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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Multifunctional electrospun nanofibers incorporated with an anti-infection drug and immobilized with proteins

Zhou, Shufei 16 August 2010 (has links)
Electrospinning is a novel technique to fabricate non-woven fibers with sizes ranging from nano to micrometers. Polymers have been electrospun into nanofibers that can be developed into desirable materials with excellent biocompatibility and biodegradability for biomedical applications in wound healing and tissue regeneration. These nanofiber materials can be further functionalized to be loaded with bioactive molecules, including antibacterial agents, functional proteins that promote tissue reconstruction while protect host tissues from contamination. This study focuses on the development of multifunctional nanofibers that are incorporated with antibacterial drug(s) and immobilized with bioactive proteins. These nanofibers are potentially useful for wound care and tissue engineering scaffolding to provide both infection control and promotion of wound healing or tissue regenerations.
2

Multifunctional electrospun nanofibers incorporated with an anti-infection drug and immobilized with proteins

Zhou, Shufei 16 August 2010 (has links)
Electrospinning is a novel technique to fabricate non-woven fibers with sizes ranging from nano to micrometers. Polymers have been electrospun into nanofibers that can be developed into desirable materials with excellent biocompatibility and biodegradability for biomedical applications in wound healing and tissue regeneration. These nanofiber materials can be further functionalized to be loaded with bioactive molecules, including antibacterial agents, functional proteins that promote tissue reconstruction while protect host tissues from contamination. This study focuses on the development of multifunctional nanofibers that are incorporated with antibacterial drug(s) and immobilized with bioactive proteins. These nanofibers are potentially useful for wound care and tissue engineering scaffolding to provide both infection control and promotion of wound healing or tissue regenerations.
3

Theoretical Studies of Diamond for Electronic Applications

Zhao, Shuainan January 2016 (has links)
Diamond has since many years been applied in electronic fields due to its extraordinary properties. Substitutional dopants and surface functionalization have also been introduced in order to improve the electrochemical properties. However, the basic mechanism at an atomic level, regarding the effects of dopants and terminations, is still under debate. In addition, theoretical modelling has during the last decades been widely used for the interpretation of experimental results, prediction of material properties, and for the guidance of future materials. Therefore, the purpose of this research project has been to theoretically investigate the influence of dopants and adsorbates on electronic and geometrical structures by using density functional theory (DFT) under periodic boundary conditions. Both the global and local effects of dopants (boron and phosphorous) and terminations have been studied. The models have included H-, OH-, F-, Oontop-, Obridge- and NH2-terminations on the diamond surfaces. For all terminating species studied, both boron and phosphorous have been found to show a local impact, instead of a global one, on diamond structural geometry and electronic properties. Therefore, the terminating species only affect the DOS of the surface carbon layers. In addition, Oontop-terminated (111) diamond surfaces present reactive surface properties and display metallic conductivity. Moreover, the conductivity of the diamond surface can be dramatically increased by the introduction of a phosphorous dopant in the lattice. The work function of a diamond surface has also been found to be influenced to a large extent by the various adsorbates and the dopant levels. Diamond can also be used as a promising substrate for an epitaxial graphene adlayer. The effects of dopants and terminations on the graphene and diamond (111) interfacial systems have been investigated theoretically in great detail. The interfacial interaction is of the Van der Waal type with an interfacial distance around 3 Å. The interactions between graphene and a terminated diamond substrate were found to be relatively weaker than those for a non-terminated diamond substrate (even with dopants). For all interface systems between graphene and diamond, a diamond-supported graphene adlayer without induced defects can still keep its intrinsic high carrier mobility. A minor charge transfer was observed to take place from the graphene adlayer to a non-terminated diamond substrate (with or without dopants) and to Oontop-, OH- or Obridge-terminated diamond substrates. However, for the situation with an H-terminated diamond surface, the electron transfer took place from the diamond surface to graphene. On the contrary, an interfacial system with a non-terminated diamond surface offers a more pronounced charge transfer than that of the terminated diamond substrates. A small finite band gap at the Dirac point was also observed for the Oontop-terminated diamond-supporting graphene adlayer.
4

