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Multilamellar onion-type

Regev, D., Backov, R. and Faure, C. (2004) Gold nanopartides spontaneously generated in onion-type multilamellar vesides bilayers. Particle coupling imaged by cryo-TEM. Chemistry of Materials, 16, 5280-5285. [Pg.190]

Liquid crystals, liposomes, and artificial membranes. Phospholipids dissolve in water to form true solutions only at very low concentrations ( 10-10 M for distearoyl phosphatidylcholine). At higher concentrations they exist in liquid crystalline phases in which the molecules are partially oriented. Phosphatidylcholines (lecithins) exist almost exclusively in a lamellar (smectic) phase in which the molecules form bilayers. In a warm phosphatidylcholine-water mixture containing at least 30% water by weight the phospholipid forms multilamellar vesicles, one lipid bilayer surrounding another in an "onion skin" structure. When such vesicles are subjected to ultrasonic vibration they break up, forming some very small vesicles of diameter down to 25 nm which are surrounded by a single bilayer. These unilamellar vesicles are often used for study of the properties of bilayers. Vesicles of both types are often called liposomes.75-77... [Pg.392]


See other pages where Multilamellar onion-type is mentioned: [Pg.181]    [Pg.605]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.500]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.181 ]




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