Yahya Motemani
Ruhr University Bochum
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Featured researches published by Yahya Motemani.
Nanotechnology | 2014
Christina Sengstock; Michael Lopian; Yahya Motemani; Anna Borgmann; Chinmay Khare; Pio John S. Buenconsejo; Thomas A. Schildhauer; Alfred Ludwig; M. Köller
The aim of this study was to reproduce the physico-mechanical antibacterial effect of the nanocolumnar cicada wing surface for metallic biomaterials by fabrication of titanium (Ti) nanocolumnar surfaces using glancing angle sputter deposition (GLAD). Nanocolumnar Ti thin films were fabricated by GLAD on silicon substrates. S. aureus as well as E. coli were incubated with nanostructured or reference dense Ti thin film test samples for one or three hours at 37 °C. Bacterial adherence, morphology, and viability were analyzed by fluorescence staining and scanning electron microscopy and compared to human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs).Bacterial adherence was not significantly different after short (1 h) incubation on the dense or the nanostructured Ti surface. In contrast to S. aureus the viability of E. coli was significantly decreased after 3 h on the nanostructured film compared to the dense film and was accompanied by an irregular morphology and a cell wall deformation. Cell adherence, spreading and viability of hMSCs were not altered on the nanostructured surface. The results show that the selective antibacterial effect of the cicada wing could be transferred to a nanostructured metallic biomaterial by mimicking the natural nanocolumnar topography.
ACS Combinatorial Science | 2013
Sara Borhani-Haghighi; Michael Kieschnick; Yahya Motemani; Alan Savan; Detlef Rogalla; Hans-Werner Becker; Jan Meijer; Alfred Ludwig
A Lia(NixMnyCoz)Or cathode materials library was fabricated by combinatorial magnetron sputtering. The compositional analysis of the library was performed by a new high-throughput approach for Li-content measurement in thin films, which combines automated energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, Deuteron-induced gamma emission, and Rutherford backscattering measurements. Furthermore, combining this approach with thickness measurements allows the mapping of density values of samples from the materials library. By correlating the obtained compositional data with structural data from high-throughput X-ray diffraction measurements, those compositions which show a layered (R3̅m) structure and are therefore most interesting for Li-battery applications (for cathode (positive) electrodes) can be rapidly identified. This structure was identified as being most pronounced in the compositions Li0.6(Ni0.16Mn0.35Co0.48)O2, Li0.7(Ni0.10Mn0.37Co0.51)O2, Li0.6(Ni0.23Mn0.33Co0.43)O2, Li0.3(Ni0.65Mn0.08Co0.26)O2, Li0.3(Ni0.63Mn0.08Co0.29)O2, Li0.4(Ni0.56Mn0.09Co0.34)O2, Li0.5(Ni0.45Mn0.13Co0.42)O2, and Li0.6(Ni0.34Mn0.14Co0.52)O2.
Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2016
V. Khalili; Jafar Khalil-Allafi; Christina Sengstock; Yahya Motemani; Alexander Paulsen; Jan Frenzel; Gunther Eggeler; M. Köller
Release of Ni(1+) ions from NiTi alloy into tissue environment, biological response on the surface of NiTi and the allergic reaction of atopic people towards Ni are challengeable issues for biomedical application. In this study, composite coatings of hydroxyapatite-silicon multi walled carbon nano-tubes with 20wt% Silicon and 1wt% multi walled carbon nano-tubes of HA were deposited on a NiTi substrate using electrophoretic methods. The SEM images of coated samples exhibit a continuous and compact morphology for hydroxyapatite-silicon and hydroxyapatite-silicon-multi walled carbon nano-tubes coatings. Nano-indentation analysis on different locations of coatings represents the highest elastic modulus (45.8GPa) for HA-Si-MWCNTs which is between the elastic modulus of NiTi substrate (66.5GPa) and bone tissue (≈30GPa). This results in decrease of stress gradient on coating-substrate-bone interfaces during performance. The results of nano-scratch analysis show the highest critical distance of delamination (2.5mm) and normal load before failure (837mN) as well as highest critical contact pressure for hydroxyapatite-silicon-multi walled carbon nano-tubes coating. The cell culture results show that human mesenchymal stem cells are able to adhere and proliferate on the pure hydroxyapatite and composite coatings. The presence of both silicon and multi walled carbon nano-tubes (CS3) in the hydroxyapatite coating induce more adherence of viable human mesenchymal stem cells in contrast to the HA coated samples with only silicon (CS2). These results make hydroxyapatite-silicon-multi walled carbon nano-tubes a promising composite coating for future bone implant application.
Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2015
Manfred R. Koller; Christina Sengstock; Yahya Motemani; Chinmay Khare; Pio John S. Buenconsejo; Jonathan Geukes; Thomas A. Schildhauer; Alfred Ludwig
Ten different Ag dot arrays (16 to 625 microstructured dots per square mm) were fabricated on a continuous Au thin film and for comparison also on Ti film by sputter deposition and photolithographic patterning. To analyze the antibacterial activity of these microstructured films Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus were placed onto the array surfaces and cultivated overnight. To analyze the viability of planktonic as well as surface adherent bacteria, the applied bacterial fluid was subsequently aspirated, plated on blood agar plates and adherent bacteria were detected by fluorescence microscopy. A particular antibacterial effect towards both bacterial strains was induced by Ag dot arrays on fabricated Au thin film (sacrificial anode system for Ag), due to the release of Ag ions from dissolution of Ag dots in contrast to Ag dot arrays fabricated on the Ti thin films (non-sacrificial anode system for Ag) which remained intact to the original dot shape. The required number of Ag dots on gold film to achieve complete bactericidal effects for both bacterial strains was seven times lower than that observed with Ag dot arrays on Ti film.
Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2017
M. Köller; Petri Bellova; Siyamak Memar Javid; Yahya Motemani; Chinmay Khare; Christina Sengstock; Thomas A. Schildhauer; Alfred Ludwig
Five different Ag dots arrays (16 to 400dots/mm2) were fabricated on a continuous platinum, palladium, or iridium thin film and for comparison also on titanium film by sputter deposition and photolithographic patterning. To analyze the antibacterial activity of these microstructured films Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) were placed onto the array surfaces and cultivated overnight. To analyze the viability of planktonic as well as surface adherent bacteria, the applied bacterial fluid was subsequently aspirated, plated on blood agar plates and adherent bacteria were detected by fluorescence microscopy. A particular antibacterial effect towards S. aureus was induced by Ag dot arrays on each of the platinum group thin film (sacrificial anode system for Ag) in contrast to Ag dot arrays fabricated on the Ti thin films (non-sacrificial anode system for Ag). Among platinum group elements the Ir-Ag system exerted the highest antibacterial activity which was accompanied by most advanced dissolution of the Ag dots and Ag ion release compared to Ag dots on Pt or Pd.
ACS Combinatorial Science | 2018
Peter M. Kadletz; Yahya Motemani; Joy Iannotta; Steffen Salomon; Chinmay Khare; Lukas Grossmann; Hans Jürgen Maier; Alfred Ludwig; Wolfgang W. Schmahl
Ti-Ta thin films exhibit properties that are of interest for applications as microactuators and as biomedical implants. A Ti-Ta thin film materials library was deposited at T = 25 °C by magnetron sputtering employing the combinatorial approach, which led to a compositional range of Ti87Ta13 to Ti14Ta86. Subsequent high-throughput characterization methods permitted a quick and comprehensive study of the crystallographic, microstructural, and morphological properties, which strongly depend on the chemical composition. SEM investigation revealed a columnar morphology having pyramidal, sharp tips with coarser columns in the Ti-rich and finer columns in the Ta-rich region. By grazing incidence X-ray diffraction four phases were identified, from Ta-lean to Ta-rich: ω phase, α″ martensite, β phase, and a tetragonal Ta-rich phase (Ta(tetr)). The crystal structure and microstructure were analyzed by Rietveld refinement and clear trends could be determined as a function of Ta-content. The lattice correspondences between β as the parent phase and α″ and ω as derivative phases were expressed in matrix form. The β ⇌ α″ phase transition shows a discontinuity at the composition where the martensitic transformation temperatures fall below room temperature (between 34 and 38 at. % Ta) rendering it first order and confirming its martensitic nature. A short study of the α″ martensite employing the Landau theory is included for a mathematical quantification of the spontaneous lattice strain at room temperature (ϵ̂max = 22.4(6) % for pure Ti). Martensitic properties of Ti-Ta are beneficial for the development of high-temperature actuators with actuation response at transformation temperatures higher than 100 °C.
Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 2015
T. Niendorf; P. Krooß; E. Batyrsina; Alexander Paulsen; Yahya Motemani; Andreas Ludwig; P. Buenconsejo; Jan Frenzel; Gunther Eggeler; Hans Jürgen Maier
Applied Surface Science | 2014
Yahya Motemani; C. Greulich; Chinmay Khare; Michael Lopian; Pio John S. Buenconsejo; Thomas A. Schildhauer; Alfred Ludwig; Manfred R. Koller
Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2014
Yahya Motemani; Pio John S. Buenconsejo; C. Craciunescu; Andreas Ludwig
Advanced Engineering Materials | 2015
Yahya Motemani; Peter M. Kadletz; Bernd J. Maier; Ramona Rynko; Christoph Somsen; Alexander Paulsen; Jan Frenzel; Wolfgang W. Schmahl; Gunther Eggeler; Alfred Ludwig