23 results on '"Frant, M"'
Search Results
2. Evidence That the Reactivity of the Martian Soil Is Due to Superoxide Ions
- Author
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Yen, A. S., Kim, S. S., Hecht, M. H., Frant, M. S., and Murray, B.
- Published
- 2000
3. Evidence that the reactivity of the martian soil is due to superoxide ions
- Author
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Murray, B, Frant, M, Hecht, M, Kim, S, and Yen, A
- Abstract
The Viking Landers were unable to detect evidence of Life on Mars but, instead, found a chemically reactive soil capable of decomposing organic molecules.
- Published
- 2000
4. Evidence that the reactivity of the martian soil is due to superoxide ions
- Author
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Yen, A, Kim, S, Hecht, M, Frant, M, and Murray, B
- Published
- 2000
5. The MECA Payload as an Exobiology Laboratory on the MSP 2001 Lander
- Author
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Marshall, J, Anderson, M, Buehler, M, Frant, M, Fuerstenau, S, Hecht, M, Keller, U, Markiewicz, W, Meloy, T, and Pike, T
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The "Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment" (MECA) payload for Mars Surveyor Project 2001 (MSP 2001) is comprised of a multifunctional laboratory equipped to assess martian soil properties with wet chemistry, camera imagery, optical microscopy (potentially with UV fluorescence capability), atomic force microscopy (AFM; potentially with mineral-discrimination capabilities), electrometry, active & passive external materials-test panels, mineral hardness testing, and electrostatic and magnetic materials testing. Additionally, evaluation of soil chemical and physical properties as a function of depth down to -50 cm will be facilitated by the Lander/MECA robot arm on which the camera (RAC) and electrometer are mounted. MECA was designed as a NASA Human Exploration and Development of Space (HEDS) payload for determining the properties of martian soil that may be detrimental to human exploration. It is, however, well equipped to address exobiology questions in the following areas: (1)Geochemical clues to Aqueous Mineralogy and Oxidant formation; (2) Soil structures and microfabrics as indicators of water-volatiles migration; (3) Minerals and rocks as clues to ancient hydrology; (4) Grain textures as indicators of aqueous activity and weathering. Additional information is contained in the original.
- Published
- 1999
6. Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA): Identifying the Hazards of the Martian Soil
- Author
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Meloy, T. P, Hecht, M. H, Anderson, M. S, Frant, M. A, Fuerstenau, S. D, Keller, H. U, Markiewicz, W. J, Marshall, J, Pike, W. T, and Quate, C. F
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
Sometime in the next decade NASA will decide whether to send a human expedition to explore the planet Mars. The Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA) has been selected by NASA to evaluate the Martian environment for soil and dust hazards to human exploration. The integrated MECA payload contains three elements: a wet-chemistry laboratory, a microscopy station, and enhancements to a lander robot-arm system incorporating arrays of material patches and an electrometer to identify triboelectric charging during soil excavation. The wet-chemistry laboratory will evaluate samples of Martian soil in water to determine the total dissolved solids, redox potential, pH, and quantify the concentration of many soluble ions using ion-selective electrodes. These electrodes can detect potentially dangerous heavy-metal ions, emitted pathogenic gases, and the soil's corrosive potential. MECA's microscopy station combines optical and atomic-force microscopy with a robot-arm camera to provide imaging over nine orders of magnitude, from meters to nanometers. Soil particle properties including size, shape, color, hardness, adhesive potential (electrostatic and magnetic), will be determined on the microscope stage using an ar-ray of sample receptacles and collection substrates, and an abrasion tool,. The simple, rugged atomic-force microscope will image in the submicron size range and has the capability of performing a particle-by-particle analysis of the dust and soil. Although selected by NASA's Human Exploration and Development of Space Enterprise, the MECA instrument suite also has the capability to address basic geology, paleoclimate, and exobiology issues. To understand both contemporaneous and ancient processes on Mars, the mineralogical, petrological, and reactivity of Martian surface materials should be constrained: the NMCA experiment will shed light on these quantities through its combination of chemistry and microscopy. On Earth, the earliest forms of life are preserved as microfossils. The atomic-force microscope will have the required resolution to image down to the scale of terrestrial microfossils and beyond.