Surface Functionalization of Silicon Microwires for Use in Artificial Photosynthetic Devices

Bruce, Jared January 2014 (has links)
Integrated photoelectrochemical water splitting with sunlight is one possible solution to growing global energy needs. Integration of catalysts, photoabsorbers and a membrane require low barriers to charge dissipation if a free standing device structure is to be achieved. The n-type/PEDOT:PSS junction has be identified as the major resistive component and constitutes a large barrier to charge dissipation. In this thesis, the modification of the interface between n-type Si/PEDOT:PSS was achieved by growing a highly – doped region at the contact between the wire and the membrane to reduce voltage loss at the junction from 300 mV to 130 mV. In addition, modification of the surface using a thiophene moiety is observed to decrease the voltage loss from 300 mV to 30 mV. Formation of an insulating silicon oxide on the methyl functionalized surface of the microwires identified a need for characterization of planar silicon samples representative of the sides of the microwires. Si (110), (211) and (111) crystal faces were functionalized with a methyl group and showed different resistance to oxidation. The Si (111) surface was the most resistant while the Si (211) surface was observed to be the least resistant to ambient oxidation.
5

The Design of Biodegradable Polyester Nanocarriers for Image-guided Therapeutic Delivery

Jo, Ami 12 September 2018 (has links)
Multiple hurdles, such as drug solubility, stability, and physical barriers in the body, hinder bioavailability of many promising therapeutics. Polymeric nanocarriers can encapsulate the therapeutics to protect non-target areas from side effects but also protect the drug from premature degradation for increased circulation and bioavailability. To capitalize on these advantages, the polymer nanoparticle must be properly engineered for increased control in size distribution, therapeutic encapsulation, colloidal stability, and release kinetics. However, each application requires a specific set of characteristics and properties. Being able to tailor these by manipulation of different design parameters is essential to optimize nanoparticles for the application of interest. This study of nanoparticle fabrication and characterization takes us a step closer to building effective delivery systems tailored for specific treatments. Poly(ethylene oxide)-b-poly(D,L-lactic acid) (PEO-b-PDLLA) based nanoparticles were produced to range from 100-200 nm in size. They were fluorescently labeled with a hydrophobic dye 6-13 bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl) pentacene (TIPS pentacene) at an optimal loading of 0.5 wt% with respect to the core. Surfaces were successfully coated with streptavidin to be readily functionalized with various biotinylated compounds such as PD-L1 antibodies or A488 fluorophore. Using the same PEO-b-PDLLA, iron oxide and a conjugated polymer poly(2- methoxy-5-(2-ethylhexyloxy)-1,4-phenylenevinylene) (MEH-PPV) were co-encapsulated to form fluorescently labeled magnetic particles. Using poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), CRISPR-Cas9 plasmids were encapsulated at 1.6 wt% and most of the payload released within the first 24 hours. The incorporated plasmids were intact enough to have mammalian macrophages successfully express the bacterial protein Cas9. Using similar PLGA based particles, the surface was functionalized with streptavidin and bound to the surface of bacteria as an active carrier for increased penetration of solid tumors averaging ~23 particles per bacterium. PEO-b-PLGA based particles were used in conjunction with a hydrophobic salt former to encapsulate a peptide designed to reduce platelet binding to cancer cells and mitigate extravasation. The peptide encapsulated was increased from < 2 wt% without salt former to 8.5 wt% with the used of hexadecyl phosphonic acid. Although the applications across these projects can be broad, the fundamentals and important design parameters considered contribute to the overarching field of effective carriers for drug delivery. / Ph. D. / There are many reasons why many promising pharmaceutical formulations never make it through regulation and onto market, including low solubility of the drug, low absorbance by the body, and harmful side effects, to name a few. Using polymer drug carriers, these difficulties can be overcome by holding the drug in a more soluble carrier, releasing it on a certain timeline or to a specific location to increase absorbance and decrease side effects. When designing a carrier, the requirements for the product are dependent on the application and the disease of interest. This work looks at the material types and conditions during particle formation to see how it affects the final product to better define and understand how these parameters change the performance. This work shows that the carrier size can be manipulated depending on how much of one material is used versus the other, they can be labeled to fluoresce so they can be tracked during cell and animal studies, and they can be coated with targeting compounds on the surface to increase the specificity of the carrier to localize to a target location of interest. Different particles containing DNA for gene editing, peptides for cancer therapies, and magnetic iron oxides to increase transport across difficult cell barriers have all be fabricated and characterized. The lessons learned through these projects will help guide future work to more effective and efficient delivery of pharmaceuticals to the body.
6

