Author Archive

EAQ converts nanotubes from metallic to semiconducting

The practical use of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) in electronics such as field-effect transistors has been somewhat hindered by the presence of metallic nanotubes in current synthetic methods.   Scientists in Singapore and the US have come up with a simple method to convert unwanted metallic single-walled carbon nanotubes (M-SWNTs) into semiconducting ones (S-SWNTs).

The team immersed as synthesised SWNT on-chip devices and immersed them into a solution containing an aromatic compound – 2-ethylanthraquinone (EAQ), which is a mild radical initiator. The EAQ-generated radicals preferentially attack the M-SWNTs over the S-SWNTs in situ, converting them to its semiconducting mode.

Alternative methods for converting M-SWNTs to S-SWNTs use either electron irradiation, which is difficult to scale up, or hydrogen plasma, which is aggressive and can’t be controlled. “This approach (using EAQ…) is simple, mild and easily scalable to whole wafers,” claim John Rogers (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, US) and Mary Chan-Park (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore).

Free access to the full article online:
 

On-chip diameter-dependent conversion of metallic to semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes by immersion in 2-ethylanthraquinone
Jiangbo Li, Xuena Luan, Yinxi Huang, Simon Dunham, Peng Chen, John A. Rogers and Mary B. Chan-Park
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00817J, Communication

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A dual combo for mouth wash or dental paste

“Chlorhexidine-loaded calcium phosphate nanoparticles provide a dual system with both mineralising and antibacterial properties,” claim German scientists.

Calcium phosphate is a natural component of tooth mineral and it can help to remineralise damaged enamel. On the other hand, chlrohexidine is an antibacterial agent, which helps prevent the bacterial colonisation on the tooth surface. The team led by Professor Matthis Epple at the University of Duisburg-Essen synthesised chlorhexidine-loaded calcium phosphate nanoparticles for use either in mouth wash or as a paste.  

The figure below shows that “the fluorescein-labelled paste containing the functionalised nanoparticles adhered well onto the tooth surface, especially at the cervical and proximal areas”. Epple and co-workers also demonstrate that the paste sticks well to the root surface and closes dentin tubules.

Read the full paper published in RSC Advances by clicking on the title below or simply register online, if you do not have free access to the Journal content already.

Chlorhexidine-loaded calcium phosphate nanoparticles for dental maintenance treatment: combination of mineralising and antibacterial effects
Anna Kovtun, Diana Kozlova, Kathirvel Ganesan, Caroline Biewald, Nadine Seipold, Peter Gaengler, Wolfgang H. Arnold and Matthias Epple
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00955A, Paper

 

Also of interest is a recent review article recently published in RSC Advances. Click on the title for free access.

Recent advances in the development of dental composite resins
Christine Lavigueur and X. X. Zhu
RSC Adv., 2012, 2, 59-63
DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00922B, Review

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Eastern Promise

Yongyuth Yuthavong is interested in the development of novel antimalarial agents. He currently leads a research group at the National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC) in Thailand. Professor Yuthavong was the first president of the National Science and Technology Development Agency (1992-1998) and served as the minister of science and technology (2006-2008), both in Thailand.

When did you become interested in malaria?

During my studies at the University of Oxford, UK, I was investigating the chemical kinetics of enzymatic reactions. When I went back to Thailand, I realised that no one understood, or cared, about enzymes. To make people understand that studying enzymes is important, I decided to tackle a significant problem in the country using my expertise.  I studied red blood cell membranes and saw that malaria was a significant problem, and that both chemistry and biochemistry could be used to understand the parasite’s life and processes. The available drugs – such as chloroquine and pyrimethamine – were becoming ineffective so we needed new drugs. Together with other biochemists, I formed a malaria research group. We were lucky that we were mostly in the same department so we could meet on a daily basis, because it was very difficult to do research in Thailand.

Is the cure for malaria drug-based or vaccine-based?

It is still drug based. Some vaccines are being developed by GlaxoSmithKline, but they are not as effective. I think that there is still a long way to go on the vaccination side. The ideal drugs have to be cheap, orally administered and preferably cause no resistance, which is almost impossible. You will find that almost all anti-infection drugs, including antibiotics, will last at most 5-10 years before resistance is developed. I think that we need a new paradigm where the drug hits a more fundamental mechanism so that no mutation or resistance is possible.