- Published
- 1999
7. The MECA Payload as a Dust Analysis Laboratory on the MSP 2001 Lander
- Author
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Marshall, J, Anderson, M, Buehler, M, Frant, M, Fuerstenau, S, Hecht, M, Keller, U, Markiewicz, W, Meloy, T, and Pike, T
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
In a companion abstract, the "Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment" (MECA) payload for Mars Surveyor Program 2001 (MSP 2001) is described in terms of its capabilities for addressing exobiology on Mars. Here we describe how the same payload elements perform in terms of gathering data about surface dust on the planet. An understanding of the origin and properties of dust is important to both human exploration and planetary geology. The MECA instrument is specifically designed for soil/dust investigations: it is a multifunctional laboratory equipped to assess particulate properties with wet chemistry, camera imagery, optical microscopy (potentially with LTV fluorescence capability), atomic force microscopy (AFM; potentially with mineral-discrimination capabilities), electrometry, active & passive external materials-test panels, mineral hardness testing, and electrostatic & magnetic materials testing. Additionally, evaluation of soil chemical and physical properties as a function of depth down to about 50 cm will be facilitated by the Lander/MECA robot arm on which the camera (RAC) and electrometer are mounted. Types of data being sought for the dust include: (1) general textural and grain-size characterization of the soil as a whole --for example, is the soil essentially dust with other components or is it a clast-supported material in which dust resides only in the clast interstices, (2) size frequency distribution for dust particles in the range 0.01 to 10.00 microns, (3) particle-shape distribution of the soil components and of the fine dust fraction in particular, (4) soil fabric such as grain clustering into clods, aggregates, and cemented/indurated grain amalgamations, as well as related porosity, cohesiveness, and other mechanical soil properties, (5) cohesive relationship that dust has to certain types of rocks and minerals as a clue to which soil materials may be prime hosts for dust "piggybacking", (6) particle, aggregate, and bulk soil electrostatic properties, (7) particle hardness, (8) particle magnetic properties, (9) bulk dust geochemistry (solubility, reactivity, ionic and mineral species). All of these quantities are needed in order for the human exploration program to make assessments of hazards on Mars, and to better enable the production on earth, of soil/dust simulants that can act as realistic test materials in terms of those properties that render dust a contaminant.Such properties include the small grain size that enables penetration of space-suit joints, mechanical interfaces and bearings, seals, etc., and presents difficulty for filtration systems. Size also plays a critical role in the potential for lung disease in long-term habitats. The properties of grain shape and hardness are important parameters in determining the abrasiveness of dust as it enters mechanical systems, or bombards helmet visors and habitat windows in dust-laden winds. Adhesive electrostatic and magnetic properties of dust will be prime causes of contamination of space suits and equipment. Contamination causes mechanical malfunction, tracking of dirt into habitats, "piggybacking" of toxins on dust into habitats, changes in albedo and efficiency of solar arrays and heat exchangers, and changes in electrical conductivity of suit surfaces and other materials that may have specific safety requirements regarding electrical conductivity. Other potentially hazardous properties of dust include the possibility of high solubility of some component grains (rendering them reactive), and toxicity of some materials --grains of superoxidants and heavy metals (there is always the slim, but not inconceivable possibility of biogenic components such as spores). Because Mars has no active surface aqueous regime, volcanic emissions, meteoritic debris, weathering products, and photochemical products of Mars have nowhere to go except reside in the surface; there are few mechanical or chemical (buffering) processes to remove the accumulation of eons. From a planetology perspective, there are many enigmatic issues relating to dust and the aeolian regime in general. MECA will be able to address many questions in this area. For example, if MECA determines a particular particle size distribution (size and sorting values), it will be possible to make inferences about the origin of the dust - - is it all aeolian, or a more primitive residue of weathering, volcanic emissions, and meteoritic gardening? Trenching with the Lander/MECA robot arm will enable local stratigraphy to be determined in terms of depositional rates, amounts and cyclicity in dust storms and/or local aeolian transport. Grain shape will betray the origin of the dust fragments as being the product of recent or ancient weathering, or the comminution products of aeolian transport --the dust-silt ratio might be a measure of aeolian comminution energy. Additional information is contained in the original.
