Guldagerbrennan7854
Our findings show how a structural change, which can be deformations along the layers, slipping of layers, or change of the interlayer distance, can induce metal-to-semiconductor or indirect-to-direct semiconductor transition, suggesting a way to adjust or even switch between the intralayer vs interlayer conductive anisotropy in Ni3(HITP)2, in particular, and 2D MOFs in general.The interfacial chemistry of diborane (B2H6) with hydroxylated silica was investigated via in situ Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and temperature-programmed desorption. During exposure of silica to B2H6 under ultrahigh vacuum conditions, a decline in infrared band intensity assigned to excitation of the interfacial silanol O-H vibration at 3750 cm-1 and the associated appearance of a feature at 3687 cm-1 revealed hydrogen-bonding interactions between B2H6 and interfacial silanol groups. The IR spectrum for silica was completely recovered following desorption of the adsorbates, indicating that interactions between B2H6 and clean silica are reversible, in contrast to other reports on this system. During temperature-programmed desorption of diborane from silica, B2H6 was observed to desorb between 80 and 150 K, evidence for weak interactions between B2H6 and the surface. see more Electronic-structure calculations revealed that these interactions were due to bifurcated dihydrogen bonds between two terminal B-H groups of the adsorbate and interfacial silanol groups.Understanding the nanostructure and nanomechanical properties of surface layers of erucamide, in particular the molecular orientation of the outermost layer, is important to its widespread use as a slip additive in polymer materials. Extending our recent observations of nanomorphologies of erucamide layers on a hydrophilic silica substrate, here we evaluate its nanostructure on a more hydrophobic polypropylene surface. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging revealed the molecular packing, thickness, and surface coverage of the erucamide layers, while peak force quantitative nanomechanical mapping (QNM) showed that erucamide reduced the adhesive response on polypropylene. Synchrotron X-ray reflectivity (XRR) was used to probe the out-of-plane structure of the surface layers. Static contact angle measurements further corroborated on the resulting wettability, also demonstrating the efficacy of erucamide physisorption in facilitating control over polypropylene surface wetting. The results show the formation of ercamide surface layer underpinning its nanomechanical properties, relevant to many applications in which erucamide is commonly used as a slip additive.Equipping DNA with hydrophobic anchors enables targeted interaction with lipid bilayers for applications in biophysics, cell biology, and synthetic biology. Understanding DNA-membrane interactions is crucial for rationally designing functional DNA. Here we study the interactions of hydrophobically tagged DNA with synthetic and cell membranes using a combination of experiments and atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The DNA duplexes are rendered hydrophobic by conjugation to a terminal cholesterol anchor or by chemical synthesis of a charge-neutralized alkyl-phosphorothioate (PPT) belt. Cholesterol-DNA tethers to lipid vesicles of different lipid compositions and charges, while PPT DNA binding strongly depends on alkyl length, belt position, and headgroup charge. Divalent cations in the buffer can also influence binding. Our MD simulations directly reveal the complex structure and energetics of PPT DNA within a lipid membrane, demonstrating that longer alkyl-PPT chains provide the most stable membrane anchoring but may disrupt DNA base paring in solution. When tested on cells, cholesterol-DNA is homogeneously distributed on the cell surface, while alkyl-PPT DNA accumulates in clustered structures on the plasma membrane. DNA tethered to the outside of the cell membrane is distinguished from DNA spanning the membrane by nuclease and sphingomyelinase digestion assays. The gained fundamental insight on DNA-bilayer interactions will guide the rational design of membrane-targeting nanostructures.Optically and vibrationally resonant nanophotonic devices are of particular importance for their ability to enhance optomechanical interactions, with applications in nanometrology, sensing, nano-optical control of light, and optomechanics. Here, the optically resonant excitation and detection of gigahertz vibrational modes are demonstrated in a nanoscale metasurface array fabricated on a suspended SiC membrane. With the design of the main optical and vibrational modes to be those of the individual metamolecules, resonant excitation and detection are achieved by making use of direct mechanisms for optomechanical coupling. Ultrafast optical pump-probe studies reveal a multimodal gigahertz vibrational response corresponding to the mechanical modes of the suspended nanoresonators. Wavelength and polarization dependent studies reveal that the excitation and detection of vibrations takes place through the metasurface optical modes. The dielectric metasurface pushes the modulation speed of optomechanical structures closer to their theoretical limits and presents a potential for compact and easily fabricable optical components for photonic applications.On the basis of the lanthanide metalloligand [Ln(ODA)3]3- (H2ODA = oxydiacetic acid), three new Na-Ln heterometallic coordination polymers, [Ln(ODA)3Na2]n [Ln = Eu (1) and Gd (2)] and [Tb(ODA)3Na3(H2O)2]n (3), had been assembled by adjusting the concentration of Na+ ions in the reaction system. The investigations of fluorescence sensing showed that 1 could be a ratiometric probe to detect tetracycline (TC) and oxytetracycline (OTC) with high sensitivity and low detection limits, 71.92 ppb for the former and 45.54 ppb for the latter, and 3 could selectively sense 4-(phenylazo)aniline through the turn-off pathway with 14.59 ppb of detection limits. Moreover, the competing and circulating experiments indicated that both 1 and 3 had satisfactory antiinterference and recyclability for the corresponding analytes. All of these results implied that 1 and 3 should be potential fluorescent sensors for the detection of TC/OTC and 4-(phenylazo)aniline, and the possible sensing mechanism had also been discussed in depth.