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Dive into the research topics where Gunnar Glasser is active.

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Featured researches published by Gunnar Glasser.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2011

Inorganic polymeric phosphate/polyphosphate as an inducer of alkaline phosphatase and a modulator of intracellular Ca2+ level in osteoblasts (SaOS-2 cells) in vitro

Werner E. G. Müller; Xiaohong Wang; B. Diehl-Seifert; K. Kropf; Ute Schlossmacher; Ingo Lieberwirth; Gunnar Glasser; Matthias Wiens; Heinz-Christoph Schröder

Inorganic polymeric phosphate is a physiological polymer that accumulates in bone cells. In the present study osteoblast-like SaOS-2 cells were exposed to this polymer, complexed in a 2:1 stoichiometric ratio with Ca(2+), polyP (Ca(2+) salt). At a concentration of 100 μM, polyP (Ca(2+) salt) caused a strong increase in the activity of the alkaline phosphatase and also an induction of the steady-state expression of the gene encoding this enzyme. Comparative experiments showed that polyP (Ca(2+) salt) can efficiently replace β-glycerophosphate in the in vitro hydroxyapatite (HA) biomineralization assay. In the presence of polyP (Ca(2+) salt) the cells extensively form HA crystallites, which remain intimately associated with or covered by the plasma membrane. Only the tips of the crystallites are directly exposed to the extracellular space. Element mapping by scanning electron microscopy/energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy coupled to a silicon drift detector supported the finding that organic material was dispersed within the crystallites. Finally, polyP (Ca(2+) salt) was found to cause an increase in the intracellular Ca(2+) level, while polyP, as well as inorganic phosphate (P(i)) or Ca(2+) alone, had no effect at the concentrations used. These findings are compatible with the assumption that polyP (Ca(2+) salt) is locally, on the surface of the SaOS-2 cells, hydrolyzed to P(i) and Ca(2+). We conclude that the inorganic polymer polyP (Ca(2+) salt) in concert with a second inorganic, and physiologically occurring, polymer, biosilica, activates osteoblasts and impairs the maturation of osteoclasts.


ACS Nano | 2014

Photon energy upconverting nanopaper: a bioinspired oxygen protection strategy.

Anna J. Svagan; Dmitry Busko; Yuri Avlasevich; Gunnar Glasser; Stanislav Baluschev; Katharina Landfester

The development of solid materials which are able to upconvert optical radiation into photons of higher energy is attractive for many applications such as photocatalytic cells and photovoltaic devices. However, to fully exploit triplet-triplet annihilation photon energy upconversion (TTA-UC), oxygen protection is imperative because molecular oxygen is an ultimate quencher of the photon upconversion process. So far, reported solid TTA-UC materials have focused mainly on elastomeric matrices with low barrier properties because the TTA-UC efficiency generally drops significantly in glassy and semicrystalline matrices. To overcome this limit, for example, combine effective and sustainable annihilation upconversion with exhaustive oxygen protection of dyes, we prepare a sustainable solid-state-like material based on nanocellulose. Inspired by the structural buildup of leaves in Nature, we compartmentalize the dyes in the liquid core of nanocellulose-based capsules which are then further embedded in a cellulose nanofibers (NFC) matrix. Using pristine cellulose nanofibers, a sustainable and environmentally friendly functional nanomaterial with ultrahigh barrier properties is achieved. Also, an ensemble of sensitizers and emitter compounds are encapsulated, which allow harvesting of the energy of the whole deep-red sunlight region. The films demonstrate excellent lifetime in synthetic air (20.5/79.5, O2/N2)-even after 1 h operation, the intensity of the TTA-UC signal decreased only 7.8% for the film with 8.8 μm thick NFC coating. The lifetime can be further modulated by the thickness of the protective NFC coating. For comparison, the lifetime of TTA-UC in liquids exposed to air is on the level of seconds to minutes due to fast oxygen quenching.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Colloidal assemblies on patterned silane layers

Ulrich Jonas; Aránzazu del Campo; Christian Krüger; Gunnar Glasser; Diana Boos

The site-selective assembly of colloidal polymer particles onto laterally patterned silane layers was studied as a model system for the object assembly process at mesoscale dimensions. The structured silane monolayers on silicon oxide substrates were fabricated by a combination of liquid- and gas-phase deposition of different trialkoxysilanes with a photolithographic patterning technique. By using this method various types of surface functionalizations such as regions with amino functions next to areas of the bare silica surface or positively charged regions of a quaternary ammonium silane surrounded by a hydrophobic octadecylsilane film could be obtained. Furthermore, a triethoxysilane with a photoprotected amino group was synthesized, which allowed direct photopatterning after monolayer preparation, leading to free NH2 groups at the irradiated regions. The different silane monolayer patterns were used to study the surface assembly behavior of carboxylated methacrylate particles by optical and scanning electron microscopy. In dependence of the assembly conditions (different surface functionalizations, pH, and drying conditions), a selective preference of the particles for a specific surface type versus others was found. Site-specific colloid adsorption could be observed also on the photosensitive silane layers after local deprotection with light. From the photosensitive silane and positively charged ammonium silane, molecularly mixed monolayers were prepared, which allowed particle adsorption and photoactivation within the same monolayer as shown by fluorescence labeling.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2012

Hierarchically Structured Metal Oxide/Silica Nanofibers by Colloid Electrospinning

Nesrin Horzum; Rafael Muñoz-Espí; Gunnar Glasser; Mustafa M. Demir; Katharina Landfester; Daniel Crespy

We present herein a new concept for the preparation of nanofibrous metal oxides based on the simultaneous electrospinning of metal oxide precursors and silica nanoparticles. Precursor fibers are prepared by electrospinning silica nanoparticles (20 nm in diameter) dispersed in an aqueous solution of poly(acrylic acid) and metal salts. Upon calcination in air, the poly(acrylic acid) matrix is removed, the silica nanoparticles are cemented, and nanocrystalline metal oxide particles of 4-14 nm are nucleated at the surface of the silica nanoparticles. The obtained continuous silica fibers act as a structural framework for metal oxide nanoparticles and show improved mechanical integrity compared to the neat metal oxide fibers. The hierarchically nanostructured materials are promising for catalysis applications, as demonstrated by the successful degradation of a model dye in the presence of the fibers.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Well‐Defined Nanofibers with Tunable Morphology from Spherical Colloidal Building Blocks

Markus B. Bannwarth; Samuel W. Kazer; Sebastian Ulrich; Gunnar Glasser; Daniel Crespy; Katharina Landfester

From particles to fibers: Nanofibers with different morphologies and periodicities can be fabricated by supraparticular assembly of magnetic spherical nanoparticles. A linear sintering process is used to merge the assembled colloids together. The structure of the obtained fibers is controlled by the process parameters and the morphology of the spherical colloidal building blocks.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Polarization fatigue of organic ferroelectric capacitors

Dong Zhao; Ilias Katsouras; Mengyuan Li; Kamal Asadi; Junto Tsurumi; Gunnar Glasser; Jun Takeya; Paul W. M. Blom; Dago M. de Leeuw

The polarization of the ferroelectric polymer P(VDF-TrFE) decreases upon prolonged cycling. Understanding of this fatigue behavior is of great technological importance for the implementation of P(VDF-TrFE) in random-access memories. However, the origin of fatigue is still ambiguous. Here we investigate fatigue in thin-film capacitors by systematically varying the frequency and amplitude of the driving waveform. We show that the fatigue is due to delamination of the top electrode. The origin is accumulation of gases, expelled from the capacitor, under the impermeable top electrode. The gases are formed by electron-induced phase decomposition of P(VDF-TrFE), similar as reported for inorganic ferroelectric materials. When the gas barrier is removed and the waveform is adapted, a fatigue-free ferroelectric capacitor based on P(VDF-TrFE) is realized. The capacitor can be cycled for more than 108 times, approaching the programming cycle endurance of its inorganic ferroelectric counterparts.


Biomacromolecules | 2014

Cellulose nanofiber/nanocrystal reinforced capsules: a fast and facile approach toward assembly of liquid-core capsules with high mechanical stability.

Anna J. Svagan; Anna Musyanovych; Michael Kappl; Max Bernhardt; Gunnar Glasser; Christian Wohnhaas; Lars Berglund; Jens Risbo; Katharina Landfester

Liquid-core capsules of high mechanical stability open up for many solid state-like applications where functionality depending on liquid mobility is vital. Herein, a novel concept for fast and facile improvement of the mechanical properties of walls of liquid-core capsules is reported. By imitating natures own way of enhancing the mechanical properties in liquid-core capsules, the parenchyma plant cells found in fruits and vegetables, a blend of short cellulose nanofibers (<1 μm, NFC) and nanocrystals (CNC) was exploited in the creation of the capsule walls. The NFC/CNC blend was prepared from a new version of the classical wood pulp hydrolysis. The capsule shell consisted of a covalently (by aromatic diisocyanate) cross-linked NFC/CNC structure at the outer capsule wall and an inner layer dominated by aromatic polyurea. The mechanical properties revealed an effective capsule elastic modulus of 4.8 GPa at 17 wt % NFC/CNC loading, about six times higher compared to a neat aromatic polyurea capsule (0.79 GPa) and 3 orders of magnitude higher than previously reported capsules from regenerated cellulose (0.0074 GPa). The outstanding mechanical properties are ascribed to the dense nanofiber structure, present in the outer part of the capsule wall, that is formed by oriented NFC/CNC of high average aspect ratio (L/d ∼ 70) and held together by both covalent (urethane bonds) and physical bonds (hydrogen bonds).


ChemBioChem | 2011

Sponge Biosilica Formation Involves Syneresis Following Polycondensation in vivo

Xiaohong Wang; Heinz-Christoph Schröder; D. Brandt; Matthias Wiens; Ingo Lieberwirth; Gunnar Glasser; Ute Schlossmacher; Shunfeng Wang; Werner E. G. Müller

Syneresis is a process observed during the maturation/aging of silica gels obtained by sol–gel synthesis that results in shrinkage and expulsion of water due to a rearrangement and increase in the number of bridging siloxane bonds. Here we describe how the process of biosilica deposition during spicule (“biosilica” skeleton of the siliceous sponges) formation involves a phase of syneresis that occurs after the enzyme‐mediated polycondensation reaction. Primmorphs from the demosponge Suberites domuncula were used to study syneresis and the inhibition of this mechanism. We showed by scanning electron microscopy that spicules added to primmorphs that have been incubated with manganese sulfate fuse together through the deposition of silica spheres and bridges. Energy‐dispersive X‐ray mapping of the newly formed deposits showed high silicon and oxygen content. These biosilica deposits contain a comparably higher percentage of water than mature/aged spicules. Quantitative real‐time polymerase chain reaction analyses revealed that the addition of silicate to primmorph cultures resulted in a marked upregulation of the expression of the aquaporin gene and of the genes encoding the silica anabolic enzyme silicatein‐α and the silica catabolic enzyme silicase. On the other hand, addition of manganese sulfate, either alone or together with silicate, caused a strong reduction in the level of aquaporin transcripts, although this metal ion did not essentially affect the silicate‐induced increase in silicatein‐α and silicase gene expression. We conclude that the secondary silica deposits formed on spicules under physiological conditions in the presence of silicate fuse together and subsequently undergo syneresis, which is facilitated by the removal of water through aquaporin channels. In growing spicules, these processes of biosilica formation and syneresis in the lamellar monolithic structures precede the final step of “biosintering” during which the massive biosilica rods of the spicules are formed.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1997

DIRECT MEASUREMENT OF THE DIPOLE MOMENT OF A METASTABLE MEROCYANINE BY ELECTROMECHANICAL INTERFEROMETRY

Marcia Levitus; Gunnar Glasser; Dieter Neher; Pedro F. Aramendía

Abstract The permanent dipole moments of an indolinespirobenzopyran and its merocyanine from in a poly(isobutyl methacrylate) host were determined by electromechanical interferometry. This technique allows the determination of the piezoelectric and electrostrictive properties of thin films for which the polarization of the sample can be determined. The sample was exposed to an external electric field and the polarization was measured as a function of time before and after UV irradiation. Results show that the orientation of spiropyran and merocyanine molecules in the direction of the field is fast compared with the time scale of the photoisomer decay kinetics, allowing the determination of dipole moments from polarization values in the limit of thermal equilibrium. The experiments reveala pronounced increase in the dipole moment upon ring opening with μ0=6.4 D for the spirobenzopyran and μ0=14.2 D for the merocyanine form.


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2003

Functional polymers as nanoscopic building blocks

Jose-Luis Hernandez-Lopez; Roland E. Bauer; W. S. Chang; Gunnar Glasser; Dörthe Grebel-Koehler; Markus Klapper; Maximilian Kreiter; J. Leclaire; Jean-Pierre Majoral; Silvia Mittler; Klaus Müllen; Krasimir Vasilev; Tanja Weil; Jishan Wu; Tao Zhu; Wolfgang Knoll

Abstract Polyphenylene dendrimers are introduced as polymeric building blocks—with a strictly monodisperse particle size distribution within the nanometer range—for the construction of nanostructured materials and devices. The possibility for the introduction of different functionalities in the core, the scaffold or the periphery of the dendrimers offer their use as interesting modules for photonic, electronic or bioactive structures and supramolecular functional assemblies. Thus, dendrimers complement the available set of nanoscopic building blocks made from metals, e.g., Au nanoclusters and semiconductors, e.g., luminescent quantum dots. In a first set of experiments, we describe the fabrication of multilayer architectures using dendrimers with chargeable groups at the surface. This way, the polyelectrolyte deposition technique can be applied for the construction of hybrid layered assemblies with a control of the internal supramolecular structure at the nanometer level. Surface plasmon field-enhanced fluorescence spectroscopy is used to monitor the luminescent properties of dendrimers with a phthalocyanine core integrated into such a multilayer assembly. AFM and SEM micrographs demonstrate the use of surface-functionalized dendrimers (exposing sulfur groups at the periphery) in combination with Au nanoparticles for the controlled assembly of hybrid aggregates as nanoscopic functional devices.

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Krasimir Vasilev

University of South Australia

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