Single Molecule Characterization of Peptide/Hematite Binding

Dunn, James Albert 18 October 2017 (has links)
No description available.
7

Analytical Modeling, Perturbation Analysis and Experimental Characterization of Guided Surface Acoustic Wave Sensors

Onen, Onursal 01 January 2013 (has links)
In this dissertation, guided surface acoustic wave sensors were investigated theoretically and experimentally in detail for immunosensing applications. Shear horizontal polarized guided surface acoustic wave propagation for mass loading sensing applications was modeled using analytical modeling and characterized by perturbation analysis. The model verification was performed experimentally and a surface acoustic wave immunosensor case study was presented. The results of the immunosensing were also investigated using the perturbation analysis. Guided surface acoustic wave propagation problem was investigated in detail for gravimetric (or mass loading) guided wave sensors, more specifically for immunosensors. The analytical model was developed for multilayer systems taking viscoelasticity into account. The closed form algebraic solutions were obtained by applying appropriate boundary conditions. A numerical approach was used to solve dispersion equation. Detailed parametric investigation of dispersion curves was conducted using typical substrate materials and guiding layers. Substrate types of ST-cut quartz, 41° YX lithium Niobate and 36° YX lithium tantalate with guiding layers of silicon dioxide, metals (chromium and gold), and polymers (Parylene-C and SU-8) were investigated. The effects of frequency and degree of viscoelasticity were also studied. The results showed that frequency only has effect on thickness with same shaped dispersion curves. Dispersion curves were found to be unaffected by the degree of viscoelasticity. It was also observed that when there was a large shear velocity difference between substrate and guiding layer, a transition region with a gradual decrease in phase velocity was obtained. However, when shear velocities were close, a smooth transition was observed. Furthermore, it was observed that, large density differences between substrate and guiding layer resulted in sharp and with nearly constant slope transition. Smooth transition was observed for the cases of minimal density differences. Experimental verification of the model was done using multi-layer photoresists. It was shown that with modifications, the model was able to represent the cases studied. Perturbation equations were developed with first order approximations by relating the slope of the dispersion curves with sensitivity. The equations were used to investigate the sensitivity for material selection (substrate, guiding layer, and mass perturbing layer) and degree of viscoelasticity. The investigations showed that the sensitivity was increased by using guiding layers with lower shear velocities and densities. Among the guiding layers investigated, Parylene C showed the highest sensitivity followed by gold and chrome. The perturbation investigations were also extended to viscoelasticity and to protein layers for immunosensing applications. It was observed that, viscous behavior resulted in slightly higher sensitivity; and sensitivity to protein layers was very close to sensitivity for polymers. The optimum case is found to be ST-cut quartz with Parylene-C guiding layer for protein layer sensing. Finally, an immunosensing case study was presented for selective capture of protein B-cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2), which is elevated in many cancer types including ovarian cancer. The immunosensor was designed, fabricated, and experimentally characterized. An application-specific surface functionalization scheme with monoclonal antibodies, ODMS, Protein A/G and Pluronic F127 was developed and applied. Characterization was done using the oscillation frequency shift of with sensor used as the feedback element of an oscillator circuit. Detection of Bcl-2 with target sensitivity of 0.5 ng/ml from buffer solutions was presented. A linear relation between frequency shift and Bcl-2 concentration was observed. The selectivity was shown with experiments by introducing another protein, in addition to Bcl-2, to the buffer. It was seen that similar detection performance of Bcl-2 was obtained even with presence of control protein in very high concentrations. The results were also analyzed with perturbation equations.
8

EXPANDING APPLICATIONS OF IRON OXIDE NANOPARTICLES BY SURFACE FUCNTIONALIZATION: FROM MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING TO NANO-CATALYSIS

Duanmu, Chuansong 01 December 2009 (has links)
In this dissertation, research efforts mainly focused on exploring the applications of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) in MR imaging and nanocatalysis via surface functionalization. A dopamine-based surface-functionalization strategy was established. The Simanek dendrons (G1 to G3), oligonucleotides and amino acids were loaded onto SPION surfaces via this approach to develop pH-sensitive MRI contrast agents, specific-DNA MR probes and a biomimetic hydrolysis catalyst. Dendron-SPION conjugates (G1 to G3) have good aqueous solubilities and high transverse relaxivities (>300 s-1*mM-1). They also showed interesting strong pH-sensitive R2 and R2* relaxivities, which were governed by the clustering states of dendron-SPIONs in different pH environments. Values of R2m and R2* m/R2m varied by over an order of magnitude around pH 5. The efficient cell-uptake (~3 million/cell) and low cytotoxicity of G1 to G3-SPIONs were demonstrated on HeLa cell cultures. The strong R2* effects were observed indicating the SPION clustering in HeLa cells. Two SPION-oligonuleotide conjugates were synthesized by coupling two half-match oligonucleotides onto domapine-capped SPIONs via SPDP linkers. They served as MR probes to detect a single-strand DNA with the same sequence to miRNA-21 based on the change of R2 values due to the DNA-bridged SPION clustering. The detection limit of the DNA could reach to 16.5 nM. A biomimetic hydrolysis nanocatalyst (i.e., Fe2O3-Asp-His complex) was developed by loading Asp and His-dopamine derivatives onto SPIONs. Paraoxon and nitrophenyl acetate were hydrolyzed under a mild condition (neutral pH, 37 °C) catalyzed by the Fe2O3-Asp-His complex. The two amino acids Asp and His cooperated with each other on the SPION surfaces to catalyze hydrolysis reactions. This catalyst could be recycled by a magnet and reused for four times without a significant loss of catalytic activity.
9

Surface and Interface Engineering of Conjugated Polymers and Nanomaterials in Applications of Supercapacitors and Surface-functionalization

