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Query: UMLS:C0276640 (
TEM
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20,729
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The synthesis of gold nanoplates was carried out in an aqueous solution by thermal reduction of HAuCl(4) with trisodium citrate in the presence of cetyltrimethylammonium
bromide
(CTAB) surfactant in just 5-40 min. The sizes of the gold nanoplates can be varied from as small as tens of nanometers in width, to several hundreds of nanometers, and even a few microns in width by changing the reagent concentrations, solution temperature, and the reaction time. A [CTAB]/[HAuCl(4)] ratio of 6 in the reaction solution was found to be favorable for the formation of gold nanoplates. The nanoplates possess well-defined shapes with sharp edges. The small nanoplates exhibit mainly a triangular shape, while larger nanoplates show a mixture of triangular, hexagonal, truncated triangular, and other symmetrical structures. The nanoplates are composed of essentially (111) lattice planes, as revealed by both XRD and
TEM
results. Nanoplates with widths from several hundreds of nanometers to a few microns absorb light strongly in the near-infrared region. The growth mechanism of these nanoplates was investigated. The ability to synthesize gold nanoplates with these different size ranges in large scale in aqueous solution using simple CTAB capping surfactant should allow more diverse applications of gold nanoplates.
...
PMID:Thermal aqueous solution approach for the synthesis of triangular and hexagonal gold nanoplates with three different size ranges. 1641 18
Understanding the interaction between silicate ions and surfactants is critical for the design and development of mesoporous siliceous materials. We examined the interaction between sodium silicate ions and three different cationic surfactants [namely, cetyltrimethylammonium
bromide
(CTAB), tetradecyltrimethylammonium
bromide
(TTAB), and dodecyltrimethylammonium
bromide
(DTAB)] and an anionic surfactant [sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)] in dilute solution at room temperature. From the combination of several techniques, such as conductometric and potentiometric titrations, dynamic light scattering, and isothermal titration calorimetry, the phase behavior of the sodium silicate and CTAB system was determined. We observed that the aggregation behavior of the silicate-CTAB system is similar to that of a polymer-surfactant system. The formation of the silicate-CTAB complex is induced by the adsorption of SiOH and SiO- groups, aided by CTAB unimers. The electrostatic attraction and hydrophobic interaction are the dominant forces controlling the formation of silicate-CTAB complexes. When these complexes are saturated with CTAB unimers, free CTAB micelles are then produced.
TEM
micrographs revealed that a stable Si-O-Si network is absent within the silicate-CTAB complexes, and surprisingly, stable silicate-CTAB complexes with ordered structure were observed. The present finding is important for understanding the interaction between silicate and surfactant in the synthesis of mesoporous structure in the dilute solution regime.
...
PMID:Interaction between silicates and ionic surfactants in dilute solution. 1646 67
A series of ethylene-containing mesoporous organosilica materials were fabricated via surfactant-mediated assembly of 1,2-bis(triethoxysilyl)ethylene (BTEE) organosilica precursor using alkyltrimethylammonium
bromide
(CnTAB) surfactants with different alkyl chain length (n=12, 14, 16, 18) as supramolecular templates. The presence of molecularly ordered ethylene groups in the resulting periodic mesoporous organosilica (PMO) materials was confirmed by XRD data along with 29Si and 13C MAS NMR analysis. Additional characterization techniques, namely nitrogen sorption,
TEM
, and TGA, confirmed the structural ordering and thermal stability of the molecularly ordered ethylene-bridged PMOs. The PMOs exhibit molecular-scale ordering (with a periodicity of 5.6 A) within the organosilica framework and tunable pore size, which depending on the alkyl chain length of the surfactant templates, varied in the range 23-41 A. Furthermore, depending on the alkyl chain length of the templates, the particle morphology of the PMOs gradually changed from monodisperse spheres (for C12TAB) to rod or cakelike particles (for C14TAB) and elongated ropelike particles for longer chain surfactants. Variations in the surfactant chain length therefore allowed control of both the pore size and particle morphology without compromising molecular-scale or structural ordering. The reactivity of ethylene groups was probed by bromination, which demonstrated the potential for further functionalization of the PMOs.
...
PMID:Surfactant mediated control of pore size and morphology for molecularly ordered ethylene-bridged periodic mesoporous organosilica. 1650 72
The computer aided analysis of the EPR spectra of radical surfactant probes inserted in cetyltrimethylammonium
bromide
micelles provided information on the kinetics of formation of micelle templated silico-aluminas (MTSA) at 343 K, obtained by means of silica and alumina alkaline solutions at different Si/Al ratios (from infinity to 4). Mainly two spectral components were analyzed and relatively quantified in the EPR spectra: (1) the micellar component, due to probes inserted in the surfactant aggregates, whose mobility decreases over the synthesis time, thus reporting on the progressive modification of the micelle structure and the solid condensation; (2) the interacting component, mainly arising from the electrostatic interactions between the surfactant heads and the charged surface sites. This last component increases its relative intensity over the synthesis time, informing about condensation and structuration of the silico-alumina at the micelle surface. X-ray diffraction (XRD), nitrogen sorption isotherms at 77 K, thermogravimetric analysis,
TEM
and chemical analysis were performed to characterize both as-synthesized and calcined MTSA materials. Nitrogen sorption isotherms allowed us to evaluate the pore diameter, the specific surface area and the pore volume. At Si/Al<15 a decrease in pore volume and specific surface area was interpreted as due to the contemporaneous presence of a hexagonal MTSA and an amorphous material, which was ascertained by means of XRD as the only present at Si/Al=4. The amorphous structure at Si/Al<15 used Na+ as contraions, whereas the surfactants are no more needed to neutralize the negatively charged groups at the solid surface. The hypothesis of a "break" at Si/Al=15 was supported by EPR: the interactions between the surfactant probe heads and the negatively charged surface groups are drastically reduced at Si/Al<15. On the contrary, at Si/Al>15, increasing amounts of alumina slow the kinetics of the synthesis but enhance electrostatic interactions between the surfactant heads and the negatively charged surface groups. Dilution of the synthesis mixture decreased the extent of the interactions, due to partial protonation of the silanol groups, and slowed the synthesis process.
...
PMID:Synthesis of micelle templated silico-aluminas with different alumina contents. 1650 97
The structural and dynamic properties of low ionic strength micellar solutions of the cationic surfactant perfluorooctylbutane trimethylammonium
bromide
have been investigated by cryo-
TEM
, small-angle neutron scattering, small-angle X-ray scattering, T-jump and rheological experiments. The surfactant molecules self-assemble into narrow ribbons with average dimensions on the order of 4 nm x 3 nm, either under salt-free conditions or in the presence of up to 30 mM KBr or NaF. Cryo-
TEM
also reveals in the salt-free systems the presence of networks of multiconnected micelles. Rheological experiments showed that these surfactant systems exhibit a strong shear-thickening effect even in the presence of up to 30 mM KBr. The T-jump response of the micellar solutions was found to be multiexponential. This observation rules out the presence of only linear micelles with an exponential length distribution and suggests more complex topologies of the micellar aggregates. The relaxation time associated with the predominant process in the T-jump relaxation is strongly correlated to the critical shear rate beyond which shear thickening occurs, thus indicating that this critical shear rate is controlled by the micellar kinetics.
...
PMID:Structural and dynamical properties of ribbonlike self-assemblies of a fluorinated cationic surfactant. 1651 52
We present the phase behavior and thermodynamics of the catanionic mixture of the gemini surfactant hexanediyl-alpha,omega-bis(dodecyldimethylammonium
bromide
), designated here as 12-6-12Br(2), and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) over the full range of composition, at the water-rich corner. Visual and turbidity measurements of the mixtures provide some basic macroscopic information on phase behavior. The structure of the aggregates formed spontaneously in the mixtures has been observed with
TEM
. As the molar fraction of SDS, X(SDS), is increased, at constant total surfactant concentration, the aggregation morphologies change gradually from gemini-rich micelles, through multiphase regions containing a precipitate (catanionic surfactant) and a vesicle region, to SDS-rich micelles. From isothermal titration calorimetry measurements, the phase boundaries and corresponding enthalpy changes for phase transitions have been obtained. The formation of the different microstructures, in particular, the spontaneously formed vesicles in the SDS-rich side, is discussed on the basis of geometric and electrostatic effects occurring in the SDS-gemini mixture.
...
PMID:Phase behavior and thermodynamics of a mixture of cationic gemini and anionic surfactant. 1653 60
The aggregation behavior and the thermodynamics of binding between poly(ethylene oxide)-block-poly(2-(diethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) (PEO-b-PDEAEMA) block copolymers and plasmid DNA were examined. Binding between the polymer and DNA were confirmed by gel electrophoresis. The high affinity between the polymer and DNA was demonstrated through the ethidium
bromide
(EtBr) displacement assay, and the binding was found to be related to the stoichiometric balance between the amine group of the polymer and the DNA nucleotide molar ratio (N/P molar ratio). The light scattering and
TEM
results showed that, at low polymer concentration, the hydrodynamic radii (R(h)) of the polymer/DNA complexes was around 90 nm; however, at sufficiently high polymer concentration, the complexes condensed to around 35 nm induced by a structural rearrangement of the amphiphilic nature of the block copolymer. The isothermal titration calorimetric results showed that the binding between the polymer and DNA is driven by a large favorable enthalpy.
...
PMID:Aggregation behavior and thermodynamics of binding between poly(ethylene oxide)-block-poly(2-(diethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) and plasmid DNA. 1658 51
Core/shell-type titania nanocapsules containing a single Ag nanoparticle were prepared. Ag nanoparticles were prepared using the reduction of silver nitrate with hydrazine in the presence of cetyltrimethylammonium
bromide
(CTAB) as protective agent. The sol-gel reaction of titanium tetraisopropoxide (TTIP) was used to prepare core/shell-type titania nanocapsules with CTAB-coated Ag nanoparticles as the core.
TEM
observations revealed that the size of the core (Ag particle) and the thickness of the shell (titania) of the core/shell particles obtained are about 10 nm and 5-10 nm, respectively. In addition, the nanocapsules were found to be dispersed in the medium as individual particles without aggregation. Moreover, titania coating caused the surface plasmon absorption of Ag nanoparticles to shift toward the longer wavelength side.
...
PMID:Preparation of highly dispersed core/shell-type titania nanocapsules containing a single Ag nanoparticle. 1660 15
Several experimental techniques (conductivity, zeta potential, transmission electronic microscopy, and steady-state fluorescence spectroscopy) have been used to study the formation of mixed colloidal aggregates consisting of a cationic double-chain surfactant, di-dodecyldimethylammonium
bromide
(di-C12DMAB), and a single-chain alkyltrimethylammonium
bromide
with 10 and/or 14 carbon atoms (decyltrimethylammonium
bromide
, C10TAB, and/or tetradecyltrimethylammonium
bromide
, C14TAB). Special interest has been devoted to the prevesicle domain, within which the formation of aggregated nanostructures was first reported in our laboratory. For that purpose, studies have been carried out on the very dilute region by means of conductivity experiments, confirming the existence of two critical aggregation concentrations in that concentration domain: the so-called mixed critical aggregate concentration, CAC, and the mixed critical vesicle concentration, CVC. By carrying out
TEM
experiments on negatively stained samples, we were surprised to find a number of aggregates without a clear aggregation pattern and with a variety of sizes and shapes at concentrations below CAC, where only monomers were expected. However, the nanoaggregates found at concentrations between CAC and CVC, also by
TEM
microscopy, show a clear and ordered "fingerprint"-like aggregation pattern similar to the liquid-crystalline phases reported for DNA-liposome complexes and/or DNA packed with viral capsids. Finally, at total surfactant concentrations above CVC, the aggregates were confirmed, by means of cryo-
TEM
micrographs and zeta potential measurements, to be essentially unilamellar spherical vesicles with a medium polydispersity and a net-averaged surface density charge of around 12 x 10(-3) C m(-2). The fluorescence emission of two probes, TNS (anionic) and PRODAN (nonionic), allows for the analysis of the micropolarity and microviscosity of the different microenvironments present in aqueous surfactant solutions where the above-mentioned vesicle and prevesicle aggregates are present.
...
PMID:Electrochemical, microscopic, and spectroscopic characterization of prevesicle nanostructures and vesicles on mixed cationic surfactant systems. 1661 41
Herein, three new glycopolymers have been synthesized via "click polymerization" to promote nucleic acid delivery in the presence of biological media containing serum. These structures were designed to contain a trehalose moiety to promote biocompatibility, water solubility, and stability against aggregation, amide-triazole groups to enhance DNA binding affinity, and an oligoamine unit to facilitate DNA encapsulation, phosphate neutralization, and interactions with cell surfaces. A 2,3,4,2',3',4'-hexa-O-acetyl-6,6'-diazido-6,6'-dideoxy-D-trehalose (4) monomer was polymerized via copper(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition with a series of dialkyne-amide comonomers that contain either one, two, or three Boc-protected secondary amines (7a, 7b, or 7c, respectively). After deprotection, three water-soluble polycations (9a, 9b, or 9c) were obtained with similar degrees of polymerization (n = 56-61) to elucidate the role of amine number on nucleic acid binding, complex formation, stability, and cellular delivery. Gel electrophoresis and ethidium
bromide
experiments showed that 9a-9c associated with plasmid DNA (pDNA) and formed complexes (polyplexes) at N/P ratios dependent on the amine number.
TEM
experiments revealed that 9a-9c polyplexes were small (50-120 nm) and had morphologies (spherical and rodlike) associated with the polymer chain stiffness. Dynamic light scattering studies in the presence of media containing serum demonstrated that 9c polyplexes had a low degree of flocculation, whereas 9a and 9b polyplexesd aggregate rapidly. Further biological studies revealed that these structures were biocompatible and deliver pDNA into HeLa cells. Particularly, 9c polyplexes promoted high delivery efficacy and gene expression profiles in the presence of serum.
...
PMID:Trehalose click polymers inhibit nanoparticle aggregation and promote pDNA delivery in serum. 1678 82
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