On March 15th and 16th 2012 the “2nd International Workshop on Magnetic Particle Imaging” (www.iwmpi.uni-luebeck.de) was held at the University of Lübeck in Germany. This international meeting was chaired by Prof. Thorsten M. Buzug (University of Lübeck) and Dr. Jörn Borgert (Philips Research Hamburg). The workshop aimed at covering the status and recent developments of both, the instrumentation and the tracer material used in Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI), as each of them is equally important.
The meeting was a huge success, with 162 scientists attending from 12 countries!
To inform yourself about what is going on in this new area for magnetic particles, see a full report which was kindly communicated by Silvio Dutz, Jena, on March 31, 2012, here.
Mingliang Ma, Qiuyu Zhang et al. prepared small polymer-coated nanochains of magnetic nanoparticles that might be useful for many different things. The length of the peapod-like nanochains can be controlled by magnetic field intensity, and the thickness of polymer shell can be tuned by the amount of monomers.
Check the details of this preprint in the Journal of Colloid and Interface Science here.
This is a very exciting news item. Lucia Gutiérrez from the University of Western Australia and the Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid ICMM-CSIC in Spain just finished the first magnetic nanoalphabet (or "Nanoalfabeto", as she calls it). All the magnetic nanoparticles spelling out the letters of the alphabet were imaged in different transmission electron microscopes (TEM). Most pictures are from Lucia, but M. Puerto Morales in Madrid, Spain, Alex G. Roca in York, UK, and Mounir Ibrahim in Perth, Australia also contributed pictures to complete the alphabet.
Please go ahead, download the file, and send it to all your friends. It makes a great poster for anybody interested in magnetic nanoparticles or electron microscopy! Get the file here.
Kannan M. Krishnan, an engineer who has applied his expertise in biomedical nanomagnetics to provide a much-needed paper detailing the advances and challenges in using magnetic nanoparticles for medical applications, is being honored by IEEE with the 2012 IEEE Donald G. Fink Prize Paper Award. IEEE is the world’s largest technical professional association.
The award, sponsored by the IEEE Life Members Committee and given to an outstanding survey, review or tutorial paper appearing in any of the IEEE Transactions, Proceedings of the IEEE, journals or magazines, recognizes Krishnan for his paper “Biomedical Nanomagnetics: A Spin Through Possibilities in Imaging, Diagnostics and Therapy”. Check it out here. The award will be presented on May 20, 2012 at the IEEE International Magnetics Conference in Vancouver, Canada.
If you come to our next Magnetic Carrier Meeting, then you will have a chance to meet Kannan yourself, as he is going to give an invited talk about the magnetic particles that are best suited for Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI).
Olefins with up to four carbon atoms are key building blocks for synthesis of polymers, cosmetics, drugs, solvents, and other commercial products. The lightweight compounds are typically produced by the petroleum industry by steam cracking naphtha, which is derived from crude oil. Cracking converts long-chain hydrocarbons to short ones and introduces unsaturation. That process has been carried out on a global scale for decades, but the associated environmental consequences and limited petroleum supplies have driven researchers to seek alternative routes to C 2 –C 4 olefins.
Hirsa M. Torres Galvis and Krijn P. de Jong of Utrecht University and coworkers have formulated iron catalysts that sidestep some of those limitations. The team found that supporting iron oxide nanoparticles on high-surface-area materials that interact weakly with the particles leads to stable, active, and fairly selective
catalysts. Specifically, they found that depending on reaction conditions, catalysts
consisting of sodium and sulfur-doped iron oxide nanoparticles supported
on carbon nanofibers and other samples supported on α-alumina convert syngas to C 2 –C 4 olefins with roughly 60% selectivity. Many of the catalyst samples remained stable throughout a 60-hour test period, the team reports.
Check out the details for yourself here.
Polystyrene nanoparticles are generally considered nontoxic, but a new study by Michael Shuler, Gretchen Mahler et al now suggests that ingesting them can influence iron uptake and transport. There might be a mechanism by which ingested nanoparticles exert a subtle yet harmful effect. The researchers examined how carboxylated polystyrene particles just 50 nm in diameter behaved in an in vitro model of the human intestinal epithelium and in tests with live chickens given doses that mimic potential human exposure. Intestinal cells in the in vitro model showed increased iron transport because of disruptions to the cell membrane. Chickens with acute nanoparticle exposure had lower iron absorption than either unexposed or chronically exposed chickens. The researchers found that the villi—tiny projections in the intestinal walls—of chickens subjected to
chronic exposure remodeled themselves to increase the surface area for iron absorption.
Although people do not normally eat polystyrene nanoparticles, other nanoparticles commonly used as food additives (e.g., titanium dioxide and
silicates) might have similar effects.
Check out the details here.
Portable, low-cost and quantitative detection of a broad range of targets at home and in the field has the potential to revolutionize medical diagnostics and environmental monitoring. Taking advantage of the wide availability and low cost of the pocket-sized personal glucose meter—used worldwide by diabetes sufferers—Yu Xiang and Yi Lu demonstrate a method to use such meters to quantify non-glucose targets, ranging from a recreational drug (cocaine, 3.4 mM detection limit) to an important biological cofactor (adenosine, 18 mM detection limit), to a disease marker (interferon-gamma of tuberculosis, 2.6 nM detection limit) and a toxic metal ion (uranium, 9.1 nM detection limit). The method is based on the target-induced release of invertase from a functional-DNA–invertase conjugate bound to magnetic particles. The released invertase converts sucrose into glucose, which is detectable using a normal glucose meter. The approach should be easily applicable to the detection of many other targets through the use of suitable functional-DNA partners (aptamers DNAzymes or aptazymes).
Check the original Nature Chemistry article here.
A research team led by Julian Eastoe of England’s University of Bristol recently developed an iron-based surfactant that responds to a magnetic field. The researchers showed that their detergent, composed of an alkane chain with a cationic head group and a tetrachloroferrate(III) counterion (FeCl4–), is capable of being drawn from an aqueous phase through an organic solvent by a small magnet. With small-angle neutron scattering, the team also proved that in water, their magnetic surfactant forms small clusters called micelles. Conventional soaps and detergents also form these structures, which give the cleaners their functionality.
When asked why he and his team decided to try making a surfactant that’s switched on by a magnet, Eastoe says they were motivated by “good old-fashioned scientific curiosity.” There has to be a place for that type of inquiry
in science, he contends. To read more, check this Angewandte Chemie article here.
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