Robertsonrosales7029
Zwitterionic peptides are great candidates as antifouling coating materials in many biomedical applications. We investigated the structure and antifouling properties of surface-tethered zwitterionic peptide monolayers with different peptide chain lengths and charge distributions using a combination of surface plasma resonance, atomic force microscopy, and all atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulation techniques. Our results demonstrate that zwitterionic peptides with more zwitterionic lysine (K) and glutamic acid (E) repeating units exhibit better antifouling performance. The block charge distributions of the positive and negative charges in the peptides (having multiple positive charges next to the same amount of negative charges), although affecting the structure of the peptide molecules, do not significantly change the antifouling properties of the peptide monolayers in the solutions containing monovalent ions. However, divalent cations, Ca2+ and Mg2+, in solution can significantly alter the structure and lower the antifouling performance of the zwitterionic peptide monolayers, especially with the sequences of block charges. All atomistic MD simulations quantitatively reveal that the divalent cations in solution lead to more interchain electrostatic cross-links between peptide chains, especially for peptides with block charges, which causes dehydration of the zwitterionic peptides and diminishes their antifouling performances.We report the observation of current-induced spin polarization, the Rashba-Edelstein effect (REE), and its Onsager reciprocal phenomenon, the spin galvanic effect (SGE), in a few-layer graphene/2H-TaS2 heterostructure at room temperature. Spin-sensitive electrical measurements unveil full spin-polarization reversal by an applied gate voltage. The observed gate-tunable charge-to-spin conversion is explained by the ideal work function mismatch between 2H-TaS2 and graphene, which allows for a strong interface-induced Bychkov-Rashba interaction with a spin-gap reaching 70 meV, while keeping the Dirac nature of the spectrum intact across electron and hole sectors. The reversible electrical generation and control of the nonequilibrium spin polarization vector, not previously observed in a nonmagnetic material, are elegant manifestations of emergent two-dimensional Dirac Fermions with robust spin-helical structure. Our experimental findings, supported by first-principles relativistic electronic structure and transport calculations, demonstrate a route to design low-power spin-logic circuits from layered materials.Because nitric oxide (NO) gas is an endogenously produced signaling molecule which is related to numerous physiological functions, numerous studies have been conducted to develop the NO delivery systems to take advantages for potential biomedical applications. However, NO is a reactive radical gas molecule which has very short life time and easy to transform to nitrogen oxide species by reaction with oxygen species. Therefore, it is necessary to develop the NO delivery carrier that releases NO gas to a topical area for the specific applications. Selleck icFSP1 In this study, laponite clay was introduced to fabricate the NO delivery carrier by the formation of a laponite-polyamine (LP-PAn) composites. The laponite clay and pentaethylenehexamine (PEHA) formed macromolecular structure by electrostatic interaction. And the nitric oxide donor, N-diazeniumdiolate (NONOates), was synthesized into the LP-PAn composite. We investigated the conformation of the LP-PAn composite structure and the NO donor formation by zeta potential, x-ray diffraction UV-vis and fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy. Then, we analyzed the NO release profile. Additionally, we confirmed the applicability in biomedical applications via cell viability test and in vitro tube formation assay.Low-energy minima structures for (CaCO3)n, n ≤ 28, are predicted using bottom-up genetic algorithms in conjunction with density functional theory electronic structure calculations, in comparison with the frozen and relaxed top-down clusters generated by cuts from the calcite, vaterite, and aragonite crystal structures. Similarities in structural motifs for the bottom-up and relaxed top-down are revealed using a fragment recognition technique. Fragment energy decomposition analysis shows that the bottom-up and relaxed top-down clusters belong to two classes of amorphous clusters with distinct intracluster energy distributions, despite their structural similarity. The bottom-up clusters with >20 formula units are surface stabilized with negative surface energy densities. In contrast, the top-down clusters are interior stabilized with positive surface energy densities. We prove that the sign of the surface energy density determines whether the nucleation reaction energy as a function of nuclear size has a maximum or a minimum. The surface-stabilized bottom-up clusters are proposed to be a type of prenucleation cluster at the minimum of the nucleation reaction energy. A mechanism for mineralization of CaCO3 involving prenucleation clusters and nonclassical growth pathway is proposed on the basis of our theoretical findings, which is consistent with previous titration experiments.Two-dimensional (2D) semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) have emerged as attractive platforms in next-generation nanoelectronics and optoelectronics for reducing device sizes down to a 10 nm scale. To achieve this, the controlled synthesis of wafer-scale single-crystal TMDs with high crystallinity has been a continuous pursuit. However, previous efforts to epitaxially grow TMD films on insulating substrates (e.g., mica and sapphire) failed to eliminate the evolution of antiparallel domains and twin boundaries, leading to the formation of polycrystalline films. Herein, we report the epitaxial growth of wafer-scale single-crystal MoS2 monolayers on vicinal Au(111) thin films, as obtained by melting and resolidifying commercial Au foils. The unidirectional alignment and seamless stitching of the MoS2 domains were comprehensively demonstrated using atomic- to centimeter-scale characterization techniques. By utilizing onsite scanning tunneling microscope characterizations combined with first-principles calculations, it was revealed that the nucleation of MoS2 monolayer is dominantly guided by the steps on Au(111), which leads to highly oriented growth of MoS2 along the ⟨110⟩ step edges.