5 results match your criteria: "International Technology Center[Affiliation]"
Biointerphases
September 2015
International Technology Center, 8100 Brownleigh Dr., Raleigh, North Carolina 27617.
Diamond has outstanding bulk properties such as super hardness, chemical inertness, biocompatibility, luminescence, to name just a few. In the nanoworld, in order to exploit these outstanding bulk properties, the surfaces of nanodiamond (ND) particles must be accordingly engineered for specific applications. Modification of functional groups on the ND's surface and the corresponding electrostatic properties determine their colloidal stability in solvents, formation of photonic crystals, controlled adsorption and release of cargo molecules, conjugation with biomolecules and polymers, and cellular uptake.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
March 2015
International Technology Center, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.
Discussed in this paper are several theoretical and computational approaches that have been used to better understand the fracture of both single-crystal and polycrystalline diamond at the atomic level. The studies, which include first principles calculations, analytic models and molecular simulations, have been chosen to illustrate the different ways in which this problem has been approached, the conclusions and their reliability that have been reached by these methods, and how these theory and modelling methods can be effectively used together.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSolid State Nucl Magn Reson
August 2015
Department of Physics, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, P. O. Box 653, Be'er Sheva 8410501, Israel.
We report on (13)C nuclear spin-lattice relaxation time (T1) dependence on the magic-angle-spinning (MAS) rate in powder nanodiamond samples. We confirm that the relaxation is caused by interaction of nuclear spins with fluctuating electron spins of localized paramagnetic defects. It was found that T1 is practically not affected by MAS for small particles, while for larger particles with lower defect density T1 is different in static and MAS regimes and reveals elongation with increasing MAS rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanotechnology
November 2008
International Technology Center, 8100-120 Brownleigh Drive, Raleigh, NC 27617, USA. Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, Unska 3, 10 000 Zagreb, Croatia.
Pure poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) films, PDMS-nanodiamond (ND) and pure nanodiamond powder were irradiated with 2 MeV protons under a variety of fluence and current conditions. Upon proton irradiation, these samples acquire a fluence-dependent photoluminescence (PL). The emission and excitation spectra, photostability and emission lifetime of the induced photoluminescence of PDMS and PDMS-ND samples are reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanotechnology
June 2008
International Technology Center, 8100 Brownleigh Drive, Suite 120, Raleigh, NC 27617, USA.
Colloid suspensions of irregularly shaped, highly charged detonation nanodiamond particles are found to have unexpected optical properties, similar to those of photonic crystals. This finding is all the more surprising since the particles used in this work are far more polydisperse than those typically forming photonic crystals. Intensely iridescent structures have been fabricated using the centrifugation of aqueous suspensions of nanodiamonds.
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