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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
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    Magnetic measurement methods to probe nanoparticle–matrix interactions
    (Berlin : de Gruyter, 2021) Liebl, Maik; Eberbeck, Dietmar; Coene, Annelies; Leliaert, Jonathan; Jauch, Philine; Kruteva, Margarita; Fruhner, Lisa; Barnsley, Lester; Mayr, Stefan G.; Wiekhorst, Frank
    Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) are key elements in several biomedical applications, e.g., in cancer therapy. Here, the MNPs are remotely manipulated by magnetic fields from outside the body to deliver drugs or generate heat in tumor tissue. The efficiency and success of these approaches strongly depend on the spatial distribution and quantity of MNPs inside a body and interactions of the particles with the biological matrix. These include dynamic processes of the MNPs in the organism such as binding kinetics, cellular uptake, passage through cell barriers, heat induction and flow. While magnetic measurement methods have been applied so far to resolve the location and quantity of MNPs for therapy monitoring, these methods can be advanced to additionally access these particle–matrix interactions. By this, the MNPs can further be utilized as probes for the physical properties of their molecular environment. In this review, we first investigate the impact of nanoparticle–matrix interactions on magnetic measurements in selected experiments. With these results, we then advanced the imaging modalities magnetorelaxometry imaging and magnetic microsphere tracking to spatially resolve particle–matrix interactions.
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    Tailoring morphology in titania nanotube arrays by implantation: experiments and modelling on designed pore size—and beyond
    (London [u.a.] : Taylor & Francis, 2021) Kupferer, Astrid; Mändl, Stephan; Mayr, Stefan G.
    Titania nanotube arrays are an exceptionally adaptable material for various applications ranging from energy conversion to biomedicine. Besides electronic properties, structural morphology on nanometre scale is essential. It is demonstrated that ion implantation constitutes a versatile method for the synthesis of tailored nanotube morphologies. Experimental-phenomenological observations reveal a successive closing behaviour of nanotubes upon ion implantation. Employing molecular dynamics calculations in combination with analytical continuum models, the physical origins of this scenario are unravelled by identifying ion bombardment induced viscous flow driven by capillarity as its underlying mechanism besides minor contributions from sputtering and redeposition. These findings enable the tailoring of nanotube arrays suitable for manifold applications.
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    Compositional Patterning in Carbon Implanted Titania Nanotubes
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2021) Kupferer, Astrid; Holm, Alexander; Lotnyk, Andriy; Mändl, Stephan; Mayr, Stefan G.
    Ranging from novel solar cells to smart biosensors, titania nanotube arrays constitute a highly functional material for various applications. A promising route to modify material characteristics while preserving the amorphous nanotube structure is present when applying low-energy ion implantation. In this study, the interplay of phenomenological effects observed upon implantation of low fluences in the unique 3D structure is reported: sputtering versus readsorption and plastic flow, amorphization versus crystallization and compositional patterning. Patterning within the oxygen and carbon subsystem is revealed using transmission electron microscopy. By applying a Cahn–Hilliard approach within the framework of driven alloys, characteristic length scales are derived and it is demonstrated that compositional patterning is expected on free enthalpy grounds, as predicted by density functional theory based ab initio calculations. Hence, an attractive material with increased conductivity for advanced devices is provided. © 2021 The Authors. Advanced Functional Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH
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    Thermal and structural properties of the martensitic transformations in Fe7Pd3 shape memory alloys: An ab initio-based molecular dynamics study
    ([London] : IOP, 2019) Holm, Alexander; Mayr, Stefan G.
    Ferromagnetic shape memory alloys, including the Fe7Pd3 system, constitute an upcoming class of functional materials, whose atomic-scale physical foundations are still insufficiently understood. The present work employs molecular dynamics simulations, based on ab initio derived embedded atom method potentials, to study martensitic transformations and twin variant reorientation. We address thermal and stress induced austenite-martensite transitions, twinning, as well as twin boundary mobility. While the predicted thermal properties are in accordance with experimental observations, we explore the detailed crystallography underlying transformation as well as twin boundary motion. © 2019 The Author(s).
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    Mechanical spectroscopy of retina explants at the protein level employing nanostructured scaffolds
    (London : Royal Soc. of Chemistry, 2016) Rahman, S. Mayazur; Reichenbach, Andreas; Zink, Mareike; Mayr, Stefan G.
    Development of neuronal tissue, such as folding of the brain, and formation of the fovea centralis in the human retina are intimately connected with the mechanical properties of the underlying cells and the extracellular matrix. In particular for neuronal tissue as complex as the vertebrate retina, mechanical properties are still a matter of debate due to their relation to numerous diseases as well as surgery, where the tension of the retina can result in tissue detachment during cutting. However, measuring the elasticity of adult retina wholemounts is difficult and until now only the mechanical properties at the surface have been characterized with micrometer resolution. Many processes, however, such as pathological changes prone to cause tissue rupture and detachment, respectively, are reflected in variations of retina elasticity at smaller length scales at the protein level. In the present work we demonstrate that freely oscillating cantilevers composed of nanostructured TiO2 scaffolds can be employed to study the frequency-dependent mechanical response of adult mammalian retina explants at the nanoscale. Constituting highly versatile scaffolds with strong tissue attachment for long-term organotypic culture atop, these scaffolds perform damped vibrations as fingerprints of the mechanical tissue properties that are derived using finite element calculations. Since the tissue adheres to the nanostructures via constitutive proteins on the photoreceptor side of the retina, the latter are stretched and compressed during vibration of the underlying scaffold. Probing mechanical response of individual proteins within the tissue, the proposed mechanical spectroscopy approach opens the way for studying tissue mechanics, diseases and the effect of drugs at the protein level.
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    Programing stimuli-responsiveness of gelatin with electron beams: Basic effects and development of a hydration-controlled biocompatible demonstrator
    (London : Nature Publishing Group, 2017) Riedel, Stefanie; Heyart, Benedikt; Apel, Katharina S.; Mayr, Stefan G.
    Biomimetic materials with programmable stimuli responsiveness constitute a highly attractive material class for building bioactuators, sensors and active control elements in future biomedical applications. With this background, we demonstrate how energetic electron beams can be utilized to construct tailored stimuli responsive actuators for biomedical applications. Composed of collagen-derived gelatin, they reveal a mechanical response to hydration and changes in pH-value and ion concentration, while maintaining their excellent biocompatibility and biodegradability. While this is explicitly demonstrated by systematic characterizing an electron-beam synthesized gelatin-based actuator of cantilever geometry, the underlying materials processes are also discussed, based on the fundamental physical and chemical principles. When applied within classical electron beam lithography systems, these findings pave the way for a novel class of highly versatile integrated bioactuators from micro-to macroscales.