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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(40): 16348-16353, 2021 10 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34590854

RESUMO

The glass transition temperature (Tg) of a series of polyacrylate- and polymethacrylate-based polymers having bistable hydrazone photoswitches as pendants increases upon photoisomerization. The ensuing photohardening of the polymeric network was corroborated using nanoindentation measurements. The bistability of the switch allowed us to lock-in and sustain multiple Tg values in the same polymeric material as a function of the hydrazone switch's Z/E isomer ratio, even at elevated temperatures.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 58(9): 2815-2819, 2019 02 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30644615

RESUMO

Circulating nucleic acids, such as short interfering RNA (siRNA), regulate many biological processes; however, the mechanism by which these molecules enter the cell is poorly understood. The role of extracellular-matrix-derived polymers in binding siRNAs and trafficking them across the plasma membrane is reported. Thermal melting, dynamic light scattering, scanning electron microscopy, and computational analysis indicate that hyaluronic acid can stabilize siRNA via hydrogen bonding and Van der Waals interactions. This stabilization facilitated HA size- and concentration-dependent gene silencing in a CD44-positive human osteosarcoma cell line (MG-63) and in human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSCs). This native HA-based siRNA transfection represents the first report on an anionic, non-viral delivery method that resulted in approximately 60 % gene knockdown in both cell types tested, which correlated with a reduction in translation levels.


Assuntos
Materiais Biomiméticos/química , Ácido Hialurônico/química , RNA Interferente Pequeno/química , Ânions/química , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares
3.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 406(29): 7533-8, 2014 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24997536

RESUMO

Combinatorial chemistry and high-throughput techniques are an efficient way of exploring optimal values of elemental composition. Optimal composition can result in high performance in a sequence of material synthesis and characterization. Materials combinatorial libraries are typically encountered in the form of a thin film composition gradient which is produced by simultaneous material deposition on a substrate from two or more sources that are spatially separated and chemically different. Fast spatially resolved techniques are needed to characterize structure, composition, and relevant properties of these combinatorial screening samples. In this work, the capability of a glow discharge optical emission spectroscopy (GD-OES) elemental mapping system is extended to nitrogen-based combinatorial libraries with nonconductive components through the use of pulsed radiofrequency power. The effects of operating parameters of the glow discharge and detection system on the achievable spatial resolution were investigated as it is the first time that an rf source is coupled to a setup featuring a push-broom hyperspectral imaging system and a restrictive anode tube GD source. Spatial-resolution optimized conditions were then used to characterize an aluminum nitride/chromium nitride thin-film composition spread. Qualitative elemental maps could be obtained within 16.8 s, orders of magnitude faster than typical techniques. The use of certified reference materials allowed quantitative elemental analysis maps to be extracted from the emission intensity images. Moreover, the quantitative procedure allowed correcting for the inherent emission intensity inhomogeneity in GD-OES. The results are compared to quantitative depth profiles obtained with a commercial GD-OES instrument.

4.
Adv Mater ; 35(46): e2303142, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37515520

RESUMO

Oxide glasses are an elementary group of materials in modern society, but brittleness limits their wider usability at room temperature. As an exception to the rule, amorphous aluminum oxide (a-Al2 O3 ) is a rare diatomic glassy material exhibiting significant nanoscale plasticity at room temperature. Here, it is shown experimentally that the room temperature plasticity of a-Al2 O3 extends to the microscale and high strain rates using in situ micropillar compression. All tested a-Al2 O3 micropillars deform without fracture at up to 50% strain via a combined mechanism of viscous creep and shear band slip propagation. Large-scale molecular dynamics simulations align with the main experimental observations and verify the plasticity mechanism at the atomic scale. The experimental strain rates reach magnitudes typical for impact loading scenarios, such as hammer forging, with strain rates up to the order of 1 000 s-1 , and the total a-Al2 O3 sample volume exhibiting significant low-temperature plasticity without fracture is expanded by 5 orders of magnitude from previous observations. The discovery is consistent with the theoretical prediction that the plasticity observed in a-Al2 O3 can extend to macroscopic bulk scale and suggests that amorphous oxides show significant potential to be used as light, high-strength, and damage-tolerant engineering materials.

5.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 90(4): 045105, 2019 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31042979

RESUMO

High temperature nanoindentation is an emerging field with significant advances in instrumentation, calibration, and experimental protocols reported in the past couple of years. Performing stable and accurate measurements at elevated temperatures holds the key for small scale testing of materials at service temperatures. We report a novel high temperature vacuum nanoindentation system, High Temperature Ultra Nanoindentation Tester (UNHT3 HTV), utilizing active surface referencing and non-contact heating capable of performing measurements up to 800 °C. This nanoindenter is based on the proven Ultra Nano-Hardness Tester (UNHT) design that uses two indentation axes: one for indentation and another for surface referencing. Differential displacement measurement between the two axes enables stable measurements to be performed over long durations. A vacuum level of 10-7 mbar prevents sample surface oxidation at elevated temperatures. The indenter, reference, and sample are heated independently using integrated infrared heaters. The instrumental design details for developing a reliable and accurate high temperature nanoindenter are described. High temperature calibration procedures to minimize thermal drift at elevated temperatures are reported. Indentation data on copper, fused silica, and a hard coating show that this new generation of instrumented indenter can achieve unparalleled stability over the entire temperature range up to 800 °C with minimum thermal drift rates of <2 nm/min at elevated temperatures.

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