Author Archive

Hot Communication: Chameleon clothes for quantitative oxygen imaging

A chameleon cloth that changes colour in response a drop in oxygen concentration could be used to warn of oxygen deficient areas say Chinese scientists.

The colour of the cloth gradually changes from red to purple to blue as the oxygen concentration increases. The light, soft and flexible cotton cloth could be easily included in clothes to make wearable sensors the team say.

Graphical abstract: Chameleon clothes for quantitative oxygen imaging

Read the full paper for free until 8th December:

Xu-dong Wang, Ting-yao Zhou, Xin-hong Song, Yaqi Jiang, Chaoyong James Yang and Xi Chen, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 17651-17653

This paper was also featured in Chemistry World.

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Focus on: Metamaterials

Journal of Materials Chemistry cover imageFeature Article
Metamaterials: constitutive parameters, performance, and chemical methods for realization
Hongsheng Chen
J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 6452-6463
 
Critical Review
Metamaterials: a new frontier of science and technology
Yongmin Liu and Xiang Zhang
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2011, 40, 2494-2507

Communication
Photocatalytic metamaterials: TiO2 inverse opals
Fabrizio Sordello, Clara Duca, Valter Maurino and Claudio Minero
Chem. Commun., 2011, 47, 6147-6149

Papers
Low loss photopatternable matrix materials for LWIR-metamaterial applications
Roger D. Rasberry, Yun-Ju Lee, James C. Ginn, Paul F. Hines, Christian L. Arrington, Andrea E. Sanchez, Michael T. Brumbach, Paul G. Clem, David W. Peters, Michael B. Sinclair and Shawn M. Dirk
J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 13902-13908

Dielectric metamaterial particles with enhanced efficiency of mechanical/electrical energy transformation
Yinpo Qiao, Xiaopeng Zhao and Yanyan Su
J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 394-399

Chiral assembly of gold nanorods with collective plasmonic circular dichroism response
Rong-Yao Wang, Honglei Wang, XiaoChun Wu, Yinglu Ji, Peng Wang, Yuan Qu and Tai-Shung Chung
Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 8370-8375

Self-organization of mono- and bi-modal PbS nanocrystal populations in superlattices
Michela Corricelli, Davide Altamura, Liberato De Caro, Antonella Guagliardi, Andrea Falqui, Alessandro Genovese, Angela Agostiano, Cinzia Giannini, Marinella Striccoli and M. Lucia Curri
CrystEngComm, 2011, 13, 3988-3997

Are you working on the synthesis, properties or applications of metamaterials? Then why not submit your next article to Journal of Materials Chemistry?

News from Journal of Materials Chemistry on Twitter

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Hot Article: Nanoparticles that capture, kill, & remove pathogens

Researchers combined silver nanoparticles and iron oxide to make nanoparticles with Ag@Fe2O3 yolk–shell structure. After functionalization of the surface with glucose, these magnetic nanoparticles show high capture efficiency of bacteria and potent antibacterial activity because of Ag cores. Interested to know more? Read the article for free until 7th December (free registration required)

Multifunctional Ag@Fe2O3 yolk–shell nanoparticles for simultaneous capture, kill, and removal of pathogen: Zhanhua Wei, Zijian Zhou, Meng Yang, Chenghong Lin, Zhenghuan Zhao, Dengtong Huang, Zhong Chen and Jinhao Gao, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 16344-16348

 Graphical abstract: Multifunctional Ag@Fe2O3 yolk–shell nanoparticles for simultaneous capture, kill, and removal of pathogen

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Hot Paper: Yellow to Red: A soft porous crystal with mechanofluorochromism

Graphical abstract: Construction of soft porous crystal with silole derivative: strategy of framework design, multiple=A soft porous crystal which changes its fluorescence in response to mechanical grinding and heat has been developed by scientists in China. 

Applying mechanical force changes the organic crystal’s fluorescence from yellow through to cherry red. Heating the crystal reverses this. The team say this mechanofluorochromism is caused by the crystal going through multiple structural transformations.

Read the full paper for free until 5th December:

Construction of soft porous crystal with silole derivative: strategy of framework design, multiple structural transformability and mechanofluorochromism: J. Mei, J. Wang, A. Qin, H. Zhao, W. Yuan, Z. Zhao, H. H. Y. Sung, C. Deng, S. Zhang, I. D. Williams, J. Z. Sun and B. Z. Tang, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1JM12673C

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2011 Le Prix La Recherche award: Chemistry Section

Congratulations to Azzedine Bousseksou and co-workers for winning the 2011 Le Prix La Recherche award (Chemistry Section) for their research on ‘bistable fluorescent nanoparticles’.

