16 results on '"Medda, L."'
Search Results
2. Heat-Driven Iontronic Nanotransistors.
- Author
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Prete D, Colosimo A, Demontis V, Medda L, Zannier V, Bellucci L, Tozzini V, Sorba L, Beltram F, Pisignano D, and Rossella F
- Abstract
Thermoelectric polyelectrolytes are emerging as ideal material platform for self-powered bio-compatible electronic devices and sensors. However, despite the nanoscale nature of the ionic thermodiffusion processes underlying thermoelectric efficiency boost in polyelectrolytes, to date no evidence for direct probing of ionic diffusion on its relevant length and time scale has been reported. This gap is bridged by developing heat-driven hybrid nanotransistors based on InAs nanowires embedded in thermally biased Na
+ -functionalized (poly)ethyleneoxide, where the semiconducting nanostructure acts as a nanoscale probe sensitive to the local arrangement of the ionic species. The impact of ionic thermoelectric gating on the nanodevice electrical response is addressed, investigating the effect of device architecture, bias configuration and frequency of the heat stimulus, and inferring optimal conditions for the heat-driven nanotransistor operation. Microscopic quantities of the polyelectrolyte such as the ionic diffusion coefficient are extracted from the analysis of hysteretic behaviors rising in the nanodevices. The reported experimental platform enables simultaneously the ionic thermodiffusion and nanoscale resolution, providing a framework for direct estimation of polyelectrolytes microscopic parameters. This may open new routes for heat-driven nanoelectronic applications and boost the rational design of next-generation polymer-based thermoelectric materials., (© 2023 The Authors. Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2023
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3. Adsorption of Malachite Green and Alizarin Red S Dyes Using Fe-BTC Metal Organic Framework as Adsorbent.
- Author
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Delpiano GR, Tocco D, Medda L, Magner E, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Algorithms, Hot Temperature, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Iron chemistry, Models, Chemical, Molecular Structure, Thermodynamics, Water chemistry, Water Pollutants, Chemical chemistry, Anthraquinones chemistry, Coloring Agents chemistry, Metal-Organic Frameworks chemistry, Rosaniline Dyes chemistry
- Abstract
Synthetic organic dyes are widely used in various industrial sectors but are also among the most harmful water pollutants. In the last decade, significant efforts have been made to develop improved materials for the removal of dyes from water, in particular, on nanostructured adsorbent materials. Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) are an attractive class of hybrid nanostructured materials with an extremely wide range of applications including adsorption. In the present work, an iron-based Fe-BTC MOF, prepared according to a rapid, aqueous-based procedure, was used as an adsorbent for the removal of alizarin red S (ARS) and malachite green (MG) dyes from water. The synthesized material was characterized in detail, while the adsorption of the dyes was monitored by UV-Vis spectroscopy. An optimal adsorption pH of 4, likely due to the establishment of favorable interactions between dyes and Fe-BTC, was found. At this pH and at a temperature of 298 K, adsorption equilibrium was reached in less than 30 min following a pseudo-second order kinetics, with k″ of 4.29 × 10
-3 and 3.98 × 10-2 g∙mg-1 min-1 for ARS and MG, respectively. The adsorption isotherm followed the Langmuir model with maximal adsorption capacities of 80 mg∙g-1 (ARS) and 177 mg∙g-1 (MG), and KL of 9.30·103 L∙mg-1 (ARS) and 51.56·103 L∙mg-1 (MG).- Published
- 2021
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4. Gold Nanoparticles: A Powerful Tool to Visualize Proteins on Ordered Mesoporous Silica and for the Realization of Theranostic Nanobioconjugates.
