Nanoscale Issue 10 of 2012 out now!

The latest issue of Nanoscale is now online. You can read the full issue here:
OFC_10

The outside front cover features an Article on Electroplated porous polypyrrole nanostructures patterned by colloidal lithography for drug-delivery applications by J. Pokki, O. Ergeneman, K. M. Sivaraman, B. Özkale, M. A. Zeeshan, T. Lühmann, B. J. Nelson and S. Pané.

Controlled reversible debundling of single-walled carbon nanotubes by photo-switchable dendritic surfactants is the Communication highlighted on the inside front cover by Christian Kördel, Antonio Setaro, Pascal Bluemmel, Chris S. Popeney, Stephanie Reich and Rainer Haag.
IFC_10

 

 Issue 10 also contains the following Feature Articles:

Fancy submitting an article to Nanoscale? Then why not submit to us today!

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Nanoscale welcomes new Associate Editor Xiao Cheng Zeng

Photograph of Professor Xiao Cheng ZengNanoscale is delighted to announce that Professor Xiao Cheng Zeng has been appointed as an Associate Editor for the journal. Prof. Zeng is the Ameritas Distinguished University Professor of Chemistry at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, USA. He received his bachelor’s degree in Physics from Peking University in 1984 and his Ph.D. from Ohio State University in 1989. He pursued his postdoctoral research in physical chemistry at the University of Chicago and UCLA from 1989 to 1993.

His research interests include computational and theoretical study of liquids (water in particular), confined fluids, two-phase interfaces, and nanoclusters, as well as nanocatalysts and computer-aided design and study of nanostructured materials.

Read Professor Zeng’s recent articles in Nanoscale:

Investigating structural evolution of thiolate protected gold clusters from the first-principles
Yong Pei and Xiao Cheng Zeng
Nanoscale, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30685A

Edge-decorated graphene nanoribbons by scandium as hydrogen storage media
Menghao Wu, Yi Gao, Zhenyu Zhang and Xiao Cheng Zeng
Nanoscale
, 2012, 4, 915-920, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR11257D

Mn monolayer modified Rh for syngas-to-ethanol conversion: a first-principles study
Fengyu Li, De-en Jiang, Xiao Cheng Zeng and Zhongfang Chen
Nanoscale
, 2012, 4, 1123-1129, DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11121C

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Top 10 most-read Nanoscale articles in March

This month sees the following articles in Nanoscale that are in the top ten most accessed for March:

3D branched nanowire heterojunction photoelectrodes for high-efficiency solar water splitting and H2 generation
Ke Sun, Yi Jing, Chun Li, Xiaofeng Zhang, Ryan Aguinaldo, Alireza Kargar, Kristian Madsen, Khaleda Banu, Yuchun Zhou, Yoshio Bando, Zhaowei Liu and Deli Wang
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 1515-1521
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR11952H

Gold nanoparticles: preparation, properties, and applications in bionanotechnology
Yi-Cheun Yeh, Brian Creran and Vincent M. Rotello
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 1871-1880 
DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11188D 

One-step seeded growth of Au nanoparticles with widely tunable sizes 
Chuanbo Gao, John Vuong, Qiao Zhang, Yiding Liu and Yadong Yin
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 2875-2878
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30300K 

Nanostructured metal oxide-based materials as advanced anodes for lithium-ion batteries 
Hao Bin Wu, Jun Song Chen, Huey Hoon Hng and Xiong Wen (David) Lou
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 2526-2542 
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR11966H 

Graphene: nanoscale processing and recent applications 
László P. Biró, Péter Nemes-Incze and Philippe Lambin  
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 1824-1839
DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11067E 

Graphene edges: a review of their fabrication and characterization
Xiaoting Jia, Jessica Campos-Delgado, Mauricio Terrones, Vincent Meunier and Mildred S. Dresselhaus
Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 86-95
DOI: 10.1039/C0NR00600A 

Molding the flow of light on the nanoscale: from vortex nanogears to phase-operated plasmonic machinery
Svetlana V. Boriskina and Björn M. Reinhard
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 76-90
DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11406A 

Graphene-based composite materials beneficial to wound healing 
Bingan Lu, Ting Li, Haitao Zhao, Xiaodong Li, Caitian Gao, Shengxiang Zhang and Erqing Xie
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 2978-2982
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR11958G

Synthesis of superparamagnetic Fe3O4/PMMA/SiO2 nanorattles with periodic mesoporous shell for lysozyme adsorption
Fang Lan, Hao Hu, Wen Jiang, Kexia Liu, Xiaobo Zeng, Yao Wu and Zhongwei Gu
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 2264-2267 
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR12125E 

Recent progress on metal core@semiconductor shell nanocomposites as a promising type of photocatalyst
Nan Zhang, Siqi Liu and Yi-Jun Xu
Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 2227-2238
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR00009A 

Why not take a look at the articles today and blog your thoughts and comments below.

Fancy submitting an article to Nanoscale? Then why not submit to us today!

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Lanthanide-doped nanocrystals for bioapplications

Nanoscale ‘HOT’ ArticleLanthanide-doped KLaF4 nanocrystals

Xueyuan Chen and co-workers have synthesised and characterised a variety of water soluble lanthanide-doped KLaF4 luminescent nanocrystals.

Doping with Er3+/Yb3+, Ho3+/Yb3+ or Tm3+/Yb3+ gave upconversion (UC) phosphors, whereas doping with Ce3+/Tb3+ or Eu3+ gave downconversion (DC) phosphors.

 

 

The authors believe that these nanocrystal phosphors have potential for use in bioassays, DNA hybridisation, and bio-imaging.

 

 

Read the Nanoscale Article today:

Controlled synthesis and optical spectroscopy of lanthanide-doped KLaF4 nanocrystals
Rui Liu, Datao Tu, Yongsheng Liu, Haomiao Zhu, Renfu Li, Wei Zheng, En Ma and Xueyuan Chen

Nanoscale
, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30794D

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Small is beautiful

Fabrizio Gelain and co-workers have developed a biocompatible scaffold which is capable of encouraging the regeneration of neural precursor cells derived from neural stem cell in mice. The regeneration of nerve tissue after spinal injury is important but difficult to achieve. The groups reports a promising strategy for neural cell regeneration and they suggest that the approach may have wider applications in other areas of tissue engineering.

One of the stunning images of the mouse neurons they studied has been selected to feature in Chemistry World‘s Chemistry through the lens feature.

bIII-Tubulin positive murine neurons

Zeiss Apotome microscopy showing a highly organised network of beta-tubulin positive (green) murine neurons, GFAP (red) astrocytes and nuclei marked with DAPI (blue).

Read this exciting research paper in full today:

New bioactive motifs and their use in functionalized self-assembling peptides for NSC differentiation and neural tissue engineering
F. Gelain , D. Cigognini , A. Caprini , D. Silva , B. Colleoni , M. Donegá , S. Antonini , B. E. Cohen and A. Vescovi
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30220A

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Silver boosted fungi for water purification

Water purifying fungi have had a silver-coloured boost

By adding silver nanoparticles to the outside of white rot fungus, scientists have enhanced its natural ability to degrade water pollution – the silver acts as an antibacterial and the fungi remove heavy metals and pollutants from the water.

The scientists also package the super silver rot inside filters to demonstrate how the technology could be used for efficient, low cost water treatment.

Read the Nanoscale article:
Selected Region Functionalized Fungi with Magnetic Targeting Properties and Versatile Purification Capabilities
X Wang et al, Nanoscale, 2012
DOI: 10.1039/c2nr30766a

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Nanoscale Best Speaker Prize Winners

We are thrilled to announce the winners of the Nanoscale Best Speaker Prize at the “China-Singapore Young Chemist Forum”: Dr. Yuangang Zheng (Institute of Materials Research and Engineering, Singapore) and Prof. Hailin Peng (Peking University, China).

Nanoscale: Best Speaker Prize Winners

Nanoscale Best Speaker Prize winners at China-Singapore Young Chemist Forum

The Prizes were presented by the Chairs of the two Forums, Prof. Hua Zhang (Singapore) and Prof. Haoli Zhang (China), and were part of the 28th Chinese Chemical Society Congress which was held at Chengdu, China from the 13-16 April 2012.

