Author Archive

This week’s hot papers – Read for free until October 26th

Ion electrodiffusion governs silk electrogelation

The formation of biocompatible medical adhesives based on silk hydrogels can be controlled by electric fields.  The elongation of the silk fibres is dependent on factors such as the value of the applied DC current, pH and silk fibroin concentration.  In this hot paper, Kaplan and co-workers describe a model which describes the transition of silk fibroin solution to a gel sate whereby the silk elongation can be mediated by a local change of the pH. The model was confirmed experimentally suggesting it could be used to calculate the amount of current needed for desired gel state growth under various conditions.

(Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 6897-6905 )






Interfacial viscoelasticity controls buckling, wrinkling and arrest in emulsion drops undergoing mass transfer

Oil droplets in emulsions are widely used for foods, consumer products and pharmaceutical applications. The mass transfer and ripening processes in emulsions with complex, non-Newtonian interfaces is little studied. In this hot paper, Erni and co-workers present a detailed study of the effect of interfacial rheological properties on compositional ripening in emulsions. The results are expected to have applications in the design and engineering of delivery systems in pharmaceuticals, phytochemicals, and flavour or fragrance compounds.

(Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 6958-6967)

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Soft Matter paper appears in BBC News story – Read for free until October 26th!

A Soft Matter paper by groups from the Centre of Molecular Materials for Photonics and Electronics and the Inkjet Research Centre at the University of Camrbidge has appeared in a BBC News story. The paper describes the inkjet printing of liquid crystals on to a wet, solution-based polymer with precise control over droplet size.

Printed photonic arrays from self-organized chiral nematic liquid crystals
D. J. Gardiner, W.-K. Hsiao, S. M. Morris, P. J. W. Hands, T. D. Wilkinson, I. M. Hutchings and H. J. Coles, Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 9977.

The BBC news story can be found here.

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Interaction of nano-objects with lipid membranes themed collection

The Soft Matter themed collection on ‘Interaction of nano-objects with lipid membranes’ has been published.  The themed collection covers a multidisciplinary topic which involves the interaction of nano-objects such as proteins, polymer chains and peptides with lipid membranes.

Find the full collection description by Guest Editor Vladimir Baulin (Universitat Rovira, Spain) and the rest of the collection here.

The themed collection contains the following Review article:

Beyond the lipid-bilayer: interaction of polymers and nanoparticles with membranes

Matthias Schulz, Adekunle Olubummo and Wolfgang H. Binder

Soft Matter, 2012,8, 4849-4864

And the front cover paper of Soft Matter Volume 8, Number 12:

Hydrophobic droplets in amphiphilic bilayers: a coarse-grained mean-field theory study

Martin J. Greenall and Carlos M. Marques

Soft Matter, 2012,8, 3308-3314


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Soft Matter Poster Prize winners at PhysCell2012

Congratulations to the Soft Matter Poster Prize winners at Pierre-Gilles de Gennes school Physics of Cells: From Soft to Living Matter conference.

The three joint winners were Philipp Khuc Trong (University of Cambridge, UK), Callen Hyland (Yale University, USA) and Rabea Sandman (University of Goettingen, Germany).

From left to right: Philipp Khuc Trong, Callen Hyland and Rabea Sandman

Philipp Khuc Trong

Poster title: Coupling of active motion and advection shapes intracellular cargo transport

Callen Hyland

Poster title: Substrate-dependent traction force in regenerating neurons

Rabea Sandman

Poster title: Surface structure influences blood platelet behavior

The Pierre-Gilles de Gennes school Physics of Cells: From Soft to Living Matter was held 2nd – 4th September in Hyeres, France.

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Hot paper: Recovery from applied strain in interpenetrating polymer network hydrogels

Double network hydrogels are tough synthetic gels consisting of two-interpenetrating networks. The recoverability of double network hydrogels from loading and unloading is improved in this hot paper by synthesising hydrogels using an ionically cross-linked network and a covalently cross-linked network. The authors prepare hydrogels consisting of ionically cross-linked Gellan gum (a naturally occurring anionic polysaccharide) and covalently cross-linked poly(acrylamide). The new hydrogel shows improved mechanical properties and can almost completely recover from subsequent loading-unloading cycles with respect to the second compressive cycle.

(Soft Matter, 2012, DOI: 10.1039/C2SM26745D, Advanced Article). Read for free until October 12th.

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Soft Matter poster prize winners

Well done to Eric Appel (University of Camrbidge, UK), Kosai Al Khateb (University of Reading, UK) and Mellany Ramaekers (Technical University Eindhoven, Netherlands) for winning the Soft Matter poster prizes at the Polymeric and Self-Assembled Hydrogels 2012 conference held at King’s College London, UK. (more…)

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