Author Archive

Materials for Biosurfaces is now 20th March 2012

The submission deadline for the Materials for Biosurfaces themed issue has been extended by 1 month. The final submission deadline for contributions is now 20th March 2012.

The Materials for Biosurfaces themed issue will focus on the synthetic and physical chemistry of biosurfaces with a primary attention to polymer based surfaces and the role of surfaces in biomedical related applications such as biosensors. Materials of interest include polymer brushes, hydrogels, membranes and self-assembled monolayers. The role of surfaces in cell adhesion and cell-surface interactions is also a topic of this special issue. Professor Christopher K. Ober (Cornell University, USA), Dr. Christian Ohm (Cornell University, USA), Ms. Mary E. Welch (Cornell University, USA) are the guest editors of this themed issue.

Please contact the editorial office if you would like to discuss contributing an article.

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Hot Paper: Improved SERS properties with gold-modified silver nanorod arrays

Oblique-angle deposited Ag nanorod arrays provide good performance for SERS sensing; however, the instability of Ag surfaces can impede their use for real-world sensing applications. Modifying silver nanorod arrays with a Au-coating via a galvanic replacement reaction is one method of mitigating this problem. In this hot paper the morphology optical properties and structure of the Ag nanorod arrays are modified with Au-coating via a galvanic replacement reaction are studied. Read the article for free until 13th February:

 Graphical abstract: Gold-modified silver nanorod arrays: growth dynamics and improved SERS properties

Gold-modified silver nanorod arrays: growth dynamics and improved SERS properties: Chunyuan Song, Justin L. Abell, Yuping He, S. Hunyadi Murph, Yiping Cui and Yiping Zhao, J. Mater. Chem., 2012, 22, 1150-1159

To keep up-to-date with all the latest research, sign up for the journal’s e-alerts or RSS feeds or follow Journal of Materials Chemistry on Twitter.

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Hot Feature Article: Photoalignment of liquid crystals

In this hot Feature Article Oleg Yaroshchuk and Yuriy Reznikov discuss the basis and recent achievements of photoalignment of liquid crystals. They provide an update on the classification of photoaligned materials and exposure schemes, and they analyze the relationship between the molecular structure of the materials and characteristics of liquid crystal alignment. Read the article for free until 9th February (free registration required)

 Graphical abstract: Photoalignment of liquid crystals: basics and current trends

Photoalignment of liquid crystals: basics and current trends: Oleg Yaroshchuk and Yuriy Reznikov, J. Mater. Chem., 2012, 22, 286-300

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Hot Paper: Invisible photonic prints show their patterns when wet

Graphical abstract: Invisible photonic prints shown by waterScientists at Tongji University, Shanghai, China, have developed a method of creating patterns on photonic paper that are only visible when the paper is wet. The siloxane-containing photonic paper is fabricated by using lithography to create a contrast of crosslinking or degree of hydrophobization. When the invisible prints are soaked in water for several minutes, the small difference in reflection wavelength (λ) between the pattern and the background is significantly amplified due to their different swelling speeds, which leads to a visible image. The process is fully reversible and soaking and drying will repeat the cycle of showing and hiding the patterns.

Invisible photonic prints shown by water: Ruyang Xuan and Jianping Ge, J. Mater. Chem., 2012, 22, 367-372

This article was also featured in Chemistry World. The Chemistry World story is available here.

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Hot Article: Soft matter meets plasmonics – Broad band tuning of the plasmonic resonance of gold nanoparticles

Graphical abstract: Broad band tuning of the plasmonic resonance of gold nanoparticles hosted in self-organized soft materialsCombining metallic nanoparticles with host materials whose dielectric properties can be tuned by means of an external control is one route to create “active plasmonics”. In this hot article a soft-matter periodic structure made from a composite mixture of cholesteric liquid crystals and Au nanoparticles is reported. The cholesteric liquid crystals act as a “host fluid” whose refractive index can be varied in a broad range by using external electric fields and temperature variations. This has a strong influence on the position of the plasmonic absorption peak of the nanoparticles.

Broad band tuning of the plasmonic resonance of gold nanoparticles hosted in self-organized soft materials: Luciano De Sio, Roberto Caputo, Ugo Cataldi and Cesare Umeton, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 18967-18970

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Hot Article: Mitigating PEM degradation in fuel cells with nanoparticle additives

Membrane degradation is one of the most important factors limiting the lifetime of polymer electrolyte fuel cells. In this hot article researchers based in Spain and the US investigate whether adding freestanding and silica-supported metal (Pt, Pd, Ag, and Au) nanoparticles can help mitigate polymer electrolyte membrane degradation in an operating fuel cell. The metal nanoparticles to be added were chosen based on their catalytic activity and ability to scavenge free radicals. Interested to know more? Read the full article for free until 31st January (free registration required).