Nanoscale will be awarding further Prizes over the summer so watch this space!

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Two in one technique for biological imaging

A UK based team has combined two methods into a new technique to investigate cell-substrate interactions in biomedical research.

The new technique, correlative light-ion microscopy (CLIM), combines both ion and fluorescence microscopy to obtain topographical and biochemical information for the same area of a sample.

The idea for the technique came to Molly Stevens and her colleagues at Imperial College London, when they observed unknown structures while conducting characterisation tests on human tissue samples. ‘We realised that there was no simple and efficient method to correlate structural and biochemical information at the micro and nanoscale. Therefore, the only way forward was to ingeniously combine our available technology and expertise in order to develop a new imaging method,’ she says.

Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), which provides structural information, normally requires the sample to be dried and coated with a protective layer, while fluorescence microscopy – used to obtain biochemical information – usually needs the sample to be hydrated. The two techniques would appear to be mutually exclusive, or at the very least time consuming to correlate if run separately.

Both SIM (left) and fluorescence (right) microscopies can be performed on the same sample

Both SIM (left) and fluorescence (right) microscopies can be performed on the same sample

The new method works because instead of SEM, scanning ion microscopy (SIM) is used. This involves a beam of gallium ions instead of electrons, which does not interfere with the fluorescence signal, a problem with traditional SEM. Non-contradictory sample preparation also means that both tests can be run on the same sample.

‘I believe that the developed approach is a major breakthrough in the field as it generates new and useful information that is otherwise difficult to obtain,’ comments Ali Khademhosseini, from Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, US, who studies micro and nanoscale technologies to control cellular behaviour. ‘I anticipate its widespread use in many biological applications where both SEM and fluorescence are needed.’

Stevens believes the work can be helpful across many fields including biotechnology, biomaterials and cell biology, particularly when looking at in situ cell interactions. ‘Considering that fluorescence microscopes can be found in virtually any laboratory and scanning ion microscopes are more and more common, CLIM may well find very wide applicability in biomedical laboratories,’ she says.

Correlative light-ion microscopy for biological applications
Sergio Bertazzo, Thomas von Erlach, Silvia Goldoni, Pelin L Çandarlıoğlu and Molly M Stevens
DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30431G

Read the original article at Chemistry World

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Noisy graphene devices

Following on from their discovery of graphene “speakers”, scientists in China have done more detailed study of the amplitude and frequency of the sound at different distances and angles, and the temperature dependence of the sound frequency. The authors are optimistic about the applications of these devices in  multimedia and consumer electronics as well as biological and medical devices.

Read the full details of their exciting work:

Static behavior of graphene-based sound-emitting device
He Tian, Dan Xie, Yi Yang, Tian-Ling Ren, Yu-Feng Wang, Chang-Jian Zhou, Ping-Gang Peng, Li-Gang Wang and Li-Tian Liu
Nanoscale, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR30417A

You may also be interested in the authors’ original communication:

Single-layer graphene sound-emitting devices: experiments and modeling
He Tian, Dan Xie, Yi Yang, Tian-Ling Ren, Yu-Feng Wang, Chang-Jian Zhou, Ping-Gang Peng, Li-Gang Wang and Li-Tian Liu
Nanoscale, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2NR11572G

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Nanoscale Issue 9 of 2012 out now!

The latest issue of Nanoscale is now online. You can read the full issue here:
OFC_09

The outside front cover is a Feature Article titled: Far-field photostable optical nanoscopy (PHOTON) for real-time super-resolution single-molecular imaging of signaling pathways of single live cells by Tao Huang, Lauren M. Browning and Xiao-Hong Nancy Xu.

IFC_09

The Communication featured on the inside front cover is: A zwitterion-DNA coating stabilizes nanoparticles against Mg2+ driven aggregation enabling attachment to DNA nanoassemblies by Thilak Kumara Mudalige, Oleg Gang and William B. Sherman.

 

 Issue 9 contains the following Review:

Also of interest are the below Feature Articles:

Fancy submitting an article to Nanoscale? Then why not submit to us today!

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