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Cellular complexity captured in durable silica biocomposites
Authors:Bryan Kaehr  Jason L. Townson  Robin M. Kalinich  Yasmine H. Awad  B. S. Swartzentruber  Darren R. Dunphy  C. Jeffrey Brinker
Affiliation:aAdvanced Materials Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM 87106; ;bDepartment of Chemical and Nuclear Engineering, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131; and ;cCenter for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Albuquerque, NM 87185
Abstract:Tissue-derived cultured cells exhibit a remarkable range of morphological features in vitro, depending on phenotypic expression and environmental interactions. Translation of these cellular architectures into inorganic materials would provide routes to generate hierarchical nanomaterials with stabilized structures and functions. Here, we describe the fabrication of cell/silica composites (CSCs) and their conversion to silica replicas using mammalian cells as scaffolds to direct complex structure formation. Under mildly acidic solution conditions, silica deposition is restricted to the molecularly crowded cellular template. Inter- and intracellular heterogeneity from the nano- to macroscale is captured and dimensionally preserved in CSCs following drying and subjection to extreme temperatures allowing, for instance, size and shape preserving pyrolysis of cellular architectures to form conductive carbon replicas. The structural and behavioral malleability of the starting material (cultured cells) provides opportunities to develop robust and economical biocomposites with programmed structures and functions.
Keywords:sol-gel   biomineralization   biopreservation   frustule
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