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Keywords = transmission electronmicroscopy

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16 pages, 7796 KiB  
Article
Extreme Sub-Wavelength Structure Formation from Mid-IR Femtosecond Laser Interaction with Silicon
by Kevin Werner and Enam Chowdhury
Nanomaterials 2021, 11(5), 1192; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11051192 - 30 Apr 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3206
Abstract
Mid-infrared (MIR) wavelengths (2–10 μμm) open up a new paradigm for femtosecond laser–solid interactions. On a fundamental level, compared to the ubiquitous near-IR (NIR) or visible (VIS) laser interactions, MIR photon energies render semiconductors to behave like high bandgap materials, while [...] Read more.
Mid-infrared (MIR) wavelengths (2–10 μμm) open up a new paradigm for femtosecond laser–solid interactions. On a fundamental level, compared to the ubiquitous near-IR (NIR) or visible (VIS) laser interactions, MIR photon energies render semiconductors to behave like high bandgap materials, while driving conduction band electrons harder due to the λ2 scaling of the ponderomotive energy. From an applications perspective, many VIS/NIR opaque materials are transparent for MIR. This allows sub-surface modifications for waveguide writing while simultaneously extending interactions to higher order processes. Here, we present the formation of an extreme sub-wavelength structure formation (∼λ/100) on a single crystal silicon surface by a 3600 nm MIR femtosecond laser with a pulse duration of 200 fs. The 50–100 nm linear structures were aligned parallel to the laser polarization direction with a quasi-periodicity of 700 nm. The dependence of the structure on the native oxide, laser pulse number, and polarization were studied. The properties of the structures were studied using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM), cross-sectional transmission electron-microscopy (CS-TEM), electron diffraction (ED), and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX). As traditional models for the formation of laser induced periodic surface structure do not explain this structure formation, new theoretical efforts are needed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Laser-Generated Periodic Nanostructures)
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19 pages, 3603 KiB  
Article
Quantitative Cryo-TEM Reveals New Structural Details of Doxil-Like PEGylated Liposomal Doxorubicin Formulation
by Rickard Nordström, Lin Zhu, Johan Härmark, Yael Levi-Kalisman, Erez Koren, Yechezkel Barenholz, Genia Levinton and Dima Shamrakov
Pharmaceutics 2021, 13(1), 123; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13010123 - 19 Jan 2021
Cited by 41 | Viewed by 6984
Abstract
Nano-drugs based on nanoparticles (NP) or on nano-assemblies as carriers of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) are often expected to perform better compared to conventional dosage forms. Maximum realization of this potential though requires optimization of multiple physico-chemical, including structural and morphological, parameters. [...] Read more.
Nano-drugs based on nanoparticles (NP) or on nano-assemblies as carriers of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) are often expected to perform better compared to conventional dosage forms. Maximum realization of this potential though requires optimization of multiple physico-chemical, including structural and morphological, parameters. Meaningful distributions of these parameters derived from sufficient populations of individual NPs rather than ensemble distributions are desirable for this task, provided that relevant high-resolution data is available. In this study we demonstrate powerful capabilities of the up-to-date cryogenic transmission electron-microscopy (cryo-TEM) as well as correlations with other techniques abundant in the nano-research milieu. We explored Doxil®-like (an anticancer drug and the first FDA-approved nano-drug) (75–100 nm) PEGylated liposomes encapsulating single doxorubicin-sulfate nano-rod-crystals (PLD). These crystals induce liposome sphere-to-ellipsoid deformation. Doxil® was characterized by a multitude of physicochemical methods. We demonstrate, that accompanied by advanced image-analysis means, cryo-TEM can successfully enable the determination of multiple structural parameters of such complex liposomal nano-drugs with an added value of statistically-sound distributions. The latter could not be achieved by most other physicochemical approaches. It seems that cryo-TEM is capable of quantitative description of individual liposome morphological features, including meaningful distributions of all structural elements, with averages that correlate with other physical methods. Here it is demonstrated that such quantitative cryo-TEM analysis is a powerful tool in determining what is the optimal drug to lipid ratio in PLD, which is found to be the drug to lipid ratio existing in Doxil®. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Development of Micro and Nano Systems for the Drug Delivery)
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25 pages, 3746 KiB  
Article
Characterization of Chlorhexidine-Loaded Calcium-Hydroxide Microparticles as a Potential Dental Pulp-Capping Material
by Balasankar M. Priyadarshini, Subramanian T. Selvan, Karthikeyan Narayanan and Amr S. Fawzy
Bioengineering 2017, 4(3), 59; https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering4030059 - 22 Jun 2017
Cited by 28 | Viewed by 11866
Abstract
This study explores the delivery of novel calcium hydroxide [Ca(OH)2] microparticles loaded with chlorhexidine (CHX) for potential dental therapeutic and preventive applications. Herein, we introduce a new approach for drug-delivery to deep dentin-surfaces in the form of drug-loaded microparticles. Unloaded Ca(OH) [...] Read more.
This study explores the delivery of novel calcium hydroxide [Ca(OH)2] microparticles loaded with chlorhexidine (CHX) for potential dental therapeutic and preventive applications. Herein, we introduce a new approach for drug-delivery to deep dentin-surfaces in the form of drug-loaded microparticles. Unloaded Ca(OH)2 [Ca(OH)2/Blank] and CHX-loaded/Ca(OH)2 microparticles were fabricated by aqueous chemical-precipitation technique. The synthesized-microparticles were characterized in vitro for determination of surface-morphology, crystalline-features and thermal-properties examined by energy-dispersive X-ray scanning and transmission electron-microscopy (EDX-SEM/TEM), Fourier-transform infrared-spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray diffraction (XRD), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and differential scanning-calorimetry (DSC). Time-related pH changes, initial antibacterial/biofilm-abilities and cytotoxicity of CHX-loaded/Ca(OH)2 microparticles were evaluated. Microparticles were delivered to dentin-surfaces with subsequent SEM examination of treated dentin-substrates. The in vitro and ex vivo CHX-release profiles were characterized. Ca(OH)2/Blank were hexagonal-shaped with highest z-average diameter whereas CHX-inclusion evidenced micro-metric spheres with distinguishable surface “rounded deposits” and a negative-shift in diameter. CHX:Ca(OH)2/50 mg exhibited maximum encapsulation-efficiency with good antibacterial and cytocompatible properties. SEM examination revealed an intact layer of microparticles on exposed dentin-surfaces with retention of spherical shape and smooth texture. Microparticles loaded on dentin-surfaces showed prolonged release of CHX indicating substantial retention on dentin-substrates. This study validated the inherent-applicability of this novel drug-delivery approach to dentin-surfaces using micro-metric CHX-loaded/Ca(OH)2 microparticles. Full article
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8 pages, 1746 KiB  
Communication
In Situ Electron Microscopy of Lactomicroselenium Particles in Probiotic Bacteria
by Gabor Nagy, Gyula Pinczes, Gabor Pinter, Istvan Pocsi, Jozsef Prokisch and Gaspar Banfalvi
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2016, 17(7), 1047; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17071047 - 30 Jun 2016
Cited by 24 | Viewed by 7796
Abstract
Electron microscopy was used to test whether or not (a) in statu nascendi synthesized, and in situ measured, nanoparticle size does not differ significantly from the size of nanoparticles after their purification; and (b) the generation of selenium is detrimental to the bacterial [...] Read more.
Electron microscopy was used to test whether or not (a) in statu nascendi synthesized, and in situ measured, nanoparticle size does not differ significantly from the size of nanoparticles after their purification; and (b) the generation of selenium is detrimental to the bacterial strains that produce them. Elemental nano-sized selenium produced by probiotic latic acid bacteria was used as a lactomicroselenium (lactomicroSel) inhibitor of cell growth in the presence of lactomicroSel, and was followed by time-lapse microscopy. The size of lactomicroSel produced by probiotic bacteria was measured in situ and after isolation and purification. For these measurements the TESLA BS 540 transmission electron microscope was converted from analog (aTEM) to digital processing (dTEM), and further to remote-access internet electron microscopy (iTEM). Lactobacillus acidophilus produced fewer, but larger, lactomicroSel nanoparticles (200–350 nm) than Lactobacillus casei (L. casei), which generated many, smaller lactomicroSel particles (85–200 nm) and grains as a cloudy, less electrodense material. Streptococcus thermophilus cells generated selenoparticles (60–280 nm) in a suicidic manner. The size determined in situ in lactic acid bacteria was significantly lower than those measured by scanning electron microscopy after the isolation of lactomicroSel particles obtained from lactobacilli (100–500 nm), but higher relative to those isolated from Streptococcus thermopilus (50–100 nm). These differences indicate that smaller lactomicroSel particles could be more toxic to the producing bacteria themselves and discrepancies in size could have implications with respect to the applications of selenium nanoparticles as prebiotics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Inorganic Nanostructures in Biological Systems)
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