2 research outputs found

    Bioinspired synthesis of mesoporous silicas

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    Recent years have witnessed rapid growth in the no. of new investigations at the interface of materials chem. and biol. This review highlights the recent developments in the studies of protein-mediated silica biomineralization in diatoms and the \ downscaling\ and \ upscaling\ models derived thereof, as well as the recent progress in the fabrication of artificial silicas with novel pore structures and morphologies at different length scales based on these new insights into biosilica formation

    Ultrasmall, small, and wide angle X-ray scattering analysis of diatom biosilica: interspecific differences in fractal properties

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    Freshly prepd. acid-cleaned biosilica of 21 different diatom species was studied using a combination of wide, small, and ultrasmall angle X-ray scattering anal. (WAXS, SAXS, and USAXS) in order to det. whether the structural and fractal properties from the subnanometer level up to dimensions of several microns are species-specific, and if so to quantify them. WAXS data are in line with the amorphous nature of this kind of biosilica: no Bragg reflections were obsd. at the level below 1 nm. Straight domains in the scattering spectra (in both SAXS and USAXS) revealed the presence of different fractal regions with highly species-specific transition points, as part of the surface structure. All silica specimens had four of these fractal regions, but with a length scale per region characteristic for each specimen except for the region (Region I) covering the WAXS domain (d <1.5 nm). In this first region no fractal behavior was obsd. for the amorphous biosilica. Region II, with a fractal dimension (Ds) over 3.8, which indicates a smooth surface, covered the lower SAXS domain (1.5 <d <10 nm). Region III (3.3 <Ds <3.8), in the upper SAXS and lower USAXS domain (10 <d <396 nm), represented a rougher surface, whereas Region IV (Ds <2.8), the upper USAXS domain (d > 396 nm), revealed the roughest surface. Transition points between straight regions in the scattering spectra did relate to the dimension of meso- and macro-pores that are known to be present in diatom biosilica; the pore sizes detd. from the spectra agreed with ests. made from electron micrographs. Interestingly, dominant scattering peaks were obsd. in USAXS, as if we were dealing with crystals as in highly ordered MCM-type silicas. This crystallinity was only apparent, not real; it is most probably due to the high regularity in pore distributions in diatom biosilica in the size range of 100 to .apprx.500 nm. Our data show that diatom biosilica has quantifiable species-specific fractal surface properties, next to the well known species-specific pore architecture that is well beyond those of other well-ordered artificial silica materials. Consequently, it is likely that each also has its own surface pattern of reactive sites and in view of these large variations each diatom species potentially can be the source for the design of a different silica-based materia
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