, muss die Variation lokal dieser Fläche folgen. Spannungen und Drehmomente tragen dann zu einer einzigen Gleichgewichtsbedingung bei; ihre Beiträge können nicht mehr einzeln identifiziert werden. Um quantitative Aussagen über das Verhalten einer fluiden Oberfläche zu machen, müssen ihre elastischen Eigenschaften bekannt sein. Der "Nanotrommel"-Versuchsaufbau ermöglicht es, Membraneigenschaften lokal zu untersuchen: Er besteht aus einer porenüberspannenden Membran, die während des Experiments durch die Spitze eines Rasterkraftmikroskops in die Pore gedrückt wird. Der lineare Verlauf der resultierenden Kraft-Abstands-Kurven kann mit Hilfe der in dieser Arbeit entwickelten Theorie reproduziert werden, wenn der Einfluss von Adhäsion zwischen Spitze und Membran vernachlässigt wird. Bezieht man diesen Effekt in die Rechnungen mit ein, ändert sich das Resultat erheblich: Kraft-Abstands-Kurven sind nicht länger linear, Hysterese und nichtverschwindende Trennkräfte treten auf. Die Voraussagen der Rechnungen könnten in zukünftigen Experimenten dazu verwendet werden, Parameter wie die Biegesteifigkeit der Membran mit einer Auflösung im Nanometerbereich zu bestimmen. Wenn die Materialeigenschaften bekannt sind, können Probleme der Membranmechanik genauer betrachtet werden. Oberflächenvermittelte Wechselwirkungen sind in diesem Zusammenhang ein interessantes Beispiel. Mit Hilfe des oben erwähnten Spannungstensors können analytische Ausdrücke für die krümmungsvermittelte Kraft zwischen zwei Teilchen, die z. B. Proteine repräsentieren, hergeleitet werden. Zusätzlich wird das Gleichgewicht der Kräfte und Drehmomente genutzt, um mehrere Bedingungen an die Geometrie der Membran abzuleiten. Für den Fall zweier unendlich langer Zylinder auf der Membran werden diese Bedingungen zusammen mit Profilberechnungen kombiniert, um quantitative Aussagen über die Wechselwirkung zu treffen. Theorie und Experiment stoßen an ihre Grenzen, wenn es darum geht, die Relevanz von krümmungsvermittelten Wechselwirkungen in der biologischen Zelle korrekt zu beurteilen. In einem solchen Fall bieten Computersimulationen einen alternativen Ansatz: Die hier präsentierten Simulationen sagen voraus, dass Proteine zusammenfinden und Membranbläschen (Vesikel) bilden können, sobald jedes der Proteine eine Mindestkrümmung in der Membran induziert. Der Radius der Vesikel hängt dabei stark von der lokal aufgeprägten Krümmung ab. Das Resultat der Simulationen wird in dieser Arbeit durch ein approximatives theoretisches Modell qualitativ bestätigt.
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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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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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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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In der hier vorliegenden Dissertation wird die Entwicklung und Charakterisierung einer biomimetischen Beschichtung für Titanimplantatoberflächen, insbesondere Dentalimplantate, beschrieben. Ziel war es, die Adhäsion und Aktivität von Osteoblasten auf Titanoberflächen zu steigern und so eine Beschleunigung der Implantatintegration in das Knochengewebe zu erreichen. Hierfür wurde eine spezielle Art der biomimetischen Beschichtung entwickelt, bei der biotinyliertes Fibronektin (bFn) über Streptavidin auf eine biotinylierte TiOX-Modelloberfläche immobilisiert wurde. Die Biotinmodifizierung der TiOX-Oberfläche erfolgte hierbei über einen „Self-Assembly-Prozess“ durch sequenzielle Chemiesorption von N-(6-aminohexyl)aminopropyltrimethoxysilan sowie verschiedenen Sulfo-NHS-Biotin-Derivaten, welche den Aufbau einer Streptavidin-Monolage ermöglichten. Als ein wichtiges Resultat zeigte sich, dass die Streptavidin-Monolage effektiv die unspezifische Adsorption von Proteinen an die TiOX-Oberfläche unterbindet und hierdurch die Adhäsion von Osteoblasten auf dieser unterdrückt. Dies hat den Vorteil, dass auf eine antiadhäsive Basisbeschichtung, welche für eine spezifische Zellreaktion wichtig ist, verzichtet werden kann. Dieses osteoblastere Adhäsionsverhalten änderte sich signifikant nach Anbindung von bFn an die Streptavidin-Monolage, mit dem Ergebnis, einer drastischen Steigerung der Osteoblastenadhäsion. Weiterhin besaßen Osteoblasten auf diesen Oberflächen ein Proteinexpressionsmuster, das auf eine erhöhte Osteoinduktion schließen lässt. Es zeigte sich darüber hinaus eine verstärkte Zelladhäsion sowie eine Steigerung des osteoinduktiven Effekts auf Substraten, bei denen bFn über eine Streptavidin-Monolage immobilisiert wurde, gegenüber mit nativem Fibronektin (Fn) modifizierten TiOX-Oberflächen. Ein wesentlicher Schwerpunkt bestand daher in der Analyse der Zusammensetzung und Struktur der biomimetischen Beschichtung über „Surface Plasmon Spectroscopy“ und „Atomic Force Microscopy“. Diese ergab, dass bFn und natives Fn auf den jeweiligen Oberflächen eine unterschiedliche Konformation einnimmt. Im Gegensatz zu nativem Fn, das bei der Adsorption unter physiologischen Bedingungen auf TiOX-Oberflächen eine kompakte Konformation besitzt, nimmt bFn auf einer Streptavidin-Monolage eine entfaltete Konformation ein. Bei letzterer handelt es sich um dieselbe, welche Fn in vivo innerhalb der extrazellulären Matrix besitzt. Sie unterscheidet sich von der kompakten Fn-Konformation dahingehend, dass entlang der Fn-Achse weitere Proteinbindestellen zugänglich werden und hierdurch die Zellaffinität von Fn gesteigert wird. Die nachgewiesene Konformationsänderung kann somit als Grund für die gesteigerte Osteoblasten-Adhäsion und Aktivität auf Oberflächen mit bFn angenommen werden. Diese Kenntnisse konnten weiterhin für die Optimierung des biomimetischen Schichtsystems genutzt werden. So war es möglich, durch alternierendes Inkubieren der Biotin-aktivierten Oberfläche mit Streptavidin und bFn, ein Multilayersystem gezielt aufzubauen. Der Vorteil dieses Multilayersystems gegenüber einer einfachen Monolage aus bFn besteht in einer erhöhten Stabilität der biomimetischen Beschichtung, wodurch eine Anwendung in der Praxis erleichtert würde.