scholarly journals Scalable Fabrication of Metallopolymeric Superstructures for Highly Efficient Removal of Methylene Blue

Nanomaterials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 1001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meirong Zhou ◽  
Tianyu Yang ◽  
Weibin Hu ◽  
Xiaohong He ◽  
Junni Xie ◽  
...  

Metallopolymeric superstructures (MPS) are hybrid functional materials that find wide applications in environmental, energy, catalytic and biomedical-related scenarios, while their fabrication usually suffers from the complicated polymerization between monomeric ligands and metal ions. In this work, we have developed a facile one-step protocol to fabricate metallopolymeric superstructures with different morphology including nanospheres, nanocubes, nanorods, and nanostars for environmental remediation application. Specifically, we have firstly synthesized the amphiphilic block copolymers (BCP) bearing hydrophobic aromatic backbone and hydrophilic pendent carboxylic/sulfonic groups, which have been subsequently transformed into MPS via the metal ions mediated self-assembly in mixed solution of dimethylformamide (DMF) and H2O. Based on SEM, FTIR, XRD and XPS characterization, we have revealed that the fine morphology and condensed structures of MPS can be modulated via the metal ions and BCP concentration, and the obtained MPS can be employed as efficient adsorbents for the removal of methylene blue with maximum adsorption capacity approaching 936.13 mg/g.

2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (18) ◽  
pp. 9832-9839 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyang Li ◽  
Antoni Sánchez-Ferrer ◽  
Massimo Bagnani ◽  
Jozef Adamcik ◽  
Paride Azzari ◽  
...  

G-quadruplex, assembled from a square array of guanine (G) molecules, is an important structure with crucial biological roles in vivo but also a versatile template for ordered functional materials. Although the understanding of G-quadruplex structures is the focus of numerous studies, little is known regarding the control of G-quartet stacking modes and the spontaneous orientation of G-quadruplex fibrils. Here, the effects of different metal ions and their concentrations on stacking modes of G-quartets are elucidated. Monovalent cations (typically K+) facilitate the formation of G-quadruplex hydrogels with both heteropolar and homopolar stacking modes, showing weak mechanical strength. In contrast, divalent metal ions (Ca2+, Sr2+, and Ba2+) at given concentrations can control G-quartet stacking modes and increase the mechanical rigidity of the resulting hydrogels through ionic bridge effects between divalent ions and borate. We show that for Ca2+ and Ba2+ at suitable concentrations, the assembly of G-quadruplexes results in the establishment of a mesoscopic chirality of the fibrils with a regular left-handed twist. Finally, we report the discovery of nematic tactoids self-assembled from G-quadruplex fibrils characterized by homeotropic fibril alignment with respect to the interface. We use the Frank–Oseen elastic energy and the Rapini–Papoular anisotropic surface energy to rationalize two different configurations of the tactoids. These results deepen our understanding of G-quadruplex structures and G-quadruplex fibrils, paving the way for their use in self-assembly and biomaterials.


Author(s):  
Candan Tamerler ◽  
Mehmet Sarikaya

Nature provides inspiration for designing materials and systems that derive their functions from highly organized structures. Biological hard tissues are hybrid materials having inorganics within a complex organic matrix, the molecular scaffold controlling the inorganic structures. Biocomposites incorporate both biomacromolecules such as proteins, lipids and polysaccharides, and inorganic materials, such as hydroxyapatite, silica, magnetite and calcite. The ordered organization of hierarchical structures in organisms begins via the molecular recognition of inorganics by proteins that control interactions and is followed by the highly efficient self-assembly across scales. Following the molecular biological principle, proteins could also be used in controlling materials formation in practical engineering via self-assembled, hybrid, functional materials structures. In molecular biomimetics, material-specific peptides could be the key in the molecular engineering of biology-inspired materials. With the recent developments of nanoscale engineering in physical sciences and the advances in molecular biology, we now combine genetic tools with synthetic nanoscale constructs to create a novel methodology. We first genetically select and/or design peptides with specific binding to functional solids, tailor their binding and assembly characteristics, develop bifunctional peptide/protein genetic constructs with both material binding and biological activity, and use these as molecular synthesizers, erectors and assemblers. Here, we give an overview of solid-binding peptides as novel molecular agents coupling bio- and nanotechnology.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Galen Eakins

