Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027960 (
mole
)
21,279
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ag/alumina catalysts with different
silver
loading (1.28-6 wt %) for lean NO reduction activity were prepared by impregnation and the incipient wetness method. Complementary HRTEM, HAADF, O2-chemisorption, and EDXS studies were applied to investigate the dependence between
silver
particle size and catalytic activities of the prepared materials. The catalyst with the lowest
silver
loading (1.28 wt %) was found to be the most active catalyst in terms of reacted NO molecules per
mole
of
silver
. On the basis of the HRTEM, HAADF, and O2-chemisorption studies it could be concluded that the mean particle size or particle size distribution of the samples alone could not explain the big difference in the activities. EDXS analyses showed on the other hand that all of the samples were very heterogeneous in terms of particle size distribution, e.g., including both small and very big particles. Furthermore, both metallic
silver
and mainly hexagonal
silver
oxide (Ag2O) were found to be present in the samples. Despite the valuable information provided by ex situ characterization of the prepared samples, it needs to be emphasized that establishing a structure-reactivity relationship for this type of catalyst requires in situ characterization.
...
PMID:Structure-activity relationship in HC-SCR of NOx by TEM, O2-chemisorption, and EDXS study of Ag/Al2O3. 1647 51
Microemulsions are suitable reaction media to prepare a wide variety of nanoparticles and provide control over their sizes. However, as typically used, microemulsions limit rates of rapid reactions and suffer from low reactant solubilization capacity. This work presents a new application of a novel approach aimed at minimizing these limitations. This approach, which was previously applied for AgCl nanoparticle preparation, involves solubilization of a bulk
silver
halide in the form of higher halides, by means of reaction with the surfactant counterion of a microemulsion, and the reprecipitation of
silver
halide nanoparticles in the water pools of individual reverse micelles. CTAB microemulsions were employed because they possess a reactive counterion and are known to have a high solubilization capacity for ionic reactants. Despite their high solubilization capacity, CTAB microemulsions achieved lower nanoparticles uptake (molar concentration of the colloidal nanoparticles) for the same surfactant concentration when compared to our previous study. The effect of the following variables on the nanoparticle uptake and the particle size was investigated: (1) operation variables, including rate of mixing and temperature; and (2) microemulsion variables, including CTAB and n-butanol concentrations, and water-to-surfactant
mole
ratio, R. These variables provide a comprehensive test to the proposed mechanism and expose the role of the surfactant layer rigidity. The nanoparticle uptake increased as the rate of mixing, temperature, and CTAB concentration increased, and decreased as n-butanol concentration and R increased. High n-butanol concentration and R values reduced the effective surfactant concentration and contributed to less surfactant layer rigidity and to particle aggregation.
...
PMID:A novel approach for the preparation of AgBr nanoparticles from their bulk solid precursor using CTAB microemulsions. 1648 16
Tiopronin monolayer-protected
silver
nanoparticles with different core sizes (average diameter = 2, 5, 20 nm) were prepared by using different
mole
ratios of
silver
nitrate/tiopronin. Ligands on the
silver
particles were partially displaced by fluorescein-labeled thiolate single-stranded oligonucleotides or their complementary unlabeled oligonucleotides through ligand exchange. The fluorophores on
silver
particles showed a surface-enhanced fluorescence (SEF) dependent on the size of metallic cores. The particles could be coupled through hybridizations of oligonucleotides bound on the particles. The coupled particles were aggregated due to multiple displacements of oligonucleotides on each particle, resulting in stronger SEF. The dye-labeled oligonucleotides were assembled on the
silver
islands on the solid substrate, and the complementary oligonucleotide-displaced particles were coupled via oligonucleotide hybridization. The couplings between particles and islands resulted in an obvious fluorescence enhancement.
...
PMID:Surface-enhanced fluorescence of fluorescein-labeled oligonucleotides capped on silver nanoparticles. 1685 86
This paper presents an environmentally friendly, inexpensive, rapid, and efficient process for size-selective fractionation of polydisperse metal nanoparticle dispersions into multiple narrow size populations. The dispersibility of ligand-stabilized
silver
and gold nanoparticles is controlled by altering the ligand tails-solvent interaction (solvation) by the addition of carbon dioxide (CO2) gas as an antisolvent, thereby tailoring the bulk solvent strength. This is accomplished by adjusting the CO2 pressure over the liquid, resulting in a simple means to tune the nanoparticle precipitation by size. This study also details the influence of various factors on the size-separation process, such as the types of metal, ligand, and solvent, as well as the use of recursive fractionation and the time allowed for settling during each fractionation step. The pressure range required for the precipitation process is the same for both the
silver
and gold particles capped with dodecanethiol ligands. A change in ligand or solvent length has an effect on the interaction between the solvent and the ligand tails and therefore the pressure range required for precipitation. Stronger interactions between solvent and ligand tails require greater CO2 pressure to precipitate the particles. Temperature is another variable that impacts the dispersibility of the nanoparticles through changes in the density and the
mole
fraction of CO2 in the gas-expanded liquids. Recursive fractionation for a given system within a particular pressure range (solvent strength) further reduces the polydispersity of the fraction obtained within that pressure range. Specifically, this work utilizes the highly tunable solvent properties of organic/CO2 solvent mixtures to selectively size-separate dispersions of polydisperse nanoparticles (2 to 12 nm) into more monodisperse fractions (+/-2 nm). In addition to providing efficient separation of the particles, this process also allows all of the solvent and antisolvent to be recovered, thereby rendering it a green solvent process.
