Membranes synthesized from sphingomyelin-tocopherol mixtures and treated with the protein, "excitation-inducing material," to increase their electrical conductance were tested for applicability of the Nernst equation and changes in electrical rectifying behavior with temperature. Above pH 7, and in the temperature range 303-323 degrees K, ion-diffusion potentials created by salts of monovalent cations showed that areas of the membrane activated by excitation-inducing material were only permeable to cations. Results also indicated that a parallel current with an activation energy of 1.00 eV per molecule passed through unactivated areas of the membrane. Below pH 7, the ratio of measured diffusion potentials to predicted values decreased steadily. Electrical rectification was exhibited by membranes activated by excitation-inducing material with positive current consistently passing preferentially from the side rich in excitation-inducing material to the opposite side. For a given membrane, the current-voltage curves did not change from 312 to 323 degrees K; but below 312 degrees K, the membrane suddenly increased its conductance and became ohmic. This phenomenon was independent of salt concentration and pH, and resembled a phase transition.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.69.12.3765 | DOI Listing |
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
April 2024
Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Advanced Metallic Materials, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, 211189, P. R. China.
Nanoscale
June 2023
Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, 37831, USA.
The impulsive excitation of ensembles of excitons or color centers by a high-energy electron beam results in the observation of photon bunching in the second-order correlation function of the cathodoluminescence generated by those emitters. Photon bunching in cathodoluminescence microscopy can be used to resolve the excited-state dynamics and the excitation and emission efficiency of nanoscale materials, and it can be used to probe interactions between emitters and nanophotonic cavities. Unfortunately, the required integration times for these measurements can be problematic for beam-sensitive materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 1972
Membranes synthesized from sphingomyelin-tocopherol mixtures and treated with the protein, "excitation-inducing material," to increase their electrical conductance were tested for applicability of the Nernst equation and changes in electrical rectifying behavior with temperature. Above pH 7, and in the temperature range 303-323 degrees K, ion-diffusion potentials created by salts of monovalent cations showed that areas of the membrane activated by excitation-inducing material were only permeable to cations. Results also indicated that a parallel current with an activation energy of 1.
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