- Published
- 1999
8. The MSP 2001 Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA)
- Author
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Hecht, M. H, Meloy, T. P, Anderson, M. S, Buehler, M. G, Frant, M. A, Grannan, S. M, Fuerstenau, D, Keller, H. U, Markiewicz, W. J, and Marshall, J
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA) will evaluate the Martian environment for soil and dust-related hazards to human exploration as part of the Mars Surveyor Program 2001 Lander. Sponsored by the Human Exploration and Development of Space (HEDS) enterprise, MECA's goal is to evaluate potential geochemical and environmental hazards that may confront future Martian explorers, and to guide HEDS scientists in the development of high fidelity Mars soil simulants. The integrated MECA payload contains a wet-chemistry laboratory, a microscopy station, an electrometer to characterize the electrostatics of the soil and its environment, and arrays of material patches to study the abrasive and adhesive properties of soil grains. The instrument will acquire soil samples with a robotic arm equipped with a camera. MECA will examine surface and subsurface soil and dust in order to characterize particle size, shape, hardness, and also physical characteristics that may provide clues to mineralogy. MECA will characterize soil/water mixtures with respect to pH, redox potential, total dissolved ions, and trace toxins. MECA will determine the nature of electrostatic charging associated with excavation of soil, and the influence of ionizing radiation on material properties. It will also observe natural dust accumulation on engineering materials. To accomplish these objectives, MECA is allocated a mass of 10 kg within an enclosure of 35 x 25 x 15 cm. The Wet Chemistry Laboratory (WCL) consists of four identical cells that will accept samples from surface and subsurface regions accessible to the Lander's robotic arm, mix them with water, and perform extensive analysis of the solution. Ion-selective electrodes and related sensors will evaluate total dissolved solids, redox potential, pH, and the concentration of many soluble ions and gases in wet Martian soil. These electrodes can detect potentially dangerous heavy-metal ions, emitted pathogenic gases, and the soil's corrosive potential. Experiments will include cyclic voltammetry and anodic stripping voltammetry. Complementary to the Viking experiments, the chemical laboratory will characterize the water-soil solution rather than emitted gases. Nonetheless, through analysis of dissolved gases it will be able to replicate many of the Viking observations related to oxidants. MECA's microscopy station combines optical and atomic-force microscopy (AFM) in an actively focused, controlled illumination environment to image particles from millimeters to nanometers in size. Careful selection of substrates allows controlled experiments in adhesion, abrasion, hardness, aggregation, magnetic and other properties. Special tools allow primitive manipulation (brushing and scraping) of samples. Soil particle properties including size, shape, color, hardness, adhesive potential (electrostatic and magnetic), will be determined using an array of sample receptacles and collection substrates. The simple, rugged atomic-force microscope will image in the submicron size range and has the capability of performing a particle-by-particle analysis of the dust and soil. On Earth, the earliest forms of life are preserved as microfossils. The atomic-force microscope will have the required resolution to image down to the scale of terrestrial microfossils and beyond. Mounted on the end of the robot arm, MECA's electrometer actually consists of four types of sensors: an electric field meter, several triboelectricity monitors, an ion gauge, and a thermometer. Tempered only by ultraviolet-light-induced ions and a low-voltage breakdown threshold, the dry, cold, dusty martian environment presents an imposing electrostatic hazard to both robots and humans. The field meter will measure the ambient field on nearby objects while the triboelectric sensors, using identical circuitry, will measure the charge accumulated on test substances as they are dragged through the soil by the arm. The ion chamber, open to the environment, will sense both charged dust and free ions in the air. Over and above the