The emergence of drug-resistant pathogenic microorganisms has become a public health concern, with demand for strategies to suppress their proliferation in healthcare facilities. The present study investigates the physicochemical and antimicrobial properties of carbon dots (CD-MR) derived from the methyl red azo dye. The morphological and structural analyses reveal that such carbon dots present a significant fraction of graphitic nitrogen in their structures, providing a wide emission range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present work is devoted to the study of the thermo-optical properties of liquid crystals doped with traces of fullerene C(60) at the vicinity of the nematic-smectic-A phase transition. By using the time-resolved Z-scan technique, we measure the temperature dependence of the thermo-optical coefficient and the thermal diffusivity. Our results reveal that the critical behavior of the thermal diffusivity is strongly affected by the fullerene addition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
February 2013
Within the harmonic approximation, we analytically determine the elastic-mediated interaction between colloidal nanoparticles adsorbed on the surface of smectic films under the influence of an external field. Both cases of free-standing films and films deposited over a solid substrate are considered. We show that the asymptotic decay (1/R in free-standing and exponential in deposited films) is not altered by the external field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
December 2011
We study the smectic to nematic (SmA-N) phase transition taking place at the center of a free-standing film that exhibits enhanced surface order due to the anchoring promoted by a surrounding gas. The usual McMillan mean-field approach predicts that the SmA-N transition in bulk samples can be continuous or discontinuous (first or second order) depending on the molecular geometry, with a tricritical point separating these two regimes. Here we show that the additional orientational order imposed by the surface anchoring stabilizes the surface-induced smectic and nematic phases, leading to the breakdown of the tricritical point and to the emergence of a critical end point.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStrongly anchored free-standing smectic films usually present a stepwise reduction of the number of layers when the temperature is raised above the smectic-isotropic bulk transition temperature. Here, we demonstrate that a field-induced layer thinning transition can take place in smectic films with a negative dielectric anisotropy even below the bulk transition temperature. Using an extended McMillan's model, we provide the phase diagram of this layering transition and show that, when the field is raised above the bulk transition field, the film thickness reduction is well described by a power law with an exponent that depends on the temperature and the aspect ratio of the liquid-crystal molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF