Sampsa Vierros
Aalto University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sampsa Vierros.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
Sampsa Vierros; Maria Sammalkorpi
Here, we examine a well-characterized model system of phospholipids in cyclohexane via molecular dynamics simulations using a force field known for reproducing both phospholipid behavior in water and cyclohexane bulk properties to a high accuracy, CHARMM36, with the aim of evaluating the transferability of a force field parametrization from an aqueous environment to an organic solvent. We compare the resulting reverse micelles with their expected experimental shape and size, and find the model struggles with reproducing basic, experimentally known reverse micellar structural characteristics for common phosphadidylcholine lipids such as 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), 1,2-dioleyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DOPC), and 1,2-dilinoleyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DLPC) in cyclohexane solvent. We find evidence that the deviation from the experimental behavior originates from an underestimation of the lipid tail-cyclohexane interaction in the model. We compensate for this, obtain reverse micellar structures within the experimentally expected range, and characterize these structurally in molecular detail. Our findings indicate extra caution and verification of model applicability is warranted in simulational studies employing standard biomolecular models outside the usual aqueous environment.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Jukka Määttä; Sampsa Vierros; Maria Sammalkorpi
Control of aqueous dispersion is central in the processing and usage of nanoscale hydrophobic objects. However, selecting dispersive agents based on the size and form of the hydrophobic object and the role of coating morphology in dispersion efficiency remain important open questions. Here, the effect of the substrate and the dispersing molecule curvature, as well as, the influence of dispersant concentration on the adsorption morphology are examined by molecular simulations of graphene and carbon nanotube (CNT) substrates with phospholipids of varying curvature as the dispersing agents. Lipid spontaneous curvature is increased from close to zero (effectively cylindrical lipid) to highly positive (effectively conical lipid) by studying double tailed dipalmitoylphosphadidylcholine (DPPC) and single tailed lysophosphadidylcholine (LPC) which differ in the number of acyl chains but have identical headgroup. We find that lipids are good dispersion agents for both planar and curved nanoparticles and induce a dispersive barrier nonsize selectively. Differences in dispersion efficiency arise from lipid headgroup density and their extension from the hydrophobic substrate in the adsorption morphology. We map the packing morphology contributing factors and report that the aggregate morphologies depend on the competition of interactions rising from (1) hydrophobicity driven maximization of lipid-substrate contacts and lipid self-adhesion, (2) tail bending energy cost, (3) preferential alignment along the graphitic substrate principal axes, and (4) lipid headgroup preferential packing. Curved substrates adjust the morphology by changing the balance between the interaction strengths. Jointly, the findings show substrate curvature and dimensions are a way to tune lipid adsorption to desired, self-assembling patterns. Besides engineering dispersion efficiency, the findings could bear significance in designing materials with defined molecular scale, molecular coatings for orientation specific CNT assembly or lipid-based molecular masks and patterning on graphene.
Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2017
Olli Pekka Lehtinen; Robertus Nugroho; Tuula Lehtimaa; Sampsa Vierros; Panu Hiekkataipale; Janne Ruokolainen; Maria Sammalkorpi; Monika Österberg
The self-assembly of phospholipids in oil, specifically lecithin in rapeseed oil, was investigated by combining experimental and computational methods The influence of temperature, water, and free fatty acids on the onset of lecithin aggregation in the rapeseed oil was determined using the 7,7,8,8 -tetracyanoquinodimethane dye (TCNQ) solubilization method and the size and shape of the self-assembled lecithin structures were investigated by small-angle X-ray scattering and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy. In the absence of excess water in the system (0.03wt-% water in oil), stable cylindrical lecithin reverse micelles were observed above the critical micelle concentration (CMC). Comparing the aggregation response in room temperature and at 70°C revealed that CMC decreased with increasing temperature. Furthermore, already a modest amount of added water (0.3wt-% water in oil) was sufficient to induce the formation of lamellar lecithin structures, that phase separated from the oil. In low water content, oleic acid suppressed the formation of lecithin reverse micelles whereas in the presence of more water, the oleic acid stabilized the reverse micelles. Consequently, more water was needed to induce phase separation in the presence of oleic acid. Molecular dynamics simulations indicated that the stabilizing effect of oleic acid resulted from oleic acid enhancing phospholipid solubilization in the oil by forming a solvating shell around the phosphate head group. The findings showed that the response of the mixed surfactant system is a delicate interplay of the different components and variables. The significance of the observations is that multiple parameters need to be controlled for desired system response, for example towards vegetable oil purification or phospholipid based microemulsions.
Langmuir | 2018
Pavel Yazhgur; Sampsa Vierros; Delphine Hannoy; Maria Sammalkorpi; Anniina Salonen
We have studied adsorbed layers of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) at air-water interfaces in the presence of added electrolyte. Fast bubble compression/expansion measurements were used to obtain the surface equation of state, i.e., the surface tension vs CTAB surface concentration dependence. We show that while a simple model where the surfactant molecules are assumed to be noninteracting is insufficient to describe the measured response of the surfactant layer, a modified Frumkin equation where the local interactions between the molecular components depend on their surface concentration captures the response. The variation of the effective interactions in the surfactant layer in the model shows that the interactions in the surfactant layer change from effectively repulsive to attractive with increasing surface concentration. Molecular dynamics simulations are performed to probe the origins of the change in the interactions. The simulations indicate that already at low surface concentrations the surfactants aggregate as highly dynamic rafts with surfactant orientation parallel to the interface. Increasing the concentration leads to a change in the assembly morphology at the interface: the surfactant layer thickens and the surfactants sample a range of tilted orientations with respect to the interfacial plane. The change from transient raftlike assemblies to dynamical aggregates at the interface involves a clear increase in the degree of counterion binding: we speculate that the flip of the effective interaction parameter in the model used to interpret the experimental results could result from this. The work here presents basic steps toward a proper understanding of the molecular organization and interactions of surfactants at an air-water interface. This is crucially important in understanding macroscopic properties of surfactant-stabilized systems such as foams, emulsions, and colloidal dispersions.
Langmuir | 2018
Oriol Cusola; Samu Kivistö; Sampsa Vierros; Piotr Batys; Mariko Ago; Blaise L. Tardy; Luiz G. Greca; M. Blanca Roncero; Maria Sammalkorpi; Orlando J. Rojas
Polydisperse smooth and spherical biocolloidal particles were suspended in aqueous media and allowed to consolidate via evaporation-induced self-assembly. The stratification of the particles at the solid–air interface was markedly influenced, but not monotonically, by the drying rate. Cross-sectional imaging via electron microscopy indicated a structured coating morphology that was distinctive from that obtained by using particles with a mono- or bimodal distribution. Segregation patterns were found to derive from the interplay of particle diffusion, interparticle forces, and settling dynamics. Supporting our experimental findings, computer simulations showed an optimal drying rate for achieving maximum segregation. Overall, stratified coatings comprising nano- and microparticles derived from lignin are expected to open opportunities for multifunctional structures that can be designed and predicted on the basis of experimental Péclet numbers and computational order.
Archive | 2018
Sampsa Vierros; Maria Sammalkorpi
The micelles of the non-ionic C12E10 surfactant and 1-hexanol as an aqueous solution additives are studied toward the purpose of understanding the role of alcohol additives in tuning the characteristics of alkyl-ethoxylate micellar systems. Our dynamic light scattering and cloud point experiments show that the addition of hexanol induces a response similar to an increase of temperature. We associate the change with increased attraction between the micelles at low to moderate hexanol loadings and a potential increase of the aggregate size at a high hexanol-to-surfactant ratio. Detailed molecular dynamic simulation characterization shows that hexanol solubilizes to a micelle palisade layer when the hexanol-to-C12E10 ratio is less than or equal to 0.5 while swollen micelles, in which a part of hexanol forms an oil core, are present when the ratio increases above approximately 1.5. The simulations indicate that the surface of the micelles is rough. Formation of reverse hexanol structures akin to those found in bulk octanol is observed in the oil core. Molecular simulations associate the increase in attraction between micelles observed via the experiments with decreased chain density in the headgroup region. This density decrease is caused by hexanol molecules solubilized between neighbouring surfactants. Altogether, these findings provide detailed physical characterization of the effect of an archetypal solution additive, hexanol, on an alkyl ethoxylate micelle system. These findings could bear a significance in designing micellar and emulsion based systems with desired solution characteristics or properties for e.g. drug delivery, catalysis, or platforms for green chemistry reactions.
Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data | 2014
Jukka Määttä; Sampsa Vierros; Paul R. Van Tassel; Maria Sammalkorpi
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015
Sampsa Vierros; Maria Sammalkorpi
Electrochemistry Communications | 2012
Sampsa Vierros; Tomi Iivonen; Christoffer Johans
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2018
Sampsa Vierros; Maria Sammalkorpi