Patterned cell cultures obtained by microcontact printing have been modified in situ by a microelectrochemical technique. It relies on lifting cell-repellent properties of oligo(ethylene glycol)-terminated self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) by Br2, which is produced locally by an ultramicroelectrode of a scanning electrochemical microscope (SECM). After Br2 treatment the SAM shows increased permeability and terminal hydrophobicity as characterized by SECM approach curves and contact angle measurements, respectively. Polarization-modulation Fourier transform infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopic (PM FTIRRAS) studies on macroscopic samples show that the Br2 treatment removes the oligo(ethelyene glycol) part of the monolayer within a second time scale while the alkyl part of the SAM degrades with a much slower rate. The lateral extension of the modification can be limited because heterogeneous electron transfer from the gold support destroys part of the electrogenerated Br2 once the monolayer is locally damaged in a SECM feedback configuration. This effect has been reproduced and analyzed by exposing SAM-modified samples to Br2 in the galvanic cell Au|SAM|5 microM Br2 + 0.1 M Na2SO4||10 microM KBr + 0.1 M Na2SO4|Au followed by an PM FTIRRAS characterization of the changes in the monolayer system.
A lipid bilayer deposited on an electrode surface can serve as a benchmark system to investigate lipid-protein interactions in the presence of physiological electric fields. Recoverin and myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) are used to study the impact of strong and weak protein-lipid interactions on the structure of model lipid bilayers, respectively. The structural changes in lipid bilayers are followed using electrochemical polarization modulation infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (PM IRRAS). Recoverin contains a myristoyl group that anchors in the hydrophobic part of a cell membrane. Insertion of the protein into the 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC)-cholesterol lipid bilayer leads to an increase in the capacitance of the lipid film adsorbed on a gold electrode surface. The stability and kinetics of the electric-field-driven adsorption-desorption process are not affected by the interaction with protein. Upon interaction with recoverin, the hydrophobic hydrocarbon chains become less ordered. The polar head groups are separated from each other, which allows for recoverin association in the membrane. MAG is known to interact with glycolipids present on the surface of a cell membrane. Upon probing the interaction of the DMPC-cholesterol-glycolipid bilayer with MAG a slight decrease in the capacity of the adsorbed lipid film is observed. The stability of the lipid bilayer increases towards negative potentials. At the molecular scale this interaction results in minor changes in the structure of the lipid bilayer. MAG causes small ordering in the hydrocarbon chains region and an increase in the hydration of the polar head groups. Combining an electrochemical approach with a structure-sensitive technique, such as PM IRRAS, is a powerful tool to follow small but significant changes in the structure of a supramolecular assembly.
The results of calculations of the main parameters of the soot formation process (t, k f , SY, and r m ) carried out with the use of the detailed kinetic model of soot formation are compared with the experimental measurements of these parameters by the continuous-wave (CW)-laser extinction technique and by the time-resolved laser-induced incandescence (LII) method during C 6 H 6 pyrolysis behind reflected shock waves. The detailed kinetic model of soot formation that is developed incorporates the gas-phase mechanisms of acetylene pyrolysis and the mechanisms of formation of polyaromatic hydrocarbons, polyyne molecules, and pure carbon clusters. It combines the H abstraction=C 2 H 2 addition and polyyne pathways of the soot formation process. The formation, growth, and coagulation of soot precursors and soot particles are described within the framework of the discrete Galerkin technique based on an error-controlled expansion of the size distribution function of heterogeneous species into the orthogonal polynomials of a discrete variable (in particular, the number of monomers in the heterogeneous particle) that makes it possible to preserve a discrete character of any elementary transformations of heterogeneous particles and to describe them as elementary chemical reactions for the heterogeneous particles of all sizes. The comparison of the calculations with the experimental measurements of the induction time t, observable rate of soot particle growth, k f , and soot yield SY by the CW-laser extinction method in the pyrolysis of benzene=argon mixtures in shock-tube experiments clearly demonstrates that the coincidence is quantitatively good for all the main parameters of soot formation. A particular difference between the values of the mean soot particle radius r m experimentally measured by the time-resolved LII technique and calculated with the help of the detailed kinetic model is observed at the low and high temperatures. The results presented demonstrate the current level of the predictive capabilities of the detailed kinetic model of soot formation and the reliability of the time-resolved LII technique for the quantitative determination of the soot particle sizes.
Ultrathin titanium layers when deposited on the surface of gold can be successfully applied for infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) investigations. It was shown that the reflectivity, the phase shift, and the mean square electric field of the p- and s-polarized IR radiation in up to 20 nm thick titanium layers covered with a 3-4 nm thick layer of native oxide are comparable to those of the air/gold interface. The surface selection rule is fulfilled. Thus, qualitative and quantitative analysis of 1,2-dimyristoyl- sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) bilayers transferred in liquid expanded (LE) and liquid condensed (LC) states can be performed. Differences are found in the hydration state and molecular arrangement of the two investigated bilayers. In the DMPC bilayer in the LE state, the C-N bond in the positively charged choline moiety is inclined by approximately 70 degrees toward the surface of the negatively charged titanium substrate. In the phosphate moiety, the in-plane vector of the O-P-O group makes a small angle of approximately 15 degrees to the surface normal. This open structure of the lipid molecule corresponds to the B crystal structure of the DMPC molecule and provides space for strong hydration of the polar headgroup. In the DMPC bilayer in the LC state, the intermolecular distances are reduced; the C-N bond of the choline group makes a smaller angle to the surface normal, and the in-plane vector of the O-P-O group in the phosphate moiety displays a larger tilt. The degree of hydration is reduced. The arrangement of the polar headgroup region corresponds to the A crystal structure of the DMPC molecule.
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