- Author
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Piludu M, Medda L, Monduzzi M, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Humans, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Particle Size, Porosity, Surface Properties, Theranostic Nanomedicine, Gold chemistry, Nanoconjugates chemistry, Proteins analysis, Silicon Dioxide chemistry
- Abstract
Ordered mesoporous silica (OMS) is a very interesting nanostructured material for the design and engineering of new target and controlled drug-delivery systems. Particularly relevant is the interaction between OMS and proteins. Large pores (6–9 nm) micrometric particles can be used for the realization of a drug depot system where therapeutic proteins are adsorbed either inside the mesopores or on the external surface. Small pores (1–2 nm) mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs), can be injected in the blood stream. In the latter case, therapeutic proteins are mainly adsorbed on the MSNs’ external surface. Whenever a protein-OMS conjugate is prepared, a diagnostic method to locate the protein either on the internal or the external silica surface is of utmost importance. To visualize the fine localization of proteins adsorbed in mesoporous silica micro- and nanoparticles, we have employed specific transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analytical strategies based on the use of gold nanoparticles (GNPs) conjugates. GNPs are gaining in popularity, representing a fundamental tool to design future applications of MSNs in nanomedicine by realizing theranostic nanobioconjugates. It may be pointed out that we are at the very beginning of a new age of the nanomaterial science: the “mesoporous golden age„.
- Published
- 2018
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5. Adsorption and release of ampicillin antibiotic from ordered mesoporous silica.
- Author
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Nairi V, Medda L, Monduzzi M, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Ampicillin analysis, Anti-Bacterial Agents analysis, Ampicillin chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Drug Liberation, Silicon Dioxide chemistry
- Abstract
In this work the adsorption and the release of ampicillin - a β-lactam penicillin-like antibiotic - from MCM-41, SBA-15, and (amino functionalized) SBA-15-NH
2 ordered mesoporous silica (OMS) materials were investigated. The silica matrices differ for their pore size (SBA-15 vs. MCM-41) mainly, and also for surface charge (SBA-15 and MCM-41, vs. SBA-15-NH2 ). OMS samples were characterized through small-angle X-rays scattering (SAXS), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), N2 adsorption-desorption isotherms, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and potentiometric titrations. The quantification of immobilized and released ampicillin was monitored by mean of UV-Vis spectroscopy. Experimental adsorption isotherms evidenced that ampicillin's loading is not related to the pore size (dBJH ) of the adsorbent. Indeed the maximal loadings were 237mg/g for SBA-15 (dBJH =6.5nm), 278mg/g for MCM-41 (dBJH =2.2nm), and 333mg/g for SBA-15-NH2 (dBJH =5.6nm). Loading seems, instead, to be related to the surface charge density (σ) of the sorbent surface. Indeed, at pH 7.4 ampicillin drug is negatively charged and likely prefers to interact with SBA-15-NH2 (σSBA-15-NH2 =+0.223Cm-2 ) rather than the slightly negatively charged silicas (σSBA-15 =-0.044Cm-2 and σMCM-41 =-0.033Cm-2 ). Similarly, ampicillin release is affected by interfacial interactions. Indeed, we found a burst release from pure silica samples (SBA-15 and MCM-41), whereas a sustained one from SBA-15-NH2 sample. We explain this behavior as a result of an attractive interaction between the protonated amino group of SBA-15-NH2 and the negatively charged carboxylate group of ampicillin. In summary, in order to obtain a sustained drug release, the chemical nature of the matrix's surface plays a role which is more important than its textural features. SBA-15-NH2 matrix is hence a suitable candidate for local sustained release of antibiotic drugs., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
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6. Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles Functionalized with Hyaluronic Acid and Chitosan Biopolymers. Effect of Functionalization on Cell Internalization.
