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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Stellacci is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Stellacci.


Small | 2010

Effect of Surface Properties on Nanoparticle–Cell Interactions

Ayush Verma; Francesco Stellacci

The interaction of nanomaterials with cells and lipid bilayers is critical in many applications such as phototherapy, imaging, and drug/gene delivery. These applications require a firm control over nanoparticle-cell interactions, which are mainly dictated by surface properties of nanoparticles. This critical Review presents an understanding of how synthetic and natural chemical moieties on the nanoparticle surface (in addition to nanoparticle shape and size) impact their interaction with lipid bilayers and cells. Challenges for undertaking a systematic study to elucidate nanoparticle-cell interactions are also discussed.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2008

Superwetting nanowire membranes for selective absorption

Jikang Yuan; Xiaogang Liu; Ozge Akbulut; Junqing Hu; Steven L. Suib; Jing Kong; Francesco Stellacci

The construction of nanoporous membranes is of great technological importance for various applications, including catalyst supports, filters for biomolecule purification, environmental remediation and seawater desalination. A major challenge is the scalable fabrication of membranes with the desirable combination of good thermal stability, high selectivity and excellent recyclability. Here we present a self-assembly method for constructing thermally stable, free-standing nanowire membranes that exhibit controlled wetting behaviour ranging from superhydrophilic to superhydrophobic. These membranes can selectively absorb oils up to 20 times the materials weight in preference to water, through a combination of superhydrophobicity and capillary action. Moreover, the nanowires that form the membrane structure can be re-suspended in solutions and subsequently re-form the original paper-like morphology over many cycles. Our results suggest an innovative material that should find practical applications in the removal of organics, particularly in the field of oil spill cleanup.


Nature | 2004

Low-voltage organic transistors with an amorphous molecular gate dielectric

Marcus Halik; Hagen Klauk; Ute Zschieschang; Günter Schmid; Christine Dr. Dehm; Markus Dr. Schütz; Steffen Maisch; Franz Prof. Dr. Effenberger; Markus Brunnbauer; Francesco Stellacci

Organic thin film transistors (TFTs) are of interest for a variety of large-area electronic applications, such as displays, sensors and electronic barcodes. One of the key problems with existing organic TFTs is their large operating voltage, which often exceeds 20 V. This is due to poor capacitive coupling through relatively thick gate dielectric layers: these dielectrics are usually either inorganic oxides or nitrides, or insulating polymers, and are often thicker than 100 nm to minimize gate leakage currents. Here we demonstrate a manufacturing process for TFTs with a 2.5-nm-thick molecular self-assembled monolayer (SAM) gate dielectric and a high-mobility organic semiconductor (pentacene). These TFTs operate with supply voltages of less than 2 V, yet have gate currents that are lower than those of advanced silicon field-effect transistors with SiO2 dielectrics. These results should therefore increase the prospects of using organic TFTs in low-power applications (such as portable devices). Moreover, molecular SAMs may even be of interest for advanced silicon transistors where the continued reduction in dielectric thickness leads to ever greater gate leakage and power dissipation.


Nature Materials | 2013

Identifying champion nanostructures for solar water-splitting

Scott C. Warren; Kislon Voïtchovsky; Hen Dotan; Céline Marie Leroy; Maurin Cornuz; Francesco Stellacci; Cécile Hébert; Avner Rothschild; Michael Grätzel

Charge transport in nanoparticle-based materials underlies many emerging energy-conversion technologies, yet assessing the impact of nanometre-scale structure on charge transport across micrometre-scale distances remains a challenge. Here we develop an approach for correlating the spatial distribution of crystalline and current-carrying domains in entire nanoparticle aggregates. We apply this approach to nanoparticle-based α-Fe₂O₃ electrodes that are of interest in solar-to-hydrogen energy conversion. In correlating structure and charge transport with nanometre resolution across micrometre-scale distances, we have identified the existence of champion nanoparticle aggregates that are most responsible for the high photoelectrochemical activity of the present electrodes. Indeed, when electrodes are fabricated with a high proportion of these champion nanostructures, the electrodes achieve the highest photocurrent of any metal oxide photoanode for photoelectrochemical water-splitting under 100 mW cm(-2) air mass 1.5 global sunlight.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Silver Nanoparticles with Broad Multiband Linear Optical Absorption

Osman M. Bakr; Vincenzo Amendola; Christine M. Aikens; Wim Wenseleers; Rui Li; Luca Dal Negro; George C. Schatz; Francesco Stellacci

Keywords: thiols ; cluster compounds ; luminescence ; quantum dots ; surface plasmon resonance Reference EPFL-ARTICLE-166610doi:10.1002/anie.200900298 Record created on 2011-06-06, modified on 2017-05-10


Nature Materials | 2009

The effect of nanometre-scale structure on interfacial energy

Jeffrey J. Kuna; Kislon Voïtchovsky; Chetana Singh; Hao Jiang; Steve Mwenifumbo; Pradip Kr. Ghorai; Molly M. Stevens; Sharon C. Glotzer; Francesco Stellacci

Natural surfaces are often structured with nanometre-scale domains, yet a framework providing a quantitative understanding of how nanostructure affects interfacial energy, gamma(SL), is lacking. Conventional continuum thermodynamics treats gamma(SL) solely as a function of average composition, ignoring structure. Here we show that, when a surface has domains commensurate in size with solvent molecules, gamma(SL) is determined not only by its average composition but also by a structural component that causes gamma(SL) to deviate from the continuum prediction by a substantial amount, as much as 20% in our system. By contrasting surfaces coated with either molecular- (<2 nm) or larger-scale domains (>5 nm), we find that whereas the latter surfaces have the expected linear dependence of gamma(SL) on surface composition, the former show a markedly different non-monotonic trend. Molecular dynamics simulations show how the organization of the solvent molecules at the interface is controlled by the nanostructured surface, which in turn appreciably modifies gamma(SL).


Nanoscale | 2014

A general mechanism for intracellular toxicity of metal-containing nanoparticles

Stefania Sabella; Randy P. Carney; Virgilio Brunetti; Maria Ada Malvindi; Noura Al-Juffali; Giuseppe Vecchio; Sam M. Janes; Osman M. Bakr; Roberto Cingolani; Francesco Stellacci; Pier Paolo Pompa

We demonstrate a general mechanism for the toxicity induced by metal-containing NPs, named “lysosome-enhanced Trojan horse effect”, which provides design rules to engineer safer NPs.


Nature Materials | 2012

Ultrasensitive detection of toxic cations through changes in the tunnelling current across films of striped nanoparticles

Eun Seon Cho; Jiwon Kim; Baudilio Tejerina; Thomas M. Hermans; Hao Jiang; Hideyuki Nakanishi; Miao Yu; Alexander Z. Patashinski; Sharon C. Glotzer; Francesco Stellacci; Bartosz A. Grzybowski

Although multiple methods have been developed to detect metal cations, only a few offer sensitivities below 1 pM, and many require complicated procedures and sophisticated equipment. Here, we describe a class of simple solid-state sensors for the ultrasensitive detection of heavy-metal cations (notably, an unprecedented attomolar limit for the detection of CH(3)Hg(+) in both standardized solutions and environmental samples) through changes in the tunnelling current across films of nanoparticles (NPs) protected with striped monolayers of organic ligands. The sensors are also highly selective because of the ligand-shell organization of the NPs. On binding of metal cations, the electronic structure of the molecular bridges between proximal NPs changes, the tunnelling current increases and highly conductive paths ultimately percolate the entire film. The nanoscale heterogeneity of the structure of the film broadens the range of the cation-binding constants, which leads to wide sensitivity ranges (remarkably, over 18 orders of magnitude in CH(3)Hg(+) concentration).


Nano Letters | 2013

Effect of Particle Diameter and Surface Composition on the Spontaneous Fusion of Monolayer-Protected Gold Nanoparticles with Lipid Bilayers

Reid C. Van Lehn; Prabhani U. Atukorale; Randy P. Carney; Yu Sang Yang; Francesco Stellacci; Darrell J. Irvine; Alfredo Alexander-Katz

Anionic, monolayer-protected gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) have been shown to nondisruptively penetrate cellular membranes. Here, we show that a critical first step in the penetration process is potentially the fusion of such AuNPs with lipid bilayers. Free energy calculations, experiments on unilamellar and multilamellar vesicles, and cell studies all support this hypothesis. Furthermore, we show that fusion is only favorable for AuNPs with core diameters below a critical size that depends on the monolayer composition.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Ordering surfaces on the nanoscale: implications for protein adsorption.

Andrew Hung; Steve Mwenifumbo; Morgan Mager; Jeffrey J. Kuna; Francesco Stellacci; Irene Yarovsky; Molly M. Stevens

Monolayer-protected metal nanoparticles (MPMNs) are a newly discovered class of nanoparticles with an ordered, striped domain structure that can be readily manipulated by altering the ratio of the hydrophobic to hydrophilic ligands. This property makes them uniquely suited to systematic studies of the role of nanostructuring on biomolecule adsorption, a phenomenon of paramount importance in biomaterials design. In this work, we examine the interaction of the simple, globular protein cytochrome C (Cyt C) with MPMN surfaces using experimental protein assays and computational molecular dynamics simulations. Experimental assays revealed that adsorption of Cyt C generally increased with increasing surface polar ligand content, indicative of the dominance of hydrophilic interactions in Cyt C-MPMN binding. Protein-surface adsorption enthalpies calculated from computational simulations employing rigid-backbone coarse-grained Cyt C and MPMN models indicate a monotonic increase in adsorption enthalpy with respect to MPMN surface polarity. These results are in qualitative agreement with experimental results and suggest that Cyt C does not undergo significant structural disruption upon adsorption to MPMN surfaces. Coarse-grained and atomistic simulations furthermore elucidated the important role of lysine in facilitating Cyt C adsorption to MPMN surfaces. The amphipathic character of the lysine side chain enables it to form close contacts with both polar and nonpolar surface ligands simultaneously, rendering it especially important for interactions with surfaces composed of adjacent nanoscale chemical domains. The importance of these structural characteristics of lysine suggests that proteins may be engineered to specifically interact with nanomaterials by targeted incorporation of unnatural amino acids possessing dual affinity to differing chemical motifs.

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Dive into the Francesco Stellacci's collaboration.

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Randy P. Carney

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Ying Hu

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Javier Reguera

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Quy Khac Ong

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Paulo Jacob Silva

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Alicia M. Jackson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Darrell J. Irvine

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Osman M. Bakr

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Oktay Uzun

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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