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Dive into the research topics where John F. Ankner is active.

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Featured researches published by John F. Ankner.


Langmuir | 2009

Spin-Assisted Layer-by-Layer Assembly: Variation of Stratification as Studied with Neutron Reflectivity †

Eugenia Kharlampieva; Veronika Kozlovskaya; Jennifer W. Chan; John F. Ankner; Vladimir V. Tsukruk

We apply neutron reflectivity to probe the internal structure of spin-assisted layer-by-layer (SA-LbL) films composed of electrostatically assembled polyelectrolytes. We find that the level of stratification and the degree of layer intermixing can be controlled by varying the type and concentration of salt during SA-LbL assembly. We observe well-defined layer structure in SA-LbL films when deposited from salt-free solutions. These films feature 2-nm-thick bilayers, which are approximately 3-fold thicker than those in conventional LbL films assembled under similar conditions. The addition of a 10 mM phosphate buffer promotes progressive layer interdiffusion with increasing distance from the substrate. However, adding 0.1 M NaCl to the phosphate buffer solution restores the layer stratification. We also find that SA-LbL films obtained from buffer solutions are more stratified as compared to the highly intermixed layers seen in conventional LbL films from buffer. Our results yield new insights into the mechanism of SA-LbL assembly and the final microstructure in comparison with traditional LbL assemblies.


Langmuir | 2008

Hydrogen-bonded polymer multilayers probed by neutron reflectivity.

Eugenia Kharlampieva; Veronika Kozlovskaya; John F. Ankner; Svetlana A. Sukhishvili

We present a neutron reflectivity study of the internal structure of multilayers made of a weak polyelectrolyte and a neutral component where interactions between adjacent layers are controlled by hydrogen-bonding. We found the degree of interpenetration of polymer layers expressed as the interlayer roughness to be strongly correlated with the strength of intermolecular interactions between the adjacent layers. In addition, polymer layers become more diffuse with a distance from the substrate. Our results demonstrate that hydrogen-bonded films exhibit a close correlation between their structure and properties, which is essential for various applications.


Biomacromolecules | 2011

Neutron Reflectometry and QCM-D Study of the Interaction of Cellulases with Films of Amorphous Cellulose

Gang Cheng; Zelin Liu; Jaclyn K. Murton; Michael S. Jablin; Manish Dubey; Jaroslaw Majewski; Candice E. Halbert; James F. Browning; John F. Ankner; Bulent Akgun; Chao Wang; Alan R. Esker; Kenneth L. Sale; Blake A. Simmons; Michael S. Kent

Improving the efficiency of enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulose is one of the key technological hurdles to reduce the cost of producing ethanol and other transportation fuels from lignocellulosic material. A better understanding of how soluble enzymes interact with insoluble cellulose will aid in the design of more efficient enzyme systems. We report a study involving neutron reflectometry (NR) and quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) of the interaction of a fungal enzyme extract ( T. viride ) and an endoglucanse from A. niger with amorphous cellulose films. The use of amorphous cellulose is motivated by that the fact that several biomass pretreatments currently under investigation disrupt the native crystalline structure of cellulose and increase the amorphous content. NR reveals the profile of water through the film at nanometer resolution and is highly sensitive to interfacial roughness, whereas QCM-D provides changes in mass and film stiffness. NR can be performed using either H(2)O- or D(2)O-based aqueous reservoirs. NR measurement of swelling of a cellulose film in D(2)O and in H(2)O revealed that D/H exchange on the cellulose chains must be taken into account when a D(2)O-based reservoir is used. The results also show that cellulose films swell slightly more in D(2)O than in H(2)O. Regarding enzymatic digestion, at 20 °C in H(2)O buffer the T. viride cocktail rapidly digested the entire film, initially roughening the surface, followed by penetration and activity throughout the bulk of the film. In contrast, over the same time period, the endoglucanase was active mainly at the surface of the film and did not increase the surface roughness.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Characterization of the Decaheme c-type Cytochrome OmcA in Solution and on Hematite Surfaces by Small Angle X-ray Scattering and Neutron Reflectometry

Alexander Johs; Liang Shi; Timothy C. Droubay; John F. Ankner; Liyuan Liang

The outer membrane protein OmcA is an 85 kDa decaheme c-type cytochrome located on the surface of the dissimilatory metal-reducing bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1. It is assumed to mediate shuttling of electrons to extracellular acceptors that include solid metal oxides such as hematite (alpha-Fe(2)O(3)). No information is yet available concerning OmcA structure in physiologically relevant conditions such as aqueous environments. We purified OmcA and characterized its solution structure by small angle x-ray scattering (SAXS), and its interaction at the hematite-water interface by neutron reflectometry. SAXS showed that OmcA is a monomer that adopts a flat ellipsoidal shape with an overall dimension of 34 x 90 x 65 A(3). To our knowledge, we obtained the first direct evidence that OmcA undergoes a redox state-dependent conformational change in solution whereby reduction decreases the overall length of OmcA by approximately 7 A (the maximum dimension was 96 A for oxidized OmcA, and 89 A for NADH and dithionite-reduced OmcA). OmcA was also found to physically interact with electron shuttle molecules such as flavin mononucleotide, resulting in the formation of high-molecular-weight assemblies. Neutron reflectometry showed that OmcA forms a well-defined monomolecular layer on hematite surfaces, where it assumes an orientation that maximizes its contact area with the mineral surface. These novel insights into the molecular structure of OmcA in solution, and its interaction with insoluble hematite and small organic ligands, demonstrate the fundamental structural bases underlying OmcAs role in mediating redox processes.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Depletion at solid/liquid interfaces: Flowing hexadecane on functionalized surfaces

Philipp Gutfreund; Max Wolff; Marco Maccarini; Stefan Gerth; John F. Ankner; Jim Browning; Candice E. Halbert; Hanna Wacklin; H. Zabel

We present a neutron reflectivity study on interfaces in contact with flowing hexadecane, which is known to exhibit surface slip on functionalized solid surfaces. The single crystalline silicon substrates were either chemically cleaned Si(100) or Si(100) coated by octadecyl-trichlorosilane (OTS), which resulted in different interfacial energies. The liquid was sheared in situ and changes in reflectivity profiles were compared to the static case. For the OTS surface, the temperature dependence was also recorded. For both types of interfaces, density depletion of the liquid at the interface was observed. In the case of the bare Si substrate, shear load altered the structure of the depletion layer, whereas for the OTS covered surface no effect of shear was observed. Possible links between the depletion layer and surface slip are discussed. The results show that, in contrast to water, for hexadecane the enhancement of the depletion layer with temperature and interfacial energy reduces the amount of slip. Thus a density depletion cannot be the origin of surface slip in this system.


Neutron News | 2008

The SNS Liquids Reflectometer

John F. Ankner; Xiaodong Tao; Candice E. Halbert; Jim Browning; S. Michael Kilbey; Onome Swader; Mark D. Dadmun; Eugenia Kharlampieva; Svetlana A. Sukhishvili

The SNS Liquids Reflectometer [1], installed as one of the first instruments at the Spallation Neutron Source, has now been functional for more than a year. This instrument is designed to view liquid and solid surfaces in specular, off specular, and near-surface small angle scattering geometries. The guide system supplies 2 Å < λ < 16.5 Å neutrons at vertical incident angles ranging from 0° < αi < 5.5° for free liquid surfaces and up to 45° for solid surfaces. Three bandwidth choppers, synchronized with the spallation source and operating at 15–60 Hz, provide neutrons in bandwidths ranging from 3.5–14 Å at a fixed incident angle onto a sample. The sample stage enables all of the motions necessary for positioning liquid and solid surfaces, while the detector arm directs a position-sensitive detector to view the sample at specular or off specular angles up to 90° and can scan out of the specular plane by up to 30°.


Langmuir | 2012

Silk Layering As Studied with Neutron Reflectivity

Brett Wallet; Eugenia Kharlampieva; Katie Campbell-Proszowska; Veronika Kozlovskaya; Sidney T. Malak; John F. Ankner; David L. Kaplan; Vladimir V. Tsukruk

Neutron reflectivity (NR) measurements of ultrathin surface films (below 30 nm) composed of Bombyx mori silk fibroin protein in combination with atomic force microscopy and ellipsometry were used to reveal the internal structural organization in both dry and swollen states. Reconstituted aqueous silk solution deposited on a silicon substrate using the spin-assisted layer-by-layer (SA-LbL) technique resulted in a monolayer silk film composed of random nanofibrils with constant scattering length density (SLD). However, a vertically segregated ordering with two different regions has been observed in dry, thicker, seven-layer SA-LbL silk films. The vertical segregation of silk multilayer films indicates the presence of a different secondary structure of silk in direct contact with the silicon oxide surface (first 6 nm). The layered structure can be attributed to interfacial β-sheet crystallization and the formation of well-developed nanofibrillar nanoporous morphology for the initially deposited silk surface layers with the preservation of less dense, random coil secondary structure for the layers that follow. This segregated structure of solid silk films defines their complex nonuniform behavior in the D(2)O environment with thicker silk films undergoing delamination during swelling. For a silk monolayer with an initial thickness of 6 nm, we observed the increase in the effective thickness by 60% combined with surprising decrease in density. Considering the nanoporous morphology of the hydrophobic silk layer, we suggested that the apparent increase in its thickness in liquid environment is caused by the air nanobubble trapping phenomenon at the liquid-solid interface.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Thermoresponsive PNIPAM Coatings on Nanostructured Gratings for Cell Alignment and Release

Mikhail Zhernenkov; Rana Ashkar; Hao Feng; Olukemi O. Akintewe; Nathan D. Gallant; Ryan Toomey; John F. Ankner; Roger Pynn

Thermoresponsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) has been widely used as a surface coating to thermally control the detachment of adsorbed cells without the need for extreme stimuli such as enzyme treatment. Recently, the use of 2D and 3D scaffolds in controlling cell positioning, growth, spreading, and migration has been of a great interest in tissue engineering and cell biology. Here, we use a PNIPAM polymer surface coating atop a nanostructured linear diffraction grating to controllably change the surface topography of 2D linear structures using temperature stimuli. Neutron reflectometry and surface diffraction are utilized to examine the conformity of the polymer coating to the grating surface, its hydration profile, and its evolution in response to temperature variations. The results show that, in the collapsed state, the PNIPAM coating conforms to the grating structures and retains a uniform hydration of 63%. In the swollen state, the polymer expands beyond the grating channels and absorbs up to 87% water. Such properties are particularly desirable for 2D cell growth scaffolds with a built-in nonextreme tissue-release mechanism. Indeed, the current system demonstrates advanced performance in the effective alignment of cultured fibroblast cells and the easy release of the cells upon temperature change.


Physica B-condensed Matter | 1996

Neutron reflectivity measurements of homopolymer interfaces reinforced with random copolymers

R. Kulasekere; H. Kaiser; John F. Ankner; Thomas P. Russell; H. R. Brown; Craig J. Hawker; Anne M. Mayes

Abstract The behavior of random copolymers of polystyrene (PS) and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), denoted P(S ƒ —r—MMA 1− ƒ ), at the polymer/air, polymer/polymer and polymer/solid interfaces was investigated by neutron reflectivity. Interfacial broadening shows significant penetration of the copolymer into the adjacent homopolymer.


Langmuir | 2015

Chain Conformation and Dynamics in Spin-Assisted Weak Polyelectrolyte Multilayers

Aliaksandr Zhuk; Victor Selin; Iryna Zhuk; Benjamin Belov; John F. Ankner; Svetlana A. Sukhishvili

We report on the effect of the deposition technique on film layering, stability, and chain mobility in weak polyelectrolyte layer-by-layer (LbL) films. Ellipsometry and neutron reflectometry (NR) showed that shear forces arising during spin-assisted assembly lead to smaller amounts of adsorbed polyelectrolytes within LbL films, result in a higher degree of internal film order, and dramatically improve stability of assemblies in salt solutions as compared to dip-assisted LbL assemblies. The underlying flattening of polyelectrolyte chains in spin-assisted LbL films was also revealed as an increase in ionization degree of the assembled weak polyelectrolytes. As demonstrated by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP), strong binding between spin-deposited polyelectrolytes results in a significant slowdown of chain diffusion in salt solutions as compared to dip-deposited films. Moreover, salt-induced chain intermixing in the direction perpendicular to the substrate is largely inhibited in spin-deposited films, resulting in only subdiffusional (<2 Å) chain displacements even after 200 h exposure to 1 M NaCl solutions. This persistence of polyelectrolyte layering has important ramifications for multistage drug delivery and optical applications of LbL assemblies.

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Victor Selin

Stevens Institute of Technology

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Eugenia Kharlampieva

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Bradley S. Lokitz

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Candice E. Halbert

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Sushil K. Satija

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Veronika Kozlovskaya

Georgia Institute of Technology

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H. Kaiser

University of Missouri

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James F. Browning

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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