- Author
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Salis A, Fanti M, Medda L, Nairi V, Cugia F, Piludu M, Sogos V, and Monduzzi M
- Abstract
Mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs), based on the MCM-41 matrix, were functionalized with amino groups, and then with hyaluronic acid (HA) or chitosan (CHIT) to fabricate bioactive conjugates. The role of the functional groups toward cytotoxicity and cellular uptake was investigated using 3T3 mouse fibroblast cells. A very high biocompatibility of MSN-NH
2 , MSN-HA and MSN-CHIT matrices was assessed through the MTS biological assay and Coulter counter evaluation. No significant differences in cytotoxicity data arise from the presence of different functional groups in the investigated MSNs. Fluorescence microscopy experiments performed using fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated MSN-NH2 , MSN-HA, and MSN-CHIT, and transmission electron microscopy experiments performed on slices of the investigated systems embedded in epoxy resins give evidence of significant differences due to type of functionalization in terms of cellular uptake and stability of the particles in the biological medium. MSN-NH2 and MSN-HA conjugates are easily internalized, the uptake of the HA-functionalized MSNs being much higher than that of the -NH2 -functionalized MSNs. Differently, MSN-CHIT conjugates tend to give large aggregates dispersed in the medium or localized at the external surface of the cell membranes. Both fluorescence microscopy and TEM images show that the MSNs are distributed in the cytoplasm of the cells in the case of MSN-NH2 and MSN-HA, whereas only a few particles are internalized in the case of MSN-CHIT. Flow cytometry experiments confirmed quantitatively the selectively high cellular uptake of MSN-HA particles.- Published
- 2016
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7. Effect of electrolytes on proteins physisorption on ordered mesoporous silica materials.
- Author
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Salis A, Medda L, Cugia F, and Monduzzi M
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Porosity, Electrolytes chemistry, Proteins chemistry, Silicon Dioxide chemistry
- Abstract
This short review highlights the effect of electrolytes on the performance of proteins-mesoporous silica conjugates which can open interesting perspectives in biotechnological fields, particularly nanomedicine and biocatalysis. Indeed therapeutic proteins and peptides represent a challenging innovation for several kinds of diseases, but since their self-life in biological fluids is very short, they need a stealth protective carrier. Similarly, enzymes need a solid support to improve thermal stability and to allow for recycling. Ordered mesoporous silica materials represent a valid choice as widely demonstrated. Both proteins and silica mesoporous materials possess charged surfaces, and here, the crucial role of pH, buffer, ionic strength and electrolyte type is posed in relation with loading/release of proteins onto/from the silica support through the analysis of adsorption and release processes. A delicate interplay of electrostatic and van der Waals interactions arises from considering electrolytes' effects on the two different charged surfaces. Clear outcomes concern the effect of pH and ionic strength. Protein loading onto the silica matrix is favored by an adsorbing solution having a pH close to the protein pI, and by a high ionic strength that reduces the Debye length. Release is instead favored by an adsorbing solution characterized by an intermediate ionic strength, close to the physiological values. Significant specific ions effects are shown to affect both proteins and silica matrices, as well as protein adsorption onto silica matrices. Further work is needed to quantify specific ion effects on the preservation of the biological activity, and on the release performance., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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8. Silver Enhancement for Transmission Electron Microscopy Imaging of Antibody Fragment-Gold Nanoparticles Conjugates Immobilized on Ordered Mesoporous Silica.
- Author
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Piludu M, Medda L, Cugia F, Monduzzi M, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Particle Size, Porosity, Surface Properties, Antibodies chemistry, Gold chemistry, Metal Nanoparticles chemistry, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission methods, Silicon Dioxide chemistry, Silver chemistry
- Abstract
Ordered mesoporous silica (OMS) materials are receiving great attention as possible carriers for valuable but unstable drugs as, for example, therapeutic proteins. A key issue is to prove that the therapeutic protein is effectively able to penetrate the pores of OMS during the adsorption step. Here, we immobilized an antibody fragment [F(ab')GAMIgG] conjugated with ultrasmall gold nanoparticles (GNPs) onto amino-functionalized SBA-15 (SBA-NH2) mesoporous silica. The aim of this work is the visualization of the location of the conjugates adsorbed onto SBA-NH2 with transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Because of the ultrasmall size of GNPs (<1 nm), we use the silver enhancement procedure to amplify their size. In this procedure, ultrathin sections of conjugate-loaded SBA-NH2 particles are prepared by a ultramicrotome sectioning technique. The ultrasmall GNPs located on the top side of the 70-90 nm thick slices act as microcrystallization nucleation sites for the deposition of reduced metallic silver. Consequently, the ultrasmall GNPs increase their size. This allows for the direct imaging of the conjugates adsorbed. We clearly localize the F(ab')GAMIgG-GNPs conjugates either on the external surface of the particles or inside the mesopores of SBA-NH2 through TEM.