...
PMID:Tunable solvation effects on the size-selective fractionation of metal nanoparticles in CO2 gas-expanded solvents. 1685 77
A photoisomerizable thiolated nitrospiropyran SP, (1a), monolayer is assembled on a Au electrode by the primary deposition of thiolated nitromerocyanine isomer 1b as a monolayer on the electrode, followed by the irradiation of the surface with visible light, lambda > 475 nm. The surface coverage of nitrospiropyran units (1a) on the electrode is 2 x 10-10
mole
cm-2. Irradiation of the electrode with UV light, 320 nm < lambda < 360 nm, results in the nitromerocyanine, MR, monolayer on the electrode that binds
Ag+
ions to the phenolate units. The
Ag+
ions associated with the MR monolayer undergo cyclic reduction to surface-confined Ag0 nanoclusters, and reoxidation and dissolution of the Ag0 nanoclusters to
Ag+
ions associated with the monolayer are demonstrated. The electron-transfer rate constants for the reduction of
Ag+
to Ag0 and for the dissolution of Ag0 were determined by chronoamperometry and correspond to ketred = 12.7 s-1 and ketox = 10.5 s-1, respectively. The nanoclustering rate was characterized by surface plasmon resonance measurements, and it proceeds on a time scale of 10 min. The size of the Ag0 nanoclusters is in the range of 2 to 20 nm. The electrochemically induced reduction of the MR-
Ag+
monolayer to the MR-Ag0 surface and the reoxidation of the MR-Ag0 surface control the hydrophilic-hydrophobic properties of the surface. The advancing contact angle of the MR-Ag0-functionalized surface is 59 degrees , and the contact angle of the MR-
Ag+
-monolayer-functionalized surface is 74 degrees . Photoisomerization of the Ag0-MR surface to the Ag0-SP state, followed by the oxidation of the Ag0 nanoclusters, results in the dissolution of the
Ag+
ions into the electrolyte solution.
...
PMID:Photochemically controlled electrochemical deposition and dissolution of Ag0 nanoclusters on au electrode surfaces. 1712 19
At the cellular level, a small number of protein molecules (receptors) can induce significant cellular responses, emphasizing the importance of molecular detection of trace amounts of protein on single living cells. In this study, we designed and synthesized
silver
nanoparticle biosensors (AgMMUA-IgG) by functionalizing 11.6 +/- 3.5-nm Ag nanoparticles with a mixed monolayer of 11-mercaptoundecanoic acid (MUA) and 6-mercapto-1-hexanol (1:3
mole
ratio) and covalently conjugating IgG with MUA on the nanoparticle surface. We found that the nanoparticle biosensors preserve their biological activity and photostability and can be utilized to quantitatively detect individual receptor molecules (T-ZZ), map the distribution of receptors (0.21-0.37 molecule/microm(2)), and measure their binding affinity and kinetics at concentrations below their dissociation constant on single living cells in real time over hours. The dynamic range of detection is 0-50 molecules per cell. We also found that the binding rate (2-27 molecules/min) is highly dependent upon the coverage of receptors on living cells and their ligand concentration. The binding association and dissociation rate constants and affinity constant are k1 = (9.0 +/- 2.6) x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1), k(-1) = (3.0 +/- 0.4) x 10(-4) s(-1), and KB = (4.3 +/- 1.1) x 10(7) M(-1), respectively.
...
PMID:Design and synthesis of single-nanoparticle optical biosensors for imaging and characterization of single receptor molecules on single living cells. 1786 52
Utilizing similar methods and ideas of QSAR in metal toxicity assessment, we tried to establish the relationship between the ion characteristics of heavy metals and the biosorption capacity by waste biomass of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, obtained from a local brewery. The biosorption experiment was carried out and the maximum biosorption capacity (q(max)) was determined by the Langmuir isotherm model. The values of q(max) decreased in order on
mole
basis: Pb2+ >
Ag+
> Cr3+ > Cu2+ > Zn2+ > Cd2+ > Co2+ > Sr2+ > Ni2+ > Cs+. The biomass prefer to bind class B ions (Pb2+ and
Ag+
), then borderline ions, and last hard ions (Sr2+ and Cs+) based on the HASB principle. Twenty two parameters of physiochemical characteristics of ions were selected to correlate q(max). Linear regression analysis showed that only one parameter, i.e., the covalent index X2(m)r was correlated well to q(max) for all metal ions tested. The greater the covalent index value of metal ion was, the greater was potential to form covalent bonds with biological ligands, and the larger was the metal ion biosorption. Classification of metal ions (for divalent ion or for soft-hard ion) improved the models. More properties such as polarizing power Z2/r or the first hydrolysis constant /lgK(OH)/ or ionization potential IP were statistically significant. X2(m)r seemed to be suitable to account for metal ions containing soft ions, whereas Z2/r, /lgK(OH)/ and IP suitable for only soft ions or metal ions without soft ions.
