Isabel Obieta
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Publication
Featured researches published by Isabel Obieta.
Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine | 2010
Nere Garmendia; I. Santacruz; Rodrigo Moreno; Isabel Obieta
Zirconia ceramics are widely used as femoral heads, but case studies show that delayed failure can occur in vivo due to crack propagation. The addition of carbon nanotubes (CNT) is aimed to avoid the slow crack propagation and to enhance the toughness of the ceramic material used for prostheses. However, to really enhance the mechanical properties of the material it is necessary to achieve a uniform distribution of the CNT in the zirconia matrix. Colloidal processing has demonstrated to be suitable for obtaining ceramic-based composites with homogeneous distribution of the phases and high green density. This work compares the colloidal behavior of the as-received multi wall carbon nanotubes (ar-MWCNT) and the partially coated MWCNT (pc-MWCNT) when immersed in a nanozirconia matrix. With pc-MWCNT an improvement in the dispersion is proved. Moreover, the sintered samples that contain pc-MWCNT show higher density, lower grain size, improved toughness and enhanced hardness under the same sintering cycle when compared to the samples with ar-MWCNT.
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2012
Patricia García-Parra; Fabio Cavaliere; Marcos Maroto; Leire Bilbao; Isabel Obieta; Adolfo López de Munain; José Iñaki Álava; Ander Izeta
Topographical and biochemical characteristics of the substrate are critical for neuronal differentiation including axonal outgrowth and regeneration of neural circuits in vivo. Contact stimuli and signaling molecules allow neurons to develop and stabilize synaptic contacts. Here we present the development, characterization and functional validation of a new polymeric support able to induce neuronal differentiation in both PC12 cell line and adult primary skin-derived precursor cells (SKPs) in vitro. By combining a photolithographic technique with use of neural extracellular matrix (ECM) as a substrate, a biocompatible and efficient microenvironment for neuronal differentiation was developed.
Key Engineering Materials | 2007
Nere Garmendia; Leire Bilbao; Roberto Munoz; L. Goikoetxea; Ainara García; Izaskun Bustero; Beatriz Olalde; Nerea Garagorri; Isabel Obieta
Carbon nanotubes could avoid the crack propagation and enhance the toughness of the ceramic material used for prostheses applications. So nanozirconia partially coated carbon nanotubes have been obtained via hydrothermal synthesis of zirconia nanoparticles in presence of multiwall carbon nanotubes. The as covered nanotubes should have a better wettability in the ceramic matrix and improve the dispersion of the CNTs in the nanocomposite, which results in a new ceramic biomaterial with a longer lifetime and better reliability. The obtained product has been structurally characterized by several techniques such as FTIR, XRD, SEM, AFM, EELS, XPS and TGA. The citotoxicity of the sintered product was studied by the change in the pH and ICP-AES in in-vitro biocompatibility tests.
Sensors | 2018
Achille Francone; Timothy Kehoe; Isabel Obieta; Virginia Saez-Martinez; Leire Bilbao; Ali Z. Khokhar; Nikolaj Gadegaard; Claudia Simao; Nikolaos Kehagias; Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres
Hydrogel materials offer many advantages for chemical and biological sensoring due to their response to a small change in their environment with a related change in volume. Several designs have been outlined in the literature in the specific field of hydrogel-based optical sensors, reporting a large number of steps for their fabrication. In this work we present a three-dimensional, hydrogel-based sensor the structure of which is fabricated in a single step using thermal nanoimprint lithography. The sensor is based on a waveguide with a grating readout section. A specific hydrogel formulation, based on a combination of PEGDMA (Poly(Ethylene Glycol DiMethAcrylate)), NIPAAm (N-IsoPropylAcrylAmide), and AA (Acrylic Acid), was developed. This stimulus-responsive hydrogel is sensitive to pH and to water. Moreover, the hydrogel has been modified to be suitable for fabrication by thermal nanoimprint lithography. Once stimulated, the hydrogel-based sensor changes its topography, which is characterised physically by AFM and SEM, and optically using a specific optical set-up.
Journal of The European Ceramic Society | 2009
Nere Garmendia; Isabel Santacruz; Rodrigo Moreno; Isabel Obieta
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2008
Beatriz Olalde; Jesus M. Aizpurua; Ainara García; Izaskun Bustero; Isabel Obieta; Maria Jesus Jurado
Journal of The European Ceramic Society | 2011
Nere Garmendia; Sylvie Grandjean; Jérôme Chevalier; Luis A. Díaz; Ramón Torrecillas; Isabel Obieta
Journal of Applied Polymer Science | 2011
Virginia Saez-Martinez; Ainara García-Gallastegui; Carolina Vera; Beatriz Olalde; Iratxe Madarieta; Isabel Obieta; Nerea Garagorri
Superlattices and Microstructures | 2009
Teodora Ignat; Roberto Munoz; Kleps Irina; Isabel Obieta; Miu Mihaela; Monica Simion; Mircea Iovu
International Journal of Applied Ceramic Technology | 2012
Nere Garmendia; Isabel Sanstacruz; Rodrigo Moreno; Isabel Obieta