Histatin-5 (Hist-5) is an antimicrobial peptide found in human saliva that functions to defend the oral cavity from microbial infections, such as those caused by the fungal pathogen Candida albicans (C. albicans). Hist-5 can bind Cu in multiple oxidation states, Cu2+ and Cu+ in vitro, and supplemental Cu2+ has been shown to improve the fungicidal activity of the peptide against C. albicans in culture. However, the exact role of Cu on the antifungal activity of Hist-5 and whether direct peptide–Cu interactions occur intracellularly has yet to be fully determined. Here, we used a combination of fluorescence spectroscopy and confocal microscopy experiments to show reversible Cu-dependent quenching of a fluorescent Hist-5 analogue, Hist-5*, indicating a direct interaction between Hist-5 and intracellular Cu. X-ray fluorescence microscopy images revealed peptide-induced changes to cellular Cu distribution and cell-associated Cu content. These data support a model in which Hist-5 can facilitate the hyperaccumulation of Cu in C. albicans and directly interact with Cu intracellularly to increase the fungicidal activity of Hist-5.
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Abstract Understanding the optoelectronic properties of optically active materials at the nanoscale often proves challenging due to the diffraction-limited resolution of visible light probes and the dose sensitivity of many optically active materials to high-energy electron probes. In this study, we demonstrate correlative synchrotron-based scanning x-ray excited optical luminescence (XEOL) and x-ray fluorescence (XRF) to simultaneously probe local composition and optoelectronic properties of halide perovskite thin films of interest for photovoltaic and optoelectronic devices. We find that perovskite XEOL stability, emission redshifting, and peak broadening under hard x-ray irradiation correlates with trends seen in photoluminescence measurements under continuous visible light laser irradiation. The XEOL stability is sufficient under the intense x-ray probe irradiation to permit proof-of-concept correlative mapping. Typical synchrotron XRF and nano-diffraction measurements use acquisition times 10–100 x shorter than the 5-second acquisition employed for XEOL scans in this study, suggesting that improving luminescence detection should allow correlative XEOL measurements to be performed successfully with minimal material degradation. Analysis of the XEOL emission from the quartz substrate beneath the perovskite reveals its promise for use as a real-time in-situ x-ray dosimeter, which could provide quantitative metrics for future optimization of XEOL data collection for perovskites and other beam-sensitive materials. Overall, the data suggest that XEOL represents a promising route towards improved resolution in the characterization of nanoscale heterogeneities and defects in optically active materials that may be implemented into x-ray nanoprobes to complement existing x-ray modalities.more » « less
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null (Ed.)Successful implementation of hot carrier solar cells requires preserving high carrier temperature as carriers migrate through the active layer. Here, we demonstrated that addition of alkali cations in hybrid organic-inorganic lead halide perovskites led to substantially elevated carrier temperature, reduced threshold for phonon bottleneck, and enhanced hot carrier transport. The synergetic effects from the Rb, Cs, and K cations result in ~900 K increase in the effective carrier temperature at a carrier density around 10 18 cm −3 with an excitation 1.45 eV above the bandgap. In the doped thin films, the protected hot carriers migrate 100 s of nanometers longer than the undoped sample as imaged by ultrafast microscopy. We attributed these improvements to the relaxation of lattice strain and passivation of halide vacancies by alkali cations based on x-ray structural characterizations and first principles calculations.more » « less
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Zinc K -edge X-ray absorption near-edge (XANES) spectroscopy was conducted on 40 zinc mineral samples and organic compounds. The K -edge position varied from 9660.5 to 9666.0 eV and a variety of distinctive peaks at higher post-edge energies were exhibited by the materials. Zinc is in the +2 oxidation state in all analyzed materials, thus the variations in edge position and post-edge features reflect changes in zinc coordination. For some minerals, multiple specimens from different localities as well as pure forms from chemical supply companies were examined. These specimens had nearly identical K -edge and post-edge peak positions with only minor variation in the intensity of the post-edge peaks. This suggests that typical compositional variations in natural materials do not strongly affect spectral characteristics. Organic zinc compounds also exhibited a range of edge positions and post-edge features; however, organic compounds with similar zinc coordination structures had nearly identical spectra. Zinc XANES spectral patterns will allow identification of unknown zinc-containing minerals and organic phases in future studies.more » « less
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Abstract The efficiency of thin-film solar cells with a Cu(
Gax )Se2absorber is limited by nanoscopic inhomogeneities and defects. Traditional characterization methods are challenged by the multi-scale evaluation of the performance at defects that are buried in the device structures. Multi-modal x-ray microscopy offers a unique tool-set to probe the performance in fully assembled solar cells, and to correlate the performance with composition down to the micro- and nanoscale. We applied this approach to the mapping of temperature-dependent recombination for Cu( Gax )Se2solar cells with different absorber grain sizes, evaluating the same areas from room temperature to . It was found that poor performing areas in the large-grain sample are correlated with a Cu-deficient phase, whereas defects in the small-grain sample are not correlated with the distribution of Cu. In both samples, classes of recombination sites were identified, where defects were activated or annihilated by temperature. More generally, the methodology of combinedoperando andin situ x-ray microscopy was established at the physical limit of spatial resolution given by the device itself. As proof-of-principle, the measurement of nanoscopic current generation in a solar cell is demonstrated with applied bias voltage and bias light.