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1.
Mol Pharm ; 17(1): 10-20, 2020 01 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31710493

ABSTRACT

Morphological and structural properties of amorphous disaccharide lactulose (C12H22O11), obtained by four different amorphization methods (milling, quenching of the melt form, spray-drying, and freeze-drying), are investigated by scanning electron microscopy, polarized neutron scattering, and molecular dynamics simulations. While major differences on the morphology of the different amorphous samples are revealed by scanning electron microscopy images, only subtle structural differences have been found by polarized neutron scattering. Microstructure of the milled sample appears slightly different from the other amorphized materials with the presence of remaining crystalline germs which are not detected by X-ray diffraction. Quantitative phase analysis shows that these remaining crystallites are present in a ratio between 1 and 4%, and their size remains between 20 and 30 nm despite a long milling time of about 8 h. The impact of the change in tautomeric concentrations on the physical properties of lactulose in the amorphous state has been investigated from molecular dynamics simulations. It is suggested that chemical differences between lactulose tautomers could be at the origin of small structural differences detected by polarized neutron scattering.


Subject(s)
Drug Compounding/methods , Lactulose/chemistry , Calorimetry, Differential Scanning , Crystallization , Desiccation , Drug Stability , Freeze Drying , Isomerism , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Neutrons , Particle Size , Powders , X-Ray Diffraction
2.
Sci Rep ; 6: 31434, 2016 08 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27527336

ABSTRACT

Understanding adaptation to extreme environments remains a challenge of high biotechnological potential for fundamental molecular biology. The cytosol of many microorganisms, isolated from saline environments, reversibly accumulates molar concentrations of the osmolyte ectoine to counterbalance fluctuating external salt concentrations. Although they have been studied extensively by thermodynamic and spectroscopic methods, direct experimental structural data have, so far, been lacking on ectoine-water-protein interactions. In this paper, in vivo deuterium labeling, small angle neutron scattering, neutron membrane diffraction and inelastic scattering are combined with neutron liquids diffraction to characterize the extreme ectoine-containing solvent and its effects on purple membrane of H. salinarum and E. coli maltose binding protein. The data reveal that ectoine is excluded from the hydration layer at the membrane surface and does not affect membrane molecular dynamics, and prove a previous hypothesis that ectoine is excluded from a monolayer of dense hydration water around the soluble protein. Neutron liquids diffraction to atomic resolution shows how ectoine enhances the remarkable properties of H-bonds in water-properties that are essential for the proper organization, stabilization and dynamics of biological structures.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids, Diamino/metabolism , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Escherichia coli/chemistry , Halomonas/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Water/analysis , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Deuterium/metabolism , Isotope Labeling , Neutron Diffraction , Scattering, Small Angle
3.
Inorg Chem ; 52(15): 8409-15, 2013 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23844979

ABSTRACT

The pyrochlore-defect fluorite order-disorder transition has been studied for a series of oxides of the type Gd(2-x)Tb(x)Zr2O7 by a combination of diffraction and spectroscopy techniques. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction data suggest an abrupt transition from the coexistence of pyrochlore and defect fluorite phases to a single defect fluorite phase with increasing Tb content. However neutron diffraction data, obtained at λ ≈ 0.497 Å for all Gd-containing samples to minimize absorption, not only provide evidence for independent ordering of the anion and cation sublattices but also suggest that the disorder transition across the pyrochlore-defect fluorite boundary of Ln2Zr2O7 is rather gradual. Such disorder was also evident in X-ray absorption measurements at the Zr L3-edge, which showed a gradual increase in the effective coordination number of the Zr from near 6-coordinate in the pyrochlore rich samples to near 7-coordinate in the Tb rich defect fluorites. These results indicate the presence of ordered domains throughout the defect fluorite region, and demonstrate the gradual nature of the order-disorder transition across the Gd(2-x)Tb(x)Zr2O7 series.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 15(22): 8487-94, 2013 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23615750

ABSTRACT

In contrast to the well-established structure of glassy GeS2, consisting of corner- and edge-sharing GeS(4/2) tetrahedra, the structural features of Ge-rich sulfide alloys remain essentially unknown. Two contrasting points of view: (1) a tetrahedral model, and (2) a distorted NaCl approach were neither confirmed nor excluded mostly because of missing advanced structural studies. Using high-energy X-ray scattering and neutron diffraction, we show the complexity of the short and intermediate range order in Ge(x)S(1-x) glasses, ⅓ ≤ x ≤ 0.47, formed by corner- and edge-sharing tetrahedra with two-fold coordinated sulfur species and a variable number of Ge-Ge bonds, and Ge-S units with three-fold coordinated sulfur at x ≥ 0.36.


Subject(s)
Germanium/chemistry , Sulfides/chemistry , Glass/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Neutron Diffraction , X-Ray Diffraction
5.
J Mater Chem B ; 1(9): 1296-1303, 2013 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32260803

ABSTRACT

Nickel and cobalt are both known to stimulate the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1α), thus significantly improving blood vessel formation in tissue engineering applications. We have manufactured nickel and cobalt doped bioactive glasses to act as a controlled delivery mechanism of these ions. The resultant structural consequences have been investigated using the methods of isotopic and isomorphic substitution applied to neutron diffraction. The structural sites present will be intimately related to their release properties in physiological fluids such as plasma and saliva, and hence the bioactivity of the material. Detailed structural knowledge is therefore a prerequisite for optimising material design. Results show that nickel and cobalt adopt a mixed structural role within these bioactive glasses occupying both network-forming (tetrahedral) and network-modifying (5-fold) geometries. Two thirds of the Ni (or Co) occupies a five-fold geometry with the remaining third in a tetrahedral environment. A direct comparison of the primary structural correlations (e.g. Si-O, Ca-O, Na-O and O-Si-O) between the archetypal 45S5 Bioglass® and the Ni and Co glasses studied here reveal no significant differences. This indicates that the addition of Ni (or Co) will have no adverse effects on the existing structure, and thus on in vitro/in vivo dissolution rates and therefore bioactivity of these glasses.

6.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 14(45): 15807-15, 2012 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23085992

ABSTRACT

Melt quenched silicate glasses containing calcium, phosphorus and alkali metals have the ability to promote bone regeneration and to fuse to living bone. Of these glasses 45S5 Bioglass® is the most widely used being sold in over 35 countries as a bone graft product for medical and dental applications; particulate 45S5 is also incorporated into toothpastes to help remineralize the surface of teeth. Recently it has been suggested that adding titanium dioxide can increase the bioactivity of these materials. This work investigates the structural consequences of incorporating 4 mol% TiO(2) into Bioglass® using isotopic substitution (of the Ti) applied to neutron diffraction and X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (XANES). We present the first isotopic substitution data applied to melt quench derived Bioglass or its derivatives. Results show that titanium is on average surrounded by 5.2(1) nearest neighbor oxygen atoms. This implies an upper limit of 40% four-fold coordinated titanium and shows that the network connectivity is reduced from 2.11 to 1.97 for small quantities of titanium. Titanium XANES micro-fluorescence confirms the titanium environment is homogenous on the micron length scale within these glasses. Solid state magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR confirms the network connectivity model proposed. Furthermore, the results show the intermediate range order containing Na-O, Ca-O, O-P-O and O-Si-O correlations are unaffected by the addition of small quantities of TiO(2) into these systems.


Subject(s)
Titanium/chemistry , Ceramics/chemistry , Isotopes , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Molecular Structure , Neutron Diffraction , Silicon , X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy
7.
J Phys Chem A ; 112(23): 5159-66, 2008 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18491845