<p>Synthetic peptides offer enormous potential to encode the assembly of molecular electronic components, provided that the complex range of interactions is distilled into simple design rules. Herein is reported a spectroscopic investigation of aggregation in an extensive series of peptide-perylene imide conjugates designed to interrogate the effect of structural variations. Throughout the course of this study, the self-assembly and photophysical properties of the compounds are explored to better understand the behavior and application of these materials. Three principal avenues of inquiry are applied: (1) the evaluation of structure-property relationships from a thermodynamic perspective, (2) the examination of peptide chiral effects upon properties and self-assembly, and (3) an application of the understanding gained from rationally designed systems to effectively utilize naturally optimized peptides in bio-organic electronics.  By fitting different contributions to temperature-dependent optical absorption spectra, this study quantifies both the thermodynamics and the nature of aggregation for peptides with incrementally varying hydrophobicity, charge density, length, amphiphilic substitution with a hexyl chain, and stereocenter inversion. Coarse effects like hydrophobicity and hexyl substitution are seen to have the greatest impact on binding thermodynamics, which are evaluated separately as enthalpic and entropic contributions. Moreover, significant peptide packing effects are resolved via stereocenter inversion studies, particularly when examining the nature of aggregates formed and the coupling between π-electronic orbitals.  Peptide chirality overall is seen to influence the self-assembly of the perylene imide cores into chiral nanofibers, and peptide stereogenic positions, stereochemical configurations, amphiphilic substitution, and perylene core modification are evaluated with respect to chiral assembly. Stereocenters in peptide residue positions proximal to the perylene core (1-5 units) are seen to impart helical chirality to the perylene core, while stereocenters in more distal residue positions do not exert a chiral influence. Diastereomers involving stereocenter inversions within the proximal residues consequently manifest spectroscopically as pseudo-enantiomers. Increased side-chain steric demand in the proximal positions gives a similar chiral influence but exhibits diminished Cotton Effect intensity with additional longer wavelength features attributed to interchain excimers. Amphiphilic substitution of a peptide with an alkyl chain disrupts chiral self-assembly, while an amphiphilic structure achieved through the modification of the perylene imide core with a bisester moiety prompts strongly exciton-coupled, chiral, solvent-responsive self-assembly into long nanofilaments.  Informed by rationally designed sequences, and capitalizing upon the optimization seen in many natural systems, specific peptide sequences designed by inspection of protein-protein interfaces have been identified and used as tectons in hybrid functional materials. An 8-mer peptide derived from an interface of the peroxiredoxin family of self-assembling proteins is exploited to encode the assembly of perylene imide-based organic semiconductor building blocks. By augmenting the peptide with additional functionality to trigger aggregation and manipulate the directionality of peptide-semiconductor coupling, a series of hybrid materials based on the natural peptide interface is presented. Using spectroscopic probes, the mode of self-assembly and the electronic coupling between neighboring perylene units is shown to be strongly affected by the number of peptides attached, and by their backbone directionality. The disubstituted material with peptides extending in the N-C direction away from the perylene core exhibits strong coupling and long-range order, which are both attractive properties for electronic device applications. A bio-organic field-effect transistor is fabricated using this material, highlighting the possibilities of exploiting natural peptide tectons to encode self-assembly in other functional materials and devices.  These results advance the development of a quantitative framework for establishing structure-function relationships that will underpin the design of self-assembling peptide electronic materials. The results further advance a model for adapting natural peptide sequences resident in β-continuous interfaces as tectons for bio-organic electronics.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shasha Liu ◽  
Chen Shen ◽  
Yuhui Wang ◽  
Yong Huang ◽  
Xun Hu ◽  
...  

Abstract To understand the interaction mechanism between adsorbent and adsorbate, activated biochar, prepared from pine sawdust using CO2 and H2O as activator, was employed to adsorb methylene blue in printing and dyeing pollutants. The pore structure, carbon structure of the aromatic ring system, and functional groups were investigated though SEM, nitrogen adsorption/desorption device (BET), Raman, and XPS characterization, and the adsorption kinetics and possible adsorption mechanism were also studied. The results showed that the activated biochar prepared by CO2 activation had more specific surface area, pore structure, and surface oxygen-containing functional groups than that prepared by H2O, which was more conductive to improving its adsorption capacity. The electrostatic interaction between the surface oxygen-containing functional groups in the adsorbents and the π-π interaction formed in the aromatic rings enhanced the adsorption capacity of activated biochar to methylene blue. The adsorption process of methylene blue by activated biochar was spontaneous, and it conformed to the pseudo-second-order kinetic characteristics and Langmuir adsorption isotherm equation. It was a monolayer adsorption and the maximum adsorption capacity was about 160 mg/g. Activated biochar as an adsorbent for wastewater treatment has promising application and development prospects.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Amorim ◽  
Sergio R.S. Veloso ◽  
Elisabete M.S. Castanheira ◽  
Loic Hilliou ◽  
Renato B. Pereira ◽  
...  

<div>The self-assembly of nanometric structures from molecular building blocks is an effective</div><div>way to make new functional materials for biological and technological applications. In this work</div><div>four symmetrical bolaamphiphiles based on dehydrodipeptides</div><div>(phenylalanyldehydrophenylalanine and tyrosyldehydrophenylalanine) linked through phenyl</div><div>or naphthyl linkers (terephthalic acid and 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid) were prepared and</div><div>their self-assembly properties studied. The results showed that all compounds with the exception</div><div>of the bolaamphiphile of tyrosyldehydrophenylalanine and 2,6-naphthalene dicarboxylic acid</div><div>gave self-standing hydrogels with critical gelation concentrations of 0.3 and 0.4 wt% using a pH</div><div>trigger. The self-assembly of these hydrogelators was investigated using STEM microscopy,</div><div>which revealed a network of entangled fibres. According to rheology the dehydrodipeptide</div><div>bolaamphiphile hydrogelators are viscoelastic materials with an elastic modulus G’ that falls in</div><div>the range of native tissue (0.37 kPa brain – 4.5 kPa cartilage). In viability and proliferation studies,</div><div>it was found that these compounds were non-toxic towards the human keratinocyte cell line,</div><div>HaCaT. In sustained release assays, we studied the effects of the charge present on the model</div><div>drug compound on the rate of cargo release from the hydrogel networks. Methylene blue (MB),</div><div>methyl orange (MO) and ciprofloxacin were chosen as cationic, anionic and overall neutral cargo,</div><div>respectively. These studies have shown that the hydrogels provide a sustained release of methyl</div><div>orange and ciprofloxacin, while the methylene blue is retained by the hydrogel network.</div>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Amorim ◽  
Sergio R.S. Veloso ◽  
Elisabete M.S. Castanheira ◽  
Loic Hilliou ◽  
Renato B. Pereira ◽  
...  

<div>The self-assembly of nanometric structures from molecular building blocks is an effective</div><div>way to make new functional materials for biological and technological applications. In this work</div><div>four symmetrical bolaamphiphiles based on dehydrodipeptides</div><div>(phenylalanyldehydrophenylalanine and tyrosyldehydrophenylalanine) linked through phenyl</div><div>or naphthyl linkers (terephthalic acid and 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid) were prepared and</div><div>their self-assembly properties studied. The results showed that all compounds with the exception</div><div>of the bolaamphiphile of tyrosyldehydrophenylalanine and 2,6-naphthalene dicarboxylic acid</div><div>gave self-standing hydrogels with critical gelation concentrations of 0.3 and 0.4 wt% using a pH</div><div>trigger. The self-assembly of these hydrogelators was investigated using STEM microscopy,</div><div>which revealed a network of entangled fibres. According to rheology the dehydrodipeptide</div><div>bolaamphiphile hydrogelators are viscoelastic materials with an elastic modulus G’ that falls in</div><div>the range of native tissue (0.37 kPa brain – 4.5 kPa cartilage). In viability and proliferation studies,</div><div>it was found that these compounds were non-toxic towards the human keratinocyte cell line,</div><div>HaCaT. In sustained release assays, we studied the effects of the charge present on the model</div><div>drug compound on the rate of cargo release from the hydrogel networks. Methylene blue (MB),</div><div>methyl orange (MO) and ciprofloxacin were chosen as cationic, anionic and overall neutral cargo,</div><div>respectively. These studies have shown that the hydrogels provide a sustained release of methyl</div><div>orange and ciprofloxacin, while the methylene blue is retained by the hydrogel network.</div>


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingbo Wu ◽  
Hongsheng Yang ◽  
He Wei ◽  
Xueli Hu ◽  
Bo Qu ◽  
...  

The self-assembly approach has been widely adopted in the effort to design and prepare functional materials. Herein, we report the synthesis and optical properties of metalloporphyrin nanoparticles. Nanoscaled particles of 5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin manganese (MnTPP) and 5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin indium (InTPP) were produced in the water/dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) mixed solution by self-assembly approach. The absorbance intensity at the characteristic peak of the monomeric and nanoscaled metalloporphyrins decreased when they interact with dimethylmethylphosphonate (DMMP). Detection limits of MnTPP and InTPP nanoparticles to DMMP were 10−9 and 10−10 L/L, respectively, and detection limits of monomeric MnTPP and InTPP to DMMP were 10−6 and 10−7 L/L, respectively. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations on MnTPP and InTPP with DMMP as axial ligands had been performed in the B3LYP/6-31g (d) approximation. Their optimized geometries and binding energies were found to depend very strongly on the central metal ion, and InTPP was more sensitive for DMMP detection in contract to MnTPP. All the experimental and theoretical results demonstrated that nanoscaled metalloporphyrin have potential prospects in determination for public safety.


Gels ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 52
Author(s):  
Carolina Amorim ◽  
Sérgio R. S. Veloso ◽  
Elisabete M. S. Castanheira ◽  
Loic Hilliou ◽  
Renato B. Pereira ◽  
...  

The self-assembly of nanometric structures from molecular building blocks is an effective way to make new functional materials for biological and technological applications. In this work, four symmetrical bolaamphiphiles based on dehydrodipeptides (phenylalanyldehydrophenylalanine and tyrosyldehydrophenylalanine) linked through phenyl or naphthyl linkers (terephthalic acid and 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid) were prepared, and their self-assembly properties were studied. The results showed that all compounds, with the exception of the bolaamphiphile of tyrosyldehydrophenylalanine and 2,6-naphthalene dicarboxylic acid, gave self-standing hydrogels with critical gelation concentrations of 0.3 wt % and 0.4 wt %, using a pH trigger. The self-assembly of these hydrogelators was investigated using STEM microscopy, which revealed a network of entangled fibers. According to rheology, the dehydrodipeptide bolaamphiphilic hydrogelators are viscoelastic materials with an elastic modulus G′ that falls in the range of native tissue (0.37 kPa brain–4.5 kPa cartilage). In viability and proliferation studies, it was found that these compounds were non-toxic toward the human keratinocyte cell line, HaCaT. In sustained release assays, we studied the effects of the charge present on model drug compounds on the rate of cargo release from the hydrogel networks. Methylene blue (MB), methyl orange (MO), and ciprofloxacin were chosen as cationic, anionic, and overall neutral cargo, respectively. These studies have shown that the hydrogels provide a sustained release of methyl orange and ciprofloxacin, while methylene blue is retained by the hydrogel network.


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