
Ruth SignorellProfessor
Office: D 342
Office Phone: (604) 822-9064
Lab(s): D 240
Lab Phone(s): (604) 822-2129
FAX: (604) 822-2847
Email: signorell@chem.ubc.ca
Curriculum Vitae: Diploma, ETH Zuerich, Switzerland (M. Quack, 1996); Ph.D., ETH Zuerich (F. Merkt, 1999); ETH Medal for the Ph.D.Thesis (1999);Postdoctoral Fellow of the Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina, University of Goettingen, Germany (M. Suhm, 2000); Senior Research Associate (C1), University of Goettingen (2001-2002); Assistant Professor, University of Goettingen (2002-2005); Research Award for Assistant Professors of the VCI, Germany (2003); Professor, UBC (2005); Werner Prize of the Swiss Chemical Society (2005); A. P. Sloan Fellowship (2007-2009); UBC Killam Research Prize (2008); CSASS Thermo Fisher Spectroscopy Award (2009)
Physical/Analytical:
Generation and Spectroscopic Investigations of Aerosols, Clusters and Nanoparticles; Infrared and XUV Spectroscopy; Intermolecular Interactions; Vibrational Dynamics; Modelling of Particle Properties
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Signorell Group Homepage
Research/Teaching Interests
Spectroscopy of Aerosols, Clusters, and Nanoparticles
The key objective of our research is the controlled generation and detailed spectroscopic characterization
of molecular nanoparticles, aerosols, and clusters from the subnanometer to the micrometer size range. This includes the
study of reactive processes involving particles. The rapidly growing interest
in these weakly bound huge molecular aggregates arises from their increasing
relevance in many different fields. Molecular particles of widely varying
composition play an important role as aerosols in atmospheric processes and
as reactive sites in interstellar dust. To understand their influence on corresponding
processes and to control their formation it is crucial to know their chemical
composition, their size, their reactivity, and the processes by which they
are formed. This knowledge opens up other fields of application such as nanoparticles
of pharmaceutical agents which are attractive drug delivery systems for medical
applications. The major goal here is the preparation of encapsulated or coated
drug particles for the controlled drug delivery.
Our current research activities are in the following areas:
(i) Infrared Spectroscopy and Modeling of Molecularly Structured Aerosol Particles
(ii) Metallodielectric Nanoparticles and Molecular Nanoparticles as Drug Delivery Systems
(iii) XUV Spectroscopy of Aerosols and Cluster
We ultimately
aim at unravelling the microscopic origin of the characteristic patterns found
in the spectra of these weakly bound molecular aggregates. In this context,
we want to answer two central questions:(i) Which
spectral properties can be described on a local or even molecular level and
which are inherent ensemble properties affecting the particle as a whole?
(ii) To what extend does this distinction depend on the type and strength
of intermolecular forces acting in the particles? To address these questions
we combine a broad range of experimental tools with specially tailored theoretical
approaches.
Methods:
Particle
Generation: Collisional Cooling Cells (4-298K); Supersonic
Expansion; Rapid Expansion of Supercritical Solutions (RESS); Electrospray
Particle
Characterization: Spectroscopic Characterization In Situ; Laser Light Scattering; Particle Sizing; Electron
Microscopy
Modelling:
Standard Quantum Chemical Calculations ; Vibrational
Dynamics Calculations; Molecular Dynamics Simulations; Classical Scattering
Theory
Examples:
1) Shape,
Size, and Surface Effects of Icy Aerosol Particles of Planetary Atmospheres: Molecular ice particles of widely varying
composition influence physical-chemical processes in the atmospheres of planets, their moons and in
interstellar dust. One example are methane aerosols on Titan which form the counterpart to water clouds in the Earth's atmosphere. Another example are ammonia clouds in the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn. In these fields spectroscopic methods play a crucial role
in characterizing these weakly bound aggregates. We are interested in the
spectroscopic characterization of pure and composite particles with sizes
in the submicrometer range. This also includes the
study of intrinsic particle properties such as shape, size, and surface effects.
Left: Small ammonia ice cluster.
Right: Shape effects in IR spectra of CO2 ice particles. Experiments
compared with quantum mechanical exciton calculations.
The particles can be generated in supersonic expansions or by collisional cooling down to liquid helium temperatures.
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2) Generation
of Drug Nanoparticles:
Coating and mixing of drug nanoparticles with polymers
helps to prevent agglomeration of the primary particles and to control drug
release. The agglomeration behaviour depends on the amout
of polymer which can be controlled by FTIR-spectroscopy in situ during the
particle formation. Left: SEM-Image of agglomerated phytosterol
particles with primary radii of less than 50 nm. The particles were generated by rapid expansion of supercritical CO2 solutions. Right: In
situ IR spectra of pure phytosterol particles and mixed phytosterol/L-PLA
particles.
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