potential threat to electronics, the electrostatic environment holds one of the keys to transport of dust and, consequently, Martian meteorology. Viewed with the robot arm camera, the abrasion and adhesion plates are strategically placed to allow direct observation of the interaction between materials and soils on a macroscopic scale. Materials of graded hardness are placed directly under the robot arm scoop to sense wear and soil hardness. A second array, placed on the lander deck, is deployed after the dust plume of landing has settled. It can be manipulated in a primitive fashion by the arm, first having dirt deposited on it from the scoop and subsequently shaken clean. A third array will passively collect dust from the atmosphere. In addition to objectives related to human exploration, the MECA data set will be rich in information relevant to basic geology, paleoclimate, and exobiology issues. To understand both contemporaneous and ancient processes on Mars, the mineralogy, petrology, and reactivity of Martian surface materials should be constrained. The MECA experiment will shed light on these quantities through its combination of chemistry and microscopy. MECA will be capable of measuring the composition of ancient surface water environments, observing microscopic evidence of geological (and biological?) processes, inferring soil and dust transport, comminution and weathering mechanisms, and characterizing soil horizons that might be encountered during excavation.
- Published
- 1999
9. Soil Analysis Micro-Mission Concepts Derived from the MSP 2001 Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA)
- Author
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Hecht, M. H, Meloy, T. P, Anderson, M. S, Buehler, M. G, Frant, M. A, Grannan, S. M, Fuerstenau, S. D, Keller, H. U, Markiewicz, W. J, and Marshall, J
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA) will evaluate the Martian environment for soil and dust-related hazards to human exploration as part of the Mars Surveyor Program 2001 Lander. The integrated MECA payload contains a wet-chemistry laboratory, a microscopy station, an electrometer to characterize the electrostatic environment, and arrays of material patches to study abrasion and adhesion. Heritage will be all-important for low cost micro-missions, and adaptations of instruments developed for the Pathfinder, '98 and '01 Landers should be strong contenders for '03 flights. This talk has three objectives: (1) Familiarize the audience with MECA instrument capabilities; (2) present concepts for stand-alone and/or mobile versions of MECA instruments; and (3) broaden the context of the MECA instruments from human exploration to a comprehensive scientific survey of Mars. Due to time limitations, emphasis will be on the chemistry and microscopy experiments. Ion-selective electrodes and related sensors in MECA's wet-chemistry laboratory will evaluate total dissolved solids, redox potential, pH, and the concentration of many soluble ions and gases in wet Martian soil. These electrodes can detect potentially dangerous heavy-metal ions, emitted pathogenic gases, and the soil's corrosive potential, and experiments will include cyclic voltammetry and anodic stripping. For experiments beyond 2001, enhancements could allow multiple use of the cells (for mobile experiments) and reagent addition (for quantitative mineralogical and exobiological analysis). MECA's microscopy station combines optical and atomic-force microscopy (AFM) in an actively focused, controlled illumination environment to image particles from millimeters to nanometers in size. Careful selection of substrates allows controlled experiments in adhesion, abrasion, hardness, aggregation, magnetic and other properties. Special tools allow primitive manipulation (brushing and scraping) of samples. Soil particle properties including size, shape, color, hardness, adhesive potential (electrostatic and magnetic), will be determined using an array of sample receptacles and collection substrates. The simple, rugged atomic-force microscope will image in the submicron size range and has the capability of performing a particle-by-particle analysis of the dust and soil. Future implementations might enhance the optical microscopy with spectroscopy, or incorporate advanced AFM techniques for thermogravimetric and chemical analysis.
