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Sperm Micromotors for Cargo Delivery through Flowing Blood

2020, Xu, Haifeng, Medina-Sánchez, Mariana, Maitz, Manfred F., Werner, Carsten, Schmidt, Oliver G.

Micromotors are recognized as promising candidates for untethered micromanipulation and targeted cargo delivery in complex biological environments. However, their feasibility in the circulatory system has been limited due to the low thrust force exhibited by many of the reported synthetic micromotors, which is not sufficient to overcome the high flow and complex composition of blood. Here we present a hybrid sperm micromotor that can actively swim against flowing blood (continuous and pulsatile) and perform the function of heparin cargo delivery. In this biohybrid system, the sperm flagellum provides a high propulsion force while the synthetic microstructure serves for magnetic guidance and cargo transport. Moreover, single sperm micromotors can assemble into a train-like carrier after magnetization, allowing the transport of multiple sperm or medical cargoes to the area of interest, serving as potential anticoagulant agents to treat blood clots or other diseases in the circulatory system.

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Short-Range Cooperative Slow-down of Water Solvation Dynamics Around SO42--Mg2+ Ion Pairs

2022, Kundu, Achintya, Mamatkulov, Shavkat I., Brünig, Florian N., Bonthuis, Douwe Jan, Netz, Roland R., Elsaesser, Thomas, Fingerhut, Benjamin P.

The presence of ions affects the structure and dynamics of water on a multitude of length and time scales. In this context, pairs of Mg2+ and SO42- ions in water constitute a prototypical system for which conflicting pictures of hydration geometries and dynamics have been reported. Key issues are the molecular pair and solvation shell geometries, the spatial range of electric interactions, and their impact on solvation dynamics. Here, we introduce asymmetric SO42- stretching vibrations as new and most specific local probes of solvation dynamics that allow to access ion hydration dynamics at the dilute concentration (0.2 M) of a native electrolyte environment. Highly sensitive heterodyne 2D-IR spectroscopy in the fingerprint region of the SO42- ions around 1100 cm-1 reveals a specific slow-down of solvation dynamics for hydrated MgSO4 and for Na2SO4 in the presence of Mg2+ ions, which manifests as a retardation of spectral diffusion compared to aqueous Na2SO4 solutions in the absence of Mg2+ ions. Extensive molecular dynamics and density functional theory QM/MM simulations provide a microscopic view of the observed ultrafast dephasing and hydration dynamics. They suggest a molecular picture where the slow-down of hydration dynamics arises from the structural peculiarities of solvent-shared SO42--Mg2+ ion pairs.

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Targeted T1 Magnetic Resonance Imaging Contrast Enhancement with Extraordinarily Small CoFe2O4 Nanoparticles

2019, Piché, Dominique, Tavernaro, Isabella, Fleddermann, Jana, Lozano, Juan G., Varambhia, Aakash, Maguire, Mahon L., Koch, Marcus, Ukai, Tomofumi, Hernández Rodríguez, Armando J., Jones, Lewys, Dillon, Frank, Reyes Molina, Israel, Mitzutani, Mai, González Dalmau, Evelio R., Maekawa, Toru, Nellist, Peter D., Kraegeloh, Annette, Grobert, Nicole

Extraordinarily small (2.4 nm) cobalt ferrite nanoparticles (ESCIoNs) were synthesized by a one-pot thermal decomposition approach to study their potential as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents. Fine size control was achieved using oleylamine alone, and annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy revealed highly crystalline cubic spinel particles with atomic resolution. Ligand exchange with dimercaptosuccinic acid rendered the particles stable in physiological conditions with a hydrodynamic diameter of 12 nm. The particles displayed superparamagnetic properties and a low r2/r1 ratio suitable for a T1 contrast agent. The particles were functionalized with bile acid, which improved biocompatibility by significant reduction of reactive oxygen species generation and is a first step toward liver-targeted T1 MRI. Our study demonstrates the potential of ESCIoNs as T1 MRI contrast agents.

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Confined crystals of the smallest phase-change material

2013, Giusca, C.E., Stolojan, V., Sloan, J., Börrnert, F., Shiozawa, H., Sader, K., Rümmeli, M.H., Büchner, B., Silva, S.R.P.

The demand for high-density memory in tandem with limitations imposed by the minimum feature size of current storage devices has created a need for new materials that can store information in smaller volumes than currently possible. Successfully employed in commercial optical data storage products, phase-change materials, that can reversibly and rapidly change from an amorphous phase to a crystalline phase when subject to heating or cooling have been identified for the development of the next generation electronic memories. There are limitations to the miniaturization of these devices due to current synthesis and theoretical considerations that place a lower limit of 2 nm on the minimum bit size, below which the material does not transform in the structural phase. We show here that by using carbon nanotubes of less than 2 nm diameter as templates phase-change nanowires confined to their smallest conceivable scale are obtained. Contrary to previous experimental evidence and theoretical expectations, the nanowires are found to crystallize at this scale and display amorphous-to-crystalline phase changes, fulfilling an important prerequisite of a memory element. We show evidence for the smallest phase-change material, extending thus the size limit to explore phase-change memory devices at extreme scales.

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Mechanistic Understanding of the Heterogeneous, Rhodium-Cyclic (Alkyl)(Amino)Carbene-Catalyzed (Fluoro-)Arene Hydrogenation

2020, Moock D., Wiesenfeldt M.P., Freitag M., Muratsugu S., Ikemoto S., Knitsch R., Schneidewind J., Baumann W., Schäfer A.H., Timmer A., Tada M., Hansen M.R., Glorius F.

