21 research outputs found
Exploring the potential of plant-derived natural products beyond functional food: Applications in nanomedicine
The use of plant products as nutritional food and therapeutic agents is immemorial and intimately linked to the human life since its origin. Also, the tanning action of plant extracts has been hugely exploited to transform animal skins into leather from ancient times to present. However, the exploitation of the potential applications of the plant biomolecules in some of the modern technologies is rather now emerging. In fact, the power antioxidant, reducing and biological activities of the plant metabolites, together their chelating and their biodegradable properties, make the plant-derived natural products unique raw materials to design new sustainable approaches to prepare promising hybrid formulations and composites at the nanometer scale for innovative diagnostic and therapeutic procedures and nanotechnology applications. In the present contribution, some recent advances in this topic are briefly discussed
Estudio del mecanismo de magnetización en nanoelipsoides de Fe con microestructuras diseñadas, bioinspiradas en la bacteria magnetotáctica
En este trabajo se estudia la preparación de nanoelipsoides magnéticos mediante la reducción con hidrógeno de nanoarquitecturas alargadas compuestas de nanocristales de hematites altamente orientados. En particular, se estudia el efecto del tiempo de reducción en las propiedades microestructurales y magnéticas de los nanoelipsoides prestando especial atención al estudio de las fuentes de anisotropía magnética presentes en el sistema y el posible mecanismo de inversión de la magnetización.
In this work, the preparation route of magnetic nanoellipsoids by the hydrogen reduction of elongated nanoarchitectures composed by highly oriented hematite nanocrystals is revised. In particular, the effect of the reduction time on the microstructural and magnetic properties of the nanoellipsoids are studied with special attention to the different magnetic sources and the possible magnetization reversal mechanism
Formación de partículas nanométricas en soluciones sobresaturadas
El estudio de los procesos asociados a la precipitación
química en soluciones sobresaturadas es
crucial para entender los mecanismos de algunos
procesos naturales, como la biomineralización de
estructuras biológicamente funcionales y la formación
de rocas sedimentarias químicas. Por otra
parte, este fenómeno puede emplearse en el laboratorio
para sintetizar eficaz y versátilmente nuevos
materiales de interés fundamental y práctico.
En este trabajo se presenta una revisión de los
fundamentos del fenómeno de la cristalización en
soluciones sobresaturadas considerando su aplicación
en la producción de nanopartículas uniformes
con características controlables
Size distribution and frustrated antiferromagnetic coupling effects on the magnetic behavior of ultrafine akaganéite (β-FeOOH) nanoparticles
The magnetic properties of low dimensional materials of several iron oxyhydroxide phases, such as akaganéite (β-FeOOH) or lepidocrocite (γ-FeO(OH)), remain poorly explored, probably due to their specific preparation as single crystalline phase requires special conditions owing to their structural instability. In the present work, ultrafine akaganéite nanoparticles were prepared by the hydrolysis of FeCl3 solutions at room temperature induced by the presence of NaOH. The resulting product was characterized by several analytical techniques. Structural investigations using X-ray diffraction (XRD), high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), and selected area electron diffraction (SAED) revealed that the sample was mainly constituted by rather-equiaxial akaganéite nanocrystals with mean diameter of 3.3 ± 0.5 nm. In addition, a small amount of rodlike akaganéite particles with 23 ± 5 nm in length and 5 ± 1 nm in width was also detected. The study of the respective dependences of the dc magnetization and the ac susceptibility on temperature and exciting magnetic field revealed complex magnetic relaxation processes, high coercivity values at low temperature, and exchange bias effect. These results have been tentatively explained considering size distribution effects and the presence of superparamagnetic and spin glass-like contributions arising from the frustration of the antiferromagnetic order owing to surface effects and an insufficient filling of the akaganéite channels with Cl- anions.Financial support from the Mexican Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT)
and Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo León under research projects CB12-179486 and PAICYT-CE793-11, respectively, is acknowledged. Spanish funding under the MINECO research project MAT2010-20798-C05-04 and FEDER is also acknowledged.Peer Reviewe
Microstructural, spectroscopic, and antibacterial properties of silver-based hybrid nanostructures biosynthesized using extracts of coriander leaves and seeds
Coriander leaves and seeds have been highly appreciated since ancient times, not only due to their pleasant flavors but also due to their inhibitory activity on food degradation and their beneficial properties for health, both ascribed to their strong antioxidant activity. Recently, it has been shown that coriander leaf extracts can mediate the synthesis of metallic nanoparticles through oxidation/reduction reactions. In the present study, extracts of coriander leaves and seeds have been used as reaction media for the wet chemical synthesis of ultrafine silver nanoparticles and nanoparticle clusters, with urchin- and tree-like shapes, coated by biomolecules (mainly, proteins and polyphenols). In this greener route of nanostructure preparation, the active biocompounds of coriander simultaneously play the roles of reducing and stabilizing agents. The morphological and microstructural studies of the resulting biosynthesized silver nanostructures revealed that the nanostructures prepared with a small concentration of the precursor Ag salt (AgNO3 =5 mM) exhibit an ultrafine size and a narrow size distribution, whereas particles synthesized with high concentrations of the precursor Ag salt (AgNO3 =0.5 M) are polydisperse and formation of supramolecular structures occurs. Fourier transform infrared and Raman spectroscopy studies indicated that the bioreduction of the Ag- ions takes place through their interactions with free amines, carboxylate ions, and hydroxyl groups. As a consequence of such interactions, residues of proteins and polyphenols cap the biosynthesized Ag nanoparticles providing them a hybrid core/shell structure. In addition, these biosynthesized Ag nanomaterials exhibited size-dependent plasmon extinction bands and enhanced bactericidal activities against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, displaying minimal inhibitory Ag concentrations lower than typical values reported in the literature for Ag nanoparticles, probably due to the synergy of the bactericidal activities of the Ag nanoparticle cores and their capping ligandsSEP CB12-17948
Fenómenos físicos de las nanopartículas de oro
El oro ha sido uno de los materiales más preciados
por el hombre desde la antigüedad por sus excelentes
propiedades, entre las que destaca su hermoso color
y brillo, su maleabilidad y su estabilidad química. En
las últimas décadas, el interés por este material se ha
incrementado al encontrar que el oro en forma de nanopartículas presenta fenómenos físicos nuevos que incrementan su potencial tecnológico. En esta contribución presentamos una breve descripción de algunos de estos fenómenos, los cuales son objeto de estudio del cuerpo académico física de los sistemas de baja dimensionalidad y sus aplicaciones de la FCFM de la UANL
Pseudo-monocrystalline properties of cylindrical nanowires confinedly grown by electrodeposition in nanoporous alumina templates
Four different cylindrical nanowire systems (nickel, cobalt, Co23Cu77, and multisegmented Co58Ni42/Co83Ni17
nanowires) with single-crystal-like properties were characterized by transmission electron microscopy and
selected-area electron diffraction (SAED) under different tilting angles. Although these nanowires have
different chemical compositions, crystalline structures and/or diameters, they exhibit similar behaviors, which
are unexpected for ideal single-crystals. All the samples presented SAED patterns that did not experience
changes from one zone axis to another when the nanowire was tilted in a wide range of angles, exhibiting
related apparent interplanar distances that are dependent on the nanowire inclination, yielding deformed
patterns that can be unrecognizable. Moreover, face-centered cubic nanowires presented classically
forbidden reflections. These behaviors were explained by considering the characteristics of the measurement
technique and the confined template-assisted growth, which force the atoms to be accommodated in
a cylindrical volume with nanoscale dimensions, yielding the frustrated formation of stable facets and right
angles in the nanowire radial directions, together with the formation of stacking faults