...
PMID:[Relationship of biosorption capacity of heavy metal ions by Saccharomyces cerevisiae and their ionic characteristics]. 1792 2
Photoinduced organic oxidation with iron (hydr)oxides in aqueous suspension has been argued with respect to two principal mechanisms: (a) photoinduced ligand-to-metal charge transfer within a surface complex and (b) semiconductor photocatalysis. In this work, the photodegradation of azo dye orange II with UV light (lambda > or = 320 nm) in the aerated aqueous suspensions of haematite, maghemite, magnetite, goethite, lepidocrocite, and feroxyhite at an initial pH of 6.5 has been examined. The results showed that (1) all of the catalysts were effective at initiating dye photodegradation but the iron oxides appeared to be more active than the iron hydroxides; (2) the photodissolution of different iron phases and the dye photolysis in the dissolved iron solutions were very slow; (3) the initial rate of dye loss was proportional to the initial amount of adsorption, implying dye photodegradation on the catalyst surface; and (4) upon addition of H2O2, AgNO3, and NaF to the suspension, the rate of dye photodegradation was significantly enhanced with all the catalysts. In the presence of H2O2, less than 50% of the total rate enhancement was ascribed to the photo-Fenton reaction in solution and the dark Fenton reactions in solution and on the catalyst. In the presence of AgNO3, about 1
mole
of
silver
particles was produced by consuming 3 moles of the dye substrate. In the presence of NaF, hydroxyl radicals were detected by an ethanol scavenger, whereas such radicals were not found in the absence of NaF. Moreover, under visible-light irradiation (lambda > or = 450 nm), the dye degradation was much slower than that under UV irradiation, but the reaction was also accelerated by the addition of NaF and AgNO3. The results suggest that mechanism b, not mechanism a, is operative for dye photodegradation occurring on the iron (hydr)oxides. A detailed discussion of all possible pathways is given in the text.
...
PMID:Photoinduced degradation of orange II on different iron (hydr)oxides in aqueous suspension: rate enhancement on addition of hydrogen peroxide, silver nitrate, and sodium fluoride. 1805 20
Composition and structure dependence of the shift in the position of the surface plasmon resonance band upon introduction of NaBH4 to aqueous solutions of gold and
silver
nanoparticles are presented.
Silver
and gold nanoalloys in different compositions were prepared by co-reduction of the corresponding salt mixtures using sodium citrate as the reducing agent. After addition of NaBH4 to the resultant nanoalloys, the maximum of their surface plasmon resonance band, ranging between that of pure
silver
(ca. 400 nm) and of pure gold (ca. 530 nm), is blue-shifted as a result of electron storage on the particles. The extent of this blue shift increases non-linearly with the
mole
fraction of
silver
in the nanoparticle, parallel to the trends reported previously for both the frequency and the extinction coefficient of the plasmon band shifts. Gold(core)@silver(shell) nanoparticles were prepared by sequential reduction of gold and
silver
, where addition of NaBH4 results in relatively large spectral shift in the plasmon resonance band when compared with the nanoalloys having a similar overall composition. The origin of the large plasmon band shift in the core-shell is related with a higher
silver
surface concentration on these particles. Hence, the chemical nature of the nanoparticle emerges as the dominating factor contributing to the extent of the spectral shift as a result of electron storage in bimetallic systems.
...
PMID:Optical response of Ag-Au bimetallic nanoparticles to electron storage in aqueous medium. 1868 Oct 38
The fused salt electrochemical cell: Ag; AgCl, KC1; K(2)S(2),O(7),K(2)SO(4); O(2), Pt has been studied. Exact thermodynamic treatment of the chemical reaction, which occurs when current is drawn from the cell, is possible because K(2)S(2)O(7)(1) and AgCl(1) are immiscible, so that no junction potential occurs. Potentials observed at temperatures ranging from 700-800 degrees K for six different mixtures are reported. The Nernst equation is obeyed if it is assumed that the potassium disulphate-potassium sulphate system behaves ideally and that the
silver
chloride-potassium chloride system deviates slightly, negatively, from ideality. The thermodynamic functions, DeltaG degrees , DeltaH degrees and DeltaS degrees have been calculated from the corrected values of E degrees obtained. The free energy change follows the equation: DeltaG(700-800 degrees K) degrees = -71,680-29.50 T cal
mole
.
...
PMID:The potassium disulphate-potassium sulphate, silver chloride-potassium chloride electrochemical cell. 1895 60
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>