- Published
- 1999
10. The Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA) Wet Chemistry Experiment on the Mars 2001 Lander
- Author
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Grannan, S. M, Meloy, T. P, Hecht, H, Anderson, M. S, Buehler, M, Frant, M, Kounaves, S. P, Manatt, K. S, Pike, W. T, and Schubert, W
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
The Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA) is an instrument suite that will fly on the Mars Surveyor 2001 Lander Spacecraft. MECA is sponsored by the Human Exploration and Development of Space (HEDS) program and will evaluate potential hazards that the dust and soil of Mars might present to astronauts and their equipment on a future human mission to Mars. Four elements constitute the integrated MECA payload: a microscopy station, patch plates, an electrometer, and the wet chemistry experiment (WCE). The WCE is the first application of electrochemical sensors to study soil chemistry on another planetary body, in addition to being the first measurement of soil/water solution properties on Mars. The chemical composition and properties of the watersoluble materials present in the Martian soil are of considerable interest to the planetary science community because characteristic salts are formed by the water-based weathering of rocks, the action of volcanic gases, and biological activity. Thus the characterization of water-soluble soil materials on Mars can provide information on the geochemical history of the planet surface. Additional information is contained in the original extended abstract.
- Published
- 1999
11. Soil Analysis Micro-mission Concepts Derived from the MSP '01 Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA)
- Author
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Smith, P, Schubert, W, Pike, W, Marshall, J, Markiewicz, W, Keller, H, Fuerstenau, S, Grannan, S, Frant, M, Buehler, M, Anderson, M, Meloy, T, and Hecht, M
- Abstract
UNKNOWN
- Published
- 1999
12. Soil Analysis Micro-mission Concepts Derived from the MSP '01 Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment (MECA)
- Author
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Hecht, M, Meloy, T, Anderson, M, Buehler, M, Frant, M, Grannan, S, Fuerstenau, S, Keller, H, Markiewicz, W, Marshall, J, Pike, W, Schubert, W, and Smith, P
- Published
- 1999
13. Mars Enviromental Compatibility Assessment (MECA) - Identifying the Hazards of the Martian Soil
- Author
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Pike, W, Meloy, T, Hecht, M, Anderson, M, Frant, M, Fuerstenau, S, Keller, H, Markiewicz, W, Marshall, J, Quate, C, Rademacher, J, Shellman, M, Schubert, W, and Smith, P
- Published
- 1998
14. Mars Enviromental Compatibility Assessment (MECA) - Identifying the Hazards of the Martian Soil
- Author
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Smith, P, Schubert, W, Shellman, M, Rademacher, J, Quate, C, Marshall, J, Markiewicz, W, Keller, H, Fuerstenau, S, Frant, M, Anderson, M, Hecht, M, Meloy, T, and Pike, W
- Abstract
UNKNOWN
- Published
- 1998
15. O ROK NAROZENÍ HUSOVA
- Author
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Bartoš, Frant. M.
- Published
- 1965
16. Potassium Ion Specific Electrode with High Selectivity for Potassium over Sodium
- Author
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Frant, M. S. and Ross,, J. W.
- Published
- 1970
17. Carbon scrubber
- Author
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Frant, M. S
- Subjects
Materials - Abstract
Inorganic carbon is removed from samples to be analyzed for "total organic carbon". In automated water analysis systems, semipermeable membrane separates two sample streams, one treated with acid, other with base. Carbonate and bicarbonated ions are converted to dissolved CO2 by acid; reverse process occurs in basic stream. Only CO2 is passed by membrane, from acid treated stream to base treated stream. Acidic stream emerges free of all inorganic carbon.
- Published
- 1981
18. Meter for very slow flows
- Author
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Baxter, W. J., Jr, Frant, M. S, and West, S. J
- Subjects
Machinery - Abstract
Solid-state sensing unit developed for use with NASA's Water-Quality Monitoring System can detect small velocity changes in slow moving fluid. Nonprotruding sensor is applicable to numerous other uses requiring sensitive measurement of slow flows.
- Published
- 1978
19. The effect of positively charged plasma polymerization on initial osteoblastic focal adhesion on titanium surfaces
- Author
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FINKE, B, primary, LUETHEN, F, additional, SCHROEDER, K, additional, MUELLER, P, additional, BERGEMANN, C, additional, FRANT, M, additional, OHL, A, additional, and NEBE, B, additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Chemopreventive activity of bioactive fungal fractions isolated from milk-supplemented cultures of Cerrena unicolorand Pycnoporus sanguineuson colon cancer cells
- Author
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Piet, Mateusz, Zajac, A., Paduch, R., Jaszek, M., Frant, M., Stefaniuk, D., Matuszewska, A., and Grzywnowicz, K.
- Abstract
The biochemical properties and anti-tumorigenic activity of Cerrena unicolor(CU) and Pycnoporus sanguineus(PS) towards colon cancer cells and the effect of supplementation of the fungal culture medium with cow milk on these activities were examined. CU1-II and PS4-II exhibited anticancer properties through various mechanisms. The extracts at the 200 µg/mL concentration significantly decreased the viability of HT-29 and SW948 cells. They also exhibited pro-apoptotic properties towards the cancer cell lines (HT-29, LS 180, and SW948). Furthermore, culturing the studied fungi on milk-supplemented media may improve the pro-health properties of both milk and mushrooms. The extracts had a higher concentration of proteins, lower levels of free amino acids, and higher content of phenolic compounds than milk. They also exerted a free radical scavenging effect, which may be connected with the high activity of catalase and superoxide dismutase. The tested extracts exhibited anticancer activity: C. unicolorgrown on the medium without milk and P. sanguineusgrown on the medium with milk. The CU1-II and PS4-II extracts exhibited the strongest anticancer properties; however, PS4-II exerted a milder effect on normal CCD 841 CoTr cells than CU1-II. CU3-II exerted the mildest effect among all extracts on both normal and cancer cells.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Corrosion of Pure Aluminum and Tin in Salt Spray
- Author
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FRANT, M. S., primary
- Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Effect of Traces of Large Molecules Containing Nitrogen on Hydrogen Overvoltage
- Author
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Juda, W., primary, Frant, M. S., additional, and Kramer, D. N., additional
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Surface functionalized titanium thin films: zeta-potential, protein adsorption and cell proliferation.
- Author
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Cai K, Frant M, Bossert J, Hildebrand G, Liefeith K, and Jandt KD
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Cell Survival, Cells, Cultured, Electrochemistry, Fibrinogen chemistry, Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Nanostructures chemistry, Osteoblasts chemistry, Surface Properties, Cell Proliferation, Proteins chemistry, Titanium chemistry
- Abstract
The relationship between electric charge at a material surface and protein adsorption is essential to understand the mechanism of biological integration of materials with tissues. This study investigated the influence of titanium thin films' surface chemistry and surface electric charge (zeta-potential) properties on protein adsorption and cell proliferation. Titanium thin films were surface functionalized with different functional end groups, such as -CH=CH2, -NH2 and -COOH groups in order to produce surfaces with a variety of electric charge properties. The chemical compositions, electric charges and wettability were investigated by using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), zeta-potential measurements and water contact angle measurements, respectively. XPS revealed the surface functionalization of titanium films with -CH=CH2, -NH2, and -COOH groups, which were converted from -CH=CH2 groups. Ti-COOH samples showed the lowest water contact angles and zeta-potential compared to all other samples investigated in this study. NH2-terminated titanium films displayed intermediate contact angles of 70.3+/-2.5 degrees . Fibrinogen adsorption on titanium films and surface functionalized titanium films were investigated in this study. Ti-COOH samples displayed a lower protein adsorption than all other groups, such as NH2-, -CH=CH2-terminated titanium thin films. A tendency that the lower zeta-potential of the samples, the lower the protein adsorption at their surfaces was observed. In vitro cell proliferation tests were also performed on the different surface functionalized titanium films. NH2-terminated titanium films displayed good cell proliferation and cell viability tendency. However, a lower cell proliferation on COOH-terminated titanium films was observed compared with NH2-terminated titanium films. This effect was attributed to the difference in protein adsorption of these samples.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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