Martin Valldor
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Valldor.
ACS Nano | 2011
Lisong Xiao; Jiangtian Li; Dermot F. Brougham; Eoin K. Fox; Neus Feliu; Alexey Bushmelev; Annette Schmidt; Natascha Mertens; Fabian Kiessling; Martin Valldor; Bengt Fadeel; Sanjay Mathur
Ultrasmall superparamagnetic Fe(3)O(4) nanoparticles (USIRONs) were synthesized by a novel, easily scalable chemical reduction of colloidal iron hydroxide under hydrothermal conditions. The average crystallite size (5.1 ± 0.5 nm) and good crystallinity of the samples were supported by HR-TEM analysis and the saturation magnetization value (47 emu g(-1)). Vitamin C, used as a chemical reducing agent, also served as a capping agent in the oxidized form (dehydroascorbic acid, DHAA) to impart nanoparticles with exceptional solubility and stability in water, PBS buffer, and cell culture medium. Detailed physicochemical analysis of the USIRON suspensions provided insight into the magnetic ordering phenomena within the colloid, arising from the formation of uniform clusters displaying a hydrodynamic size of 41 nm. Phantom experiments on the contrast agent (clinical 3 T MRI scanner) revealed an enhanced r(2)/r(1) ratio of 36.4 (r(1)= 5 s(-1) mM(-1) and r(2)= 182 s(-1) mM(-1)) when compared to the clinically approved agents. The potential of the DHAA-Fe(3)O(4) nanoparticles as negative contrast agents for MRI with optimal hydrodynamic size for extended blood circulation times was confirmed by strong contrast observed in T(2)- and T(2)*-weighted images. The cell tests performed with primary human immune-competent cells confirmed the excellent biocompatibility of USIRONs.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
W. Schweika; Martin Valldor; Peter Lemmens
Y0.5Ca0.5BaCo4O7 contains kagomé layers of Co ions, whose spins are strongly coupled, with a Curie-Weiss temperature of -2200 K. At low temperature, T=1.2 K, our diffuse neutron scattering study with polarization analysis reveals characteristic spin correlations close to a predicted two-dimensional coplanar ground state with staggered chirality. The absence of three-dimensional long-range antiferromagnetic order indicates negligible coupling between the kagomé layers. The scattering intensities are consistent with high spin S=3/2 states of Co2+ in the kagomé layers and low spin S=0 states for Co3+ ions on interlayer sites. Our observations agree with previous Monte Carlo simulations indicating a ground state of effectively short range, staggered chiral spin order.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Jin-Ming Chen; Yi-Ying Chin; Martin Valldor; Z. Hu; Jenn-Min Lee; Shu-Chih Haw; Nozomu Hiraoka; Hirofumi Ishii; C. W. Pao; Ku-Ding Tsuei; Jyh-Fu Lee; Hong-Ji Lin; Ling-Yun Jang; A. Tanaka; Chien-Te Chen; Liu Hao Tjeng
The complex metal oxide SrCo0.5Ru0.5O(3-δ) possesses a slightly distorted perovskite crystal structure. Its insulating nature infers a well-defined charge distribution, and the six-fold coordinated transition metals have the oxidation states +5 for ruthenium and +3 for cobalt as observed by X-ray spectroscopy. We have discovered that Co(3+) ion is purely high-spin at room temperature, which is unique for a Co(3+) in an octahedral oxygen surrounding. We attribute this to the crystal field interaction being weaker than the Hunds-rule exchange due to a relatively large mean Co-O distances of 1.98(2) Å, as obtained by EXAFS and X-ray diffraction experiments. A gradual high-to-low spin state transition is completed by applying high hydrostatic pressure of up to 40 GPa. Across this spin state transition, the Co Kβ emission spectra can be fully explained by a weighted sum of the high-spin and low-spin spectra. Thereby is the much debated intermediate spin state of Co(3+) absent in this material. These results allow us to draw an energy diagram depicting relative stabilities of the high-, intermediate-, and low-spin states as functions of the metal-oxygen bond length for a Co(3+) ion in an octahedral coordination.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Lisong Xiao; Marianne E. Mertens; Laura Wortmann; Silke Kremer; Martin Valldor; Twan Lammers; Fabian Kiessling; Sanjay Mathur
Fully green and facile redox chemistry involving reduction of colloidal iron hydroxide (Fe(OH)3) through green tea (GT) polyphenols produced water-soluble Fe3O4 nanocrystals coated with GT extracts namely epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) and epicatechin (EC). Electron donating polyphenols stoichiometrically reduced Fe(3+) ions into Fe(2+) ions resulting in the formation of magnetite (Fe3O4) nanoparticles and corresponding oxidized products (semiquinones and quinones) that simultaneously served as efficient surface chelators for the Fe3O4 nanoparticles making them dispersible and stable in water, PBS, and cell culture medium for extended time periods. As-formed iron oxide nanoparticles (2.5-6 nm) displayed high crystallinity and saturation magnetization as well as high relaxivity ratios manifested in strong contrast enhancement observed in T2-weighted images. Potential of green tea-coated superparamagnetic iron oxide nanocrystals (SPIONs) as superior negative contrast agents was confirmed by in vitro and in vivo experiments. Primary human macrophages (J774A.1) and colon cancer cells (CT26) were chosen to assess cytotoxicity and cellular uptake of GT-, EGCGq-, and ECq-coated Fe3O4 nanoparticles, which showed high uptake efficiencies by J774A.1 and CT26 cells without any additional transfection agent. Furthermore, the in vivo accumulation characteristics of GT-coated Fe3O4 nanoparticles were similar to those observed in clinical studies of SPIONs with comparable accumulation in epidermoid cancer-xenograft bearing mice. Given their promising transport and uptake characteristics and new surface chemistry, GT-SPIONs conjugates can be applied for multimodal imaging and therapeutic applications by anchoring further functionalities.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014
Thomas Lehnen; Martin Valldor; Daniel Nižňanský; Sanjay Mathur
Controllable fabrication of highly porous iron vanadate (FeVO4) thick film consisting of disordered nanorods suitable for gas penetration and permeation was achieved by hydrothermal synthesis of fervanite-like FeVO4·1.1H2O. The subsequent dehydration to FeVO4 was investigated by 57Fe Mossbauer spectroscopy (ΔQS), DTA, magnetic susceptibility (χ) and electron microscopy (REM/TEM). Their integration in gas sensing devices as porous layer via polymer-blended (PVDF) doctor-blading approach was successfully demonstrated followed by investigations of their electric properties and oxygen sensing capability. The probed I–U behaviour and UV-Vis measurements confirmed the semiconducting nature of triclinic FeVO4 (Eg = 2.72 eV) and exhibited an activation energy for electric conduction of 0.46 eV. The best sensitivity of 0.29 ± 0.01 (m = −3.4 ± 0.1) could be obtained at an optimal working temperature of 250 °C.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014
Laura Wortmann; Shaista Ilyas; Daniel Niznansky; Martin Valldor; Karim Arroub; Nadja Berger; Kamil Rahme; Justin D. Holmes; Sanjay Mathur
A facile bottom-up approach for the synthesis of inorganic/organic bioconjugated nanoprobes based on iron oxide nanocubes as the core with a nanometric silica shell is demonstrated. Surface coating and functionalization protocols developed in this work offered good control over the shell thickness (8-40 nm) and enabled biovectorization of SiO2@Fe3O4 core-shell structures by covalent attachment of folic acid (FA) as a targeting unit for cellular uptake. The successful immobilization of folic acid was investigated both quantitatively (TGA, EA, XPS) and qualitatively (AT-IR, UV-vis, ζ-potential). Additionally, the magnetic behavior of the nanocomposites was monitored after each functionalization step. Cell viability studies confirmed low cytotoxicity of FA@SiO2@Fe3O4 conjugates, which makes them promising nanoprobes for targeted internalization by cells and their imaging.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Martin Valldor; Ulrich K. Rößler; Yurii Prots; Chang-Yang Kuo; Jen-Che Chiang; Z. Hu; Tun-Wen Pi; Rüdiger Kniep; Liu Hao Tjeng
Barium thio-oxocobaltate(II), Ba[CoS2/2 O2/2 ], was synthesized by the reaction of equimolar amounts of BaO, Co, and S in closed silica ampoules. The title compound (Cmcm, a=3.98808(3), b=12.75518(9), c=6.10697(4) Å) is isostructural to Ba[ZnSO]. The use of soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy confirmed that cobalt is in the oxidation state +2 and tetrahedrally coordinated. Its coordination consists of two sulfur and two oxygen atoms in an ordered fashion. High-temperature magnetic susceptibility data indicate strong low-dimensional spin-spin interactions, which are suggested to be closely related to the layer-type crystal structure and perhaps the ordered distribution of sulfur and oxygen. Antiferromagnetic ordering below TN =222 K is observed as an anomaly in the specific heat, coinciding with a significant lowering of the magnetic susceptibility. Density functional theory calculations within a generalized-gradient approximation (GGA)+U approach identify an antiferromagnetic ground state within the square-like two-dimensional layers of Co, and antiferromagnetic correlations for nearest and next nearest neighbors along bonds mediated by oxygen or sulfur. However, this magnetic state is subject to frustration by relatively strong interlayer couplings.
Physical Review B | 2012
G. Kolland; O. Breunig; Martin Valldor; M. Hiertz; J. Frielingsdorf; T. Lorenz
Elementary excitations in the spin-ice compound Dy
Inorganic Chemistry | 2014
Guangmei Wang; Martin Valldor; Eike T. Spielberg; Anja-Verena Mudring
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Physical Review B | 2011
Martin Valldor; O. Heyer; A. C. Komarek; A. Senyshyn; M. Braden; T. Lorenz
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