(Press-News.org) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.— It may seem obvious that dunking relatively spherical objects in a sauce — blueberries in melted chocolate, say — will result in an array of completely encapsulated berries.
Relying on that concept, fabricators of spherical nanoparticles have similarly dunked their wares in protective coatings in the belief such encapsulations would prevent clumping and unwanted chemical interactions with solvents.
Unfortunately, reactions in the nanoworld are not logical extensions of the macroworld, Sandia National Laboratories researchers Matthew Lane and Gary Grest have found.
In a cover article this past summer in Physical Review Letters, the researchers use molecular dynamics simulations to show that simple coatings are incapable of fully covering each spherical nanoparticle in a set.
Instead, because the diameter of a particle may be smaller than the thickness of the coating protecting it, the curvature of the particle surface as it rapidly drops away from its attached coating provokes the formation of a series of louvres rather than a solid protective wall (see illustration).
"We've known for some time now that nanoparticles are special, and that 'small is different,'" Lane said. "What we've shown is that this general rule for nanotechnology applies to how we coat particles, too."
Carlos Gutierrez, manager of Sandia's Surfaces and Interface Sciences Department, said, "It's well-known that aggregation of nanoparticles in suspension is presently an obstacle to their commercial and industrial use. The simulations show that even coatings fully and uniformly applied to spherical nanoparticles are significantly distorted at the water-vapor interface."
Said Grest, "You don't want aggregation because you want the particles to stay distributed throughout the product to achieve uniformity. If you have particles of, say, micron-size, you have to coat or electrically charge them so the particles don't stick together. But when particles get small and the coatings become comparable in size to the particles, the shapes they form are asymmetric rather than spherical. Spherical particles keep their distance; asymmetric particles may stick to each other."
The simulation's finding isn't necessarily a bad thing, for this reason: Though each particle is coated asymmetrically, the asymmetry is consistent for any given set. Said another way, all coated nanoscopic sets are asymmetric in their own way.
A predictable, identical variation occurring in every member of a nanoset could open doors to new applications.
"What we've done here is to put up a large 'dead end' sign to prevent researchers from wasting time going down the wrong path," Lane said. "Increasing surface density of the coating or its molecular chain length isn't going to improve patchy coatings, as it would for larger particles. But there are numerous other possible paths to new outcomes when you can control the shape of the aggregation."
INFORMATION:
The paper, "Spontaneous Asymmetry of Coated Spherical Nanoparticles in Solution and at Liquid-Vapor Interfaces," was published on June 9 in Physical Review Letters 104, 235501 (2010).
The computations were carried out at the New Mexico Computing Application Center. The work was supported, in part, by the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, a U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences user facility and by the National Institute for NanoEngineering through Laboratory Directed Research and Development program at Sandia National Laboratories.
Sandia National Laboratories is a multiprogram laboratory operated and managed by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. With main facilities in Albuquerque, N.M., and Livermore, Calif., Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy and environmental technologies, and economic competitiveness.
Nanoscopic particles resist full encapsulation, Sandia simulations show
Formerly unrealized defect results in clumping and unwanted chemical interactions
2010-10-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Young people with mental health problems at risk of falling through 'gap' in care services
2010-10-13
Many young people with mental health problems are at risk of falling through a huge gap in provision when they move from adolescent to adult care services, according to new research from the University of Warwick.
A team led by Professor Swaran Singh at Warwick Medical School looked at the transition from child mental health services to adult mental health services and found for the vast majority of users the move was "poorly planned, poorly executed and poorly experienced".
In a study published in The British Journal of Psychiatry, the research team looked at 154 service ...
Successful kidney transplantation despite tissue incompatibility
2010-10-13
Donor kidneys can be successfully transplanted even if there is strong tissue incompatibility between donor and recipient. An interdisciplinary working group headed by Dr. Christian Morath, senior consultant at the Department of Nephrology at Heidelberg University Hospital (Medical Director: Professor Dr. Martin Zeier) and Professor Dr. Caner Süsal, head of antibody laboratory in the Department of Transplantation Immunology, showed in a study of 34 sensitized high-risk patients that the success rate in these patients was not different from the success rate of patients with ...
Large study shows females are equal to males in math skills
2010-10-13
MADISON — The mathematical skills of boys and girls, as well as men and women, are substantially equal, according to a new examination of existing studies in the current online edition of journal Psychological Bulletin.
One portion of the new study looked systematically at 242 articles that assessed the math skills of 1,286,350 people, says chief author Janet Hyde, a professor of psychology and women's studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
These studies, all published in English between 1990 and 2007, looked at people from grade school to college and beyond. ...
Study supports the long-term benefits of transcranial magnetic stimulation for depression
2010-10-13
(CHICAGO)–In a study to determine the durability and long-term effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), psychiatric researchers at Rush University Medical Center have found the non-invasive, non-drug therapy to be an effective, long-term treatment for major depression. Results of the study were published in the October 2010 issue of Brain Stimulation, a journal published by Elsevier.
TMS therapy is a non-invasive technique that delivers highly focused magnetic field pulses to a specific portion of the brain, the left prefrontal cortex, in order to stimulate ...
Adding cetuximab to chemotherapy doubles response rate in hard-to-treat breast cancer
2010-10-13
European researchers have proven for the first time that targeting the epidermal growth factor receptor can provide substantial clinical benefit for women with hard-to-treat triple-negative breast cancer.
At the 35th Congress of the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) in Milan, Italy, the researchers presented results from a Phase-II randomized trial showing that adding the anti-EGFR antibody cetuximab to cisplatin chemotherapy doubled the response rate and time to progression when compared to cisplatin chemotherapy given alone in a study of 173 heavily pre-treated ...
Early research reveals new clues to origin of diabetes
2010-10-13
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – University of Michigan scientists have identified events inside insulin-producing pancreatic cells that set the stage for a neonatal form of non-autoimmune type 1 diabetes, and may play a role in type 2 diabetes as well. The results point to a potential target for drugs to protect normally functioning proteins essential for producing insulin.
A study published online today in the journal PLoS One shows that certain insulin gene mutations involved in neonatal diabetes cause a portion of the proinsulin proteins in the pancreas' beta cells to misfold. ...
Global research effort leads to new findings on genes and obesity
2010-10-13
October 10, 2010─(BRONX, NY) ─Two major international studies looking at data from a quarter of a million people around the globe have found a new set of genes associated with body fat distribution and obesity. Researchers at 280 institutions worldwide, including Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University, conducted the studies. The research, published in the October 10 online edition of Nature Genetics, sheds light on the biological processes involved in body fat distribution, possibly leading to new ways of treating obesity.
"These studies ...
NFL players with concussions now sidelined longer
2010-10-13
Los Angeles, CA (October 11, 2010) NFL players with concussions now stay away from the game significantly longer than they did in the late 1990s and early 2000s, according to research in Sports Health (owned by American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine and published by SAGE). The mean days lost with concussion increased from 1.92 days during 1996-2001 to 4.73 days during 2002-2007.
In an effort to discover whether concussion injury occurrence and treatment had changed, researchers compared those two consecutive six-year periods to determine the circumstances of ...
Abiraterone acetate improves survival in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer
2010-10-13
Patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer who have progressed after chemotherapy live significantly longer if treated with the drug abiraterone acetate compared to placebo, the results of a large Phase-III clinical trial confirm.
"This is a major step forward in prostate cancer therapeutics," said Dr Johann de Bono from The Institute of Cancer Research and The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust in London, who presented the study results at the 35th Congress of the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) in Milan, Italy. "Patients in this Phase-III ...
Fertility concerns of cancer survivors inadequately addressed, study finds
2010-10-13
Many cancer survivors experience changes in sexual function that leave them feeling guilty and a longing for intimacy, Australian researchers told at the 35th Congress of the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) in Milan, Italy. The researchers say that these sexuality and fertility concerns are often not adequately addressed by doctors.
Professor Bogda Koczwara from Flinders Medical Centre in Adelaide said that fertility concerns among cancer survivors was a growing problem, due to a combination of improved cancer treatment outcomes in young cancer survivors ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Brain cells drive endurance gains after exercise
Same-day hospital discharge is safe in selected patients after TAVI
Why do people living at high altitudes have better glucose control? The answer was in plain sight
Red blood cells soak up sugar at high altitude, protecting against diabetes
A new electrolyte points to stronger, safer batteries
Environment: Atmospheric pollution directly linked to rocket re-entry
Targeted radiation therapy improves quality of life outcomes for patients with multiple brain metastases
Cardiovascular events in women with prior cervical high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion
Transplantation and employment earnings in kidney transplant recipients
Brain organoids can be trained to solve a goal-directed task
Treatment can protect extremely premature babies from lung disease
Roberto Morandotti wins prestigious Max Born Award for pioneering research in quantum photonics
Scientists map brain's blood pressure control center
Acute coronary events registry provides insights into sex-specific differences
Bar-Ilan University and NVIDIA researchers improve AI’s ability to understand spatial instructions
New single-cell transcriptomic clock reveals intrinsic and systemic T cell aging in COVID-19 and HIV
Smaller fish and changing food webs – even where species numbers stay the same
Missed opportunity to protect pregnant women and newborns: Study shows low vaccination rates among expectant mothers in Norway against COVID-19 and influenza
Emotional memory region of aged brain is sensitive to processed foods
Neighborhood factors may lead to increased COPD-related emergency department visits, hospitalizations
Food insecurity impacts employees’ productivity
Prenatal infection increases risk of heavy drinking later in life
‘The munchies’ are real and could benefit those with no appetite
FAU researchers discover novel bacteria in Florida’s stranded pygmy sperm whales
DEGU debuts with better AI predictions and explanations
‘Giant superatoms’ unlock a new toolbox for quantum computers
Jeonbuk National University researchers explore metal oxide electrodes as a new frontier in electrochemical microplastic detection
Cannabis: What is the profile of adults at low risk of dependence?
Medical and materials innovations of two women engineers recognized by Sony and Nature
Blood test “clocks” predict when Alzheimer’s symptoms will start
[Press-News.org] Nanoscopic particles resist full encapsulation, Sandia simulations showFormerly unrealized defect results in clumping and unwanted chemical interactions

