4 research outputs found
Impurity effects on ionic-liquid-based supercapacitors
<p>Small amounts of an impurity may affect the key properties of an ionic liquid and such effects can be dramatically amplified when the electrolyte is under confinement. Here the classical density functional theory is employed to investigate the impurity effects on the microscopic structure and the performance of ionic-liquid-based electrical double-layer capacitors, also known as supercapacitors. Using a primitive model for ionic species, we study the effects of an impurity on the double layer structure and the integral capacitance of a room temperature ionic liquid in model electrode pores and find that an impurity strongly binding to the surface of a porous electrode can significantly alter the electric double layer structure and dampen the oscillatory dependence of the capacitance with the pore size of the electrode. Meanwhile, a strong affinity of the impurity with the ionic species affects the dependence of the integral capacitance on the pore size. Up to 30% increase in the integral capacitance can be achieved even at a very low impurity bulk concentration. By comparing with an ionic liquid mixture containing modified ionic species, we find that the cooperative effect of the bounded impurities is mainly responsible for the significant enhancement of the supercapacitor performance.</p
Phase Separation of Mixed Micelles and Synthesis of Hierarchical Porous Materials
The
mixed micelle template approach is one of the most promising synthesis
methods for hierarchical porous materials. Although considerable research
efforts have been made to explore the formation mechanism, explicit
theoretical guidance for appropriately choosing templates is still
not available. We found that the phase separation occurring in the
mixed micelles would be the key point for the synthesis of hierarchical
porous materials. Herein, the pseudophase separation theory for the
critical micelle concentration (cmc) combined with the Flory–Huggins
theory for the chain molecular mixture were employed to investigate
the properties of mixed surfactant aqueous solutions. The cmc values
of mixed surfactant solutions were experimentally determined to calculate
the Flory–Huggins interaction parameter between two surfactants,
χ. When χ is larger than the critical value, χ<sub>c</sub>, the phase separation would occur within the micellar phase,
resulting in two types of mixed micelles with different surfactant
compositions, and hence different sizes, which could be used as the
dual-template to induce bimodal pores with different pore sizes. Therefore,
the Flory–Huggins theory could be a theoretical basis to judge
whether the mixed surfactants were the suitable templates for inducing
hierarchical porous materials. We chose cetyltrimethylammonium bromide
(CTAB) and <i>n</i>-octylamine (OA) as a testing system.
The phase separation behavior of the mixed solutions as well as the
successful synthesis of hierarchical porous materials by this dual-template
indicated the feasibility of preparing hierarchical porous materials
based on the concept of phase separation of the mixed micelles
Differential interference contrast (DIC) and immunofluorescence staining images of WT and MFR <i>L</i>. <i>amazonensis</i> promastigotes treated with DMMB-PDT at 8 J/cm<sup>2</sup> in the presence of 750 nM of DMMB.
A) Refers to WT untreated control stained directly after DMMB-PDT (WT control D). B) Refers to WT exposed to treatment and stained directly after DMMB-PDT (WT DMMB-PDT D). C) Refers to WT untreated control stained 1h after DMMB-PDT (WT control 1h). D) Refers to WT exposed to treatment and stained 1h after DMMB-PDT (WT DMMB-PDT 1h). E) Refers to MFR untreated control stained directly after DMMB-PDT (MFR control D). F) Refers to MFR exposed to treatment and stained directly after DMMB-PDT (MFR DMMB-PDT D). G) Refers to MFR untreated control stained 1h after DMMB-PDT (MFR control 1h). H) Refers to MFR exposed to treatment and stained 1h after DMMB-PDT (MFR DMMB-PDT 1h). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue fluorescence) and mitochondria were stained with Mito tracker red (red fluorescence) directly after PDT. N = Nuclei; k = Kinetoplast; M = Mitochondrion. Scale bar = 5 μm.</p
In Situ Ratiometric Quantitative Tracing of Intracellular Leucine Aminopeptidase Activity via an Activatable Near-Infrared Fluorescent Probe
Leucine aminopeptidase
(LAP), one of the important proteolytic enzymes, is intertwined with
the progress of many pathological disorders as a well-defined biomarker.
To explore fluorescent aminopeptidase probe for quantitative detection
of LAP distribution and dynamic changes, herein we report a LAP-targeting
near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent probe (DCM–Leu) for ratiometric
quantitative trapping of LAP activity in different kinds of living
cells. DCM–Leu is composed of a NIR-emitting fluorophore (DCM)
as a reporter and l-leucine as a triggered moiety, which
are linked together by an amide bond specific for LAP cleavage. High
contrast on the ratiometric NIR fluorescence signal can be achieved
in response to LAP activity, thus enabling quantification of endogenous
LAP with “build-in calibration” as well as minimal background
interference. Its ratiometric NIR signal can be blocked in a dose-dependent
manner by bestatin, an LAP inhibitor, indicating that the alteration
of endogenous LAP activity results in these obviously fluorescent
signal responses. It is worth noting that DCM–Leu features
striking characteristics such as a large Stokes shift (∼205
nm), superior selectivity, and strong photostability responding to
LAP. Impressively, not only did we successfully exemplify DCM–Leu
in situ ratiometric trapping and quantification of endogenous LAP
activity in various types of living cells, but also, with the aid
of three-dimensional confocal imaging, the intracellular LAP distribution
is clearly observed from different perspectives for the first time,
owing to the high signal-to-noise of ratiometric NIR fluorescent response.
Collectively, these results demonstrate preclinical potential value
of DCM–Leu serving as a useful NIR fluorescent probe for early
detection of LAP-associated disease and screening inhibitor