Peptide-doped trehalose thin films have been characterized by bombardment with energetic cluster ion beams of C60+ and Aux+ (x = 1, 2, 3). The aim of these studies is to acquire information about the molecular sputtering process of the peptide and trehalose by measurement of secondary ion mass spectra during erosion. This system is important since uniform thin films of approximately 300 nm thickness can be reproducibly prepared on a Si substrate, allowing detailed characterization of the resulting depth profile with different projectiles. The basic form of the molecular ion intensity as a function of ion dose is described by a simple analytical model. The model includes parameters such as the molecular sputtering yield, the damage cross section of the trehalose or the peptide, and the thickness of a surface layer altered by the projectile. The results show that favorable conditions for successful molecular depth profiling are achieved when the total sputtering yield is high and the altered layer thickness is low. Successful molecular depth profiles are achieved with all of the cluster projectiles, although the degree of chemical damage accumulation was slightly lower with C60. With C60 bombardment, the altered layer thickness of about 20 nm and the damage cross section of about 5 nm2 are physically consistent with predictions of molecular dynamics calculations available for similar chemical systems. In general, the model presented should provide guidance in optimizing experimental parameters for maximizing the information content of molecular depth profiling experiments with complex molecular thin film substrates.
A buckminsterfullerene ion source is employed to characterize peptide-doped trehalose thin films. The experiments are designed to utilize the unique sputtering properties of cluster ion beams for molecular depth profiling. The results show that trehalose films with high uniformity can be prepared on Si by a spin-coating technique. Bombardment of the film with C60+ results in high quality time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry spectra, even during ion doses of up to 3 x 10(14) ions/cm2. This result is in contrast to atomic bombardment experiments in which the dose of incident ions must be kept below 10(12) ions/cm2 so as to retain mass spectral information. Moreover, since the films are of uniform thickness, it is possible to depth-profile through the film and into the Si substrate. This experimental protocol allows the yield of trehalose molecular equivalents and the degree of interface mixing to be evaluated in detail. When doped with a variety of small peptides up to a molecular weight of m/z 500, we find that the peptide molecular ion intensity remains stable under continuous C60+ bombardment, although some decrease in intensity is observed. The results are interpreted in terms of a model whereby the high trehalose yield and low damage depth of the C60 projectile combine to prevent damage accumulation. In general, the peptide-trehalose system provides a valuable model for evaluating the parameters that lead to effective 3-dimensional characterization of biomaterials.
A protocol for three-dimensional molecular thin-film analysis is described that utilizes imaging time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry and large-area atomic force microscopy. As a test study, a 300-nm trehalose film deposited on a Si substrate was structured by bombardment with a focused 15-keV Ga+ ion beam and analyzed using a 40-keV C60+ cluster ion beam. A three-dimensional sputter depth profile was acquired as a series of high-resolution lateral SIMS images with intermittent erosion cycles. As the most important result of this study, we find that the structured film exhibits a highly nonuniform erosion rate, thus preventing a simple conversion of primary ion fluence into eroded depth. Instead, the depth scale calibration must be performed individually on each pixel of the imaged area. The resulting laterally resolved depth profiles are discussed in terms of the chemical damage induced by the Ga+ bombardment along with the physics of the C60+ induced erosion process.
Biomaterial surface characteristics are critical cues that regulate cell function. We produced a novel series of poly(l-lactic acid) (PLLA) and polystyrene demixed nanotopographic films to provide nonbiological cell-stimulating cues. The increase in PLLA weight fraction (phi) in blend solutions resulted in topography changes in spin-cast films from pit-dominant to island-dominant morphologies having nanoscale depth or height (3-29 nm). Lower molecular weight PLLA segregated to the top surface of demixed films, as observed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS). For phi > or = 0.5, the topmost film layer was predominantly filled with PLLA (>96% by SIMS at 20-A depth). Nanotextured substrata stimulated osteoblastic cell adhesion to a greater degree than did flat PLLA (phi = 1), and this effect was more pronounced for nanoisland (phi = 0.7 and 0.9) relative to nanopit topographies (phi = 0.5). Demixed films having relatively lower water contact angles generally enhanced cell adhesion and spreading. Our results reveal that cell adhesion is affected by surface chemistry, topography, and wettability simultaneously and that nanotextured surfaces may be utilized in regulating cell adhesion.
Replicating efficient chemical energy utilization of biological nanomotors is one ultimate goal of nanotechnology and energy technology. Here, we report a rationally designed autonomous bipedal nanowalker made of DNA that achieves a fuel efficiency of less than two fuel molecules decomposed per productive forward step, hence breaking a general threshold for chemically powered machines invented to date. As a genuine enzymatic nanomotor without changing itself nor the track, the walker demonstrates a sustained motion on an extended double-stranded track at a speed comparable to previous burn-bridge motors. Like its biological counterparts, this artificial nanowalker realizes multiple chemomechanical gatings, especially a bias-generating product control unique to chemically powered nanomotors. This study yields rich insights into how pure physical effects facilitate harvest of chemical energy at the single-molecule level and provides a rarely available motor system for future development toward replicating the efficient, repeatable, automatic, and mechanistically sophisticated transportation seen in biomotor-based intracellular transport but beyond the capacity of the current burn-bridge motors.
Val-TPE shows aggregation-induced emission, aggregation-induced circular dichroism, circularly polarized luminescence and the capacity to self-assemble into helical nanofibers.
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