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Dive into the research topics where Ralf Schweins is active.

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Featured researches published by Ralf Schweins.


Applied Physics Letters | 2002

Shift of the photonic band gap in two photonic crystal/liquid crystal composites

Guido Mertens; Thorsten Röder; Ralf Schweins; Klaus Huber; Heinz-S. Kitzerow

We have investigated the photonic band gap of normal and inverted colloidal crystals which were infiltrated with a nematic liquid crystal. In both systems, the wavelength of the photonic band gap can be tuned by adjusting the temperature. In agreement with recent theoretical predictions, the spectral shift is larger (≈14 nm) in the inverted structure.


Langmuir | 2011

Self-aggregation of mixtures of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes and surfactants studied by rheology, dynamic light scattering and small-angle neutron scattering.

Ingo Hoffmann; Peggy Heunemann; Sylvain Prévost; Ralf Schweins; Norman J. Wagner; Michael Gradzielski

In this study, the phase behavior, structure and properties of systems composed of the cationic, cellulose-based polycation JR 400 and the anionic surfactants sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (SDBS) or sodium dodecylethoxysulfate (SDES), mainly in the semidilute regime, were examined. This system shows the interesting feature of a very large viscosity increase by nearly 4 orders of magnitude as compared to the pure polymer solution already at very low concentrations of 1 wt%. By using rheology, dynamic light scattering (DLS), and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), we are able to deduce systematic correlations between the molecular composition of the systems (characterized by the charge ratio Z=[+(polymer)]/[−(surfactant)]), their structural organization and the resulting macroscopic flow behavior. Mixtures in the semidilute regime with an excess of polycation charge form highly viscous network structures containing rodlike aggregates composed of surfactant and polyelectrolyte that are interconnected by the long JR 400 chains. Viscosity and storage modulus follow scaling laws as a function of surfactant concentration (η~c(s)(4); G(0)~c(s)(1.5)) and the very pronounced viscosity increase mainly arises from the strongly enhanced structural relaxation time of the systems. In contrast, mixtures with excess surfactant charges form solutions with viscosities even below those of the pure polymer solution. The combination of SANS, DLS, and rheology shows that the structural, dynamical, and rheological properties of these oppositely charged polyelectrolyte/surfactant systems can be controlled in a systematic fashion by appropriately choosing the systems composition.


Langmuir | 2008

Water-Soluble Interpolyelectrolyte Complexes of Polyisobutylene-block-Poly(methacrylic acid) Micelles: Formation and Properties

Markus Burkhardt; Markus Ruppel; Sandrine Tea; Markus Drechsler; Ralf Schweins; Dmitry V. Pergushov; Michael Gradzielski; A. B. Zezin; Axel H. E. Müller

We report on interpolyelectrolyte complexes (IPECs) formed by micelles of ionic amphiphilic diblock copolymers with polyisobutylene (PIB) and poly(sodium methacrylate) (PMANa) blocks interacting with quaternized poly(4-vinylpyridine) (P4VPQ). The interpolyelectrolyte complexation was followed by turbidimetry and small angle neutron scattering (SANS). The data obtained by means of a combination of SANS, dynamic light scattering (DLS), and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) provide evidence on the core-shell-corona structure of the complex species with the shell assembled from fragments of electrostatically bound PMANa and quaternized P4VPQ fragments, original PIBx-b-PMAAy micelles apparently playing a lyophilizing part. The complex formation is followed by potentiometric titration as well. This process is initially kinetically controlled. In the second step larger aggregates rearrange in favor of smaller complexes with core-shell-corona structure, which are thermodynamically more stable. An increase in ionic strength of the solution results in dissociation of the complex species as proven by SANS and analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC). This process begins at the certain threshold ionic strength and proceeds via a salt-induced gradual release of chains of the cationic polyectrolyte from the complex species.


Soft Matter | 2012

Viscosity and diffusion: crowding and salt effects in protein solutions

Marco Heinen; Fabio Zanini; Felix Roosen-Runge; Diana Fedunova; Fajun Zhang; Marcus Hennig; Tilo Seydel; Ralf Schweins; Michael Sztucki; Marián Antalík; Frank Schreiber; Gerhard Nägele

We report on a joint experimental–theoretical study of collective diffusion in, and static shear viscosity of solutions of bovine serum albumin (BSA) proteins, focusing on the dependence on protein and salt concentration. Data obtained from dynamic light scattering and rheometric measurements are compared to theoretical calculations based on an analytically treatable spheroid model of BSA with isotropic screened Coulomb plus hard-sphere interactions. The only input to the dynamics calculations is the static structure factor obtained from a consistent theoretical fit to a concentration series of small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) data. This fit is based on an integral equation scheme that combines high accuracy with low computational cost. All experimentally probed dynamic and static properties are reproduced theoretically with an at least semi-quantitative accuracy. For lower protein concentration and low salinity, both theory and experiment show a maximum in the reduced viscosity, caused by the electrostatic repulsion of proteins. On employing our theoretical and experimental results, the applicability range of a generalized Stokes–Einstein (GSE) relation connecting viscosity, collective diffusion coefficient, and osmotic compressibility, proposed by Kholodenko and Douglas [Phys. Rev. E, 1995, 51, 1081] is examined. Significant violation of the GSE relation is found, both in experimental data and in theoretical models, in concentrated systems at physiological salinity, and under low-salt conditions for arbitrary protein concentrations.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Structure and Morphology of Charged Graphene Platelets in Solution by Small-Angle Neutron Scattering

Emily M. Milner; Neal T. Skipper; Christopher A. Howard; Milo S. P. Shaffer; David J. Buckley; K. Adam Rahnejat; Patrick L. Cullen; Richard K. Heenan; Peter Lindner; Ralf Schweins

Solutions of negatively charged graphene (graphenide) platelets were produced by intercalation of nanographite with liquid potassium-ammonia followed by dissolution in tetrahydrofuran. The structure and morphology of these solutions were then investigated by small-angle neutron scattering. We found that >95 vol % of the solute is present as single-layer graphene sheets. These charged sheets are flat over a length scale of >150 Å in solution and are strongly solvated by a shell of solvent molecules. Atomic force microscopy on drop-coated thin films corroborated the presence of monolayer graphene sheets. Our dissolution method thus offers a significant increase in the monodispersity achievable in graphene solutions.


Soft Matter | 2009

Salt-induced release of lipase from polyelectrolyte complex micelles

Saskia Lindhoud; Renko de Vries; Ralf Schweins; Martinus Abraham Cohen Stuart; Willem Norde

With the aim to gain insight into the possible applicability of protein-filled polyelectrolyte complex micelles under physiological salt conditions, we studied the behavior of these micelles as a function of salt concentration. The micelles form by electrostatically driven co-assembly from strong cationic block copolymers poly(2-methyl vinyl pyridinium)41-block- poly(ethylene oxide)205, weak anionic homopolymers poly(acrylic acid)139, and negatively charged lipase molecules. The formation and disintegration of these micelles were studied with dynamic light scattering (DLS), by means of composition and salt titrations, respectively. The latter measurements revealed differences between disintegration of lipase-filled and normal polyelectrolyte complex micelles. These data, together with small angle neutron scattering (SANS) measurements provide indications that lipase is gradually released with increasing salt concentration. From the SANS data a linear relation between the intensity at q = 0 and the volume of the cores of the micelles at different salt concentrations was derived, indicating a loss of volume of the micelles due to the release of lipase molecules. It was estimated that beyond 0.12 M NaCl all lipase molecules are released.


Soft Matter | 2009

Surface aggregate structure of nonionic surfactants on silica nanoparticles

Dersy Lugo; Julian Oberdisse; Matthias Karg; Ralf Schweins; Gerhard H. Findenegg

The self-assembly of two nonionic surfactants, pentaethylene glycol monododecyl ether (C12E5) and n-dodecyl-β-maltoside (β-C12G2), in the presence of a purpose-synthesized silica sol of uniform particle size (diameter 16 nm) has been studied by adsorption measurements, dynamic light scattering and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) using a H2O/D2O mixture matching the silica, in order to highlight the structure of the surfactant aggregates. For C12E5, strong aggregative adsorption onto the silica beads, with a high plateau value of the adsorption isotherm above the CMC was found. SANS measurements were made at a series of loadings, from zero surfactant up to maximum surface coverage. It is found that the spherical core-shell model nicely reproduces the SANS data up to and including the local maximum at q = 0.42 nm−1 but not in the Porod region of high q, indicating that the surface area of the adsorbed surfactant is underestimated by the model of a uniform adsorbed layer. A satisfactory representation of the entire scattering profiles is obtained with the model of micelle-decorated silica beads, indicating that C12E5 is adsorbed as spherical micellar aggregates. This behaviour is attributed to the high surface curvature of the silica, which prevents an effective packing of the hydrophobic chains of the amphiphile in a bilayer configuration. For the maltoside surfactant β-C12G2 very weak adsorption on the silica beads was found. The SANS profile indicates that this surfactant forms oblate ellipsoidal micelles in the silica dispersion, as in the absence of the silica beads.


ChemPhysChem | 2008

Pluronics‐Stabilized Gold Nanoparticles: Investigation of the Structure of the Polymer–Particle Hybrid

Kamil Rahme; Julian Oberdisse; Ralf Schweins; Cédric Gaillard; Jean-Daniel Marty; Christophe Mingotaud; Fabienne Gauffre

Hybrid gold-polymer nanoparticles are obtained by self-assembly of amphiphilic copolymers (Pluronics) in solutions containing preformed gold nanoparticles (diameter ca. 12 nm). Dynamic light scattering, TEM, cryo-TEM, and small-angle neutron scattering experiments with contrast variation are used to characterize the structure of the gold-polymer particles. Five Pluronics (F127, F68, F88, F108, P84) with different molecular weights and hydrophilic/hydrophobic balances are investigated. Gold nanoparticles are individually embedded within globules of polymer, even under conditions for which Pluronics micelles do not form in solution. The hybrid particles are several tens of nanometers in size (larger than micelles of the corresponding Pluronics), and the size can be tuned by changing the temperature.


Langmuir | 2009

Salt-Induced Disintegration of Lysozyme-Containing Polyelectrolyte Complex Micelles

Saskia Lindhoud; Lenny Voorhaar; Renko de Vries; Ralf Schweins; Martinus Abraham Cohen Stuart; Willem Norde

The salt-induced disintegration of lysozyme-filled polyelectrolyte complex micelles, consisting of positively charged homopolymers (PDMAEMA150), negatively charged diblock copolymers (PAA42-PAAm417), and lysozyme, has been studied with dynamic light scattering (DLS) and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). These measurements show that, from 0 to 0.2 M NaCl, both the hydrodynamic radius (Rh) and the core radius (Rcore) decrease with increasing salt concentration. This suggests that the micellar structures rearrange. Moreover, from approximately 0.2 to 0.4 M NaCl the light-scattering intensity is constant. In this salt interval, the hydrodynamic radius increases, has a maximum at 0.3 M NaCl, and subsequently decreases. This behavior is observed in both a lysozyme-containing system and a system without lysozyme. The SANS measurements on the lysozyme-filled micelles do not show increased intensity or a larger core radius at 0.3 M NaCl. This indicates that from 0.2 to 0.4 M NaCl another structure is formed, consisting of just the diblock copolymer and the homopolymer, because at 0.12 M NaCl the lysozyme-PAA42-PAAm417 complex has disintegrated. One may expect that the driving force for the formation of the complex in this salt range is other than electrostatic.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2012

Demonstrating the importance of polymer-conjugate conformation in solution on its therapeutic output: Diethylstilbestrol (DES)-polyacetals as prostate cancer treatment

Vanessa Giménez; Craig James; Ana Armiñán; Ralf Schweins; Alison Paul; María J. Vicent

The design of improved polymeric carriers to be used in the next generation of polymer therapeutics is an ongoing challenge. Biodegradable systems present potential advantages regarding safety benefit apart from the possibility to use higher molecular weight (Mw) carriers allowing PK optimization, by exploiting the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR)-mediated tumor targeting. Within this context, we previously designed pH-responsive polyacetalic systems, tert-polymers, where a drug with the adequate diol-functionality was incorporated within the polymer mainchain. The synthetic, non-steroidal estrogen, diethylstilboestrol (DES) clinically used for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer was chosen as drug. In order to improve the properties of this tert-polymer, novel polyacetalic systems as block-co-polymers, with more defined structure have been obtained. This second generation polyacetals allowed higher drug capacity than the tert-polymer, a biphasic DES release profile at acidic pH and due to its controlled amphiphilic character readily formed micelle-like structures in solution. These features result in an enhancement of conjugate therapeutic value in selected prostate cancer cell models. Exhaustive physico-chemical characterization focusing on nanoconjugate solution behavior and using advanced techniques, such as, pulsed-gradient spin-echo NMR (PGSE-NMR) and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), has been carried out in order to demonstrate this hypothesis. Clear evidence of significantly different conformation in solution has been obtained for both polyacetals. These results demonstrate that an adequate control on molecular or supramolecular conformation in solution with polymer therapeutics is crucial in order to achieve the desired therapeutic output.

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Michael Gradzielski

Technical University of Berlin

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Klaus Huber

University of Paderborn

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Sylvain Prévost

Technical University of Berlin

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Richard K. Heenan

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Bernard Cabane

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Albena Lederer

Dresden University of Technology

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