- Published
- 2015
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9. The molecular motion of bovine serum albumin under physiological conditions is ion specific.
- Author
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Medda L, Monduzzi M, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Diffusion drug effects, Models, Molecular, Protein Conformation, Serum Albumin, Bovine chemistry, Thermodynamics, Movement drug effects, Salts pharmacology, Serum Albumin, Bovine metabolism
- Abstract
Specific ion effects on the Brownian molecular motion of BSA protein under physiological conditions are investigated. New useful insights into Hofmeister phenomena related to electrolyte-protein interactions are presented.
- Published
- 2015
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10. Adsorption of lysozyme on hyaluronic acid functionalized SBA-15 mesoporous silica: a possible bioadhesive depot system.
- Author
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Medda L, Casula MF, Monduzzi M, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Adhesiveness, Adsorption, Animals, Kinetics, Models, Molecular, Nitrogen chemistry, Porosity, Protein Conformation, Silanes chemistry, Surface Properties, Hyaluronic Acid chemistry, Muramidase chemistry, Silicon Dioxide chemistry
- Abstract
Silica-based ordered mesoporous materials are very attractive matrices to prepare smart depot systems for several kinds of therapeutic agents. This work focuses on the well-known SBA-15 mesoporous silica and lysozyme, an antimicrobial protein. In order to improve the bioadhesion properties of SBA-15 particles, the effect of hyaluronic acid (HA) functionalization on lysozyme adsorption was investigated. SBA-15 samples having high (H-SBA) and low (L-SBA) levels of functionalization were analyzed during the three steps of the preparations: (1) introduction of the -NH2 groups to obtain the SBA-NH2 samples; (2) functionalization with HA to obtain the SBA-HA matrices; (3) adsorption of lysozyme. All silica matrices were characterized through N2-adsorption/desorption isotherms, small-angle X-ray scattering, transmission electron microscopy, thermogravimetric analysis, and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The whole of the experimental data suggests that a high level of functionalization of the silica surface allows for a negligible lysozyme adsorption mainly due to unfavorable electrostatic interactions (H-SBA-NH2) or steric hindrance (H-SBA-HA). A low degree of functionalization of the silica surface brings about a very good performance toward lysozyme adsorption, being 71% (L-SBA-NH2) and 63% (L-SBA-HA) respectively, compared to that observed for original SBA-15. Finally, two different kinetic models--a "pseudo-second order" and a "intraparticle diffusion"--were compared to fit lysozyme adsorption data, the latter being more reliable than the former.
- Published
- 2014
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11. Specific cation effects on hemoglobin aggregation below and at physiological salt concentration.
- Author
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Medda L, Carucci C, Parsons DF, Ninham BW, Monduzzi M, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Cesium chemistry, Potassium chemistry, Sodium chemistry, Cations chemistry, Hemoglobins chemistry, Salts chemistry
- Abstract
Turbidity titrations are used to study the ion specific aggregation of hemoglobin (Hb) below and physiological salt concentration in the pH range 4.5-9.5. At a salt concentration 50 mM cations promote Hb aggregation according to the order Rb(+) > K(+) ~ Na(+) > Cs(+) > Li(+). The cation series changes if concentration is increased, becoming K(+) > Rb(+) > Na(+) > Li(+) > Cs(+) at 150 mM. We interpret the puzzling series by assuming that the kosmotropic Li(+) will bind to kosmotropic carboxylates groups-according to the law of matching water affinities (LMWA)-whereas the chaotropic Cs(+) will bind to uncharged protein patches due to its high polarizability. In fact, both mechanisms can be rationalized by invoking previously neglected ionic nonelectrostatic forces. This explains both adsorption to uncharged patches and the LMWA as a consequence of the simultaneous action of electrostatic and dispersion forces. The same interpretation applies to anions (with chaotropic anions binding to chaotropic amine groups). The implications extend beyond hemoglobin to other, still unexplained, ion specific effects in biological systems.