What have you discovered?

We found the structure of the enzyme (Plasmodium falciparum) dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase [a target for antimalarials] (published in Nature Structural Biology in 2003). From there, we understood the basis of resistance owing to mutation in the active site so that we could design compounds that would avert the effect of mutation. Now we have many candidates, but we have not published the details yet. One in particular is P218, which is a flexible diamino pyrimidine with good efficacy. P218 is effective orally and does not cause much resistance (although this part needs to be investigated), and it is relatively cheap to manufacture.

How can developed countries help developing countries to eradicate the disease?

Thailand is good in certain areas of research but poor in others. For example, in malaria research, we are very strong in the clinical sciences. International researchers come from outside Thailand to study the disease clinically. Thailand is a good base for them to go to neighbouring countries where the disease is still prevalent. We also have very good basic early applied research, such as fundamental research in the discovery and development of new drugs. But, we severely lack scale-up capabilities, and an understanding of toxicology, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. We don’t have the facilities to study the preclinical phase and mutational studies.

So, we have to collaborate with external groups, for example that of Livia Vivas at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK. We have an ongoing collaboration with the Medicines for Malaria Venture, based in Switzerland, to help us validate the structure of the target and support us in developing good drug candidates based on those targets.

However, we can do some things on our own and lead our own researchers. I think that this is really important for scientists from developing countries. Most scientists in developing countries have participated in international research projects but until now, they have played very small parts, doing some screening or cell culture work. Very few rise to the level of planning and executing and developing that strategic thinking to lead a project. We do need that.

Is it difficult to find funding in Thailand?

We have to go out and tell people that our work is really important to get support. I decided to approach people who have important positions in national research councils and universities to persuade them that we do need a new kind of granting organisation. I found some very good people who listened to us and we founded the BIOTEC research centre and later on the National Science and Technology Development Agency. These are agencies that give grants as well as do their own research. Also, I helped to draft a law that started the Thailand Research Fund, which gives grants to researchers of £30,000-50,000. This would go a long way in Thailand.

Read the full interview published in Chemistry World here.

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Organic reviews in RSC Advances

RSC Advances has published a number of organic chemistry review articles covering a wide array of topics such as organocatalysis, organometallics, aromatic, ionic liquids, DNA and supramolecular chemistry. All of our articles are free to download until December 2012. Simply register online for free access.

Iron-catalysed reduction of carbonyls and olefins
Bryden A. F. Le Bailly and Stephen P. Thomas
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 1435-1445

Regioselective formation of medium-ring heterocycles of biological relevance by intramolecular cyclization
K. C. Majumdar
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 1152-1170

Synthetically useful carbon–carbon and carbon–sulphur bond construction mediated by carbon- and sulphur-centred radicals in water and aqueous media
Al Postigo
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 14-32

Incorporation of pyridazine rings in the structure of functionalized π-conjugated materials
Sylvain Achelle, Nelly Plé and Alain Turck
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 364-388

CO2 chemistry: task-specific ionic liquids for CO2 capture/activation and subsequent conversion
Zhen-Zhen Yang, Ya-Nan Zhao and Liang-Nian He
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 545-567

The pyrolytic behavior of cellulose in lignocellulosic biomass: a review
Dekui Shen, Rui Xiao, Sai Gu and Kaihong Luo
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 1641-1660

Fast repair of DNA radicals in the earliest stage of carcinogenesis suppresses hallmarks of cancer
Rongliang Zheng, Zhongjian Jia, Ji Li, Shuangsheng Huang, Ping Mu, Fangxin Zhang, Chunming Wang and Chengshan Yuan
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 1610-1619

Take the first peep at the 2012 organic chemistry reviews here:

Homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts for multicomponent reactions
Maria José Climent, Avelino Corma and Sara Iborra
RSC Adv., 2012, 2, 16-58

Cucurbituril chemistry: a tale of supramolecular success
Eric Masson, Xiaoxi Ling, Roymon Joseph, Lawrence Kyeremeh-Mensah and Xiaoyong Lu
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00768H

 Methods for SAR visualization
Dagmar Stumpfe and Jürgen Bajorath
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00924A

Enantioselective organocatalytic α-heterofunctionalization of active methines
Alessio Russo, Claudia De Fusco and Alessandra Lattanzi
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00612F

Targeted drugs by olefin metathesis: piperidine-based iminosugars
Ileana Dragutan, Valerian Dragutan and Albert Demonceau
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00910A

Aromatic hydroxyl group—a hydrogen bonding activator in bifunctional asymmetric organocatalysis
Pankaj Chauhan and Swapandeep Singh Chimni
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00872B

If you fancy submitting your next article to RSC Advances, please click here.

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Welcome to the first issue of 2012!

RSC Advances has published 9 issues in 2011 containing 234 articles and our first issue of 2012 is also online now. In this issue, you can read the following review articles:

Homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts for multicomponent reactions
Maria José Climent, Avelino Corma and Sara Iborra
RSC Adv., 2012, 2, 16-58

Recent advances in the development of dental composite resins
Christine Lavigueur and X. X. Zhu
RSC Adv., 2012, 2, 59-63

Graphene–inorganic nanocomposites
Song Bai and Xiaoping Shen
RSC Adv., 2012, 2, 64-98

Other articles in the first issue of 2012 include: carbon nanocages for Li ion batteries, an inorganic biocatalyst, self-repairable polymer that changes to red when damaged. You can also learn about phonon-mode Raman spectra or how to purify drugs from bacteria.

Our content is free to download until December 2012. Please also note that RSC Advances authors can now choose to publish their articles immediately after acceptance. Click here for more details.

Thank you to all our authors, referees and editors for your dedicated support to RSC Advances. We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New year 2012!

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It’s a wrap!

Graphene-wrapped nanosilicon for high performance Li-ion batteries

Chinese scientists have used graphene sheets to wrap silicon nanoparticles to make nanocomposites which resemble bath lilies.

Zi-Feng Ma and co-workers, from Shanghai Jiao Tong University, have assessed the performance of the novel bath lily-like graphene sheet-wrapped silicon (GS-Si) nanocomposites as anode materials for Li-ion batteries. They showed that the GS-Si nanocomposites exhibit a high reversible capacity of 1525mAh g1 and superior cycling stability.  Conventional graphite anodes display a theoretical specific capacity of only 372 mAh g-1, making it a weak candidate for anodes of Li-ion batteries.

The GS-Si nanocomposites were synthesised using a spray-drying technique which requires “no surfactant, no filtration or washing processes and no high vacuum conditions.” The authors believe that the procedure is safe and environmentally friendly and can be scaled up for the mass production of graphene-based composite materials.

The obtained GS-Si composite possesses an open nano/micro-structure, in which nanosized Si particles are uniformly dispersed and wrapped in the graphene sheet (GS) matrix. “The GS not only constitutes a good conducting network, but also provides enough void spaces to accommodate the volume change of Si and prevent the aggregation of nano-Si particles during cycling, ” explains Ma et al.

Find out more about graphene sheet-wrapped nanocomposites by downloading the full article for free until December 2012.

A novel bath lily-like graphene sheet-wrapped nano-Si composite as a high performance anode material for Li-ion batteries
Yu-Shi He, Pengfei Gao, Jun Chen, Xiaowei Yang, Xiao-Zhen Liao, Jun Yang and Zi-Feng Ma
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 958-960

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Red marks the spot

A self-healing polymer coating that changes from clear to red when damaged has been developed by a research team in the US. The coating repairs itself in sunlight, under heating or with exposure to acidic vapours, and becomes clear again.

Marek Urban, leading researcher at the University of Southern Mississippi, explains that the polymer “films are capable of sensing color changes upon mechanical scratches, but upon exposure to the visible (VIS) portion of the electromagnetic radiation (y580 nm), temperature, and/or acidic atmospheres, not only mechanical damage is repaired, but also the mechanically induced red coloured scar vanishes.”

The red colour is because of a ring-opening reaction to form merocyanine, which is red. As the ring closes again under light, heat or an acidic vapour, it forms spironaphthoxazine, which is clear.

Want to find out more? Download the full paper for free until December 2012.

Self-repairable copolymers that change color
Dhanya Ramachandran, Fang Liu and Marek W. Urban
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00137J

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Nanotubes infiltrate plant cell walls via induced nanoholes

Carbon nanotubes that look like cups stacked on top of each other have been functionalized with cellulase enzyme to enable them to penetrate inside cells through induced nanoholes without damaging the entire plant cell wall.

Plant cell wall is a unique barrier made up of cellulosic materials which prevent the passage of macromolecules inside the cells. Traditionally, when studying plant biology, scientists strip away the cell wall using cellulase (an enzyme that causes cellulose hydrolysis) or other chemical treatments. The latter procedures to disorganize the cell walls may affect the cell viability or the cell’s capability to divide.

Scientists at Nagoya University in Japan, have developed a clever way to functionalize cup-stacked carbon nanotubes functionalized on their tips and walls with cellulase. The immobilized cellulase is proposed to induce local lesions in the cell wall, through which carbon nanotubes can transport into the interior of the cell.

The authors believe that this new method could open a lot of opportunities for studying plant cell genetics or plant diseases.

Download the full article for free by simply registering here.

Introducing carbon nanotubes into living walled plant cells through cellulase-induced nanoholes
Maged F. Serag, Noritada Kaji, Manabu Tokeshi and Yoshinobu Baba
RSC Adv., 2012, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00760B, Communication

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200th RSC Advances Article published online: A biochip for detecting ocean microbes

Fujii and co-workers have fabricated a microfluidic device capable of analyzing microbial genes in deep sea environments. The genetic analyzer consists of a PDMS–glass microfluidic device that is capable of cell lysis, DNA purification, PCR, and optical detection. The Integrated In Situ Analyzer was named “IISA-Gene’’. It was developed and evaluated in Tokyo as a result of a fruitful collabotation between the University of Tokyo and the Tokyo Institute of Technology.

“We were able to use IISA-Gene to achieve spatiotemporally resolved profiling of microbial ecosystems in ocean environments”, claims Fujii. The technique which incorporates microfluidic technology minimises the risks of contamination through sample collections and manipulations.   

By employing a simple flow-through PCR method, complicated genetic analyses can be automatically performed in extreme oceanic conditions. The performance of the system has been examined through at-sea experiments, taking it down to the deep sea using a remotely-operated vehicle. “Field evaluations at deep sea have shown that the amplification of the eubacterial universal 16S rRNA gene and the recovery of the PCR product to the surface”, says Fujii. The technology could provide a significant step to aid the discovery of further microbial life-forms in our oceans. 

This is the 200th article published online by RSC Advances, a newly launched Journal by the Royal Society of Chemistry. You can download the full article for free by simply registering here.

Integrated in situ genetic analyzer for microbiology in extreme environments
Tatsuhiro Fukuba, Akimitsu Miyaji, Takuji Okamoto, Takatoki Yamamoto, Shohei Kaneda and Teruo Fujii
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 1567-1573

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Announcement: RSC Advances is now indexed in SCI

We are pleased to announce that RSC Advances is now fully indexed in Thomson Reuters SCI-expanded databases including ISI Web of Science. This will enhance the visibility and discoverability of all the articles published. Issues 1-6 of RSC Advances are already listed on ISI. Congratulations to the authors who have their articles cited already!

Below is a list of RSC Advances articles that have already received citations:

The role of the intermolecular potential on the dynamics of ethylene confined in cylindrical nanopores
Fernando J. A. L. Cruz, Erich A. Müller and José P. B. Mota
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 270-281

Fabrication of cuprous oxide nanoparticles by laser ablation in PVP aqueous solution
Peisheng Liu, Zhigang Li, Weiping Cai, Ming Fang and Xiangdong Luo
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 847-851

A novel application of porphyrin nanoparticles as an effective fluorescent assay platform for nucleic acid detection
Junfeng Zhai, Hailong Li and Xuping Sun
RSC Adv., 2011, 1, 36-39
DOI: 10.1039/C1RA00026H

Please remember that all our articles are free to download until December 2012!

RSC Advances publishes high quality articles covering emerging areas and multidiciplinary fields. The subject coverage includes: Analytical, Biological, Catalysis, Environmental, Inorganic, Materials, Physical, Organic, Nanoscience, Energy, Food, Chemical Biology and Medicinal. More information on our scope can be read here.

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