Shape memory polymer hosts functional nanoparticles: Materials Horizons article in Chemistry World

Scientists in China have developed a polymer scaffold for functional nanoparticles that can be folded and mangled but will reform into its original shape if it is placed in water.

Materials often exhibit very different properties when shrunk down to the nanoscale. Exciting new devices can be designed when nanoscale characteristics are brought together in synergy with macroscale materials, but bespoke production processes are often needed for each new nano-composite material.

Shu-Hong Yu and colleagues at the University of Science and Technology of China have developed a simple shape memory polymer scaffold from chitosan that can be used as a host for a wide range of different functional nanoparticles, combining benefits from the macro- and nanoscale.

 
Read the full article by Emily Skinner in Chemistry World
 
A shape-memory scaffold for macroscale assembly of functional nanoscale building blocks
Huai-Ling Gao, Yang Lu, Li-Bo Mao, Duo An, Liang Xu, Jun-Tong Gu, Fei Long and Shu-Hong Yu  
Mater. Horiz., 2014, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C3MH00040K
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Better separations with more permeable membranes: Materials Horizons article in Chemistry World

Conducting polymer nanoparticles enhance membrane permeability and but repel protein molecules

There is usually a trade-off between selectivity and liquid permeability when making an ultrafiltration membrane but new research from scientists in the US suggests this doesn’t have to be the case.

Membrane technology is the preferred approach to many industrial, environmental, analytical and biomedical separations. Drinking water purification, wastewater treatment, haemodialysis and fuel cells are just a few examples of situations where membranes are central to filtration processes.

When designing a membrane to filter proteins from a liquid the aim is to increase the permeability of the membrane and to reduce the energy and time needed to achieve separation without forfeiting the selectivity of the membrane. Another goal is to eliminate the need to clean or replace the membrane by finding a way to prevent proteins from blocking the membrane’s pores and hindering its permeability.

Read the full article by William Bergius in Chemistry World
 
Highly dispersible polypyrrole nanospheres for advanced nanocomposite ultrafiltration membranes
Yaozu Liao, Thomas P. Farrell, Gregory R. Guillen, Minghua Li, James A. T. Temple, Xin-Gui Li, Eric M. V. Hoek and Richard B. Kaner  
Mater. Horiz., 2014, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C3MH00049D
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The first advance articles for Materials Horizons have been published!

All articles published in Materials Horizons benefit from wide exposure, with free access upon registration to all content published during 2014 and 2015

Chemotaxis of Catalytic Silica-Manganese Oxide “Matchstick” Particles
Adam R. Morgan, Alan B. Dawson, Holly S. Mckenzie, Thomas S. Skelhon, Richard Beanland, Henry P. W. Franks and Stefan A. F. Bon

Particles that can undergo directed self-propulsion are desirable for colloidal cargo delivery and self-assembly. This paper describes the synthesis of silica–manganese oxide “matchstick” colloids that undergo catalytic self-propulsion by consumption of hydrogen peroxide. Chemotaxis is observed when particles are placed in a fuel gradient.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00003f, Advance Article

 
 

Highly dispersible polypyrrole nanospheres for advanced nanocomposite ultrafiltration membranes
Yaozu Liao, Thomas P. Farrell, Gregory R. Guillen, Minghua Li, James A. T. Temple, Xin-Gui Li, Eric M. V. Hoek and Richard B. Kaner

In this paper, highly dispersible polypyrrole nanospheres were synthesized and used to produce polysulfone nanocomposite ultrafiltration membranes by a non-solvent induced phase separation process. The composite networks formed between polypyrrole nanospheres and polysulfone nanocomposites lead to higher porosity, hydrophilicity, surface charge, thermal stability, and water permeability, but slightly lower protein rejection.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00049d, Advance Article

  
 
 
 
 


 

Production of heavily n- and p-doped CVD graphene with solution- processed redox-active metal-organic species
Sergio A. Paniagua, Jose Baltazar, Hossein Sojoudi, Swagat K. Mohapatra, Siyuan Zhang, Clifford L. Henderson, Samuel Graham, Stephen Barlow and Seth R. Marder

In this paper, CVD graphene has been n- and p-doped using redox-active, solution processed metal–organic complexes. Electrical measurements, photoemission spectroscopies, and Raman spectroscopy were used to characterise the doped films and give insights into the changes.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00035d, Advance Article

 
 
  
 

Vesicle budding from polymersomes templated by microfluidically prepared double emulsions
Julian Thiele, Venkatachalam Chokkalingam, Shaohua Ma, Daniela A. Wilson and Wilhelm T. S. Huck

Many approaches to mimic and understand the dynamics of vesicle budding lack precise control over vesicle membrane properties or require external stimuli to induce budding. This paper reports the use of copolymer loaded double-emulsion droplets to precisely control size, size distribution, composition and morphology of giant polymersomes. By tuning the copolymer concentration in the polymersome membrane, the authors show how they identify conditions under which vesicles spontaneously bud from the polymersome surface. These findings have important implications for the design of copolymer membranes and contribute to the understanding of polymersome formation from double emulsions.

Mater. Horiz., 2014, DOI: 10.1039/c3mh00043e, Advance Article

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Keep up to date with news from Materials Horizons

Materials Horizons will be publishing its first Advance Articles very soon! Don’t forget there’s a variety of ways to keep up with the latest news about the journal.

For the latest news you can:

If you want to be amongst the first people to read the first Materials Horizons articles online, you can sign up for the Materials Horizons RSS feed or the table of contents e-Alert.

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Editorial by the Editor and Chair of the Editorial Board

Materials Horizons: A Personal Perspective

Welcome to Materials Horizons, a new materials journal published by the Royal Society of Chemistry. In this Editorial we hope to provide some insight in to the ideas that led to the creation of the journal, a vision of what it could be, and what we expect will distinguish it from other journals. It is worth stating explicitly at the outset that while the Royal Society of Chemistry is a society with the mission to advance excellence in the chemical sciences, the launch of Materials Horizons is not an attempt to create a “chemo-centric” journal. Rather, the Royal Society of Chemistry’s decision to create Materials Horizons was made with a keen recognition that materials research is intrinsically highly multi-disciplinary, and having an extremely high quality society-based journal that embraces this multi-disciplinary nature can be of significant value to our community.

Below we outline some of the principles and values that will drive editorial policy, and describe what we hope the journal will be. Armed with such knowledge, we hope that researchers within the community will develop an understanding and appreciation of the editorial decisions that will lead to acceptance and rejection of papers, and to decisions about which papers may not be sent out for peer review as they don’t fit the goals of the journal (in some such cases, they can be rapidly forwarded to another journal in the Royal Society of Chemistry portfolio for further consideration). Scientific Editors, who are all active researchers in the field, will work closely with the Editorial team to ensure articles meet the stringent criteria required for publication in the journal.

  • Materials Horizons is committed to having an editorial process that is fair, transparent and free of bias, while preserving the integrity of the anonymity of the peer review process.

  • Materials Horizons will maintain the highest scientific standards in terms of ensuring the materials within the journal are well characterized, that all conclusions are rigorously supported by data that has been collected and whose reproducibility and degree of error have been demonstrated.

  • Materials Horizons seeks to strongly emphasize first reports of observations that provide new conceptual insights in the science of materials. In this regard, the scope of Materials Horizons broadly covers all aspects of the field of materials, but the journal is very much focused on the conceptual advances, more than technological improvements. Thus, submissions that report new records for the performance of materials without some significant paradigm shift are not likely to be reviewed, unless the advance in properties on its own is sufficiently great to dramatically shift the field.

  • Materials Horizons seeks to publish very concise papers, but recognizes that our field is intrinsically complex and multidisciplinary. For this reason our Communication guidelines call for papers to be 3 pages or less, however it is not our policy that papers must be 3 pages or less. Authors are expected to be concise and to utilize the electronic supplementary information section efficiently, but there is latitude within the editorial policy for longer Communications to be published as warranted.

