Lauren E. Marbella
University of Pittsburgh
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lauren E. Marbella.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Christopher M. Andolina; Andrew C. Dewar; Ashley M. Smith; Lauren E. Marbella; Michael J. Hartmann; Jill E. Millstone
Discrete gold nanoparticles with diameters between 2 and 3 nm show remarkable properties including enhanced catalytic behavior and photoluminescence. However, tunability of these properties is limited by the tight size range within which they are observed. Here, we report the synthesis of discrete, bimetallic gold-copper nanoparticle alloys (diameter ≅ 2-3 nm) which display photoluminescent properties that can be tuned by changing the alloy composition. Electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, and pulsed-field gradient stimulated echo (1)H NMR measurements show that the nanoparticles are homogeneous, discrete, and crystalline. Upon varying the composition of the nanoparticles from 0% to 100% molar ratio copper, the photoluminescence maxima shift from 947 to 1067 nm, with excitation at 360 nm. The resulting particles exhibit brightness values (molar extinction coefficient (ε) × quantum yield (Φ)) that are more than an order of magnitude larger than the brightest near-infrared-emitting lanthanide complexes and small-molecule probes evaluated under similar conditions.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Scott E. Crawford; Christopher M. Andolina; Ashley M. Smith; Lauren E. Marbella; Kathryn A. Johnston; Patrick J. Straney; Michael J. Hartmann; Jill E. Millstone
Small gold nanoparticles (∼1.4-2.2 nm core diameters) exist at an exciting interface between molecular and metallic electronic structures. These particles have the potential to elucidate fundamental physical principles driving nanoscale phenomena and to be useful in a wide range of applications. Here, we study the optoelectronic properties of aqueous, phosphine-terminated gold nanoparticles (core diameter = 1.7 ± 0.4 nm) after ligand exchange with a variety of sulfur-containing molecules. No emission is observed from these particles prior to ligand exchange, however the introduction of sulfur-containing ligands initiates photoluminescence. Further, small changes in sulfur substituents produce significant changes in nanoparticle photoluminescence features including quantum yield, which ranges from 0.13 to 3.65% depending on substituent. Interestingly, smaller ligands produce the most intense, highest energy, narrowest, and longest-lived emissions. Radiative lifetime measurements for these gold nanoparticle conjugates range from 59 to 2590 μs, indicating that even minor changes to the ligand substituent fundamentally alter the electronic properties of the luminophore itself. These results isolate the critical role of surface chemistry in the photoluminescence of small metal nanoparticles and largely rule out other mechanisms such as discrete (Au(I)-S-R)n impurities, differences in ligand densities, and/or core diameters. Taken together, these experiments provide important mechanistic insight into the relationship between gold nanoparticle near-infrared emission and pendant ligand architectures, as well as demonstrate the pivotal role of metal nanoparticle surface chemistry in tuning and optimizing emergent optoelectronic features from these nanostructures.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Patrick J. Straney; Lauren E. Marbella; Christopher M. Andolina; Noel T. Nuhfer; Jill E. Millstone
Nanoscale platinum materials are essential components in many technologies, including catalytic converters and fuel cells. Combining Pt with other metals can enhance its performance and/or decrease the cost of the technology, and a wide range of strategies have been developed to capitalize on these advantages. However, wet chemical synthesis of Pt-containing nanoparticles (NPs) is challenging due to the diverse metal segregation and metal-metal redox processes possible under closely related experimental conditions. Here, we elucidate the relationship between Pt(IV) speciation and the formation of well-known NP motifs, including frame-like and core-shell morphologies, in Au-Pt systems. We leverage insights gained from these studies to induce a controlled transition from redox- to surface chemistry-mediated growth pathways, resulting in the formation of Pt NPs in epitaxial contact and linear alignment along a gold nanoprism substrate. Mechanistic investigations using a combination of electron microscopy and (195)Pt NMR spectroscopy identify Pt(IV) speciation as a crucial parameter for understanding and controlling the formation of Pt-containing NPs. Combined, these findings point toward fully bottom-up methods for deposition and organization of NPs on colloidal plasmonic substrates.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Lauren E. Marbella; Daniel M. Chevrier; Peter D. Tancini; Olabobola Shobayo; Ashley M. Smith; Kathryn A. Johnston; Christopher M. Andolina; Peng Zhang; Giannis Mpourmpakis; Jill E. Millstone
We report the identification, description, and role of multinuclear metal-thiolate complexes in aqueous Au-Cu nanoparticle syntheses. The structure of these species was characterized by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy techniques. The observed structures were found to be in good agreement with thermodynamic growth trends predicted by first-principles calculations. The presence of metal-thiolate complexes is then shown to be critical for the formation of alloyed Au-Cu architectures in the small nanoparticle regime (diameter ∼2 nm). In the absence of mixed metal-thiolate precursors, nanoparticles form with a Cu-S shell and a Au-rich interior. Taken together, these results demonstrate that prenucleation species, which are discrete molecular precursors distinct from both initial reagents and final particle products, may provide an important new synthetic route to control final metal nanoparticle composition and composition architectures.
Analyst | 2017
Ashley M. Smith; Kathryn A. Johnston; Scott E. Crawford; Lauren E. Marbella; Jill E. Millstone
Colloidal inorganic nanoparticles are being used in an increasingly large number of applications ranging from biological imaging to television displays. In all cases, nanoparticle surface chemistry can significantly impact particle physical properties, processing, and performance. The first step in leveraging this tunability is to develop analytical approaches to describe surface chemical features. Some of the most basic descriptors of particle surface chemistry include the quantity, identity, and arrangement of ligands appended to the particle core. Here, we review approaches to quantify molecular ligand densities on nanoparticle surfaces and consider fundamental barriers to the accuracy of this analysis including parameters such as dispersity in colloidal nanoparticle samples, particle-ligand interactions, and currently available analytical techniques. Techniques reviewed include widely studied methods such as optical, atomic, vibrational, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopies as well as emerging or niche approaches including electrospray-differential mobility analysis, pH-based methods, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Collectively, these studies elucidate surface chemistry architectures that accelerate both fundamental understanding of nanoscale physical phenomena and the implementation of these materials in a wide range of technologies.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013
Lauren E. Marbella; Hyo Soon Cho; Megan M. Spence
A new class of penetrating peptides that can target the mitochondria with high specificity was recently discovered. In this work, we developed a model inner mitochondrial membrane, equipped with a transmembrane gradient, suitable for solid-state NMR experiments. Using solid-state NMR, we observed a mitochondria-penetrating peptide interacting with the model inner mitochondrial membrane to gain insight into the mechanism of translocation. The paramagnetic relaxation effect due to Mn(2+) ions on (13)C magic angle spinning NMR was used to measure the insertion depth of the peptide and its distribution in each monolayer of the membrane. We found that at low peptide concentration the peptide binds to the outer leaflet and at high concentration, it crosses the hydrophobic bilayer core and is distributed in both leaflets. In both concentration regimes, the peptide binds at the C2 position on the lipid acyl chain. The mitochondria-penetrating peptide crossed to the inner leaflet of the model membranes without disrupting the lamellarity. These results provide evidence that supports the electroporation model of translocation. We estimated the energy associated with crossing the inner mitochondrial membrane. We found that the transmembrane potential provides sufficient energy for the peptide to cross the hydrophobic core, which is the most unfavorable step in translocation.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Yanting Jin; Nis-Julian H. Kneusels; Pieter C. M. M. Magusin; Gunwoo Kim; Elizabeth Castillo-Martínez; Lauren E. Marbella; Rachel Nathaniel Kerber; Duncan J Howe; Subhradip Paul; Tao Liu; Clare P. Grey
To elucidate the role of fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC) as an additive in the standard carbonate-based electrolyte for Li-ion batteries, the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) formed during electrochemical cycling on silicon anodes was analyzed with a combination of solution and solid-state NMR techniques, including dynamic nuclear polarization. To facilitate characterization via 1D and 2D NMR, we synthesized 13C-enriched FEC, ultimately allowing a detailed structural assignment of the organic SEI. We find that the soluble poly(ethylene oxide)-like linear oligomeric electrolyte breakdown products that are observed after cycling in the standard ethylene carbonate-based electrolyte are suppressed in the presence of 10 vol% FEC additive. FEC is first defluorinated to form soluble vinylene carbonate and vinoxyl species, which react to form both soluble and insoluble branched ethylene-oxide-based polymers. No evidence for branched polymers is observed in the absence of FEC.
Langmuir | 2016
Kathryn A. Johnston; Ashley M. Smith; Lauren E. Marbella; Jill E. Millstone
Here, we compare the ligand exchange behaviors of silver nanoparticles synthesized in the presence of two different surface capping agents: poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (MW = 10 or 40 kDa) or trisodium citrate, and under either ambient or low-oxygen conditions. In all cases, we find that the polymer capping agent exhibits features of a weakly bound ligand, producing better ligand exchange efficiencies with an incoming thiolated ligand compared to citrate. The polymer capping agent also generates nanoparticles that are more susceptible to reactions with oxygen during both synthesis and ligand exchange. The influence of the original ligand on the outcome of ligand exchange reactions with an incoming thiolated ligand highlights important aspects of silver nanoparticle surface chemistry, crucial for applications ranging from photocatalysis to antimicrobials.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017
David Punihaole; Ryan S. Jakubek; Riley J. Workman; Lauren E. Marbella; Patricia Campbell; Jeffry D. Madura; Sanford A. Asher
We investigate the solution and fibril conformations and structural transitions of the polyglutamine (polyQ) peptide, D2Q10K2 (Q10), by synergistically using UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We show that Q10 adopts two distinct, monomeric solution conformational states: a collapsed β-strand and a PPII-like structure that do not readily interconvert. This clearly indicates a high activation barrier in solution that prevents equilibration between these structures. Using metadynamics, we explore the conformational energy landscape of Q10 to investigate the physical origins of this high activation barrier. We develop new insights into the conformations and hydrogen bonding environments of the glutamine side chains in the PPII and β-strand-like conformations in solution. We also use the secondary structure-inducing cosolvent, acetonitrile, to investigate the conformations present in low dielectric constant solutions with decreased solvent-peptide hydrogen bonding. As the mole fraction of acetonitrile increases, Q10 converts from PPII-like structures into α-helix-like structures and β-sheet aggregates. Electron microscopy indicates that the aggregates prepared from these acetonitrile-rich solutions show morphologies similar to our previously observed polyQ fibrils. These aggregates redissolve upon the addition of water! These are the first examples of reversible fibril formation. Our monomeric Q10 peptides clearly sample broad regions of their available conformational energy landscape. The work here develops molecular-level insight into monomeric Q10 conformations and investigates the activation barriers between different monomer states and their evolution into fibrils.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Lauren E. Marbella; Bocheng Yin; Megan M. Spence
The conformations and motions of lipid molecules under different membrane curvatures have important implications for transmembrane protein function, binding events, and overall membrane organization. This work reports on the local order parameters of saturated lipid molecules, as measured by (13)C NMR relaxation, under several curvature conditions to probe structural changes as a function of lipid bilayer curvature. Different curvature conditions are created by depositing phosphatidylcholine membranes on spherical beads of various diameters. The findings reveal that the order parameters are not a continuous function of the membrane curvature. While small (30 nm) and large (110 nm) diameter bilayers exhibit similar order parameters, bilayers with curvatures of 60-80 nm diameter show a consistently increased order parameter along the entire lipid molecule, indicating a higher packing density and lateral tension. Order parameters for curvatures between 60 and 80 nm also show molecular evidence for interdigitation.