Date of Graduation
5-2011
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy in Chemistry (PhD)
Degree Level
Graduate
Department
Chemistry & Biochemistry
Advisor/Mentor
Tian, Z. Ryan
Committee Member
Chen, Jingyi
Second Committee Member
Sears, Derek W.
Third Committee Member
Durham, Bill
Keywords
Bioscaffold membranes; Biosensors; Nanobelts; Nanomaterials
Abstract
Nanostructured bioscaffolds and biosensors are evolving as popular and powerful tools in life science and biotechnology, due to the possible control of their surface and structural properties at the nm-scale. Being seldom discussed in literature and long-underexploited in materials and biomedical sciences, development of nanofiber-based sensory bioscaffolds has great promises and grand challenges in finding an ideal platform for low-cost quantifications of biological and chemical species in real-time, label-free, and ultrasensitive fashion. In this study, titanate nanobelts were first of all synthesized, from hydrothermal reactions of a NaOH (or KOH solution) with TiO2 powder, to possess underexploited structure and surface vital to the rapid and label-free electrochemical detections of protein (cytochrome c) and neurotransmitter (dopamine). This work is based on a suite of new physical and chemical properties on the titanate nanobelt in water, including high surface area, zwitterionic surface, chemical- and photochemical-durability, cation-exchange and anion- and cation-sorption capacities, protein- and cell-compatibility, thermal-stability, and charge conductivity. The Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) was used for identifying any denaturing of the cytochrome c pre-immobilized on the titanate nanobelts. On that basis, the pheochromocytoma cells (PC-12 cell) were chosen to grow on the titanate nanobelts. These experiments prove that the sensory bioscaffolds of titanate nanobelt-membrane is a multiplex platform for developing new tools for energy, environmental and life sciences.
Citation
Chen, F. (2011). New Interfacial Nanochemistry on Sensory Bioscaffold-Membranes of Nanobelts. Graduate Theses and Dissertations Retrieved from https://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd/96