 Photograph of the Le Prix La Recherche award ceremony

The full winning team was: A.  Bousseksou, L.  Salmon, G.  Molnár, L. Rechignat, W.nicolazzi, T. Mahfoud, C. Quintero, A. Akou, S. Bedoui, I.  Goralsky, H. Shepherd, M. Lopes, MT Carayon, K.  Abdulkader, G.felix, A. Routarou, F. Dang.

An important part of the team’s research on bistable fluorescent nanoparticles was published in Journal of Materials Chemistry in 2010. You can read the paper here:

A novel approach for fluorescent thermometry and thermal imaging purposes using spin crossover nanoparticles: Lionel Salmon, Gábor Molnár, Djelali Zitouni, Carlos Quintero, Christian Bergaud, Jean-Claude Micheau and Azzedine Bousseksou, J. Mater. Chem., 2010, 20, 5499-5503.

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Hot Communication: Germanium nanocrystal doped inverse crystalline silicon opal

A hybrid photonic crystal made from an inverse crystalline silicon opal doped with germanium nanocrystals has been created by scientists in Japan and Canada. This is the first demonstration of ncGe doped into the photonic lattice of i-cSi-o. 

The team behind the research say the synergistic effects of i-ncGe-cSi-o materials could find use of in optoelectronic and photovoltaic applications.

  Graphical abstract: Germanium nanocrystal doped inverse crystalline silicon opal

Interested to know more? Read the full article for free until 30th November: Makoto Seino, Eric J. Henderson, Daniel P. Puzzo, Naoki Kadota and Geoffrey A. Ozin, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 15895-15898

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Hot Article: Scanning electrochemical microscopy as an etching tool for ITO patterning

A one-step process for mask-free wet etching of hard and flexible Indium Tin Oxide substrates at the micron scale has been developed by scientists in France. The process is quick and provides an inexpensive way to create patterns with micrometre-size insulating areas without altering the electrical and optical properties of the entire substrate the team say.

 Graphical abstract: Scanning electrochemical microscopy as an etching tool for ITO patterning

The method developed by Julienne Charlier and co-workers uses the probe of a scanning electrochemical microscope to generate a micrometric source of oxidizing agents in an aqueous acid solution. This electrochemical wet-lithographic process preserves the electrical and optical properties of the un-etched part of the remaining ITO film.

 

Read the article for free until 29th November:

Scanning electrochemical microscopy as an etching tool for ITO patterning: Federico Grisotto, Roamin Métayé, Bruno Jousselme, Bernard Geffroy, Serge Palacin and Julienne Charlier, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 15962-15968

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Poster prize at Recent Appointees in Materials Science

Congratulations to Dr Paul Roach for winning a Journal of Materials Chemistry poster prize at Recent Appointees in Materials Science.

 Folashade Kuforiji, left and Paul Roach, right

Folashade Kuforiji (left) and Paul Roach (right)

 

The title of Dr Roach’s winning poster was: Directing Biological Response through Material Properties

Dr Paul Roach is a Lecturer in Biomedical & Cell Engineering at Institute for Science and Technology in Medicine, Keele University, UK. Recent Appointees in Materials Science was held 14th – 16th September in Bristol, UK.

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Hot Paper: Optical and electrical properties of efficiency enhanced polymer solar cells with Au nanoparticles in a PEDOT–PSS layer

Graphical abstract: Optical and electrical properties of efficiency enhanced polymer solar cells with Au nanoparticles in a PEDOT–PSS layerChinese scientists have investigated the optical and electronic contributions to efficiency improvements in polymer solar cells with Au nanoparticles. 

The absorption enhancement due to incorporation of Au NPs is insignificant and provides only a minor contribution to power conversion efficiency improvement. This is due to the lateral distribution feature of the strong near-field of plasmonic resonance around the metallic NPs. The results should also apply to other metallic NPs such as Ag and Pt included in organic thin film solar cells.

The team say that that it is necessary to account for near-field physics in order to provide a full picture for the effective optical design of photovoltaics. (J. Mater. Chem., 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1JM12820E)

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Supramolecular chirality in self-assembled nanofibers triggered by environmental change

Graphical abstract: Induction of supramolecular chirality in self-assembled nanofibers triggered by environmental changeSelf-assembled nanofibers that respond to external stimuli have been created by scientists at Seoul National University, South Korea.

The nanofibers undergo a reversible chiral–nonchiral transition triggered by heating or changes in solvent polarity. The supramolecular chirality of the nanofibers is caused by a conformational change of hydrophobic aromatic rods and reduction in the hydrodynamic volume of the ethylene oxide chains. Read the article for free until 21st November:

Zhegang Huang, Seong-Kyun Kang and Myongsoo Lee, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1JM12683K

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