| Literature DB >> 31417896 |
Vikram Singh Raghuwanshi1, Gil Garnier1.
Abstract
Cellulose, the most abundantEntities:
Keywords: biomolecule; cellulose; characterization; diagnostics; interface; thin film
Year: 2019 PMID: 31417896 PMCID: PMC6682661 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2019.00535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1Schematic of antibodies adsorption/desorption at the cellulosic thin film interface.
Figure 2Schematic of the Langmuir-Blodgett (Left) and Langmuir-Schaefer (Right) set of forming film from the air/water interface.
Figure 3Atomic force microscope image of the cellulose thin before (A) and after (B) regeneration. Reproduced with permission from Wolfberger et al. (2014).
Figure 4(A) X-ray reflectivity curves of multilayers of TMSC films at the Si substrate. (B) X-ray reflectivity curves are from the cellulose thin film regenerated from TMSC by HCl acid hydrolysis. Dotted are the experimental curves and solid line are the modeling curves. Reproduced with permission from Schaub et al. (1993).
Figure 5(A) AFM image of the deuterated bacterial cellulose (DBC) film dissolved in the ionic liquid. (B) AFM image of the cellulose film regenerated from the DBC in the HCl acid hydrolysis. Reproduced with permission from Su et al. (2016).
Figure 6AFM height images of LS films of CNC transferred at different surface pressures, (A) 45 mN/m and (B) 60 mN/m. Reproduced with permission from Habibi et al. (2010a).
Figure 7X-ray photoelectron carbon spectra of untreated (A) and washed ramie (B) cellulose nanocrystalline films. Reproduced with permission from Habibi et al. (2007).
Figure 8AFM images and the corresponding surface profiles for (a) mostly crystalline cellulose film, (b) amorphous cellulose film on polystyrene coated gold substrates. The scan size is 1 mm2 and the z-range is 15 nm. Reproduced with permission from Tammelin et al. (2015).
Figure 9ATR-FTIR spectra of cellulose and TMSC films showing different vibrational bonds. Reproduced with permission from Maver et al. (2015).
Figure 10QCM-D measurement of the water absorption in amorphous and crystalline cellulose using thin films. Change in frequency (A) and change in dissipation (B) as a function of time upon exposure to water for more crystalline and highly amorphous cellulose films. (f0 = 5 MHz, n = 3, f3/n). Reproduced with permission from Tammelin et al. (2015).
Figure 11(A) XPS wide scans from trimethylsilylcellulose (TMSC) and cellulose films hydrolyzed from TMSC with 2 M HCl for 1 min. (B) Hydrolysis of TMSC films with 0.5 M HCl followed with XPS. The carbon emission is resolved to contributions illustrating the decline of silicon bonded carbon from TMSC, as the hydrolysis proceeds. Reproduced with permission from Kontturi et al. (2003).
Figure 12(A) NR curves of deuterated cellulose and IgG adsorbed deuterated cellulose. (B) SLD profile with thickness from the substrate interface obtained by fitting the NR curves. Reproduced with permission from Raghuwanshi et al. (2017a).
Figure 13QCM-D data for the adsorption of human IgG on EDC/NHS activated NFC-film in the presence of conjugated antihuman IgG. Conjugation of IgG resulted in a small shift in frequency. Reproduced with permission from Orelma et al. (2012).
Figure 14Optical images of human blood before (left) and after (middle) drying and the contact angle sessile drop image (right), respectively, on the (a–c) glass slide surface; (d–f) cellulose acetate surface; (g–i) regenerated cellulose surface. The before and after drying images were taken in transmittance mode. Reproduced with permission from Prathapan et al. (2018).
Figure 15SPR sensogram on the adsorption of 0.1 mg/mL human IgG on cellulose. (a) CMC-modified cellulose (b), and chitosan modified cellulose (c), from aqueous solutions of pH 5.0, 6.2, 7.4, and 8.0 (the respective curves follow the same order from top down). Corresponding calculated adsorbed mass is indicated as a function of pH in the inserts (calculated from SPR data modeling). Reproduced with permission from Orelma et al. (2011).