Recently, chemoselective methods for the hydrogenation of fluorinated, silylated, and borylated arenes have been developed providing direct access to previously unattainable, valuable products. Herein, a comprehensive study on the employed rhodium-cyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene (CAAC) catalyst precursor is disclosed. Mechanistic experiments, kinetic studies, and surface-spectroscopic methods revealed supported rhodium(0) nanoparticles (NP) as the active catalytic species. Further studies suggest that CAAC-derived modifiers play a key role in determining the chemoselectivity of the hydrogenation of fluorinated arenes, thus offering an avenue for further tuning of the catalytic properties. Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society.

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Highly Efficient and Atom Economic Route for the Production of Methyl Acrylate and Acetic Acid from a Biorefinery Side Stream

2020, El Ouahabi F., Polyakov M., Van Klink G.P.M., Wohlrab S., Tin S., De Vries J.G.

We report a highly efficient and 100% atom economic synthesis of methyl acrylate and acetic acid via gas phase pyrolysis of methyl 3-acetoxypropionate at 600 °C. The latter can be produced in a single step from methyl levulinate, a side product of Avantium's FDCA process. Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society.

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Local chain deformation and overstrain in reinforced elastomers: An NMR study

2013, Pérez-Aparicio, R., Schiewek, M., Valentín, J.L., Schneider, H., Long, D.R., Saphiannikova, M., Sotta, P., Saalwächter, K., Ott, M.

A molecular-level understanding of the strain response of elastomers is a key to connect microscopic dynamics to macroscopic properties. In this study we investigate the local strain response of vulcanized, natural rubber systems and the effect of nanometer-sized filler particles, which are known to lead to highly improved mechanical properties. A multiple-quantum NMR approach enables the separation of relatively low fractions of network defects and allows to quantitatively and selectively study the local deformation distribution in the strained networks matrix on the microscopic (molecular) scale. We find that the presence of nondeformable filler particles induces an enhanced local deformation of the matrix (commonly referred to as overstrain), a slightly increased local stress/strain heterogeneity, and a reduced anisotropy. Furthermore, a careful analysis of the small nonelastic defect fraction provides new evidence that previous NMR and scattering results of strained defect-rich elastomers cannot be interpreted without explicitly taking the nonelastic defect fraction into account.

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Strong Wet and Dry Adhesion by Cupped Microstructures

2019, Wang, Y., Kang, V., Arzt, E., Federle, W., Hensel, R.

Recent advances in bio-inspired microfibrillar adhesives have resulted in technologies that allow reliable attachment to a variety of surfaces. Because capillary and van der Waals forces are considerably weakened underwater, fibrillar adhesives are however far less effective in wet environments. Although various strategies have been proposed to achieve strong reversible underwater adhesion, strong adhesives that work both in air and underwater without additional surface treatments have yet to be developed. In this study, we report a novel design - cupped microstructures (CM) - that generates strong controllable adhesion in air and underwater. We measured the adhesive performance of cupped polyurethane microstructures with three different cup angles (15, 30, and 45°) and the same cup diameter of 100 μm in dry and wet conditions in comparison to standard mushroom-shaped microstructures (MSMs) of the same dimensions. In air, 15°CM performed comparably to the flat MSM of the same size with an adhesion strength (force per real contact area) of up to 1.3 MPa, but underwater, 15°CM achieved 20 times stronger adhesion than MSM (∼1 MPa versus ∼0.05 MPa). Furthermore, the cupped microstructures exhibit self-sealing properties, whereby stronger pulls lead to longer stable attachment and much higher adhesion through the formation of a better seal. © 2019 American Chemical Society.

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Medical Imaging of Microrobots: Toward In Vivo Applications

2020, Aziz, Azaam, Pane, Stefano, Iacovacci, Veronica, Koukourakis, Nektarios, Czarske, Jürgen, Menciassi, Arianna, Medina-Sánchez, Mariana, Schmidt, Oliver G

Medical microrobots (MRs) have been demonstrated for a variety of non-invasive biomedical applications, such as tissue engineering, drug delivery, and assisted fertilization, among others. However, most of these demonstrations have been carried out in in vitro settings and under optical microscopy, being significantly different from the clinical practice. Thus, medical imaging techniques are required for localizing and tracking such tiny therapeutic machines when used in medical-relevant applications. This review aims at analyzing the state of the art of microrobots imaging by critically discussing the potentialities and limitations of the techniques employed in this field. Moreover, the physics and the working principle behind each analyzed imaging strategy, the spatiotemporal resolution, and the penetration depth are thoroughly discussed. The paper deals with the suitability of each imaging technique for tracking single or swarms of MRs and discusses the scenarios where contrast or imaging agent's inclusion is required, either to absorb, emit, or reflect a determined physical signal detected by an external system. Finally, the review highlights the existing challenges and perspective solutions which could be promising for future in vivo applications.

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Imaging of buried 3D magnetic rolled-up nanomembranes

2014, Streubel, R., Han, L., Kronast, F., Ünal, A.A., Schmidt, O.G., Makarov, D.

Increasing performance and enabling novel functionalities of microelectronic devices, such as three-dimensional (3D) on-chip architectures in optics, electronics, and magnetics, calls for new approaches in both fabrication and characterization. Up to now, 3D magnetic architectures had mainly been studied by integral means without providing insight into local magnetic microstructures that determine the device performance. We prove a concept that allows for imaging magnetic domain patterns in buried 3D objects, for example, magnetic tubular architectures with multiple windings. The approach is based on utilizing the shadow contrast in transmission X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) photoemission electron microscopy and correlating the observed 2D projection of the 3D magnetic domains with simulated XMCD patterns. That way, we are not only able to assess magnetic states but also monitor the field-driven evolution of the magnetic domain patterns in individual windings of buried magnetic rolled-up nanomembranes.