ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Water is a ubiquitous liquid with unique physico-chemical properties, whose nature has shaped our planet and life as we know it. Water in restricted geometries has different properties than in bulk. Confinement can prevent low-temperature crystallization into a hexagonal structure, thus creating a state of amorphous water. In this work we introduce a family of synthetic lipids with designed cyclopropyl modification in the hydrophobic chains that exhibit unique liquid-crystalline behaviour at low temperature, enabling maintenance of amorphous water down to 10 K due to nanoconfinement in a bio-mimetic milieu. Small and Wide Angle X-ray Scattering, Elastic and Inelastic Neutron Scattering, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and Differential Scanning Calorimetry, complemented by Molecular Dynamics Simulations, unveil a complex lipid/water phase diagram, in which bicontinuous cubic and lamellar liquid crystalline phases containing sub-zero liquid, glassy, or ice water emerge as a competition between the two components, each pushing towards its thermodynamically favoured state.
We investigate the behavior of hydrated sulfonated polysulfones over a range of ion contents through differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Experimental eviden
Surface freezing is a phenomenon in which crystallization is enhanced at a vapor-liquid interface. In some systems, such as $n$-alkanes, this enhancement is dramatic, and results in the formation of a crystalline layer at the free interface even at t
Confinement can have a dramatic effect on the behavior of all sorts of particulate systems and it therefore is an important phenomenon in many different areas of physics and technology. Here, we investigate the role played by the softness of the conf
Water shapes and defines the properties of biological systems. Therefore, understanding the nature of the mutual interaction between water and biological systems is of primary importance for a proper assessment of biological activity and the developm
First systematic spin probe ESR study of water freezing has been conducted using TEMPOL and TEMPO as the probes. The spin probe signature of the water freezing has been described in terms of the collapse of narrow triplet spectrum into a single broad