Tag Archives: Basque

Starry gold and silica Janus particles

A Feb. 11, 2014 news item on phys.org features a joint Basque/Belgian research collaboration on a Janus-type particle useful for future biomedical applications,

Researchers from the Basque centre CIC biomaGUNE and the University of Antwerp (Belgium) have designed nanoparticles with one half formed of gold branches and the other of silicon oxide. They are a kind of Janus particle, so-called in honour of the Roman god with two faces, which could be used in phototherapy in the future to treat tumours.

The Feb. 11, 2014 Platforma SINC news release on the Alpha Galileo website, which originated the news item, elaborates on the Janus myth and on the research,

In Roman mythology, Janus was the god of gates, doors, beginnings and transitions between the past and the future. In fact, the first month of the year, January (from the Latin, ianuarĭus), bears his name. This deity was characterised by his profile of two faces, something which has inspired scientists, when naming their chemical designs with two clearly distinct components.

Now, a team of researchers from CIC biomaGUNE in San Sebastian, together with colleagues from the Belgian University of Antwerp, have created Janus particles of nanometric size. They are constituted by silicon oxide on one side and gold points on the other.

Here’s an image of the ‘starry’ particles supplied by the researchers,

Two examples of nanostars with one silicon oxide face (bluish) and another with golden branches (yellow). / Credit: Liz-Marzán et al.

Two examples of nanostars with one silicon oxide face (bluish) and another with golden branches (yellow). / Credit: Liz-Marzán et al.

The news release goes on to describe the ‘starry’ particles in more detail,

As Luis Liz-Marzán, the main author of this study published in the journal ‘Chemical Communications’, explains to SINC: “These nanostars have optical and electronic properties determined largely by their small dimensions and their morphology.”

The researchers have come up with techniques to mould the sharp gold points from nanoparticles of this metal, such that very intense electric fields can be generated on the gold points using light.

“Our research is basic science, but these fields are used in processes of ultrasensitive detection to identify negligible quantities of molecules that can be absorbed on the gold face as contaminants or biomarkers that indicate the presence of a disease,” says Liz-Marzán.

Another possible application is phototherapy, the object of which is to kill malignant cells using heat, in this case induced by lighting the gold points. The oxide face would be used to join the nanostars to specific biological receptors that would take them to the damaged cells and only to these, so that the metal part can exercise its therapeutic or diagnostic function.

These nanoparticles are produced in various stages. First, golden nanospheres are produced by the chemical reduction of a salt from the precious metal. Then, two different organic compounds are added on opposite sides of the particle in order to give them distinct affinity due to the silicon oxide. In this way, the oxide covers only one part and the other remains uncovered in order to let the golden points grow.

Here’s a link to and a citation for the research paper,

Denis Rodríguez-Fernández, Thomas Altantzis, Hamed Heidari, Sara Bals, Luis M. Liz-Marzán. “A protecting group approach toward synthesis of Au–silica Janus nanostars”. Chemical Communications 50: 79-81, 2014. DOI: 10.1039/C3CC47531J.

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I last wrote about a Janus particle in an Aug. 13, 2009 post about research at Duke University.

Spain, 1M Euros, and graphene

A Dec. 5, 2013 news item on Nanowerk features a 1M Euro investment being made in graphene in Spain,

Repsol and the Centre for Industrial Technological Development (CDTI in its Spanish initials), a body dependent on the Ministry of the Economy and Competitiveness, have signed an agreement with the Graphenea company through which both will invest jointly a million euros in the share capital of these technological companies.

Graphenea is a start-up company which has developed innovative technology for the production of high-quality graphene and whose products are supplied to 40 countries and to multinationals such as Nokia, Philips and Sigma-Aldrich, amongst others. This is a company which was founded in 2010, in the Basque city of Donostia-San Sebastián, by a group of private investors and the CIC nanoGUNE research centre.

Given the Spanish economy this is very interesting news (more about the economy further down), I found this about Graphenea on its About Us webpage (on the company website),

We are a leading graphene company that manufacture, produce and supply graphene for industrial and research needs. We have developed a synthesis and transfer process to obtain high uniformity monolayer graphene films on any substrate.

Industry: Nanotechnology

Function: Graphene Manufacturer, Graphene Producer, Graphene Supplier

Specialties: CVD Graphene Films, Graphene Oxide

Type: Privately Held

Founded: 2010

Address: Graphenea S.A. A75022608 Tolosa Hiribidea 76 20018 Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain. Located in the CIC nanoGune Nanoscience Research Centre

Contact

Sales – sales@graphenea.com

Job Opportunities – jobs@graphenea.com

General Enquiries – info@graphenea.com

I found this Company Profile: Overview webpage on the Repsol website,

Repsol is an integrated global energy company with vast sector experience. It carries out Upstream and Downstream activities throughout the entire world.

At Repsol we believe in innovation as an engine of change to create a new energy model. That is why we are present in areas of high energy potential such as Brazil, Russia and the U.S. Thanks to a steady, consolidated growth strategy, we have developed new and attractive areas of business within the company.

We are concerned with achieving people’s well-being and the economic growth of society; at Repsol we contribute with talent, effort and enthusiasm to building intelligent and sustainable energy solutions in the long term. And always with processes that respond to the strict controls on safety and respect for the environment.

As for the Centre for Industrial Technological Development (CDTI), there’s this on the Taftie (The European Network of Innovative Agencies) website,

www.cdti.es

Mission:
The Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology (CDTI) is a Spanish public organisation, under the Ministry of Science and Innovation, whose objective is to help Spanish companies to increase their technological profile. It is a state-owned company, and, established in 1977, has financed more than 15,000 technology development projects so far.

CDTI is manned by more than 300 employees, three quarters of which is made up of engineers and graduates. Although the bulk of the infrastructure of CDTI is located in Madrid, the Centre has built a strategic network of offices and representatives abroad available to Spanish companies (Japan -SBTO-, Belgium -SOST and a Permanent Eureka Secretariat-, Brazil -FINEP-, Korea, Chile, Morocco, China, India, Mexico and USA) to give them support in their international technological activities.

Its main activity is to evaluate and finance technological development, innovation and modernization projects developed by Spanish companies: CDTI grants financial help of its own to companies and facilitates access to that of third parties (bank financing from the Line for the Financing of Technological Innovation) for the execution of both national and international research and development projects.

Budget:
The budget available to fund R&D&I projects managed by CDTI is about 1400 M€.

Activities:
Domestic

  • Funds market-oriented technology development with zero interest, long term loans.
  • Funds pre-competitive research projects by companies and research centres.
  • Promotes technology transfer.

lnternational
CDTI manages the Spanish participation within several industrial research and development international programs:

  • European Union R&D Programs. Head of the Spanish delegations and National Contact Point in the Thematic Priorities and Research & Innovation of FP7.
  • Eureka: National Project Coordinator (NPC), including the responsibility of approving and financing projects
  • Bilateral agreements with its foreign innovation agencies countries with the objective to promote, assist and fund the development of joint technology cooperation in areas of mutual interest.(China, Japan, India, Canada and Korea)
  • Iberoeka: National Project Coordinator (NPC). A program with similar objectives to Eureka, with 19 countries from Latin America, plus Portugal and Spain.
  • European Space Agency (ESA): Spanish delegate.
  • European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN). Spanish delegate in the Financing Committee.

So it seems the government of Spain and Repsol (an energy company) have co-invested in Graphanea presumably for the production of and/or developing applications for graphene. This investment announcement comes within days of Spain’s economic ranking being shifted from ‘negative’ to ‘stable’ by Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s credit rating agencies. A Dec. 4, 2013 news item on BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) news online tells the story,

Moody’s said there had been a real improvement in the economy and government finances.

Last week, the Standard and Poor’s ratings firms also raised its outlook for Spain on signs of economic improvement.

Debt-laden Spain has emerged from a two-year recession, with export growth and companies becoming more confident.

But unemployment remains high, at 26%, and economic growth is expected to be shallow.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s government is hoping economic growth will help reduce Spain’s spiralling public debt, currently 943bn euros (£792.5bn; $1.3 trillion), or more than 92% of the country’s entire gross domestic product (GDP).

Given the circumstance, this is a gutsy move and I hope, a successful one.