Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Professor Marshall Stoneham

On Friday (18th February 2011), I received an email from the Institute of Physics (IOP). It informed me that the President of the IOP, Professor Marshall Stoneham FRS CPhys FInstP, had sadly passed away. Prof. Stoneham had a very successful career in academia, publishing and in industry. Most recently he worked at the London centre for Nanotechnology and University College London, where  he was the Emeritus Massey Professor of Physics

In December I attended a talk by Prof. Stoneham at the CMMP10 conference in Warwick. His talk was well attended and his style engaging. The talk titled ‘Where physics meets biology’, discussed (amongst other things)  how quantum mechanics could be used to explain how humans smell. His proposal was that receptors in the nose are actuated by electron tunnelling from a donor to an acceptor mediated by the odorant molecule.

Each odorant has its own vibrational frequency. When the vibrations of the odorant cause electrons in the nasal receptors to tunnel between energy states, a nerve signal is sent to the brain and the smell detected. Different vibrational frequencies are detected by different receptors. Since different smells have different frequencies, each odorant smells different. This model termed the ‘swipe card’ model allows receptors to ‘read’ an odorant molecule by detecting its vibrational spectrum along with matching its size and shape. “The shape must be good enough, but it is something else that carries the decisive information”. The results were published in Phys. Rev. Lett. doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.038101.

Prof. Stoneham was the author of over 500 papers and a number of books on a wide range of subjects from biology to quantum computing and from nuclear safety to self-organisation. He was the recipient of the Gutrine gold medal of the IOP in 2006 for his wide-ranging theoretical work on defects in solids and the Royal Society’s Zeneca prize in 1995. Marshall Stoneham will be greatly missed by the physics community.


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Designer foods

The way that we digest fat could be controlled by food design, providing potential health benefits, according to scientists from Australia.

Fat is an essential part of our diet, but too much of it can lead to problems such as heart disease and obesity. The digestion of fat is also involved in triggering the hormone signals that tell us whether or not we are full. Reducing fat intake in meals is often negated by overeating, so designing food that controls fat absorption is of great interest.

Micrographs showing structural changes occurring in the emulsion immediately after preparation (left), 30 minutes after incubation at pH 1.9 in simulated gastric fluid (middle) and 30 minutes after subsequent incubation at pH 6.8 in simulated intestinal fluid

Micrographs showing structural changes occurring in the emulsion immediately after preparation (left), 30 minutes after incubation at pH 1.9 in simulated gastric fluid (middle) and 30 minutes after subsequent incubation at pH 6.8 in simulated intestinal fluid

Researchers at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Food and Nutritional Sciences designed fat emulsions using different surfactants, including protein, phospholipids and common food additives, and monitored how their structures changed during simulated digestion. They also gave the emulsions in a drink form to healthy volunteers and monitored blood triglyceride levels, which give an indication of how the fat is being digested by the body.

To view the full Chemistry World article, please click here: Designer foods

Link to journal article

Impact of gastric structuring on the lipolysis of emulsified lipids
Matt Golding, Tim J. Wooster, Li Day, Mi Xu, Leif Lundin, Jennifer Keogh and Peter Clifton, Soft Matter, 2011
DOI: 10.1039/c0sm01227k

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The potential of microfluidics

From top to bottom: Cholesteric particles formed via microfluidics. Flow-focusing microfluidic device. Gel emulsion in a channel. Fluorescence image of a dye-containing gel emulsion.

This week I attended a talk at the MPI for Dynamics and Self-Organisation in Goettingen, Germany by Nicolas Bremond from the EPSCI, Paris. The talk was titled “Microfluidic investigations of the destabilisation of emulsions via coalescence”. Nicolas discussed the use of microfluidic devices to study coalescence of emulsion droplets in the absence and presence of an ac electric field. The results have been published in Physical Review Letters and in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics.

In the absence of an electric field, a series of moving pairs of droplets in a microfluidic device were created. A widening of the channel, and therefore slowing of the fluid, was used to force the droplets together. Monitoring of the separation of the droplets showed that coalescence occurred just after closest proximity i.e. when they were separating. Nicolas believes that the separation of the droplets momentarily reduces the fluid pressure between the droplets, causing the high-pressure water in the droplets to burst through the barrier.

