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In classical Drude theory the conductivity is determined by the mass of the propagating particles and the mean free path between two scattering events. For a quantum particle this simple picture of diffusive transport loses relevance if strong correlations dominate the particle motion. We study a situation where the propagation of a fermionic particle is possible only through creation and annihilation of local bosonic excitations. This correlated quantum transport process is outside the Drude picture, since one cannot distinguish between free propagation and intermittent scattering. The characterization of transport is possible using the Drude weight obtained from the f-sum rule, although its interpretation in terms of free mass and mean free path breaks down. For the situation studied we calculate the Green's function and Drude weight using a Green's functions expansion technique, and discuss their physical meaning.
Based on distributions of local Green's functions we present a stochastic approach to disordered systems. specifically we address Anderson localisation and cluster effects in binary alloys. Taking Anderson localisation of Holstein polarons as an example we discuss how this stochastic approach can be used for the investigation of interacting disordered systems.
We discuss a numerical method to study electron transport in mesoscopic devices out of equilibrium. The method is based on the solution of operator equations of motion, using efficient Chebyshev time propagation techniques. Its peculiar feature is the propagation of operators backwards in time. In this way the resource consumption scales linearly with the number of states used to represent the system. This allows us to calculate the current for non-interacting electrons in large one-, two- and three-dimensional lead-device configurations with time-dependent voltages or potentials. We discuss the technical aspects of the method and present results for an electron pump device and a disordered system, where we find transient behaviour that exists for a very long time and may be accessible to experiments.
AbstractThe 2022 Roadmap is the next update in the series of Plasma Roadmaps published by Journal of Physics D with the intent to identify important outstanding challenges in the field of low-temperature plasma (LTP) physics and technology. The format of the Roadmap is the same as the previous Roadmaps representing the visions of 41 leading experts representing 21 countries and five continents in the various sub-fields of LTP science and technology. In recognition of the evolution in the field, several new topics have been introduced or given more prominence. These new topics and emphasis highlight increased interests in plasma-enabled additive manufacturing, soft materials, electrification of chemical conversions, plasma propulsion, extreme plasma regimes, plasmas in hypersonics, data-driven plasma science and technology and the contribution of LTP to combat COVID-19. In the last few decades, LTP science and technology has made a tremendously positive impact on our society. It is our hope that this roadmap will help continue this excellent track record over the next 5–10 years.
A novel method for time-resolved tuned diode laser absorption spectroscopy has been developed. In this paper, we describe in detail developed electronic module that controls time-resolution of laser absorption spectroscopy system. The TTL signal triggering plasma pulse is used for generation of two signals: the first one triggers the fine tuning of laser wavelength and second one controls time-defined signal sampling from absorption detector. The described method and electronic system enable us to investigate temporal evolution of sputtered particles in technological low-temperature plasma systems. The pulsed DC planar magnetron sputtering system has been used to verify this method. The 2" in diameter titanium target was sputtered in pure argon atmosphere. The working pressure was held at 2 Pa. All the experiments were carried out for pulse ON time fixed at 100 (is. When changing OFF time the discharge has operated between High Power Impulse Magnetron Sputtering regime and pulsed DC magnetron regime. The effect of duty cycle variation results in decrease of titanium atom density during ON time while length of OFF time elongates. We believe that observed effect is connected with higher degree of ionization of sputtered particles. As previously reported by Bohlmark et al., the measured optical emission spectra in HiPIMS systems were dominated by emission from titanium ions [1].
Growth, ageing and atherosclerotic plaque development alter the biomechanical forces acting on the vessel wall. However, monitoring the detailed local changes in wall shear stress (WSS) at distinct sites of the murine aortic arch over time has been challenging. Here, we studied the temporal and spatial changes in flow, WSS, oscillatory shear index (OSI) and elastic properties of healthy wildtype (WT, n = 5) and atherosclerotic apolipoprotein E-deficient (Apoe−/−, n = 6) mice during ageing and atherosclerosis using high-resolution 4D flow magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Spatially resolved 2D projection maps of WSS and OSI of the complete aortic arch were generated, allowing the pixel-wise statistical analysis of inter- and intragroup hemodynamic changes over time and local correlations between WSS, pulse wave velocity (PWV), plaque and vessel wall characteristics. The study revealed converse differences of local hemodynamic profiles in healthy WT and atherosclerotic Apoe−/− mice, and we identified the circumferential WSS as potential marker of plaque size and composition in advanced atherosclerosis and the radial strain as a potential marker for vascular elasticity. Two-dimensional (2D) projection maps of WSS and OSI, including statistical analysis provide a powerful tool to monitor local aortic hemodynamics during ageing and atherosclerosis. The correlation of spatially resolved hemodynamics and plaque characteristics could significantly improve our understanding of the impact of hemodynamics on atherosclerosis, which may be key to understand plaque progression towards vulnerability.
AbstractFluctuations of electron cyclotron emission (ECE) signals are analyzed for differently heated Wendelstein 7-X plasmas. The fluctuations appear to travel predominantly on flux surfaces and are used as ‘tracers’ in multivariate time series. Different statistical techniques are assessed to reveal the coupling and information entropy-based coupling analysis are conducted. All these techniques provide evidence that the fluctuation analysis allows one to check the consistency of magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) equilibrium calculations. Expanding the suite of techniques applied in fusion data analysis, partial mutual information (PMI) analysis is introduced. PMI generalizes traditional partial correlation (Frenzel and Pompe Phys. Rev. Lett.
99 204101) and also Schreiber’s transfer entropy (Schreiber 2000 Phys. Rev. Lett.
85 461). The main additional capability of PMI is to allow one to discount for specific spurious data. Since PMI analysis allows one to study the effect of common drivers, the influence of the electron cyclotron resonance heating on the mutual dependencies of simultaneous ECE measurements was assessed. Additionally, MHD mode activity was found to be coupled in a limited volume in the plasma core for different plasmas. The study reveals an experimental test for equilibrium calculations and ECE radiation transport.
In this thesis, it was the subject to build a setup to study the interaction of clusters with intense laser light. A magnetron sputter cluster ion source was built to create metal clusters for the planned investigations. Furthermore, a linear Paul trap setup was built in order to allow the investigation of the mentioned interaction at one specific cluster size. The whole apparatus was characterized and first experiments were performed.
Abstract
Alkali ion beams are among the most intense produced by the ISOLDE facility. These were the first to be studied by the ISOLTRAP mass spectrometer and ever since, new measurements have been regularly reported. Recently the masses of very neutron-rich and short-lived cesium isotopes were determined at ISOLTRAP. The isotope 148Cs was measured directly for the first time by Penning-trap mass spectrometry. Using the new results, the trend of two-neutron separation energies in the cesium isotopic chain is revealed to be smooth and gradually decreasing, similar to the ones of the barium and xenon isotopic chains. Predictions of selected microscopic models are employed for a discussion of the experimental data in the region.
Modern cavity QED and cavity optomechanical systems realize the interaction of light with mesoscopic devices, which exhibit discrete (atom-like) energy spectra or perform micromechanical motion. In this thesis we have studied the crossover from the quantum regime to the classical limit of two prototypical models, the Dicke model and the generic optomechanical model. The physical problems considered in this approach range from a ground state phase transition, its dynamical response to general nonequilibrium dynamics including Hamiltonian and driven dissipative chaotic motion. The classical limit of these models follows from the classical limit of at least one of its subsystems. The classical equations of motion result from the respective quantum equations through the application of the semiclassical approximation, i.e., the neglect of quantum correlations. The approach of the results from quantum mechanics to the prediction of the classical equations can be obtained by subsequently decreasing the respective scaling parameter. In order to obtain exact results we have utilized advanced numerical methods, e.g., the Lanczos diagonalization method for ground state calculations, the Kernel Polynomial Method for dynamical response functions, Chebyshev recursion for time propagation, and quantum state diffusion for open system dynamics. We have studied the quantum phase transition of the Dicke model in the classical oscillator limit. Our work shows that in this limit the transition occurs already for finite spin length but with the same critical behavior as in the classical spin limit. We have derived an effective model for the oscillator degrees of freedom and have discussed the differences of both classical limits with respect to quantum fluctuations around the mean-field ground state and spin-oscillator entanglement. In this thesis we have proposed a variational ansatz for the Dicke model which extends the mean-field description through the inclusion of spin-oscillator correlations. The ansatz becomes correct in the limit of large oscillator frequency and in the limit of a large spin. For the latter it captures the leading quantum corrections to the classical limit exactly including the spin-oscillator entanglement entropy. We have studied the dynamics of spin and oscillator coherent states in the nonresonant Dicke model at weak coupling. In this regime periodic collapses and revivals of Rabi oscillations occur, which are accompanied by the buildup and decay of atom-field entanglement. The spin-oscillator wave function evolves into a superposition of multiple field coherent states that are correlated with the spin configuration. In our work we provide a description of the underlying dynamical mechanism based on perturbation theory. Our analysis shows that collapse and revival at nonresonance is distinguished from the resonant case treated within the rotating wave approximation by the appearance of two time scales instead of one. We have extended our study of the Dicke dynamics to the case of increasing spin length, as the system approaches the classical spin limit. We described the emergence of collective excitations above the ground state that converge to the coupled spin-oscillator oscillations observed in the classical limit. With increased spin length the corresponding Green functions thus reveal quantum dynamical signatures of the quantum phase transition. For the dynamics at larger coupling and energy, classical phase space drift and quantum diffusion hinders the direct comparison of quantum and classical observables. As we show in our work, signatures of classical quasiperiodic orbits can be identified in the Husimi phase-space functions of the propagated wave function and individual eigenstates with energies close to that of the quasiperiodic orbits. The analysis of the generic optomechanical system complements our study of cavity QED systems by a quantum dissipative system. In this thesis we have shown for the first time, how the route to chaos in the classical optomechanical system takes place, given as a sequence of consecutive period doubling bifurcations of self-induced cantilever oscillations. In addition to the semiclassical dynamics we have analyzed the possibility of chaotic motion in the quantum regime. Our results showed that quantum mechanics protects the optomechanical system against irregular dynamics. In sufficient distance to the semiclassical limit simple periodic orbits reappear and replace the classically chaotic motion. In this way direct observation of the dynamical properties of an optomechanical system makes it possible to pin down the crossover from quantum to classical mechanics.
This thesis presents the production of polyanionic clusters within two ion storage devices:
Considering a Penning trap, the accessible range of polyanionic aluminium clusters has been expanded up to the 10th charge state. In particular, abundance curves for clusters with 5 to 9 excess electrons have been measured for the first time and analysed with respect to their lifetime-dependent appearance sizes. These sizes reveal a nearly quadratic dependency on the charge state for experimentally accessible lifetimes.
Additionally, the production of polyanionic clusters has been enabled in a radiofrequency ion trap. Therefore, the transition from a harmonic to a digital 2- and 3-state guiding signal has been investigated with respect to the ion storage. The passing of electrons through the trap during field-free periods of the guiding signal led to the first production of polyanionic clusters within a radiofrequency ion trap.
The rapid neutron-capture or the r-process is responsible for the origin of about half of the neutron-rich atomic nuclei in the universe heavier than iron. For the calculation of the abundances of those nuclei, atomic masses are required as one of the input parameters with very high precision. In the present work, the masses of the neutron-rich Zn isotopes (A=71 to 81) lying in the r-process path have been measured in the ISOLTRAP experiment at ISOLDE/CERN. The mass of 81Zn has been measured directly for the first time. The half-lives of the nuclides ranged from 46.5 h (72Zn) down to 290 ms (81Zn). In case of all the nuclides, the relative mass uncertainty (∆m/m) achieved was in the order of 1E-8 corresponding to a 100-fold improvement in precision over previous measurements.
An interesting aspect in the research of complex (dusty) plasmas is the experimental study of the interaction of micro-particles with the surrounding plasma for diagnostic purposes. Local electric fields can be determined from the behaviour of particles in the plasma, e.g. particles may serve as electrostatic probes. Since in many cases of applications in plasma technology it is of great interest to describe the electric field conditions in front of floating or biased surfaces, the confinement and behaviour of test particles is studied in front of floating walls inserted into a plasma as well as in front of additionally biased surfaces. For the latter case, the behaviour of particles in front of an adaptive electrode, which allows for an efficient confinement and manipulation of the grains, has been experimentally studied in terms of the dependence on the discharge parameters and on different bias conditions of the electrode. The effect of the partially biased surface (dc and rf) on the charged micro-particles has been investigated by particle falling experiments. In addition to the experiments, we also investigate the particle behaviour numerically by molecular dynamics, in combination with a fluid and particle-in-cell description of the plasma.
Abstract
Many processes in nature are governed by the interaction of electro-magnetic radiation with matter. New tools such as femtosecond and free-electron lasers allow one to study the interaction in unprecedented detail with high temporal and spatial resolution. In addition, much work is devoted to the exploration of novel target systems that couple to radiation in an effective and controllable way or that could serve as efficient sources of energetic particles when being subjected to intense laser fields. The interaction between matter and radiation fields as well as their mutual modification via correlations constitutes a rich field of research that is impossible to cover exhaustively. The papers in this focus issue represent a selection that largely reflects the program of the international conference on ‘Correlation Effects in Radiation Fields’ held in 2011 in Rostock, Germany.
The first Therapeutic ROS and Immunity in Cancer (TRIC) meeting was organized by the excellence research center ZIK plasmatis (with its previous Frontiers in Redox Biochemistry and Medicine (FiRBaM) and Young Professionals’ Workshop in Plasma Medicine (YPWPM) workshop series in Northern Germany) and the excellence research program ONKOTHER-H (Rostock/Greifswald, Germany). The meeting showcased cutting-edge research and liberated discussions on the application of therapeutic ROS and immunology in cancer treatment, primarily focusing on gas plasma technology. The 2-day hybrid meeting took place in Greifswald and online from 15–16 July 2021, facilitating a wide range of participants totaling 66 scientists from 12 countries and 5 continents. The meeting aimed at bringing together researchers from a variety of disciplines, including chemists, biochemists, biologists, engineers, immunologists, physicists, and physicians for interdisciplinary discussions on using therapeutic ROS and medical gas plasma technology in cancer therapy with the four main sessions: “Plasma, Cancer, Immunity”, “Plasma combination therapies”, “Plasma risk assessment and patients studies”, and “Plasma mechanisms and treated liquids in cancer”. This conference report outlines the abstracts of attending scientists submitted to this meeting.
A central point of this thesis is the investigation of surface structure and surface forces, which are created by single layers of linear polyelectrolytes (PE). In detail, the properties of cationic poly(allylamine)hydrochloride (PAH) and poly-l-lysine (PLL) and anionic sodium poly(styrene sulfonate) (PSS) are determined, which have been physisorbed onto oppositely charged silica surfaces in presence of a predefined salt concentration IAds. For these investigations, a new averaging method for colloidal probe (CP) force profiles is developed, which leads to an ultimate force resolution of 1 pN after the data processing, (signal to noise ratio of > 1000). Furthermore, a new kind of tapping mode imaging is presented (so called colloidal probe tapping mode, CPTM), which uses a CP instead of a sharp tip and hence which allows to resolve lateral inhomogeneously distributed surface forces. The basics to understand such-like obtained tapping mode images are developed. For adsorption from salt-free solution (IAds = 0) the dominance of an electrostatic double layer repulsion is observed, which is commonly attributed to the adsorption of the PE chains into a rather flat and compact layer and which is in full agreement with theoretical predictions and enormous experimental data available in literature. However, even a small addition of salt to the deposition solution (i.e. IAds > 1 mM NaCl) introduces a new contribution to the surface force, which is attributed to PE chains that are non-flatly physisorbed. Using scaling considerations, it is shown for all investigated PE that this non-flat conformation can be described by brush-like chain adsorption (cf. Section 3.3.5); other conformations like mushroom or pancake are excluded (cf. Section 5.3). Interestingly, these non-flatly physisorbed chains combine properties of neutral and PE brushes: (i) The force is very well described by the theory of Alexander and de Gennes (AdG, cf. Section 5.4). By fitting the AdG force law to the data, it is possible to determine the (brush) thickness L of the PE layer and the average distance s between brush-like physisorbed chains. Although the chains are charged the electrostatic contribution to the surface forces is too small to be noticeable (cf. Section 5.4.2). (ii) The thickness L of this PE layer is much larger compared to the compact layer (observed for salt-free adsorption) and is also subject to a pronounced swelling and shrinking if the bulk salt concentration I is decreased or increased, respectively. Surprisingly, all measurements indicate that L follows a scaling law known for salted end-grafted PE brushes, i.e. L ~ N (I s^2)^(-1/3) (with N denoting the degree of polymerization). Furthermore, the osmotic brush phase is never observed in the experiments, but chain stretching up to 1 / 3 of the contour length is regularly achieved. CPTM imaging applied to PSS shows that the brush-like physisorbed chains are not homogenously distributed over the surface, but form brush domains which coexist with flatly physisorbed chains (cf. sections 5.5 and 5.6). This clearly shows that PSS generally physisorbs in two distinct phases, which differ in conformation (flat vs. brush) and the surface force caused (electrostatic vs. steric repulsion). The force profile of the two phase system is in good approximation simply the superposition of a steric and an electrostatic repulsion, whereby their respective contribution to the composed force profile is given by their area fraction. The quantitative analysis reveals that L and s of the brush phase are independent on IAds. This is remarkable, as a change in IAds is known to induce a continuous transition between a stretched (low IAds) and coiled chain conformation (high IAds) in the deposition solution (cf. [Fleer1993, Yashiro2002]). Hence, one can conclude that the conformation in solution does not necessarily correspond to the conformation after adsorption. It is also shown that the area fraction A of the brush domains strongly depends on N and IAds. For example, for constant N the scaling relation A ~ sqrt(IAds) is determined, which is very similar to the common observation that the surface coverage %Gamma of adsorbed PE layers increases also with %Gamma ~ sqrt(IAds) [Schmitt1996, Cosgrove1986, Ahrens2001, Yim2000, Gopinadhan2007, Cornelson2010]. This suggest that brush-like physisorbed PE chains are responsible for the increase in %Gamma. In fact, Section 5.6 shows that the mass of the brush phase is approx. 0.5 mg/m² which is comparable to the increase in %Gamma reported in literature for IAds = 1 M NaCl [Cosgrove1986, Schmitt1996, Ahrens2001]. As a change in IAds does not affect L and s, but solely the brush area fraction A, it is argued in Section 5.6 that an increase in IAds can be understood as a phase transition from the (disordered) flat phase towards the (ordered and extended) brush phase. Here, further theoretical considerations would be desirable.
Magnetic reconnection is a fundamental plasma process where a change in field line connectivity occurs in a current sheet at the boundary between regions of opposing magnetic fields. In this process, energy stored in the magnetic field is converted into kinetic and thermal energy, which provides a source of plasma heating and energetic particles. Magnetic reconnection plays a key role in many space and laboratory plasma phenomena, e.g. solar flares, Earth’s magnetopause dynamics and instabilities in tokamaks. A new linear device (VINETAII) has been designed for the study of the fundamental physical processes involved in magnetic reconnection. The plasma parameters are such that magnetic reconnection occurs in a collision-dominated regime. A plasma gun creates a localized current sheet, and magnetic reconnection is driven by modulating the plasma current and the magnetic field structure. The plasma current is shown to flow in response to a combination of an externally induced electric field and electrostatic fields in the plasma, and is highly affected by axial sheath boundary conditions. Further, the current is changed by an additional axial magnetic field (guide field), and the current sheet geometry was demonstrated to be set by a combination of magnetic mapping and cross-field plasma diffusion. With increasing distance from the plasma gun, magnetic mapping results in an increase of the current sheet length and a decrease of the width. The control parameter is the ratio of the guide field to the reconnection magnetic field strength. Cross-field plasma diffusion leads to a radial expansion of the current sheet at low guide fields. Plasma currents are also observed in the azimuthal plane and were found to originate from a combination of the field-aligned current component and the diamagnetic current generated by steep in-plane pressure gradients in combination with the guide field. The reconnection rate, defined via the inductive electric field, is shown to be directly linked to the time-derivative of the plasma current. The reconnection rate decreases with increasing ratio of the guide field to the reconnection magnetic field strength, which is attributed to the plasma current dependency on axial boundary conditions and the plasma gun discharge. The above outlined results offer insights into the complex interaction between magnetic fields, electric fields, and the localized current flows during reconnection.
Turbulence is a state of a physical system characterized by a high degree of spatiotemporal disorder. Turbulent processes are driven by instabilities exhibiting complex nonlinear dynamics, which span over several spatial as well as temporal scales. Apart from fluids and gases, turbulence is observed in plasmas. While turbulent mixing of a system is sometimes a desired effect, often turbulence is an undesired state. In hot, magnetically confined plasmas, envisaged for energy generation by thermonuclear fusion, plasma turbulence is clearly a problem, since the magnetic confinement time is drastically deteriorated by turbulent transport. Hence, a control mechanism to influence and to suppress turbulence is of significance for future fusion power devices. An important area of plasma turbulence is drift wave turbulence. Drift waves are characterized by currents parallel to the ambient magnetic field, that are tightly coupled to a coherent mode structure rotating in the perpendicular plane. In the present work, the control of drift waves and drift wave turbulence is experimentally investigated in the linear magnetized helicon experiment VINETA. Two different open-loop control systems - electrostatic and electromagnetic - are used to drive dynamically parallel currents. It is observed that the dynamics of the drift waves can be significantly influenced by both control schemes. If the imposed mode number as well as the rotation direction match those of the drift waves, classical synchronization effects like, e.g., frequency locking, frequency pulling, and Arnold tongues are observed. These confirm the nonlinear interaction between the control signal and the drift wave dynamics. Finally, the broadband drift wave turbulence, and thereby turbulent transport, is considerably reduced if the applied control signal is sufficiently large in amplitude.
The central aim of this thesis was the investigation of protein/polyanion interaction using circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, enzyme immune assay (EIA), isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and flow cytometry (FC). A further aim was to understand why an endogenous protein becomes immuno-genic when forming a complex. The focus was on the protein platelet factor (PF4), which gained wide interest in the clinical field, due to its role in the life-threatening, immune-driven, adverse drug effect heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT). PF4 is a small homotetrameric chemokine with several basic amino acids on its surface, forming a positively charged ring. The antibodies that are formed during HIT recognize an epitope exposed on PF4, when it is in a complex with heparin at a certain molar ratio at which, PF4 tetramers are aligned on the heparin and forced into close approximation. The main results and conclusions of the thesis are summarized below: 5.1 Evolutionary Conservation of PF4 (Paper I – PF4/Evolution) By carrying out an amino acid sequence survey we found that the positively charged amino acids contributing to the heparin binding site on the surface of PF4 and related proteins are highly conserved in all vertebrates, including fish species. PF4 interacts with the phospholipid lipid A, the innermost part of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Gram negative bacteria. We showed that the shorter the sugar chain of the O antigen, outer and inner core of the LPS were the more PF4 was binding. The interaction of PF4 with lipid A is inhibited by heparin, suggesting that the amino acids known to contribute to heparin binding are also involved in binding to lipid A. 5.2 PF4 Interaction with Polyanions (PA) of varying Length and Degree of Sulfation (Paper II – PF4/PA) CD spectroscopy was found to be a powerful technique to monitor structural changes of PF4 caused by binding to various clinically relevant polyanions. Therefore PF4 was titrated with different PA to investigate the dependencies: i. impact of the PF4:PA molar ratio, ii. degree of polymerization of the PA and iii. degree of sulfation of the PA. In all cases, exposure of HIT-relevant epitope(s) was only observed for PA that also induced changes in secondary structure of PF4. A comparison of results of an immune ¬assay with CD spectroscopic data showed that the extent of complex anti¬genicity correlates well with the magnitude of changes in PF4 secondary structure, and that the structural changes of PF4 have to exceed a certain threshold to achieve PF4/PA complex antigenicity. These findings allowed us to calculate expectation intervals for complex antigenicity solely using CD spectroscopic data. To our knowledge, this was the first demonstration that the capability of drugs to induce antigenicity of PF4 can be assessed without the necessity of in vivo studies or the use of antibodies obtained from immunized patients specific for the antigens. The antigenicity of PF4 in complex is not restricted to negative charges originating from sulfate groups, PA with phosphate groups are also capable (binding to phospholipids). We investigated inorganic polyphosphates (polyP) with a chain length of 75 Pi and showed that the induced secondary structural changes are even higher compared to the changes induced by the different heparins and that the PF4/P75 complexes are antigenic as well. 5.3 PF4 Interaction with defined oligomeric Heparins (Paper III – PF4/defined Heparins) We tested highly purified, monodisperse heparins. In contrast to the clinically relevant but relatively undefined (high polydispersity index) glycosamino glycans reported in paper II (PF4/PA). The defined heparins induced higher secondary structural changes. Here we showed for the first time that strong conformational changes during PF4/PA complex formation are necessary but not sufficient for to the expression of the anti-PF4/heparin antibody binding site. Also, the size of the complexes is not the only prerequisite for anti-PF4/heparin antibody binding (tested by atomic force microscopy). By ITC we found that antigenicity is only induced if the PF4/PA complex has a high binding enthalpy and the complex formation leads to a negative change in entropy. 5.4 PF4/Polyphosphates (polyP) Complex Antigenicity and Interaction with Escherichia coli (E. coli, Paper IV – PF4/polyP) PolyP with chain lengths of 45 Pi and 75 Pi induced remarkable secondary structural changes in the PF4 molecule, thereby exposing the epitope recognized by anti-PF4/heparin antibodies. The induced conformational changes were similar to the changes induced by the defined heparins. Again a high binding enthalpy was observed but here in connection with a positive change in entropy. Further we showed that polyP (≥45 Pi) enhance PF4 binding to the surface of Gram negative E. coli at intermediate concentration and disrupt the binding at elevated polyP concentrations. The increased amounts of PF4 on the bacterial surface also improved the binding of anti-PF4/heparin antibodies and thereby the phagocytosis of the bacteria by poly¬morpho¬nuclear leucocytes. 5.5 Nucleic acid based Aptamers induce structural Changes in the PF4 Molecule (Paper V – PF4/Aptamer) Nucleic acids are another class of molecules containing phosphate groups. Especially after cell damage their extra¬cellular concentration can be locally quite high (>2 mg/ml). We found that certain aptamers form complexes with PF4 and thereby inducing anti-PF4/aptamer antibodies which cross-react with PF4/heparin complexes. Moreover by CD spectroscopy we showed that the protein C-aptamer caused similar secondary structural changes of PF4 like heparin, but already at much lower concentration. The maximally induced changes by the protein-C aptamer were even higher and persisted over a broader concentration range. 5.6 Protamine Interaction with Heparin (Paper VI – PS/Heparin) After the intensive investigation of the complex formation between PF4 and many different classes of PA we assessed another protein for structural changes upon complex formation with heparin. Protamine (PS) a protein in routinely used in post-cardiac surgery to reverse the anticoagulant effects of heparin was found to unfold but not to refold with increasing concentration of PA in solution. 5.7 Conclusion and Outlook When starting this thesis, it was believed that repetitive structures formed by PF4 on a heparin chain mold the epitope recognized by antibodies inducing HIT. These repetitive structures might exhibit similarities with viral capsids and are therefore recognized by the immune system of some patients. We found that induced by the close approximation PF4 changes its conformation, thereby exposing a neoepitope. The conserved positively charged amino acids of the heparin binding site and the involvement of these amino acids in the binding to lipid A confirm our hypothesis of PF4 as part of an ancient immune-mediated host defense mechanism. As possible consequence of the “primitive mechanism of defense” the highly variable O-antigens of LPS might have significantly contributed to an efficient escape mechanism by hiding the structures that made the bacteria vulnerable. In turn polyP might be an adaption of the host improve pathogen recognition by PF4 and further by antibodies inducing phagocytosis of the PF4-marked objects. Although shown only for PF4 and PS, our findings might be applicable to other proteins that also express epitopes upon changes in their secondary structure. Our physicochemical methods may further be applied: i. to drug development for the prediction of antigenicity induced by polyanionic drugs, ii. to guide the development of synthetic heparins and other polyanion based drugs, e.g. aptamers, that do not lead to HIT and iii. to provide relevant aspects for other biological functions of heparins.