ABSTRACT

The ability of gypsum, a common sulfate mineral, to host arsenic atoms in its crystalline structure, is demonstrated through experimental structural studies of the solid solutions formed upon synthetic coprecipitation of gypsum (CaSO4 x 2 H2O) and arsenic. Neutron and X-ray diffraction methods show an enlargement of the gypsum unit cell proportional to the concentration of arsenic in the solids and to the pH solution value. The substitution of sulfate ions (SO4(2-)) by arsenate ions is shown to be more likely under alkaline conditions, where the HAsO4(2-) species predominates. A theoretical Density Functional Theory model of the arsenic-doped gypsum structure reproduces the experimental volume expansion. Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) measurements of the local structure around the arsenic atom in the coprecipitated solids confirm solid state substitution and allow some refinement of the local structure, corroborating the theoretical structure found in the simulations. The charge redistribution within the structure upon substitutions of either the protonated or the unprotonated arsenate species studied by means of Mulliken Population Analyses demonstrates an increase in the covalency in the interaction between Ca(2+) and AsO4(3-), whereas the interaction between Ca(2+) and HAsO4(2-) remains predominantly ionic.


Subject(s)
Arsenates/chemistry , Calcium Sulfate/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Neutron Diffraction , X-Ray Diffraction , Molecular Conformation , Protons , Static Electricity
8.
J Phys Chem A ; 111(24): 5123-5, 2007 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17536793

ABSTRACT

The structural parameters of Hg2+ hydration were studied in 0.225 mol/L solutions of Hg2+ in DNO3/D2O by means of neutron diffraction with isotopic substitution of 199Hg for natHg. It was found that Hg2+ is hydrated by a first solvation shell of six water molecules. The observed Hg-O and Hg-H distances are equal to 2.48+/-0.05 and 3.08+/-0.05 A, respectively. The angle phi between the plane of the water molecule and the cation-water oxygen axis is approximately 35 degrees . The solvation of Hg2+ therefore mimics very closely that of Ca2+ (the Ca-O and Ca-H distances are 2.40 and 3.03 A, respectively) and helps to account for the extreme toxicity of mercury(II). We note also that the Hg-O distance obtained in the neutron diffraction experiment is larger by approximately 0.1 A than that obtained by X-ray diffraction. This difference is consistent with a shift of the oxygen electron density toward the mercury cation due to the covalency of the Hg-O interaction.


Subject(s)
Mercury/chemistry , Deuterium , Ions , Mercury Isotopes/chemistry , Neutron Diffraction , Oxygen/chemistry , Particle Size , Solutions/chemistry , Water/chemistry , X-Ray Diffraction
9.
Chemistry ; 13(15): 4178-86, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17226872

ABSTRACT

Binary SmH(3) (trigonal, a=656.7(3), c=680.1(3) pm, P$\bar 3$c1, Z=6), ternary SmMg2H7 (tetragonal, a=626.47(6), c=937.2(2) pm, P4(1)2(1)2, Z=4) and the corresponding deuterides SmD3 (a=653.9(1)m, c=676.7(2) pm) and SmMg2D7 (a=624.10(1), c=934.81(2) pm) have been prepared by hydrogenation (deuteration) of elemental samarium and the Laves phase SmMg2, respectively, and investigated by X-ray and neutron powder diffraction and SQUID and vibration magnetometry. The problem of the enormous neutron absorption of the natural isotopic mixture (natSm) is circumvented by carefully choosing the neutron wavelength (approximately 50 pm) and the use of double-walled cylindrical sample holders and a high-intensity neutron diffractometer (D4c at ILL). SmD3 crystallises with a tysonite-type structure and has three independently ordered deuterium atom sites with trigonal-planar, trigonal-pyramidal and tetrahedral metal environments and Sm--D bond lengths in the range 220(1)-258(1) pm (average: 235 pm). SmMg2D7 is a new deuteride that crystallises with an LaMg2D7-type structure. It displays four fully occupied deuterium sites having triangular and tetrahedral metal environments and Sm--D bond lengths in the range 227.6(5)-246.8(8) pm (average: 239 pm). These are the first samarium-deuterium bond lengths to be reported. Both deuterides are paramagnetic down to 2 K (SmD3: mueff=0.63(1) muB, thetap approximately -4 K; SmMg2D7: mueff=0.57(2) muB, thetap approximately -4 K). Their crystal structures and chemical and physical properties suggest mainly ionic bonding according to the limiting ionic formulae Sm3+(H-)3 and Sm3+(Mg2+)2(H-)7.

10.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 19(41): 415110, 2007 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28192322

ABSTRACT

The full set of partial structure factors for glassy germania, or GeO2, were accurately measured by using the method of isotopic substitution in neutron diffraction in order to elucidate the nature of the pair correlations for this archetypal strong glass former. The results show that the basic tetrahedral Ge(O1/2)4 building blocks share corners with a mean inter-tetrahedral Ge-Ô-Ge bond angle of 132(2)°. The topological and chemical ordering in the resultant network displays two characteristic length scales at distances greater than the nearest neighbour. One of these describes the intermediate range order, and manifests itself by the appearance of a first sharp diffraction peak in the measured diffraction patterns at a scattering vector kFSDP≈1.53 Å-1, while the other describes so-called extended range order, and is associated with the principal peak at kPP = 2.66(1) Å-1. We find that there is an interplay between the relative importance of the ordering on these length scales for tetrahedral network forming glasses that is dominated by the extended range ordering with increasing glass fragility. The measured partial structure factors for glassy GeO2 are used to reproduce the total structure factor measured by using high energy x-ray diffraction and the experimental results are also compared to those obtained by using classical and first principles molecular dynamics simulations.

11.
Phys Rev Lett ; 96(23): 235502, 2006 Jun 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16803382

ABSTRACT

The relation between the fragility of glass-forming systems, a parameter which describes many of their key physical characteristics, and atomic scale structure is investigated by using neutron diffraction to measure the topological and chemical ordering for germania, or GeO(2), which is an archetypal strong glass former. We find that the ordering for this and other tetrahedral network-forming glasses at distances greater than the nearest neighbor can be rationalized in terms of an interplay between the relative importance of two length scales. One of these is associated with an intermediate range, the other with an extended range and, with increasing glass fragility, it is the extended range ordering which dominates.

12.
J Chem Phys ; 122(15): 154511, 2005 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15945649

ABSTRACT

The gas phase of hydrogen fluoride has been investigated by neutron diffraction experiments at three different particle densities. All investigated states are within the liquid-gas coexistence region of hydrogen fluoride. From the obtained diffraction data we deduced information about the local structure of the gas phase, which consists of small agglomerates. This has been expected as liquid hydrogen fluoride forms the strongest hydrogen bonds known. Molecular dynamics simulations with a modified potential have been carried out for all experimentally investigated states. The results confirmed that the size of the formed agglomerates in the gas phase is growing with increasing density of the gas phase.

13.
Nature ; 435(7038): 75-8, 2005 May 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15875017

ABSTRACT

Atomic ordering in network glasses on length scales longer than nearest-neighbour length scales has long been a source of controversy. Detailed experimental information is therefore necessary to understand both the network properties and the fundamentals of glass formation. Here we address the problem by investigating topological and chemical ordering in structurally disordered AX2 systems by applying the method of isotopic substitution in neutron diffraction to glassy ZnCl2. This system may be regarded as a prototypical ionic network forming glass, provided that ion polarization effects are taken into account, and has thus been the focus of much attention. By experiment, we show that both the topological and chemical ordering are described by two length scales at distances greater than nearest-neighbour length scales. One of these is associated with the intermediate range, as manifested by the appearance in the measured diffraction patterns of a first sharp diffraction peak at 1.09(3) A(-1); the other is associated with an extended range, which shows ordering in the glass out to 62(4) A. We also find that these general features are characteristic of glassy GeSe2, a prototypical covalently bonded network material. The results therefore offer structural insight into those length scales that determine many important aspects of supercooled liquid and glass phenomenology.

14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 90(18): 185501, 2003 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12786018

ABSTRACT

The relative distribution of rare-earth ions R3+ (Dy3+ or Ho3+) in the phosphate glass RAl(0.30)P(3.05)O(9.62) was measured by employing the method of isomorphic substitution in neutron diffraction. It is found that 7.9(7) R-R nearest neighbors reside at 5.62(6) A in a network made from interlinked PO4 tetrahedra. Provided that the role of Al is explicitly considered, a self-consistent account of the local matrix atom correlations can be developed in which there are 1.68(9) bridging and 2.32(9) terminal oxygen atoms per phosphorus.

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