Gerald Jarre
University of Würzburg
6 Papers
Gerald Jarre is an academic researcher from University of Würzburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Surface modification & Nanodiamond. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications. Previous affiliations of Gerald Jarre include University of Kiel.
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Papers
Biotinylated nanodiamond: simple and efficient functionalization of detonation diamond.
TL;DR: A simple and efficient method for the covalent functionalization of detonation nanodiamond is developed, which opens the way to covalently bonded diamond bioconjugates for labeling, drug delivery, and other applications.
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Deagglomeration and functionalisation of detonation diamond
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present results on the production of primary particles of detonation diamond from strongly bound agglomerates using beads milling and the newly developed BASD (bead assisted sonic disintegration) method in various media.
139
Deagglomeration and surface modification of thermally annealed nanoscale diamond
Yuejiang Liang,Thomas Meinhardt,Gerald Jarre,Masaki Ozawa,Pavo Vrdoljak,Achim Schöll,F. Reinert,Anke Krueger +7 more
TL;DR: Thermally annealed nanodiamond has been functionalized by C-C coupling of the partially graphitized diamond surface using aryl diazonium salts to form stable colloidal solutions in water and physiological media (i.e. PBS buffer), an important prerequisite for biomedical applications.
103
Synthesis of nanodiamond derivatives carrying amino functions and quantification by a modified Kaiser test.
TL;DR: A modified photometric assay based on the Kaiser test has been developed and validated for different types of aminated nanodiamonds, representing an alternative wet-chemical quantification method in cases where other techniques like elemental analysis fail due to unfavourable combustion behaviour of the analyte or other impediments.
Surface functionalisation of detonation diamond suitable for biological applications
TL;DR: The organic functionalisation method for small detonation diamond agglomerates is reported, which is potentially useful for the synthesis of surface-bound peptides and for the attachment of biologically active building blocks, which could be used in drug delivery and fluorescence marker applications.