Publications by authors named "Rita J El-khouri"

This article presents a simple and practical means to produce rare-earth-based nanostructures, as well as a combined characterization of structure and optical properties in situ. A nanosphere lithography strategy combined with surface chemistry enables the production of arrays of β-NaYF(4):Yb,Er nanorings inlaid in an octadecyltrichlorosilane matrix. These arrays of nanorings are produced over the entire support, such as a 1 cm(2) glass coverslip.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In developing well hydrated polymer cushioned membranes, structural studies are often neglected. In this work, neutron and X-ray reflectivity studies reveal that hybrid bilayer/polyethylene glycol (PEG) systems created from mixtures of phospholipids and PEG conjugated lipopolymers do not yield a hydrated cushion beneath the bilayer unless the terminal ends of the lipopolymers are functionalized with reactive end groups and can covalently bind (tether) to the underlying support surface. While reactive PEG tethered systems yielded bilayers with near complete surface coverage, a bimodal distribution of heights with sub-micrometer lateral dimensions was observed consisting of cushioned membrane domains and uncushioned regions in close proximity to the support.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A robust and straightforward method for the preparation of lipid membranes upon dynamically responsive polymer cushions is reported. Structural characterization demonstrates that complete, well-packed membranes with tunable mobility can be constructed on the polymeric cushion. With this system, membrane conformational changes induced by cellular cytoskeleton interactions can be modeled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report the observation of an unusual stripe-droplet transition in precompressed Langmuir monolayers consisting of mixtures of poly(ethylene) glycol (PEG) amphiphiles and phospholipids. This highly reproducible and fully reversible transition occurs at approximately zero surface pressure during expansion (or compression) of the monolayer following initial compression into a two-dimensional solid phase. It is characterized by spontaneous emergence of an extended, disordered stripe-like morphology from an optically homogeneous phase during gradual expansion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The two-dimensional self-assembly at the air/water (A/W) interface of two dendrimer-like copolymers based on polystyrene and poly(tert-butyl acrylate) (PS-b-PtBA) or poly(acrylic acid) (PS-b-PAA) was investigated through surface pressure measurements (isotherms, isochores, and compression-expansion hysteresis experiments) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging. The two dendrimer-like block copolymers have an 8-arm PS core (Mn = 10 000 g/mol, approximately 12 styrene repeat units per arm) with a 16-arm PtBA (Mn = 230 000 g/mol, approximately 112 tert-butyl acrylate repeat units per arm) or PAA (Mn = 129 000 g/mol, approximately 112 acrylic acid repeat units per arm) corona. The PS-b-PtBA sample forms stable Langmuir monolayers and aggregates into circular surface micelles up to a plateau observed in the corresponding isotherm around 24 mN/m.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF