1 / 19

Nanoparticle Synthesis Using Glycolipids

Nanoparticle Synthesis Using Glycolipids. Shahidan Radiman et al School of Applied Physics Faculty of Science and Technology UKM. Why glycolipids?. Biocompatibility – can deliver nanoparticle to cell whether prepared in situ or ex situ;interact with DNA etc

Télécharger la présentation

Nanoparticle Synthesis Using Glycolipids

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nanoparticle Synthesis Using Glycolipids Shahidan Radiman et al School of Applied Physics Faculty of Science and Technology UKM

  2. Why glycolipids? • Biocompatibility – can deliver nanoparticle to cell whether prepared in situ or ex situ;interact with DNA etc • Display typical lyotropic liquid crystalline behaviour –and like other surfactants can be used as template • Hydrogen bonding useful for anchoring • Chirality – useful for recognition or as “sensor” • More complex phases and morphologies than ordinary surfactants e.g cryoprotectants • Larger size than normal surfactants shown to give no defects as hemimicelles on inert surface e.g graphite

  3. Economic reason for glycolipid • Biotech age – proteomics , membrane mimicry etc • Nanobionics : cell – interface • From renewable raw materials and is green tech ( non toxic , biodegradable etc) • Complex formulation – from pharmaceuticals , cosmetology to nuclear medicine • Infinite architecture and group combinations

  4. Strategy of our group • Similarity with alkylpolyglucosides which are widely studied • Phase behaviour very similar to many known surfactants and readily used concepts like HLB , packing parameter etc • Integrated studies : monolayer , microstructures in both water (+ oil) and alcohols (phase behaviour), thermal , concentrations and rheology • Thermodynamics and phase transitions especially with incorporated reacting ions (phase stability) • Informatics on both molecular and supramolecular structures

  5. Some fundamental questions? • Can glycolipid form giant micelles? • Can glycolipid in smectic phase form chiral defects? • Are monolayer glycolipid giving new features from normal surfactants? • Can glycolipid form L3 phase , bicontinuous middle-phase , highly-packed emulsions etc , organogels? • Lyotropic cubic phase – their role in membrane fusion etc

  6. Manpower of our group • Local collaborators : • UM ( Dr. Rauzah + Dr Misni) , SIRIM ( Dr Nadarajah) , UiTM ( Dr. Sazali) • UKM : Dr. V.M Sithi ( Theory and Simulation) , Dr. Azmi Hamid ( Electron Microscopy + Semiconductor) , Dr. Razak Daud ( Mechanical Alloying) , Dr. Norbaayah Ibrahim ( Laser ablation) , Dr. Redzuwan Yahaya ( Monte Carlo Simulation) and Dr. Md Soot Ahmad ( Radiation Chemistry and Processing) • International Collaborator : Prof. Peter Laggner , Inst. Of Biophysics , Austrian Academy of Science

  7. Research Students 5 PhDs: Mohamed A. Siddig (Rheology and microstructure) Irwana Nainggolan ( Synthesis and lyotropic behaviour) Siti Fazlili Abdullah ( Nanoparticle synthesis , part-time , deferred) Dahyunir Dahlan ( Electrochemical , Mechanical Alloying , deferred) Lal Said Jan ( Nanoparticle synthesis and electronic properties)

  8. Research students • 8 MSc: • Vijay Achari ( MD simulation ) • Shamsuddin Mat Isa ( Rheology and Radiation Processing) • Norlie Mazlina ( Soil remediation ) • Huang Nay Ming ( Nanoparticle synthesis) • Khiew Poi Sim ( Nanocomposites and Radiation Processing) • Hartini Chik ( Rheology and lyotropic behaviour) • Siti Salwa Zainal Abidin ( Vesicles , Liposomes and Cosmeceuticals) • Marjoni Imamora ( Mechanical alloying , laser ablation and electrochemical )

  9. New intake (March-May 2003) • 5 intakes soon: • Saiful Kamaludin ( Electrochemical and Monolayer ) • Yong Yoke Mei ( Synthesis and organogels) • Fong Ee Seng ( Soil remediation) • Kong Sing Geik ( Nanorods by LC templating) • 1 Postdoc from Ukraine (working in USA) • Cik Zaitonai Razali ( secretary for the group beginning 1 Feb. 2003)

  10. Infrastructures • 3 labs allocated to the group and one large postgraduate room ( 10 students) • Amenities: security card and keys , one photocopy machine and 4 computers . • Facilities : Preparative lab, light microscopy facility , UV-Vis spectrometer, wetting angle goniometer , XPS facility , 2 dedicated simulation computer . • In the process: LB-trough (by March 03) and rheometer (by mid April 03) and by July 2003 , SWAXS machine • International collaborations: SWAXS (Graz), SANS (Hamburg)and Synchrotron facility(Trieste)

  11. Methods of nanoparticle preparation • There are more than 25 methods to prepare nanoparticles to date but ours will mainly concentrate with using glycolipids • Methods already tried (successfully): micellar and microemulsion , LC templating • Methods to be tried (in near future) : laser ablation from micellar solution , electrochemical deposition , mechanical allloying using glycolipid as lubricant , Langmuir-Blodgett technique, organogels , vesicles and liposomes. • Challenges : polymerisable glycolipids , organometalloids, nonequilibrium structures

  12. Some recent results from UKM • Polymerisation in wormlike micelles (Cetyltrimethylammonium p-toluenesulphonate) • PbS nanorod in sucrose-ester S1670 +1heptanol + water • NiS nanoparticles in sucrose ester S1170 + tetradecane + 1butanol + water • Nanocomposite of polyaniline-coated CdS in Synperonic NP5/NP10 +cyclohexane+water • NiS nanorod in Aerosol-OT +p-xylene+ water hexagonal phase • Fundamental study : Myelin figures and phase diagrams for sucrose esters and glucapone surfactants

  13. Next step I(within 2003) • Using our own glycolipids to prepare nanoparticles • Nanoparticle applications e.g electrorheological fluids , dispersed catalysts , nanoclusters e.g SiO2 • Other materials e.g nanomagnets , nanosuperconductor etc • Longer rods • Interactions with biological materials e.g DNA , virus • Towards fabrication and large production

  14. Next step II( end 2003-early 20040 • Exploit on organogels • In situ preparation of nanoparticles in cells e.g radioactive nanoparticles • New techniques of characterisation e.g grazing incidence X-ray (for multilayers), NMR and ESR for orientations , positron annihilation spectroscopy for defects , dynamic light scattering for concentrated phases • Modelling phases (microstructures), rheology and thermodynamics

  15. Strength at UKM • Experimentalists + Theorists + Computational Physicists • Mixed physics and chemistry students • Leadership with surfactant-colloid and small-angle scattering background • Regular meetings and brainstorming sessions ( biweekly) • New MSc by courses which can be attended e.g STSP 6343 (Nanotechnology) • Feasible infrastructures

  16. Weaknesses at UKM • Group management ( a postdoc is needed , secretary only recently) • Homepage and daily bulletin board ( under construction) • Collaboration with SIRIM ( poor) , UM ( fair to good) , UiTM ( fair) • International collaboration : Graz (fair to good) –providing SAXS and synchrotron facility-need to send students • Invited speakers/ visiting professors • Delay in buying instruments (J 1000)

  17. Benchmarking (2003) • 10 international and 15 local publications • (in 2002 we have …….) • One international meeting held locally ( hopefully July 03) • Homepage linked to Paul Huibers • Invited talks /inviting speakers • Accredited laboratory ( need to check std requirements)

  18. Conclusions • Overall we are on target with a 4 month delay (receive grant on 4/4/2002) • Need diverse preparative methods and types of nanoparticle , however: • Nanoparticle production need a guiding principle • Productivity is an important issue (2003) • Quality work IS an issue (this means novelty , theory and simulations)

  19. PHILOSOPHY • There is a unifying (Tawhidic) philosophy behind our research in glycolipids and the keyword is MEMBRANES • Amphiphilic membranes are the basis of cell structures – the basis of living structures BUT also • Membranes are thought to be the fundamental structure of the universe ( e.g super membranes, M-theory etc) • The basic statistical mechanics and thermodynamics for both membranes are the same!! e.g Polyakov string ( for random membrane) = 2-dimensional gravity theory

More Related