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Dive into the research topics where Johannes D. Meeldijk is active.

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Featured researches published by Johannes D. Meeldijk.


Nature Materials | 2009

Morphology-dependent zeolite intergrowth structures leading to distinct internal and outer-surface molecular diffusion barriers

Lukasz Karwacki; Marianne H. F. Kox; D. A. Matthijs de Winter; Martyn R. Drury; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Eli Stavitski; Wolfgang Schmidt; Machteld M. Mertens; Pablo Cubillas; Neena S. John; Ally S. Chan; Norma Kahn; Simon R. Bare; M. Anderson; Jan Kornatowski; Bert M. Weckhuysen

Zeolites play a crucial part in acid-base heterogeneous catalysis. Fundamental insight into their internal architecture is of great importance for understanding their structure-function relationships. Here, we report on a new approach correlating confocal fluorescence microscopy with focused ion beam-electron backscatter diffraction, transmission electron microscopy lamelling and diffraction, atomic force microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to study a wide range of coffin-shaped MFI-type zeolite crystals differing in their morphology and chemical composition. This powerful combination demonstrates a unified view on the morphology-dependent MFI-type intergrowth structures and provides evidence for the presence and nature of internal and outer-surface barriers for molecular diffusion. It has been found that internal-surface barriers originate not only from a 90 degrees mismatch in structure and pore alignment but also from small angle differences of 0.5 degrees-2 degrees for particular crystal morphologies. Furthermore, outer-surface barriers seem to be composed of a silicalite outer crust with a thickness varying from 10 to 200 nm.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

Glycerol Etherification over Highly Active CaO‐Based Materials: New Mechanistic Aspects and Related Colloidal Particle Formation

Agnieszka M. Ruppert; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Bonny W. M. Kuipers; Ben H. Erné; Bert M. Weckhuysen

Glycerol is an attractive renewable building block for the synthesis of di- and triglycerols, which have numerous applications in the cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries. In this work, the selective etherification of glycerol to di- and triglycerol was studied in the presence of alkaline earth metal oxides and the data are compared with those obtained with Na2CO3 as a homogeneous catalyst. It was found that glycerol conversion increased with increasing catalyst basicity; that is, the conversion increases in the order: MgO90 % at 60 % conversion) are obtained over CaO, SrO, and BaO. For these catalysts no substantial acrolein formation was observed. Furthermore, at the start of the reaction mainly linear diglycerol was produced, whereas at higher conversion degrees branched diglycerol started to form. In another series of experiments different types of CaO materials were prepared. It was found that these CaO-based materials not only differed in their surface area and number of basic sites, but also in their Lewis acid strength. Within this series the CaO material possessing the strongest Lewis acid sites had the highest catalytic activity, comparable to that of BaO, pointing towards the important role of Lewis acidity for this etherification reaction. Based on these observations a plausible alternative reaction scheme for glycerol etherification is presented, which considers the facilitation of the hydroxyl leaving process. Finally, the stability of the catalytic solids under study was investigated and it was found that colloidal CaO particles of about 50-100 nm can be spontaneously generated during reaction. Catalytic testing of these CaO colloids, after isolation from the reaction medium, revealed a very high etherification activity. Understanding the nature of these Ca-based colloids opens new opportunities for investigating supported colloidal particle catalysts to take advantage of both their hetero- and homogeneous nature.


Nature Materials | 2015

Entropy-driven formation of large icosahedral colloidal clusters by spherical confinement

Bart de Nijs; Simone Dussi; Frank Smallenburg; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Dirk J. Groenendijk; Laura Filion; Arnout Imhof; Alfons van Blaaderen; Marjolein Dijkstra

Icosahedral symmetry, which is not compatible with truly long-range order, can be found in many systems, such as liquids, glasses, atomic clusters, quasicrystals and virus-capsids. To obtain arrangements with a high degree of icosahedral order from tens of particles or more, interparticle attractive interactions are considered to be essential. Here, we report that entropy and spherical confinement suffice for the formation of icosahedral clusters consisting of up to 100,000 particles. Specifically, by using real-space measurements on nanometre- and micrometre-sized colloids, as well as computer simulations, we show that tens of thousands of hard spheres compressed under spherical confinement spontaneously crystallize into icosahedral clusters that are entropically favoured over the bulk face-centred cubic crystal structure. Our findings provide insights into the interplay between confinement and crystallization and into how these are connected to the formation of icosahedral structures.


Nano Letters | 2009

Quantitative structural analysis of binary nanocrystal superlattices by electron tomography

Heiner Friedrich; Cédric Gommes; Karin Overgaag; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Wiel H. Evers; Bart de Nijs; Mark P. Boneschanscher; Petra E. de Jongh; Arie J. Verkleij; Krijn P. de Jong; Alfons van Blaaderen; Daniel Vanmaekelbergh

Binary nanocrystal superlattices, that is, ordered structures of two sorts of nanocolloids, hold promise for a series of functional materials with novel collective properties. Here we show that based on electron tomography a comprehensive, quantitative, three-dimensional characterization of these systems down to the single nanocrystal level can be achieved, which is key in understanding the emerging materials properties. On four binary lattices composed of PbSe, CdSe, and Au nanocrystals, we illustrate that ambiguous interpretations based on two-dimensional transmission electron microscopy can be prevented, nanocrystal sizes and superlattice parameters accurately determined, individual crystallographic point and plane defects studied, and the order/disorder at the top and bottom surfaces imaged. Furthermore, our results suggest that superlattice nucleation and growth occurred at the suspension/air interface and that the unit cells of some lattices are anisotropically deformed upon drying.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Highly Emissive Divalent-Ion-Doped Colloidal CsPb1–xMxBr3 Perovskite Nanocrystals through Cation Exchange

Ward van der Stam; Jaco J. Geuchies; Thomas Altantzis; Karel Hendrik Wouter van den Bos; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Sandra Van Aert; Sara Bals; Daniel Vanmaekelbergh; Celso de Mello Donegá

Colloidal CsPbX3 (X = Br, Cl, and I) perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) have emerged as promising phosphors and solar cell materials due to their remarkable optoelectronic properties. These properties can be tailored by not only controlling the size and shape of the NCs but also postsynthetic composition tuning through topotactic anion exchange. In contrast, property control by cation exchange is still underdeveloped for colloidal CsPbX3 NCs. Here, we present a method that allows partial cation exchange in colloidal CsPbBr3 NCs, whereby Pb2+ is exchanged for several isovalent cations, resulting in doped CsPb1–xMxBr3 NCs (M= Sn2+, Cd2+, and Zn2+; 0 < x ≤ 0.1), with preservation of the original NC shape. The size of the parent NCs is also preserved in the product NCs, apart from a small (few %) contraction of the unit cells upon incorporation of the guest cations. The partial Pb2+ for M2+ exchange leads to a blue-shift of the optical spectra, while maintaining the high photoluminescence quantum yields (>50%), sharp absorption features, and narrow emission of the parent CsPbBr3 NCs. The blue-shift in the optical spectra is attributed to the lattice contraction that accompanies the Pb2+ for M2+ cation exchange and is observed to scale linearly with the lattice contraction. This work opens up new possibilities to engineer the properties of halide perovskite NCs, which to date are demonstrated to be the only known system where cation and anion exchange reactions can be sequentially combined while preserving the original NC shape, resulting in compositionally diverse perovskite NCs.


Biophysical Journal | 2015

Molecular model for the solubilization of membranes into nanodisks by styrene maleic Acid copolymers.

Stefan Scheidelaar; Martijn C. Koorengevel; Juan J. Dominguez Pardo; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Eefjan Breukink; J. Antoinette Killian

A recent discovery in membrane research is the ability of styrene-maleic acid (SMA) copolymers to solubilize membranes in the form of nanodisks allowing extraction and purification of membrane proteins from their native environment in a single detergent-free step. This has important implications for membrane research because it allows isolation as well as characterization of proteins and lipids in a near-native environment. Here, we aimed to unravel the molecular mode of action of SMA copolymers by performing systematic studies using model membranes of varying compositions and employing complementary biophysical approaches. We found that the SMA copolymer is a highly efficient membrane-solubilizing agent and that lipid bilayer properties such as fluidity, thickness, lateral pressure profile, and charge density all play distinct roles in the kinetics of solubilization. More specifically, relatively thin membranes, decreased lateral chain pressure, low charge density at the membrane surface, and increased salt concentration promote the speed and yield of vesicle solubilization. Experiments using a native membrane lipid extract showed that the SMA copolymer does not discriminate between different lipids and thus retains the native lipid composition in the solubilized particles. A model is proposed for the mode of action of SMA copolymers in which membrane solubilization is mainly driven by the hydrophobic effect and is further favored by physical properties of the polymer such as its relatively small cross-sectional area and rigid pendant groups. These results may be helpful for development of novel applications for this new type of solubilizing agent, and for optimization of the SMA technology for solubilization of the wide variety of cell membranes found in nature.


ChemBioChem | 2005

Gold Glyconanoparticles as Probes to Explore the Carbohydrate- Mediated Self-Recognition of Marine Sponge Cells

Adriana Carvalho de Souza; Koen M. Halkes; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Arie J. Verkleij; Johannes F.G. Vliegenthart; Johannis P. Kamerling

Cell aggregation in the red-beard marine sponge Microciona prolifera is mediated by a 2 10 kDa proteoglycan-like macromolecular aggregation factor (MAF), and is based on two highly polyvalent functional properties; a Ca-dependent proteoglycan self-interaction and a Ca-independent cell-binding activity. MAF, the first circular proteoglycan described, is composed of two N-glycosylated proteins, MAFp3 and MAFp4, with twenty units of each glycoprotein forming the central ring and the radiating arms, respectively. Each MAFp3 carries one or two copies of a 200 kDa acidic glycan, g-200, whereas each MAFp4 carries about 50 copies of a 6 kDa glycan, g-6. The MAFp4 arms of the sunburst-like proteoglycan are linked to cell-surface binding receptors, while the MAFp3 ring exposes the g-200 glycans so that they can engage in the Ca-dependent self-association (for a detailed review, see ref. [4]). By making use of MAF-specific monoclonal antibodies, it could be demonstrated that the self-association of MAF occurs through highly repetitive epitopes on the g-200 glycan. One of these epitopes was shown to be the sulfated disaccharide GlcpNAc3S(b1–3)Fucp. To gain insight into the role of carbohydrate interactions in MAF self-aggregation, we designed a challenging system for mimicking the g-200 self-association. By using the synthetic sulfated disaccharide, multivalently presented as a bovine serum albumin conjugate, and surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, it was shown that Ca-dependent carbohydrate self-recognition is a major force in the g-200 association phenomenon. Gold glyconanoparticles have been successfully used as inert multivalent systems to explore either carbohydrate self-interactions or carbohydrate binding to proteins. In the present study, water-soluble gold glyconanoparticles coated with synthetic carbohydrates related to the sulfated disaccharide fragment (Scheme 1) were used as multivalent systems to investigate the g-200 glycan–glycan interaction by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Very recently, an NMR study of intact MAF glycans suggested the presence of a-Fuc residues. However, earlier structural analysis of oligosaccharide fragments obtained from a partial acid hydrolysate of the g-200 glycan could not identify the anomeric configuration of the fucose residue in these fragments. 16] Therefore, gold glyconanoparticles coated with the aor the b-anomer (Au-1a and Au-1b) of the native sulfated disaccharide epitope were used in the aggregation experiments. The importance of each of the two monosaccharide units for the self-recognition process of the disaccharide epitope was determined by studying the gold glyconanoparticles Au-2 and Au-3. The three gold glyconanoparticle systems Au-4 (a-l-Fucp replaced by a-l-Galp), Au-5 (bd-GlcpNAc3S replaced by b-d-GlcpNAc), and Au-6 (b-dGlcpNAc3S replaced by b-d-Glcp3S) were used to evaluate the relevance of the modified sites in the self-recognition process. Scheme 1. Gold glyconanoparticles Au-1a/b to Au-6, related to the MAF sulfated disaccharide epitope.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2010

The making of frozen-hydrated, vitreous lamellas from cells for cryo-electron microscopy

Michael Frederick Hayles; D. A. Matthijs de Winter; Chris T.W.M. Schneijdenberg; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Uwe Luecken; Hans Persoon; Jeroen de Water; Frank de Jong; Bruno M. Humbel; Arie J. Verkleij

There has been a long standing desire to produce thick (up to 500 nm) cryo-sections of fully hydrated cells and tissue for high-resolution analysis in their natural state by cryo-transmission electron microscopy. Here, we present a method that can successfully produce sections (lamellas in FIB-SEM terminology) of fully hydrated, unstained cells from high-pressure frozen samples by focused ion beam (FIB) milling. The samples are therefore placed in thin copper tubes and vitrified by high-pressure freezing. For transfer, handling and subsequent milling, the tubes are placed in a novel connective device (ferrule) that protects the sample from devitrification and contamination and passes through all operation steps. A piezo driven sample positioning stage (cryo-nano-bench, CNB) with three degrees of freedom was additionally developed to enable accurate milling of frozen-hydrated lamellas. With the CNB, high-pressure frozen samples can be milled to produce either thin lamellas (<100 nm), for direct imaging by high-resolution cryo-TEM or thicker lamellas (300-500 nm) for cryo-electron tomography. The sample remains vitreous throughout the process by using the presented tools and methods. The results are an important step towards investigating larger cells and even tissue in there natural state which in the end will enable us to gain better insights into cellular processes.


Nano Letters | 2014

Self-Assembly of Colloidal Hexagonal Bipyramid- and Bifrustum-Shaped ZnS Nanocrystals into Two-Dimensional Superstructures

Ward van der Stam; Anjan P. Gantapara; Quinten A. Akkerman; Giuseppe Soligno; Johannes D. Meeldijk; René van Roij; Marjolein Dijkstra; Celso de Mello Donegá

We present a combined experimental, theoretical, and simulation study on the self-assembly of colloidal hexagonal bipyramid- and hexagonal bifrustum-shaped ZnS nanocrystals (NCs) into two-dimensional superlattices. The simulated NC superstructures are in good agreement with the experimental ones. This shows that the self-assembly process is primarily driven by minimization of the interfacial free-energies and maximization of the packing density. Our study shows that a small truncation of the hexagonal bipyramids is sufficient to change the symmetry of the resulting superlattice from hexagonal to tetragonal, highlighting the crucial importance of precise shape control in the fabrication of functional metamaterials by self-assembly of colloidal NCs.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Binary superlattices of PbSe and CdSe nanocrystals.

Karin Overgaag; Wiel H. Evers; Bart de Nijs; Rolf Koole; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Daniel Vanmaekelbergh

In this paper we show that self-organization of colloidal PbSe and CdSe semiconductor nanocrystals with a size ratio of 0.57 leads to binary structures with a AB2 or a cuboctahedral AB13 lattice. The type of superlattice formed can be regulated by the relative concentration of both nanocrystals in the suspension.

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