Hou, Yuanfang 23 May 2016 (has links)
In this dissertation, three aspects about surface and interface engineering of conjugated polymers and nanomaterials will be discussed. (i) There is a significant promise for electroactive conjugated polymers (ECPs) in applications of electrochemical devices including energy harvesting, electrochromic displays, etc. Among these, ECPs has also been developed as electroactive materials in electrochemical supercapacitors (ESCs). Compared with metal oxides, ECPs are attractive because they have good intrinsic conductivity, low band-gaps, relatively fast doping-and-undoping process, the ease of synthesis, and tunable electronic and structural properties through structural modifications. Here, Multiple-branch-chain 3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene (EDOT) derivatives was designed as crosslinkers in the co-electropolymerization of EDOT to optimize its morphology and improve the cycling stability of PEDOT in the supercapacitor applications. High-surface-area π-conjugated polymeric networks can be synthesized via the electrochemical copolymerization of the 2D (trivalent) motifs benzo[1,2-b:3,4-b’:5,6-b’’]trithiophene (BTT) and tris-EDOT-benzo[1,2-b:3,4-b’:5,6-b’’]trithiophene (TEBTT) with EDOT. Of all the material systems studied, P(TEBTT/EDOT)-based frameworks achieved the highest areal capacitance with values as high as 443.8 mF cm-2 (at 1 mA cm-2), higher than those achieved by the respective homopolymers (PTEBTT and PEDOT) in the same experimental conditions of electrodeposition (PTEBTT: 271.1 mF cm-2 (at 1 mA cm-2); PEDOT: 12.1 mF cm-2 (at 1 mA cm-2). (ii) In electrochemical process, the suitable choice of appropriate electrolytes to enlarge the safe working potential window with electrolyte stability is well known to improve ECPs’ performance in ESCs applications. Ionic liquids (ILs) are ion-composed salts and usually fluid within a wide temperature range with low melting points. There are many unique characteristics for these intrinsic ion conductors, including high ionic conductivity, wide electrochemical voltage windows in neutral conditions, fast ion mobility in redox reaction process (>10-14 m2 V-1 s-1), low vapor pressure, and environmental stability. These properties qualified ambient-temperature ILs to be applied as supporting medium for various devices and materials processing applications in both industry and academia, overcoming the limitation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Especially, ILs have been utilized as superior medium to electrodeposit metals, alloys, semiconductors and ECPs in the application of supercapacitors. Electropolymerization of EDOT and its derivative 4,4'-dimethoxy-3,3'-bithiophene (BEDOT) have been studied in three kinds of imidazolium-based ionic liquids and conducting salt in VOCs with different anions both as the growth medium and the supporting electrolyte, to assess the influence of these anions on their morphology and electrochemical activity. It is found these thiophene polymers grown in ILs with higher viscosity and lower diffusion shows much slower growth rate and orderly morphologies than in Tetrabutylammonium hexafluorophosphate (TBAPF6) dissolved in acetonitrile (ACN), and gives better electrochemical performance via cyclic voltammetry (CV) and galvanostatic charge-and-discharge (CD) studies. Polymers displayed multiple redox peaks in several cases, the possible reasons and origins are discussed. The synthesized polymer can be affected greatly by both the ILs with different anion/cation, and its mutal interation with targeted monomer.. As far as known, there is no systematic study on how the anions of ILs and common organic solution could play a role as a medium both for polymerization and post-polymerization electrolyte for PEDOT and its derivatives. This study can be used as an easy reference and provide experimental diagnositc data when selecting ionic liquids to investigate and optimize thiophene-based electrochemical systems, such as batteries and supercapactiors. (iii) Another aspect about interface chemistry of direct functionalization of nanodiamond with maleimide has also been addressed. Functional nanodiamonds are promising candidates for extensive practical applications in surface science, photonics and nanomedicine. Here, a protocol of direct functionalization is described by which maleimide-derivatized substituents can be appended to the outer shell of thermally annealed nanodiamonds through Diels-Alder reaction. This protocol can be carried out in room temperature, ambient atmosphere, without catalyst, and provide functionalized nanodiamonds with good solubility in organic solution. Also, this method can be applied for other maleimide derivatives,e.g.m aleimide-fluorescene, which can be applied in fluorescence labeling, sensing, and drug delivery. A series of techniques, especially Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and Solid State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (SS-NMR) was conducted for the analysis of surface chemistry and the investigation of the two-point binding strategy in details.
10

Functionalization of Silica Surface Using Chan-Lam Coupling

Appiah-Kubi, George, Seaton, Kenneth, Vasiliev, Aleksey 16 April 2014 (has links)
The reaction of base-free Chan-Lam coupling was successfully used for functionalization of surface of mesoporous silica gel. Various aromatic, aliphatic, and heterocyclic compounds were immobilized by a copper-catalyzed reaction of corresponding boronic acids with surface amino groups at mild conditions. Obtained functionalized materials were mesoporous although their surface area decreased after immobilization. The reactivity of some surface functional groups was tested in their characteristic reactions.

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