  • A certain amount of speculation will be considered acceptable within papers provided that it is clearly stated as such, distinguished from conclusions based upon data, and that it does not make over-reaching statements about the scientific and technological implications of the work. Put more simply, Materials Horizons seeks to minimize hype.

  • The goal of the journal is to maximize its impact, which is distinct from its impact factor. In maximizing impact, we fully expect Materials Horizons will have a high impact factor, but we recognize that historically some of the most important work in science requires time to be fully absorbed and appreciated by the community, and this does not always happen in 24 months or less. Thus we encourage people to challenge the journal with papers that are “ahead of their time”.

Regardless of whether papers are submitted from academic, industrial or government laboratories, authors are strongly encouraged to think about the papers being a vehicle to educate and not simply report information to the community. Thus, we discourage conclusion sections which are simply reiterations of the key results, and require that the conclusions are used rather to detail the insights derived from the work. In a similar manner, Materials Horizons has both Mini-Reviews and Reviews, the guidelines for which can be found on the journal website. Both types of Materials Horizons reviews mean to provide insightful analysis of the work described and not merely to serve as a repository for information gathered from many places. Specifically, we seek to avoid papers that merely provide information as opposed to insight; authors are encouraged to think clearly about the “take home messages” of their papers.

In addition to Communications, Mini-Reviews and Reviews, Materials Horizons will have “Focus Articles”. These articles will largely take the form of editorials and concept pieces (typically invited), to explain or clarify topics in materials. In this regard, our goal is for Materials Horizons to be an educational resource for researchers of all levels.

We hope that we have presented a clear vision what we are trying to create with the launch of Materials Horizons. Ultimately the success and impact of this journal lie in the hands of you the authors, the readers and the reviewers. The editorial team at Materials Horizons is fully committed to make Materials Horizons the premier research and educational journal for this exciting discipline, and we look forward to working with you, and listening to you to make this vision a reality.

Seth & Liz

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Announcing new appointments to the Materials Horizons Advisory Board

We are delighted to announce the new appointments to the Materials Horizons Advisory Board!

Yoshio Bando
National Institute for Materials Science, Japan
Zhenan Bao
Stanford University, USA
Mischa Bonn
Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany
Jean-Luc Brédas
Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Jillian Buriak
University of Alberta, Canada
Rachel Caruso
University of Melbourne, Austrailia
Jinwoo Cheon
Yonsei University, South Korea
Makoto Fujita
University of Tokyo, Japan
Jurriaan Huskens
University of Twente, Netherlands
Graham Hutchings
Cardiff University, UK
Taeghwan Hyeon
Seoul National University, South Korea
René Janssen
Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
Antoine Kahn
Princeton University, USA
Richard Kaner
University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Frederik Krebs
Risø DTU National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Denmark
Kian Ping Loh
National University of Singapore, Singapore
Lynn Yueh Lin Loo
Princeton University, USA
HongYee Low
Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore
Richard Martel
University of Montreal, Canada
Bert Meijer
Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
Chad Mirkin
Northwestern University, USA
Catherine Murphy
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA
Markus Niederberger
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Switzerland
Teri Odom
Northwestern University, USA
Marie-Paule Pileni
Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University, France
John A. Rogers
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA
Gregory D. Scholes
University of Toronto, Canada
Nava Setter
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland
Takao Someya
University of Tokyo, Japan
Shu Wang
Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
David Weitz
Harvard University, USA
Yi Xie
University of Science and Technology of China, China
Peidong Yang
University of California, Berkeley, USA
Jackie Ying
Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, Singapore,
Shu-Hong Yu
University of Science and Technology of China, China

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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Introducing Materials Horizons Editorial Board member Markus Antonietti

Markus Antonietti is the Director for Colloid Chemistry at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces and a Professor at the University of Potsdam.

He is the author of around 520 research papers and has received widespread recognition for his work in polymer chemistry. His awards include the Gerhard-Hess prize of the German Science Foundation (1990), the Goldschmidt-Elhuyar-Award of the Real Sociedad Espanola de Quimica (2003) and the Grignard-Wittig Award of the French Chemical Society (2011). In 2009, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Macro Group UK for lifetime achievement.

Professor Antonietti is a member of the Berlin Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. He has received honorary degrees from Clarkson University in New York and the University of Stockholm. In 2011, he spent time as a Guest Professor at Zheijand University, Fuzhou University and the University of Science and Technology of China.

Professor Antonietti’s research interests are varied, extending from polymers, through porous materials, to biomimetic principles in material science. His current focus lies in questions of sustainability and the rediscovery of “simplicity” in science.

Besides being an enthusiastic scientist, Markus plays in a rock band and enjoys experimental cooking with family and friends.

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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Introducing Materials Horizons Editorial Board member C.N.R. Rao

C.N.R. Rao is the National Research Professor, Honorary President and Linus Pauling Research Professor at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research. He is also an Honorary Professor at the Indian Institute of Science. Professor Rao studied for his M.Sc. degree at Banaras University before receiving his Ph.D. from Purdue University and D.Sc. from the University of Mysore. He is the author of over 1400 research papers and 45 books.

Professor Rao has received numerous honours for his research in materials and solid state chemistry. Among the most recent are the Nikkei Asia Prize for Science, Technology and Innovation (2008), the Royal Society Royal Medal (2009) and the German Chemical Society August-Wilhelm-von-Hoffmann Medal (2010). He received the Ernesto Illy Trieste Science Prize for materials research in 2011 and was Albert Einstein Professor of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2012.

Professor Rao is the Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Council to the Prime Minister, immediate past President of The Academy of Sciences for the Developing World (TWAS) and Member of the Atomic Energy Commission of India. He is Founder-President of both the Chemical Research Society of India and the Materials Research Society of India.

Follow the latest journal news on Twitter @MaterHoriz or go to our Facebook page.

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Introducing Seth Marder, Editorial Board Chair of Materials Horizons

Seth R. Marder obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1985.  After postdoctoral research at the University of Oxford, and a National Research Council Resident Research Assoc. at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) California Institute of Technology (Caltech), he became a member of the Technical Staff at the JPL.  In 1998, he moved to the University of Arizona where he was a Professor of Chemistry and Optical Sciences.  In 2003, he joined the Georgia Institute of Technology where he is currently a Regents’ Professor of Chemistry and a Professor of Materials Science and Engineering (courtesy).  He was appointed Georgia Power Chair in Energy Efficiency in January 2010.

Dr. Marder was a founding director of the Center for Organic Photonics and Electronics and is the Co-Director of the NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) at Georgia Tech.  He is a recipient of the American Chemical Society (ACS) Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award, and Fellow of the Optical Society of America, Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE), American Physical Society, Royal Society of Chemistry, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.  His research interests are in the development of materials for nonlinear optics, applications of organic dyes for photonic, display, electronic and medical applications, and organometallic chemistry.

Find out what Seth thinks Materials Horizons will bring to the materials community by watching this short video:

(the video can also be viewed here: http://bit.ly/Xs93JH)

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Materials Horizons now open for submissions!

Submit your exceptional materials science to the journal today

Do you have an exceptional materials research discovery to report? One that deserves rapid publication in a high impact and internationally visible journal?

Look no further: Materials Horizons is now open for submissions!

Materials HorizonsMaterials Horizons will be:

  • High impact – publishing only the most novel and exciting advances
  • A leader – the Editorial Board, led by Seth Marder (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA), will drive scientific development, with Scientific Editors helping to maintain scientific standards
  • Interdisciplinary – showcasing the best research at the cutting-edge interface of materials science with chemistry, physics, biology and engineering
  • Internationally visible free access to all content published during 2014 and 2015, guaranteeing maximum exposure
  • Rapid – speedy reviewing and publication

And unlike some other journals, Materials Horizons won’t charge you for using colour to enhance the scientific understanding of your figures.

So don’t delay – submit your manuscripts for the chance to be included in the high profile first issue.

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