Publications by authors named "Lopez-Quintela M"

Phonons, the collective excitations responsible for heat transport in crystalline insulating solids, lack electric charge or magnetic moment, which complicates their active control via external fields. This presents a significant challenge in designing thermal equivalents of basic electronic circuit elements, such as transistors or diodes. Achieving these goals requires precise and reversible modification of thermal conductivity in materials.

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  • Titanium dioxide (TiO) is a compound with unique optical properties, commonly used in photocatalysis, and recent studies suggest that incorporating Cu atomic quantum clusters (AQCs) can improve its efficiency.
  • This research investigates how Cu interacts with both perfect and reduced TiO surfaces in the presence of silicate SiO ions, aimed at purifying the Cu AQCs while maintaining the compound's electronic properties.
  • The results indicate that SiO enhances the electronic states within the band gap of the Cu@TiO composite and that oxygen vacancies, alongside Cu, contribute to improved photocatalytic performance by shifting electronic states.
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Sub-nanometer metal clusters have special physical and chemical properties, significantly different from those of nanoparticles. However, there is a major concern about their thermal stability and susceptibility to oxidation. In situ X-ray Absorption spectroscopy and Near Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron spectroscopy results reveal that supported Cu clusters are resistant to irreversible oxidation at least up to 773 K, even in the presence of 0.

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We report an easily scalable synthesis method for the preparation of cysteine-capped Cu clusters through the reduction of Cu(II) ions with NaBH, using Cu clusters as catalysts. The presence of such catalytic clusters allows controlling the formation of the larger Cu clusters and prevents the production of copper oxides or Cu(I)-cysteine complexes, which are formed when Cu is absent or at lower concentrations, respectively. These results indicate that small catalytic clusters could be involved, as precursor species before the reduction step, in the different methods developed for the synthesis of clusters.

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Synthesis and purification of metal clusters without strong binding agents by wet chemical methods are very attractive for their potential applications in many research areas. However, especially challenging is the separation of uncharged clusters with only a few number of atoms, which renders the usual techniques very difficult to apply. Herein, we report the first efficient separation of Ag and Ag clusters using the different entropic driving forces when such clusters interact with DNA, into which Ag selectively intercalates.

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The enhancement of catalysts efficiency of bimetallic nanoparticles depends on the ability to exert control over surface composition. However, results relating surface composition and feeding solution of bimetallic nanoparticles synthesized in microemulsions are controversial and apparently contradictory. In order to comprehend how the resulting surface can be modified under different synthesis conditions and for different pairs of metals, a computer simulation study was carried out.

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Au/Pt nanoparticles show an optimized catalytic activity when compared with Pt nanoparticles because Pt activity is improved by the presence of Au on the surface. It was checked whether a controllable surface composition can be achieved by the simple strategy of varying the Au : Pt ratio. We present an in-depth kinetic simulation study on the influence of Au : Pt ratio on the formation of Au/Pt nanoparticles synthesized in microemulsions.

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An ab initio study of the interaction of O, the most abundant radical and oxidant species in the atmosphere, with a Cu cluster, a new generation atomic metal catalyst, is presented. The open-shell nature of the reactant species is properly accounted for by using the multireference perturbation theory, allowing the experimentally confirmed resistivity of Cu clusters toward oxidation to be investigated. Approximate reaction pathways for the transition from physisorption to chemisorption are calculated for the interaction of O with quasi-iso-energetic trapezoidal planar and trigonal bipyramidal structures.

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Indium sulfide (InS) thin films have been synthesized on glass substrates using the spray technique (CSP). The S : In molar ratio was varied from 1 to 4 in the starting solution. The Raman analysis confirms the formation of the β-InS material and the absence of a secondary phase.

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  • The study examines how decorating semiconductors with tiny metal clusters, specifically copper (Cu), alters their optical properties, particularly on a titanium dioxide (TiO) surface.
  • It shows that Cu clusters can change electronic states, facilitating electron transfer and enhancing the absorption of light, extending this into the visible spectrum.
  • The findings are supported by computational models and experimental techniques like diffuse reflectance and X-ray absorption spectroscopy, confirming the strong interaction between Cu clusters and TiO nanoparticles.
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  • Nanomaterials like silver clusters with very low atomicity show potential as pharmacological agents due to their small size and tunable properties.
  • Silver clusters of three atoms (Ag -AQCs) enhance chromatin accessibility specifically during DNA replication, increasing the effectiveness of DNA-targeting cancer drugs.
  • Co-administering Ag -AQCs with cisplatin (CDDP) significantly boosts the drug's binding to tumor DNA while sparing normal tissues, leading to a more effective reduction of lung tumors.
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Non-noble metal nanoclusters synthesis is receiving increased attention due to their unique catalytic properties and lower cost. Herein, the synthesis of ligand-free Ni nanoclusters with an average diameter of 0.7 nm corresponding to a structure of 13 atoms is presented; they exhibit a zero-valence state and a high stability toward oxidation and thermal treatment.