Amongst many of the movies shown in the talk was this one, which I have found on the web. It shows that this coalescence mechanism can also trigger coalescence in neighbouring droplets. This mechanism could perhaps be responsible for the clumping of industrial emulsion droplets.

My favourite video of the talk was one showing the behaviour of the emulsion droplets under an applied ac electric field. When the ratio of the radius of the droplet to the channel width is equal to 0.8 the droplets can be made to kiss each other; they come into contact with each other before separating again. On separation deformation of the droplets is observed. Unfortunately I haven’t found a video of this online, but a sequence of images can be seen in the Physical Review Letters paper.

Although not mentioned in the talk, Nicolas has also recently had his paper Formation of liquid-core capsules having a thin hydrogel membrane: liquid pearls published in Soft Matter.

Microfluidics offers an interesting method for studying the coalescence of emulsions under flow. However, this is not its only application as seen in the latest issue and advance articles of Soft Matter. Shashi Thutupalli et al. (doi:10.1039/c0sm00312c) demonstrate the use of microfluidics to self-assemble surfactant bilayer networks in water-oil emulsions. These bilayer membranes display a range of different electrical behaviours, which could be exploited to create wet circuitry. Formation of emulsions in this way, offers a feasible approach to construct complex devices out of molecular-sized components via controlled self-assembly.

Sara Abalde-Cela et al. demonstrate the use of a flow-focusing microfluidic device to form highly mono-disperse plasmonic agarose beads containing silver nanoparticles in their paper doi:10.1039/c0sm00601g, while Daniel Wenzlik et al. used microfluidics to prepare cholesteric liquid crystal particles from cellulose derivatives doi:10.1039/c0sm01368d.

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Themed issue: International Soft Matter Conference 2010

Soft Matter issue 4 was published as a themed issue with the International Soft Matter Conference 2010. Juan Colmenero, Dieter Richter and Roque Hidalgo-Alvarez were the guest editors. You can read their editorial here:

The front cover features Electrostatic-driven pattern formation in fibers, nanotubes and pores by Monica Olvera de la Cruz and co-workers.

Highlighted on the inside front cover is Complex plasma—the plasma state of soft matter by Manis Chaudhuri, Alexei V. Ivlev, Sergey A. Khrapak, Hubertus M. Thomas and Gregor E. Morfill which was selected as a Hot Article.

You can read the full themed issue here.

Front and inside front covers for Soft Matter issue 4Follow Soft Matter on Twitter

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International Year of Chemistry

Nanoparticles for cancer drug delivery and detection

Last week saw the launch of the International Year of Chemistry (IYC) 2011 in Paris. The theme of the year is to emphasis the importance of chemistry for sustainable development in all aspects of human life. Chemistry has an important role in solving some of the major challenges facing the world, such as human health, food security, providing clean water, energy and sustainable development. This is highlighted in the most recent issues of Soft Matter with articles on the development of nanoparticles for cancer applications, devices for the controlled release of pheromones with potential applications in the agricultural industry and highly functional renewable nanomaterials.

A further goal of the IYC is to promote Women in chemistry. 2011 is the 100th anniversary of Marie Curie’s receipt of the Nobel Prize in chemistry.

Many events are planned throughout 2011 to celebrate chemistry. Many of the activities are aimed at catching the attention and imagination of the younger generation. In Canada a video contest has been launched for school students. The aim is to produce a short chemistry related You-Tube video. The prize is a $2500 scholarship for further education.

In the UK, the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) announced the biggest global experiment which will take place on the 22nd June. Children across the world are encouraged to take part in an experiment into the properties and quality of water. More information can be found on the RSC website.

Further information of the events can be found on the RSC website and the IYC website (I have had some trouble accessing their website).  Events are being organised worldwide in countries including India, Singapore, Thailand, Brazil, Australia, America, Canada and across Europe.

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Soft Matter, 2011, Issue 3

Front and inside front covers for Soft Matter issue 6.

The outside front cover features a communication by Swapnil Rohidas Jadhav, