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Dive into the research topics where S. Hadi Madani is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Hadi Madani.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2016

Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) hydrogel/chitosan scaffold hybrid for three-dimensional stem cell culture and cartilage tissue engineering.

Amir Mellati; Meisam Valizadeh Kiamahalleh; S. Hadi Madani; Sheng Dai; Jingxiu Bi; Bo Jin; Hu Zhang

Providing a controllable and definable three-dimensional (3D) microenvironment for chondrogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) remains a great challenge for cartilage tissue engineering. In this work, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) polymers with the degrees of polymerization of 100 and 400 (NI100 and NI400) were prepared and the polymer solutions were introduced into the preprepared chitosan porous scaffolds (CS) to form hybrids (CSNI100 and CSNI400, respectively). SEM images indicated that the PNIPAAm gel partially occupied chitosan pores while the interconnected porous structure of chitosan was preserved. MSCs were incorporated within the hybrid and cell proliferation and chondrogenic differentiation were monitored. After 7-day incubation of the cell-laden constructs in a growth medium, the cell viability in CSNI100 and CSNI400 were 54 and 108% higher than that in CS alone, respectively. Glycosaminoglycan and total collagen contents increased 2.6- and 2.5-fold after 28-day culture of cell-laden CSNI400 in the chondrogenic medium. These results suggest that the hybrid structure composed of the chitosan porous scaffold and the well-defined PNIPAAm hydrogel, in particular CSNI400, is suitable for 3D stem cell culture and cartilage tissue engineering.


ChemPhysChem | 2015

Analysis of Adsorbate–Adsorbate and Adsorbate–Adsorbent Interactions to Decode Isosteric Heats of Gas Adsorption

S. Hadi Madani; Saeid Sedghi; Mark J. Biggs; Phillip Pendleton

A qualitative interpretation is proposed to interpret isosteric heats of adsorption by considering contributions from three general classes of interaction energy: fluid-fluid heat, fluid-solid heat, and fluid-high-energy site (HES) heat. Multiple temperature adsorption isotherms are defined for nitrogen, T=(75, 77, 79) K, argon at T=(85, 87, 89) K, and for water and methanol at T=(278, 288, 298) K on a well-characterized polymer-based, activated carbon. Nitrogen and argon are subjected to isosteric heat analyses; their zero filling isosteric heats of adsorption are consistent with slit-pore, adsorption energy enhancement modelling. Water adsorbs entirely via specific interactions, offering decreasing isosteric heat at low pore filling followed by a constant heat slightly in excess of water condensation enthalpy, demonstrating the effects of micropores. Methanol offers both specific adsorption via the alcohol group and non-specific interactions via its methyl group; the isosteric heat increases at low pore filling, indicating the predominance of non-specific interactions.


ChemPhysChem | 2015

Immersion Calorimetry: Molecular Packing Effects in Micropores.

S. Hadi Madani; Ana Silvestre-Albero; Mark J. Biggs; F. Rodríguez-Reinoso; Phillip Pendleton

Repeated and controlled immersion calorimetry experiments were performed to determine the specific surface area and pore-size distribution (PSD) of a well-characterized, microporous poly(furfuryl alcohol)-based activated carbon. The PSD derived from nitrogen gas adsorption indicated a narrow distribution centered at 0.57±0.05 nm. Immersion into liquids of increasing molecular sizes ranging from 0.33 nm (dichloromethane) to 0.70 nm (α-pinene) showed a decreasing enthalpy of immersion at a critical probe size (0.43-0.48 nm), followed by an increase at 0.48-0.56 nm, and a second decrease at 0.56-0.60 nm. This maximum has not been reported previously. After consideration of possible reasons for this new observation, it is concluded that the effect arises from molecular packing inside the micropores, interpreted in terms of 2D packing. The immersion enthalpy PSD was consistent with that from quenched solid density functional theory (QSDFT) analysis of the nitrogen adsorption isotherm.


Chemical Engineering Journal | 2016

Carbon dioxide adsorption by zinc-functionalized ionic liquid impregnated into bio-templated mesoporous silica beads

Ian Harvey Arellano; S. Hadi Madani; Junhua Huang; Phillip Pendleton


Carbon | 2016

Pore size distributions derived from adsorption isotherms, immersion calorimetry, and isosteric heats: A comparative study

S. Hadi Madani; Cheng Hu; Ana Silvestre-Albero; Mark J. Biggs; F. Rodríguez-Reinoso; Phillip Pendleton


Carbon | 2014

Control of the pore size distribution and its spatial homogeneity in particulate activated carbon

Cheng Hu; Saeid Sedghi; S. Hadi Madani; Ana Silvestre-Albero; Hirotoshi Sakamoto; Philip Kwong; Phillip Pendleton; Ronald J. Smernik; F. Rodríguez-Reinoso; Katsumi Kaneko; Mark J. Biggs


Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data | 2015

Characterizations of Activated Carbon–Methanol Adsorption Pair Including the Heat of Adsorptions

Jun W. Wu; S. Hadi Madani; Mark J. Biggs; Pendleton Phillip; Chen Lei; Eric Hu


Carbon | 2015

A multi-method study of the transformation of the carbonaceous skeleton of a polymer-based nanoporous carbon along the activation pathway

Cheng Hu; Amelia C. Y. Liu; Matthew Weyland; S. Hadi Madani; Phillip Pendleton; F. Rodríguez-Reinoso; Katsumi Kaneko; Mark J. Biggs


Microporous and Mesoporous Materials | 2015

Uncertainty in pore size distribution derived from adsorption isotherms: II. Adsorption integral approach

S. Hadi Madani; Luis Herrera Diaz; Mark J. Biggs; Phillip Pendleton


Carbon | 2015

Control of the spatial homogeneity of pore surface chemistry in particulate activated carbon

Saeid Sedghi; S. Hadi Madani; Cheng Hu; Ana Silvestre-Albero; William Skinner; Philip Kwong; Phillip Pendleton; Ronald J. Smernik; F. Rodríguez-Reinoso; Mark J. Biggs

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Phillip Pendleton

University of South Australia

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Cheng Hu

University of Adelaide

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Hu Zhang

University of Adelaide

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Ian Harvey Arellano

University of South Australia

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