Graphical abstract: Degradation mitigation in PEM fuel cells using metal nanoparticle additives

Degradation mitigation in PEM fuel cells using metal nanoparticle additives: Panagiotis Trogadas, Javier Parrondo, Federico Mijangos and Vijay Ramani, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 19381-19388

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Congratulations to Tom White for winning a Journal of Materials Chemistry presentation prize

Congratulations to Tom White for winning a Journal of Materials Chemistry presentation prize at Nanostructured Surfaces.

His winning talk was titled “Development of Organic Spacer Layers for the Electronic Decoupling of Molecules from Metallic Substrates”.

 Photo of Philip Moriarty, Tom White, Christopher Baddeley

Left to right: Philip Moriarty, Tom White, Christopher Baddeley

Tom White is a PhD student at the Department of Chemistry, University of Warwick, UK, working in Giovanni Costantini’s research group. Nanostructured Surfaces was organised by the RSC Solid Surfaces Group and held in Burlington House, London, UK, on 9th December 2011.

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Hot Feature Article: Mimicking biomineralization using native and non-native proteins

Mimicking biomineralization offers a route for the formation of new materials and structures. In this Feature Article Alexander Böker and co-workers review the materials and processes inspired by synthetic biomineralization. They also explore the tools and bio-inspired systems for the development of new synthetic materials and compare the original biological function of the protein to its role in the non-natural process. Read the Feature Article for free until 16th Jan:

Synthetic inorganic materials by mimicking biomineralization processes using native and non-native protein functions: Alexander Schulz, Huihui Wang, Patrick van Rijn and Alexander Böker, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 18903-18918

 Graphical abstract: Synthetic inorganic materials by mimicking biomineralization processes using native and non-native protein functions

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Two Hot Papers on materials for white LEDs

Graphical abstract: Highly efficient single-layer white polymer light-emitting devices employing triphenylamine-based iridium dendritic complexes as orange emissive componentDendritic complexes for white polymer light-emitting diodes. Chinese scientists have fabricated single-layer white polymer light-emitting devices (WPLED) by double-doping sky-blue emitter iridium(III) bis(2-(4,6-difluorophenyl)-pyridinato-N,C2)picolinate (FIrpic) into orange iridium dendrimers. These WPLEDs achieve the maximum current/power/external quantum efficiencies of 37.0 cd A−1/19.4 lm W−1/18.5%, which are among the highest efficiencies for dual-color WPLEDs ever reported.  

Highly efficient single-layer white polymer light-emitting devices employing triphenylamine-based iridium dendritic complexes as orange emissive component: Minrong Zhu, Jianhua Zou, Sujun Hu, Chen’ge Li, Chuluo Yang, Hongbin Wu, Jingui Qin and Yong Cao, J. Mater. Chem., 2012, 22, 361-366

Graphical abstract: Stacking-induced white-light and blue-light phosphorescence from purely organic radical materialsStacking-induced phosphorescence from organic radical materials. A new class of organic phosphorescent materials have been developed by scientists at University of Science and Technology of China. Based on salts of an organic radical material, the phosphorescent complexes show stacking-induced white-light and blue-light phosphorescence. The team say that these materials could lead to new LEDs.

Stacking-induced white-light and blue-light phosphorescence from purely organic radical materials: Guo-Ping Yong, Yi-Man Zhang, Wen-Long She and Ying-Zhou Li, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 18520-18522

Read both of the papers for free until 12th January (free registration required).

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Hot Paper: Making soft robotics that react to infrared-light

Researchers at University of Science & Technology of China have made prototype robots from a soft actuator. The robots are capable of gripping objects or worm-like movement, and are controlled by infrared light. The material used to create the robot is ultrasensitive photothermal actuator made from large-area graphene with chitosan and polyethylene. Read the paper for free until 9th January.

Graphical abstract: Large-area graphene realizing ultrasensitive photothermal actuator with high transparency: new prototype robotic motions under infrared-light stimuli

Large-area graphene realizing ultrasensitive photothermal actuator with high transparency: new prototype robotic motions under infrared-light stimuli: Changzheng Wu, Jun Feng, Lele Peng, Yong Ni, Haiyi Liang, Linhui He and Yi Xie, J. Mater. Chem., 2011, 21, 18584-18591

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