Publications by authors named "Lars Sonnenberg"

The interaction between poly(L-glutamic acid) (PLE) and calcite crystals was studied with AFM-based single molecule force spectroscopy. Block copolymers of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) and PLE were synthesized and covalently attached to the tip of an AFM cantilever. In desorption measurements the molecules were allowed to adsorb on the calcite crystal faces and afterward successively desorbed.

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AFM-based single molecule desorption measurements were performed on surface end-grafted poly(acrylic acid) monolayers as a function of the pH of the aqueous buffer to study the adhesion properties of polymers that bridge two surfaces. These properties were found to depend on the adhesion forces of both surfaces in a differential manner, which is explained with a simple model in analogy to the Bell-Evans formalism used in dynamic force spectroscopy. The measured interaction forces between the poly(acrylic acid) chains and silicon nitride AFM tips depend on the grafting density of the polymer monolayers as well as on the contour length of the polymer chains.

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Atomic force microscope (AFM) single molecule force spectroscopy has been used to investigate the friction coefficient of individual polymers adsorbed onto a solid support. The polymer chains were covalently attached to an AFM tip and were allowed to adsorb on a mica surface. Different polymers (ssDNA, polyallylamine) were chosen to cover a range of friction coefficients.

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A unified approach to the study of 3D conformation and molecular dynamics using magic-angle-spinning solid-state NMR is demonstrated on a uniformly 13C-labeled sample of L-tyrosine-ethylester.

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Chemical-shift-selective (13C, 13C) polarization transfer is analyzed in uniformly labeled biomolecules. It is shown that the spin system dynamics remain sensitive to the distance of interest and can be well reproduced within a quantum-mechanical multiple-spin analysis. These results lead to a general approach on how to describe chemical-shift-selective transfer in uniformly labeled systems.

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