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Featured researches published by Dong Zhou.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Gradual Ordering in Red Abalone Nacre

P. U. P. A. Gilbert; Rebecca A. Metzler; Dong Zhou; Andreas Scholl; Andrew Doran; Anthony Young; Martin Kunz; Nobumichi Tamura; S. N. Coppersmith

Red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) nacre is a layered composite biomineral that contains crystalline aragonite tablets confined by organic layers. Nacre is intensely studied because its biologically controlled microarchitecture gives rise to remarkable strength and toughness, but the mechanisms leading to its formation are not well understood. Here we present synchrotron spectromicroscopy experiments revealing that stacks of aragonite tablet crystals in nacre are misoriented with respect to each other. Quantitative measurements of crystal orientation, tablet size, and tablet stacking direction show that orientational ordering occurs not abruptly but gradually over a distance of 50 microm. Several lines of evidence indicate that different crystal orientations imply different tablet growth rates during nacre formation. A theoretical model based on kinetic and gradual selection of the fastest growth rates produces results in qualitative and quantitative agreement with the experimental data and therefore demonstrates that ordering in nacre is a result of crystal growth kinetics and competition either in addition or to the exclusion of templation by acidic proteins as previously assumed. As in other natural evolving kinetic systems, selection of the fastest-growing stacks of tablets occurs gradually in space and time. These results suggest that the self-ordering of the mineral phase, which may occur completely independently of biological or organic-molecule control, is fundamental in nacre formation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Nacre Protein Fragment Templates Lamellar Aragonite Growth

Rebecca A. Metzler; John Spencer Evans; Christopher E. Killian; Dong Zhou; Tyler H. Churchill; Narayana Appathurai; S. N. Coppersmith; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

Proteins play a major role in the formation of all biominerals. In mollusk shell nacre, complex mixtures and assemblies of proteins and polysaccharides were shown to induce aragonite formation, rather than the thermodynamically favored calcite (both aragonite and calcite are CaCO(3) polymorphs). Here we used N16N, a single 30 amino acid-protein fragment originally inspired by the mineral binding site of N16, a protein in the nacre layer of the Japanese pearl oysters (Pinctada fucata). In a calcite growth solution this short peptide induces in vitro biomineralization. This model biomineral was analyzed using X-ray PhotoElectron Emission spectroMicroscopy (X-PEEM) and found to be strikingly similar to natural nacre: lamellar aragonite with interspersed N16N layers. This and other findings combined suggest a hypothetical scenario in which in vivo three proteins (N16, Pif80, and Pif97) and a polysaccharide (chitin) work in concert to form lamellar nacre.


Geobiology | 2008

A high-resolution chemical and structural study of framboidal pyrite formed within a low-temperature bacterial biofilm

L. C. W. Maclean; Tolek Tyliszczak; P. U. P. A. Gilbert; Dong Zhou; T. J. Pray; T. C. Onstott; Gordon Southam

A novel, anaerobically grown microbial biofilm, scraped from the inner surface of a borehole, 1474 m below land surface within a South African, Witwatersrand gold mine, contains framboidal pyrite. Water flowing from the borehole had a temperature of 30.9 degrees C, a pH of 7.4, and an Eh of -50 mV. Examination of the biofilm using X-ray diffraction, field emission gun scanning electron microscope equipped for energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis demonstrated that the framboids formed within a matrix of bacteria and biopolymers. Focused ion beam sectioning of framboids followed by NEXAFS measurements using both scanning transmission X-ray microscopy and X-ray photoelectron emission microscopy revealed that the pyrite crystals grew within an organic carbon matrix consisting of exopolysaccharides and possibly extracellular DNA, which is intuitively important in sulfide mineral diagenesis. Growth of individual pyrite crystals within the framboid occurred inside organic templates confirms the association between framboidal pyrite and organic materials in low-temperature diagenetic environments and the important role of microenvironments in biofilms in regulating geochemical cycles.


Langmuir | 2008

Probing the Organic-Mineral Interface at the Molecular Level in Model Biominerals

Rebecca A. Metzler; Il Won Kim; Katya Delak; John Spencer Evans; Dong Zhou; Elia Beniash; Fred H. Wilt; Mike Abrecht; Jau Wern Chiou; Jinghua Guo; S. N. Coppersmith; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

It is widely known that macromolecules, such as proteins, can control the nucleation and growth of inorganic solids in biomineralizing organisms. However, what is not known are the complementary molecular interactions, organization, and rearrangements that occur when proteins interact with inorganic solids during the formation of biominerals. The organic-mineral interface (OMI) is expected to be the site for these phenomena, and is therefore extraordinarily interesting to investigate. In this report, we employ X-ray absorption near edge (XANES) spectromicroscopy to investigate the electronic structure of both calcium carbonate mineral crystals and polypeptides, and detect changing bonds at the OMI during crystal growth in the presence of polypeptides. We acquired XANES spectra from calcium carbonate crystals grown in the presence of three mollusk nacre-associated polypeptides (AP7N, AP24N, n16N) and in the presence of a sea urchin spicule matrix protein, LSM34. All these model biominerals gave similar results, including the disruption of CO bonds in calcite and enhancement of the peaks associated with C-H bonds and C-O bonds in peptides, indicating ordering of the amino acid side chains in the mineral-associated polypeptides and carboxylate binding. This is the first evidence of the mutual effect of calcite on peptide chain and peptide chain on calcite during biomineralization. We also show that these changes do not occur when Asp and Glu are replaced in the n16N sequence with Asn and Gln, respectively, demonstrating that carboxyl groups in Asp and Glu do participate in polypeptide-mineral molecular associations.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Assignment of Polarization-Dependent Peaks in Carbon K-Edge Spectra from Biogenic and Geologic Aragonite

Dong Zhou; Rebecca A. Metzler; T. Tyliszczak; Jinghua Guo; Mike Abrecht; S. N. Coppersmith; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

Many biominerals, including mollusk and echinoderm shells, avian eggshells, modern and fossil bacterial sediments, planktonic coccolithophores, and foraminifera, contain carbonates in the form of biogenic aragonite or calcite. Here we analyze biogenic and geologic aragonite using different kinds of surface- and bulk-sensitive X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy at the carbon K-edge, as well as high-resolution scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM). Besides the well-known main pi* and sigma* carbonate peaks, we observed and fully characterized four minor peaks, at energies between the main pi* and sigma* peaks. As expected, the main peaks are similar in geologic and biogenic aragonite, while the minor peaks differ in relative intensity. In this and previous work, the minor peaks appear to be the ones most affected in biomineralization processes, hence the interest in characterizing them. Peak assignment was achieved by correlation of polarization-dependent behavior of the minor peaks with that of the main pi* and sigma* peaks. The present characterization provides the background for future studies of aragonitic biominerals.


Soft Matter | 2016

Substrate temperature controls molecular orientation in two-component vapor-deposited glasses

Jing Jiang; Diane M. Walters; Dong Zhou; M. D. Ediger

Vapor-deposited glasses can be anisotropic and molecular orientation is important for organic electronics applications. In organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs), for example, the orientation of dye molecules in two-component emitting layers significantly influences emission efficiency. Here we investigate how substrate temperature during vapor deposition influences the orientation of dye molecules in a model two-component system. We determine the average orientation of a linear blue light emitter 1,4-di-[4-(N,N-diphenyl)amino]styryl-benzene (DSA-Ph) in mixtures with aluminum-tris(8-hydroxyquinoline) (Alq3) by spectroscopic ellipsometry and IR dichroism. We find that molecular orientation is controlled by the ratio of the substrate temperature during deposition and the glass transition temperature of the mixture. These findings extend recent results for single component vapor-deposited glasses and suggest that, during vapor deposition, surface mobility allows partial equilibration towards orientations preferred at the free surface of the equilibrium liquid.


International Journal of Modern Physics B | 2011

QUASI-HAMILTONIAN METHOD FOR COMPUTATION OF DECOHERENCE RATES

Robert Joynt; Dong Zhou; Qiang-Hua Wang

We present a general formalism for the dissipative dynamics of an arbitrary quantum system in the presence of a classical stochastic process. It is applicable to a wide range of physical situations, and in particular it can be used for qubit arrays in the presence of classical two-level systems (TLS). In this formalism, all decoherence rates appear as eigenvalues of an evolution matrix. Thus the method is linear, and the close analogy to Hamiltonian systems opens up a toolbox of well-developed methods such as perturbation theory and mean-field theory. We apply the method to the problem of a single qubit in the presence of TLS that give rise to pure dephasing 1/f noise and solve this problem exactly.


Physical Review B | 2008

Polarization-dependent imaging contrast in abalone shells

Rebecca A. Metzler; Dong Zhou; Mike Abrecht; J. W. Chiou; Jinghua Guo; D. Ariosa; S. N. Coppersmith; P. U. P. A. Gilbert


International Journal of Coal Geology | 2010

X-ray photoelectron emission spectromicroscopic analysis of arborescent lycopsid cell wall composition and Carboniferous coal ball preservation

C. Kevin Boyce; Mike Abrecht; Dong Zhou; P. U. P. A. Gilbert


arXiv: Materials Science | 2007

Ordering in red abalone nacre

Rebecca A. Metzler; Dong Zhou; Mike Abrecht; S. N. Coppersmith; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

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P. U. P. A. Gilbert

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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S. N. Coppersmith

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Rebecca A. Metzler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Mike Abrecht

Synchrotron Radiation Center

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Jinghua Guo

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Robert Joynt

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Elia Beniash

University of Pittsburgh

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Fred H. Wilt

University of California

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