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Dive into the research topics where Davi de Miranda Fonseca is active.

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Featured researches published by Davi de Miranda Fonseca.


EPL | 2006

Intercalation-enhanced electric polarization and chain formation of nano-layered particles

Jon Otto Fossum; Yves Méheust; K. P. S. Parmar; Kenneth D. Knudsen; Knut Jørgen Måløy; Davi de Miranda Fonseca

Microscopy observations show that suspensions of synthetic and natural nano-layered smectite clay particles submitted to a strong external electric field undergo a fast and extended structuring. This structuring results from the interaction between induced electric dipoles, and is only possible for particles with suitable polarization properties. Smectite clay colloids are observed to be particularly suitable, in contrast to similar suspensions of a non-swelling clay. Synchrotron X-ray scattering experiments provide the orientation distributions for the particles. These distributions are understood in terms of competing i) homogenizing entropy and ii) interaction between the particles and the local electric field; they show that clay particles polarize along their silica sheet. Furthermore, a change in the platelet separation inside nano-layered particles occurs under application of the electric field, indicating that intercalated ions and water molecules play a role in their electric polarization. The resulting induced dipole is structurally attached to the particle, and this causes particles to reorient and interact, resulting in the observed macroscopic structuring. The macroscopic properties of these electro-rheological smectite suspensions may be tuned by controlling the nature and quantity of the intercalated species, at the nanoscale.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Swelling transition of a clay induced by heating.

Elisabeth Hansen; Henrik Hemmen; Davi de Miranda Fonseca; C. Coutant; K. D. Knudsen; Tomás S. Plivelic; Daniel Bonn; Jon Otto Fossum

Clays are of paramount importance for soil stability, but also in applications ranging from oil recovery to composites and hydrogels. Generically, clays are divided into two subclasses: macroscopically swelling, ‘active’ clays that have the capacity for taking up large amounts of water to form stable gels, and ‘passive’ or non-swelling clays; the former stabilize soils whereas the latter are known to lead to landslides. However, it has been unclear so far what mechanisms underlie clay swelling. Here, we report the first observation of a temperature-induced transition from a passive to an active, swelling clay. We propose a simple description of the swelling transition; while net attractive interactions are dominant at low temperatures so that the clay particles remain attached to each other in stacks, at higher temperatures it is energetically favourable for the clay to swell due to the entropy that is gained by counterions which are liberated during swelling.


Langmuir | 2012

X-ray Studies of Carbon Dioxide Intercalation in Na-Fluorohectorite Clay at Near-Ambient Conditions

Henrik Hemmen; Erlend G. Rolseth; Davi de Miranda Fonseca; Elisabeth Hansen; Jon Otto Fossum; Tomás S. Plivelic

We show experimentally that gaseous CO(2) intercalates into the interlayer space of the synthetic smectite clay Na-fluorohectorite at conditions not too far from ambient. The mean interlayer repetition distance of the clay when CO(2) is intercalated is found to be 12.5 Å for the conditions -20 °C and 15 bar. The magnitude of the expansion of the interlayer upon intercalation is indistinguishable from that observed in the dehydrated-monohydrated transition for H(2)O, but the possibility of water intercalation is ruled out by a careful analysis of the experimental conditions and repeating the measurements exposing the clay to nitrogen gas. The dynamics of the process is observed to be dependent on the pressure, with a higher intercalation rate at increased pressure. The rate of CO(2) intercalation at the studied conditions is found to be several orders of magnitude slower than the intercalation rate of water or humidity at ambient pressure and temperature.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2007

Phase behavior of platelet-shaped nanosilicate colloids in saline solutions – a small-angle X-ray scattering study

Davi de Miranda Fonseca; Yves Méheust; Jon Otto Fossum; Kenneth D. Knudsen; Knut Jørgen Måløy; K. P. S. Parmar

A study of polydisperse suspensions of fluorohectorite clay in saline solutions is presented. The suspended clay colloids consist of stacks of nanosilicate sheets several tenths of a nanometre thick. They are polydisperse both with respect to the number of stacked nanolayers and with respect to their extension along the sheets. Due to this polydispersity, a spontaneous gravity-induced vertical segregation occurs in the sample tubes and results in the presence of up to four different phases on top of each other. Precise characterization of the phase diagram of the samples as a function of salt concentration and vertical position in the tubes, based on small-angle X-ray scattering data, is presented. The vertical positions of the phase boundaries were monitored by analyzing the eccentricity of elliptic fits to iso-intensity cuts of the scattering images. The intensity profiles along the two principal directions of scattering display two power-law behaviors with a smooth transition between them and show the absence of positional order in all phases.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Monitoring of the spatial and temporal dynamics of BER/SSBR pathway proteins, including MYH, UNG2, MPG, NTH1 and NEIL1-3, during DNA replication.

Karine Øian Bjørås; Mirta M. L. Sousa; Animesh Sharma; Davi de Miranda Fonseca; Caroline Danielsen Søgaard; Magnar Bjørås; Marit Otterlei

Abstract Base lesions in DNA can stall the replication machinery or induce mutations if bypassed. Consequently, lesions must be repaired before replication or in a post-replicative process to maintain genomic stability. Base excision repair (BER) is the main pathway for repair of base lesions and is known to be associated with DNA replication, but how BER is organized during replication is unclear. Here we coupled the iPOND (isolation of proteins on nascent DNA) technique with targeted mass-spectrometry analysis, which enabled us to detect all proteins required for BER on nascent DNA and to monitor their spatiotemporal orchestration at replication forks. We demonstrate that XRCC1 and other BER/single-strand break repair (SSBR) proteins are enriched in replisomes in unstressed cells, supporting a cellular capacity of post-replicative BER/SSBR. Importantly, we identify for the first time the DNA glycosylases MYH, UNG2, MPG, NTH1, NEIL1, 2 and 3 on nascent DNA. Our findings suggest that a broad spectrum of DNA base lesions are recognized and repaired by BER in a post-replicative process.


Nanotoxicology | 2018

Characterization of the proteome and lipidome profiles of human lung cells after low dose and chronic exposure to multiwalled carbon nanotubes

Santosh Phuyal; Mayes Kasem; Oskar Knittelfelder; Animesh Sharma; Davi de Miranda Fonseca; Vaineta Vebraite; Sergey Shaposhnikov; Geir Slupphaug; Vidar Skaug; Shanbeh Zienolddiny

Abstract The effects of long-term chronic exposure of human lung cells to multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) and their impact upon cellular proteins and lipids were investigated. Since the lung is the major target organ, an in vitro normal bronchial epithelial cell line model was used. Additionally, to better mimic exposure to manufactured nanomaterials at occupational settings, cells were continuously exposed to two non-toxic and low doses of a MWCNT for 13-weeks. MWCNT-treatment increased ROS levels in cells without increasing oxidative DNA damage and resulted in differential expression of multiple anti- and pro-apoptotic proteins. The proteomic analysis of the MWCNT-exposed cells showed that among more than 5000 identified proteins; more than 200 were differentially expressed in the treated cells. Functional analyses revealed association of these differentially regulated proteins to cellular processes such as cell death and survival, cellular assembly, and organization. Similarly, shotgun lipidomic profiling revealed accumulation of multiple lipid classes. Our results indicate that long-term MWCNT-exposure of human normal lung cells at occupationally relevant low-doses may alter both the proteome and the lipidome profiles of the target epithelial cells in the lung.


Physica B-condensed Matter | 2005

Dynamics of water intercalation fronts in a nano-layered synthetic silicate: A synchrotron X-ray scattering study

G. Løvoll; Bjornar Sandnes; Yves Méheust; Knut Jørgen Måløy; Jon Otto Fossum; G.J. da Silva; Maria Suely Pedrosa Mundim; R. Droppa; Davi de Miranda Fonseca


Energy | 2004

Observations of orientational ordering in aqueous suspensions of a nano-layered silicate

Jon Otto Fossum; E. Gudding; Davi de Miranda Fonseca; Yves Méheust; Elaine DiMasi; T. Gog; C. Venkataraman


Physical Review E | 2009

Phase diagram of polydisperse Na-fluorohectorite-water suspensions: a synchrotron small-angle x-ray scattering study.

Davi de Miranda Fonseca; Yves Méheust; Jon Otto Fossum; Kenneth D. Knudsen; K. P. S. Parmar


Physical Review E | 2010

Nematic textures in colloidal dispersions of Na-fluorohectorite synthetic clay.

Ringdal Ni; Davi de Miranda Fonseca; Elisabeth Hansen; Henrik Hemmen; Jon Otto Fossum

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Jon Otto Fossum

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Yves Méheust

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Kenneth D. Knudsen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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K. P. S. Parmar

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Henrik Hemmen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Animesh Sharma

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Elisabeth Hansen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Geir Slupphaug

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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