- Published
- 2013
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12. Hofmeister challenges: ion binding and charge of the BSA protein as explicit examples.
- Author
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Medda L, Barse B, Cugia F, Boström M, Parsons DF, Ninham BW, Monduzzi M, and Salis A
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Electrophoresis, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Ions metabolism, Light, Models, Molecular, Potentiometry, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Salts chemistry, Salts metabolism, Scattering, Radiation, Sodium chemistry, Sodium metabolism, Serum Albumin, Bovine chemistry, Serum Albumin, Bovine metabolism
- Abstract
Experiments on bovine serum albumin (BSA) via potentiometric titration (PT) and electrophoretic light scattering (ELS) are used to study specific-ion binding. The effect is appreciable at a physiological concentration of 0.1 M. We found that anions bind to the protein surface at an acidic pH, where the protein carries a positive charge (Z(p) > 0), according to a Hofmeister series (Cl(-) < Br(-) < NO(3)(-) < I(-) < SCN(-)), as well as at the isoionic point (Z(p) = 0). The results obtained require critical interpretation. The measurements performed depend on electrostatic theories that ignore the very specific effects they are supposed to reveal. Notwithstanding this difficulty, we can still infer that different 1:1 sodium salts affect the BSA surface charge/pH curve because anions bind to the BSA surface with an efficiency which follows a Hofmeister series.
- Published
- 2012
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13. Specific ion effects on the electrochemical properties of cytochrome c.
- Author
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Medda L, Salis A, and Magner E
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- Animals, Ions, Models, Molecular, Osmolar Concentration, Static Electricity, Cytochromes c chemistry, Electrochemistry methods
- Abstract
The range of salts used as supporting electrolytes in electrochemical studies of redox proteins and enzymes varies widely, with the choice of an electrolyte relying on the assumption that the electrolyte used does not affect the electrochemical properties of the proteins and enzymes under investigation. Examination of the electrochemical properties of the redox protein cytochrome c (cyt c) at a 4,4'-bipyridyl modified gold electrode demonstrates that both the redox potential (E(o')) and the faradaic current are influenced by the nature of the electrolyte used, in a manner explained primarily by Hofmeister effects. The faradaic peak currents display an atypical trend on switching from kosmotropic to chaotropic anions, with a maximum current observed in the presence of Cl(-). For a series of cations, the peak current increased in the sequence: Li(+) (0.34 μA) < guanidinium(+) (0.36 μA) < Na(+) (0.37 μA) < K(+) (0.38 μA) < Cs(+) (0.40 μA) and for anions it decreased in the sequence: Cl(-) (0.37 μA) > Br(-) (0.35 μA) > ClO(4)(-) (0.35 μA) > SCN(-) (0.31 μA) > F(-) (0.30 μA). E(o') decreased by a total of 24 mV across the series F(-) > Cl(-) > Br(-) > ClO(4)(-) > SCN(-) whereas no specific ion effect on E(o') was observed for cations. Factorisation of E(o') into its enthalpic and entropic components showed that while no specific trends were observed, large changes in ΔH(o') and ΔS(o') occurred with individual ions. The effect of anions on the faradaic peak current can be qualitatively explained by considering Collins' empirical rule of 'matching water affinities'. The effect of cations cannot be explained by this rule. However, both anion and cation effects can be understood by taking into account the cooperative action of electrostatic and ion dispersion forces. The results demonstrate that the choice of a supporting electrolyte in electrochemical investigations of redox proteins is important and emphasize that care needs to be taken in the determination and comparison of E(o'), ΔH(o') and ΔS(o') in different solutions.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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14. Measurements and theoretical interpretation of points of zero charge/potential of BSA protein.
- Author
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Salis A, Boström M, Medda L, Cugia F, Barse B, Parsons DF, Ninham BW, and Monduzzi M
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Isoelectric Point, Osmolar Concentration, Sodium Chloride chemistry, Models, Theoretical, Potentiometry methods, Serum Albumin, Bovine chemistry
- Abstract
The points of zero charge/potential of proteins depend not only on pH but also on how they are measured. They depend also on background salt solution type and concentration. The protein isoelectric point (IEP) is determined by electrokinetical measurements, whereas the isoionic point (IIP) is determined by potentiometric titrations. Here we use potentiometric titration and zeta potential (ζ) measurements at different NaCl concentrations to study systematically the effect of ionic strength on the IEP and IIP of bovine serum albumin (BSA) aqueous solutions. It is found that high ionic strengths produce a shift of both points toward lower (IEP) and higher (IIP) pH values. This result was already reported more than 60 years ago. At that time, the only available theory was the purely electrostatic Debye-Hückel theory. It was not able to predict the opposite trends of IIP and IEP with ionic strength increase. Here, we extend that theory to admit both electrostatic and nonelectrostatic (NES) dispersion interactions. The use of a modified Poisson-Boltzmann equation for a simple model system (a charge regulated spherical colloidal particle in NaCl salt solutions), that includes these ion specific interactions, allows us to explain the opposite trends observed for isoelectric point (zero zeta potential) and isoionic point (zero protein charge) of BSA. At higher concentrations, an excess of the anion (with stronger NES interactions than the cation) is adsorbed at the surface due to an attractive ionic NES potential. This makes the potential relatively more negative. Consequently, the IEP is pushed toward lower pH. But the charge regulation condition means that the surface charge becomes relatively more positive as the surface potential becomes more negative. Consequently, the IIP (measuring charge) shifts toward higher pH as concentration increases, in the opposite direction from the IEP (measuring potential)., (© 2011 American Chemical Society)
- Published
- 2011
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15. Ion specific surface charge density of SBA-15 mesoporous silica.
- Author
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Salis A, Parsons DF, Boström M, Medda L, Barse B, Ninham BW, and Monduzzi M
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Ions chemistry, Porosity, Potentiometry, Quantum Theory, Salts chemistry, Surface Properties, Silicon Dioxide chemistry
- Abstract
Potentiometric titrations were used to estimate the surface charge density of SBA-15 mesoporous silica in different salt solutions. It was found that surface charge depends both on cation type, following a Hofmeister series (Cs(+) < Guanidinium(+) < K(+) < Na(+) < Li(+)), and on salt concentration (in the range 0.05-1 M). The surface charge series is reproduced by theoretical calculations performed using a modified Poisson-Boltzmann equation that includes ionic dispersion forces with ab initio ion polarizabilities and hydrated ions. The hydration model assigns an explicit hydration shell to kosmotropic (strong hydrated) ions only. The Hofmeister series appears to be due to the combination of ion-surface dispersion interactions and ion hydration.
- Published
- 2010
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16. Selective inhibition of serotonin uptake by trazodone, a new antidepressant agent.
- Author
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Stefanini E, Fadda F, Medda L, and Gessa GL
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Transport drug effects, Brain ultrastructure, Brain Stem drug effects, Cerebral Cortex drug effects, Clomipramine pharmacology, Corpus Striatum drug effects, Kinetics, Male, Rats, Synaptosomes drug effects, Synaptosomes metabolism, Brain drug effects, Dopamine metabolism, Norepinephrine metabolism, Piperazines pharmacology, Serotonin metabolism, Trazodone pharmacology
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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