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In this paper, novel magnetic silica nanocomposites were prepared by anchoring magnetite nanoparticles onto the outer surface of mesoporous SBA-15 silica; the magnetic nanoparticles were prepared by microemulsion and solvothermal methods, varying the synthesis conditions in order to control the final physicochemical, textural and magnetic properties. The morphology and mesostructure of the materials were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier-Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR), N adsorption-desorption, and Transmission and Scanning Electron Microscopy (TEM and SEM). Magnetic silica nanocomposites feature a two-dimensional hexagonal arrangement constituted by a homogeneous pore channel system with diameters between 13 and 18 nm and a Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area higher than 260 m g.

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Computer simulations were carried out to study the origin of the different metal segregation showed by bimetallic nanoparticles synthesized in microemulsions. Our hypothesis is that the kinetics of nanoparticle formation in microemulsions has to be considered on terms of two potentially limiting factors, chemical reaction itself and the rate of reactants exchange between micelles. From the kinetic study it is deduced that chemical reduction in microemulsions is a pseudo first-order process, but not from the beginning.

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Gold nanorods have been successfully synthesized by the seed mediated method using Au clusters. This synthesis does not require silver ions to obtain large amounts of Au nanorods and has good control over their aspect ratio. Au clusters are produced with the same recipe as for Au seeds, but using shorter reaction times.

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Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONs) have physical and chemical properties that render them useful for several new biomedical applications. Still, so far, in vivo safety studies of IONs with coatings of biomedical interest are still scarce. The aim of this study, therefore, was to clarify the acute biological effects of polyacrylic acid (PAA)-coated IONs, by determining their biodistribution and their potential proinflammatory and toxic effects in CD-1 mice.

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Chitosan and gelatin are biodegradable and biocompatible polymers which may be used in the preparation of 3D scaffolds with applications in biomedicine. Chitosan/gelatin scaffolds crosslinked with glutaraldehyde were prepared by ice segregation induced self-assembly (ISISA); a unidirectional freezing at -196°C followed freeze-drying to produce macroporous materials with a well-patterned structure. This process may be included within the green chemistry by the preparation of the porous structures without using organic solvents, moreover is a versatile, non-difficult and cheap process.

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Essential processes for living cells such as transcription and replication depend on the formation of specific protein-DNA recognition complexes. Proper formation of such complexes requires suitable fitting between the protein surface and the DNA surface. By adopting doxorubicin (DOX) as a model probe, we report here that Ag atomic quantum clusters (Ag-AQCs) inhibit the intercalation of DOX into DNA and have considerable influence on the interaction of DNA-binding proteins such as topoisomerase IV, DNA gyrase and the restriction enzyme HindIII.

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Subnanometric noble metal clusters, composed by only a few atoms, behave like molecular entities and display magnetic, luminescent and catalytic activities. However, noncovalent interactions of molecular metal clusters, lacking of any ligand or surfactant, have not been seen at work. Theoretically attractive and experimentally discernible, van der Waals forces and noncovalent interactions at the metal/organic interfaces will be crucial to understand and develop the next generation of hybrid nanomaterials.

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The factors that govern the reaction rate of Au/Pt bimetallic nanoparticles prepared in microemulsions by a one-pot method are examined in the light of a simulation model. Kinetic analysis proves that the intermicellar exchange has a strong effect on the reaction rates of the metal precursors. Relating to Au, reaction rate is controlled by the intermicellar exchange rate whenever concentration is high enough.

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This paper reports a novel procedure using nanosomes, made of bola-hydroxyl and mercapto-palmitic acids, for the production of gold clusters with robust luminescent emissions and very large Stokes shifts. It shows that these results cannot be explained by the currently accepted mechanism based on ligand-to-metal charge transfer absorptions involving electron-rich ligands attached to the cluster core. Exhaustive characterization of the cluster samples using Mass Spectrometry, HR-TEM/STEM, XPS, EXAFS, and steady-state and time-resolved luminescence allows to deduce that a mixture of two cluster sizes, having non-closed shell electronic configurations, are firstly generated inside the nanosome compartments due to the difference in bonding strength of the two types of terminal groups in the fatty acids.

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Anisotropic gold nanostructures prepared by the seed method in the presence of Ag ions have been used to study their photostability to low-power UV irradiation (254 nm) at room temperature. It has been observed that, whereas spheres are very stable to photoirradiation, rods and prisms suffer from photocorrosion and finally dissolve completely with the production of Au(III) ions. Interpretation of these differences is based on the presence of semiconductor-like Ag clusters, adsorbed onto rods and prisms, able to photocorrode the Au nanoparticles, which are absent in the case of Au spheres.

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