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Dive into the research topics where Zhangfei Su is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhangfei Su.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010

Quantitative SNIFTIRS studies of (bi)sulfate adsorption at the Pt(111) electrode surface

Zhangfei Su; Victor Climent; J. Jay Leitch; Vlad Zamlynny; Juan M. Feliu; Jacek Lipkowski

Subtractively normalized interfacial Fourier transform infrared reflection spectroscopy (SNIFTIRS) was applied to study (bi)sulfate adsorption on a Pt(111) surface in solutions of variable pH while maintaining a constant total bisulfate/sulfate ((bi)sulfate) concentration without the addition of an inert supporting electrolyte. The spectra were recorded for both the p- and s-polarizations of the IR radiation in order to differentiate between the IR bands of the (bi)sulfate species adsorbed on the electrode surface from those species located in the thin layer of electrolyte. The spectra recorded with p-polarized light consist of the IR bands from both the species adsorbed at the electrode surface and those present in the thin layer of electrolyte between the electrode surface and ZnSe window whereas the s-polarized spectra contain only the IR bands from the species located in the thin layer of electrolyte. A new procedure was developed to calculate the angle of incidence and thickness of the electrolyte between the Pt(111) electrode surface and the ZnSe IR transparent window. By combining these values with the knowledge of the optical constants for Pt, H(2)O and ZnSe, the mean square electric field strength (MSEFS) at the Pt(111) electrode surface and for thin layer of solution were accurately calculated. The spectra recorded using s-polarization were multiplied by the ratio of the average MSEFS for p- and s-polarizations and subtracted from the spectra recorded using p-polarization in order to remove the IR bands that arise from the species present within the thin layer cavity. In this manner, the resulting IR spectra contain only the IR bands for the anions adsorbed on the Pt(111) electrode surface. The spectra of adsorbed anions show little change with respect to the pH ranging from 1 to 5.6. This behavior indicates that the same species is predominantly adsorbed on the metal surface for this broad range of pH values and the results suggest that sulfate is the most likely candidate for this adsorbate.


Langmuir | 2011

Electrochemical and STM studies of 1-thio-β-D-glucose self-assembled on a Au(111) electrode surface.

Annia H. Kycia; Slawomir Sek; Zhangfei Su; A. Rod Merrill; Jacek Lipkowski

In this study, a Au(111) electrode is functionalized with a monolayer of 1-thio-β-D-glucose (β-Tg), producing a hydrophilic surface. A monolayer of β-Tg was formed on a Au(111) surface by either (1) potential-assisted deposition with the thiol in a supporting electrolyte or (2) passive incubation of a gold substrate in a thiol-containing solution. For each method, the properties of the β-Tg monolayer were investigated using cyclic voltammetry (CV), differential capacitance (DC), and chronocoulometry. In addition, electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy (EC-STM) was used to obtain images of the self-assembled monolayer with molecular resolution. Potential-assisted assembly of β-Tg onto a Au(111) electrode surface was found to be complicated by oxidation of β-Tg molecules. The EC-STM images revealed formation of a passive layer containing honeycomb-like domains characteristic of a formation of S(8) rings, indicating the S-C bond may have been cleaved. In contrast, passive self-assembly of thioglucose from a methanol solution was found to produce a stable, disordered monolayer of β-Tg. Since the passive assembly method was not complicated by the presence of a faradaic process, it is the method of choice for modifying the gold surface with a hydrophilic monolayer.


Langmuir | 2016

Physicochemical Studies on Orientation and Conformation of a New Bacteriocin BacSp222 in a Planar Phospholipid Bilayer

Piotr Pieta; Marta Majewska; Zhangfei Su; Benedykt Wladyka; Marcin Piejko; Jacek Lipkowski; Paweł Mak

The behavior, secondary structure, and orientation of a recently discovered bacteriocin-like peptide BacSp222 in a lipid model system supported at a gold electrode was investigated by chronocoulometry, polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS), and attenuated total reflectance infrared (ATR-IR) spectroscopy. The IR spectra show that the secondary structure of BacSp222 is predominantly α-helical. Analysis of the spectra in the amide I region shows that the α-helical fragment of the peptide is inserted into bilayer at the potential range at which the bilayer is stable and attached to the Au(111) surface, i.e., from -0.5 to 0.3 V vs Ag/AgCl. Insertion of BacSp222 to the membrane significantly changes the conformation of the acyl chains of lipid molecules, from all-trans to partially melted; however, the chains become less tilted. Based on these results, we propose that BacSp222 interacts with the DMPC bilayer through the barrel-stave pore formation. In this model, α-helix of BacSp222 inserts into the membrane with an angle between the α-helix axis and membrane normal equal to ∼18°. The changes in orientation of the α-helical fragment of the peptide indicate that the orientation of BacSp222 with respect to the bilayer surface is potential-dependent. The peptide is inserted into the membrane driven by the electrostatic field generated by negative charge at the metal surface. It is not inserted at negative potentials where the membrane is detached from the metal and no longer exposed to the electrostatic field of the metal.


Zeitschrift für Physikalische Chemie | 2012

Measurements of the Potentials of Zero Free Charge and Zero Total Charge for 1-thio- ± bβ-D-glucose and DPTL Modified Au(111) Surface in Different Electrolyte Solutions

Zhangfei Su; J. Jay Leitch; Jacek Lipkowski

Abstract The immersion method was used to measure the potential of zero free charge (Epzfc) of a bare Au(111) electrode and the electrode modified by self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of 1-thio-β-D-glucose (β-Tg) and 2,3-di-O-phytanyl-sn-glycerol-1-tetraethylene glycol-D,L-α-lipoic acid ester (DPTL). The measurements were performed in three electrolyte solutions: 0.1 M NaH2PO4, 0.1 MKClO4 and 0.1 M NaF. The Epzc of the Au(111) electrode has different values in these electrolyte solutions due to the specific adsorption of phosphate and fluoride anions on the Au(111) surface. In contrast, when the gold surface is covered by a SAM of β-Tg, the adsorption of anions is suppressed and similar values of Epzfc were measured in the three electrolytes. Additional chronocoulometric experiments were performed to determine the potentials of the zero total charge (Epztc) for the thiol covered electrode. Significant differences between numerical values of potentials of the zero free charge Epzfc and potentials of the zero total charge Epztc were observed.


Langmuir | 2016

Quantitative Subtractively Normalized Interfacial Fourier Transform Infrared Reflection Spectroscopy Study of the Adsorption of Adenine on Au(111) Electrodes

Francisco Javier García Prieto; Zhangfei Su; J. Jay Leitch; M. Rueda; Jacek Lipkowski

Quantitative subtractively normalized interfacial Fourier transform infrared reflection spectroscopy (SNIFTIRS) was used to determine the molecular orientation and identify the metal-molecular interactions responsible for the adsorption of adenine from the bulk electrolyte solution onto the surface of the Au(111) electrode. The recorded p-polarized IR spectra of the adsorbed species were subtracted from the collected s-polarized IR spectra to remove the IR contributions of the vibrational bands of the desorbed molecules that are located within the thin layer cavity of the spectroelectrochemical cell. The intense IR band around 1640 cm(-1), which is assigned to the pyrimidine ring stretching vibrations of the C5-C6 and C6-N10 bonds, and the IR band at 1380 cm(-1), which results from a combination of the ring stretching vibration of the C5-C7 bond and the in-plane CH bending vibration, were selected for the quantitative analysis measurements. The transition dipoles of these bands were evaluated by DFT calculations. Their orientations differed by 85 ± 5°. The tilt angles of adsorbed adenine molecules were calculated from the intensity of these two vibrations at different potentials. The results indicate that the molecular plane is tilted at an angle of 40° with respect to the surface normal of the electrode and rotates by 16° around its normal axis with increasing electrode potential. This orientation results from the chemical interaction between the N10 and gold atoms coupled with the π-π parallel stacking interactions between the adjacent adsorbed molecules. Furthermore, the changes in the molecular plane rotation with the electric field suggests that the N1 atom of adenine must also participate in the interaction between the molecule and metal.


Langmuir | 2016

PM-IRRAS Studies of DMPC Bilayers Supported on Au(111) Electrodes Modified with Hydrophilic Monolayers of Thioglucose

Dorota Matyszewska; Renata Bilewicz; Zhangfei Su; Fatemah Abbasi; J. Jay Leitch; Jacek Lipkowski

A phospholipid bilayer composed of 1,2-dimyristoyl-d54-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (d54-DMPC) was deposited onto the Au(111) electrode modified with a self-assembled monolayer of 1-thio-β-d-glucose (β-Tg) via the Langmuir-Blodgett and Langmuir-Schaefer (LB-LS) techniques. Polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) measurements were used to characterize structural and orientational changes in this model biological membrane on a hydrophilic surface modified gold electrode. The results of the spectroscopic measurements showed that the tilt angle of acyl chains obtained for deuterated DMPC bilayers supported on the β-Tg-modified gold is significantly lower than that reported previously for DMPC bilayers deposited directly on Au(111) electrodes. Moreover, tilt angles of ∼18° were obtained for d54-DMPC bilayers on β-Tg self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) at positive potentials, which are similar to the values calculated for h-DMPC deposited on bare gold in the desorbed state and to those observed for a stack of hydrated DMPC bilayers. This data confirms that the β-thioglucose SAM promotes the formation of a water cushion that separates the phospholipid bilayer from the metal surface. As a result, the DMPC polar heads are not in direct contact with the electrode and can adopt a zigzag configuration, which strengthens the chain-chain interactions and allows for an overall decrease in the tilt of the acyl chains. These novel supported model membranes may be especially useful in studies pertaining to the incorporation of peptides and proteins into phospholipid bilayers.


Langmuir | 2018

Role of Transmembrane Potential and Defects on the Permeabilization of Lipid Bilayers by Alamethicin, an Ion-Channel-Forming Peptide

Zhangfei Su; Muzaffar Shodiev; J. Jay Leitch; Fatemeh Abbasi; Jacek Lipkowski

The insertion and ion-conducting channel properties of alamethicin reconstituted into a 1,2-di- O-phytanyl- sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine bilayer floating on the surface of a gold (111) electrode modified with a 1-thio-β-d-glucose (β-Tg) self-assembled monolayer were investigated using a combination of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS). The hydrophilic β-Tg monolayer separated the bilayer from the gold substrate and created a water-rich spacer region, which better represents natural cell membranes. The EIS measurements acquired information about the membrane resistivity (a measure of membrane porosity), and the PM-IRRAS experiments provided insight into the conformation and orientation of the membrane constituents as a function of the transmembrane potential. The results showed that the presence of alamethicin had a small effect on the conformation and orientation of phospholipid molecules within the bilayer for all studied potentials. In contrast, the alamethicin peptides assumed a surface state, where the helical axes adopted a large tilt angle with respect to the surface normal, at small transmembrane potentials, and inserted into the bilayer at sufficiently negative transmembrane potentials forming pores, which behaved as barrel-stave ion channels for ionic transport across the membrane. The results indicated that insertion of alamethincin peptides into the bilayer was driven by the dipole-field interactions and that the transitions between the inserted and surface states were electrochemically reversible. Additionally, the EIS measurements performed on phospholipid bilayers without alamethicin also showed that the application of negative transmembrane potentials introduces defects into the bilayer. The membrane resistances measured in both the absence and presence of alamethicin show similar dependencies on the electrode potential, suggesting that the insertion of the peptide may also be assisted by the electroporation of the membrane. The findings in this study provide new insights into the mechanism of alamethicin insertion into phospholipid bilayers.


Langmuir | 2018

Pore forming properties of alamethicin in negatively charged floating bilayer lipid membranes supported on gold electrodes

Fatemeh Abbasi; Julia Alvarez Malmagro; Zhangfei Su; J. Jay Leitch; Jacek Lipkowski

Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), atomic force microscopy (AFM), and photon polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) were employed to investigate the formation of alamethicin pores in negatively charged bilayers composed of a mixture of 1,2-dimyristoyl- sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC) and egg-PG floating at gold (111) electrode surfaces modified by self-assembled monolayers of 1-thio-β-d-glucose (β-Tg). The EIS data showed that the presence of alamethicin decreases the membrane resistivity by about 1 order of magnitude. PM-IRRAS measurements provided information about the tilt angles of peptide helical axis with respect to the bilayer normal. The small tilt angles obtained for the peptide helical axis prove that the alamethicin molecules were inserted into the DMPC/egg-PG membranes. The tilt angles decreased when negative potentials were applied, which correlates with the observed decrease in membrane resistivity, indicating that ion pore formation is assisted by the transmembrane potential. Molecular resolution AFM images provided visual evidence that alamethicin molecules aggregate forming hexagonal porous 2D lattices with periodicities of 2.0 ± 0.2 nm. The pore formation by alamethicin in the negatively charged membrane was compared with the interaction of this peptide with a bilayer formed by zwitterionic lipids. The comparison of these results showed that alamethicin preferentially forms ion translocating pores in negatively charged phospholipid membranes.


Vibrational Spectroscopy at Electrified Interfaces | 2013

In Situ PM–IRRAS Studies of Biomimetic Membranes Supported at Gold Electrode Surfaces

Annia H. Kycia; Zhangfei Su; Christa L. Brosseau; Jacek Lipkowski


Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 2013

Electrochemical and PM-IRRAS studies of floating lipid bilayers assembled at the Au(111) electrode pre-modified with a hydrophilic monolayer

Zhangfei Su; YanXia Jiang; Miguel Velázquez-Manzanares; J. Jay Leitch; Annia H. Kycia; Jacek Lipkowski

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