Author Archive

Hot Article: Rheology on Toast

Researchers use peanut butter to draw analogies between colloidal glassy pastes and metallurgy. The Peanut Butternutty spread was shown to undergo plastic deformations – similar to ‘work hardening’ observed in the strengthening of metals.

Smooth peanut butter exhibited very slow dynamics and non-linear rheological properties after constant shear rate experiments.

Read more here: Romaric R. R. Vincent and Peter Schurtenberger, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01256D, Communication. Article FREE until 4 March, 2011 at Soft Matter.

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Hot Article: Pattern Formation in Belousov-Zhabotinsky Responsive Gels

The dependence of pattern formation in hydrogels undergoing the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction on the gel size and shape is presented in a recent Soft Matter paper for an upcoming themed issue on Active Soft Matter.

The authors use both experimental and simulation approaches to validate their own theoretical model on the chemomechanical coupling in responsive gels.

Patterin Formation in hydrogels

Read this Soft Matter article for free (until February 24, 2011) here, and watch out for other papers like this in the upcoming themed issue on Active Soft Matter.

Irene Chou Chen, Olga Kuksenok, Victor V. Yashin, Ryan M. Moslin, Anna C. Balazs and Krystyn J. Van Vliet, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01007C, Paper

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Hot Article: Supramolecular assembly of glycyrrhetinic acid conjugates form dimers that can host a guest molecule

In a recent communication, triterpenoids are used as scaffolds in supramolecular self-assembly and recognition. Conjugates of mSynthesis and Self-Assembly Properties of A Glycyrrhetinic Acid Conjugate Containing Uracil and 2,6-Diaminopyridine Unitsolecules based on glycyrrhetinic acid form dimers held together through 6-hydrogen bonding pairs. The supramolecular dimeric structure was able to recognise and encapsulate polar molecules in aprotic solvents through its suitably sized cavity.

This unique dimer may have the potential to encage molecules with medicinal activity, and thus be used as a novel biomaterial.
Read this Soft Matter article for free (until February 24, 2011) here.

Jun Hu, Jinrong Lu, Ruofan Li and Yong Ju, Soft Matter, 2011, (Advance Article), DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01392G, Communication

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Hot Article: Measuring the Mechanics of Red Blood Cells

The question of ‘active’ or ‘passive’ mechanisms for red blood cell flickering (or vibratory motion), currently under debate, is investigated in a recent publication.

Red blood cells (erythrocytes) are a useful model for understanding cell mechanics. Researchers at the University of Cambridge have recently examined the response of erythrocytes to external stress with the help of optical traps and high-speed video imaging.

Read this Soft Matter article for free until 15 Feb, 2011 here!

Young Zoon Yoon, Jurij Kotar, Aidan T. Brown and Pietro Cicuta, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01117G, (Advance Article).

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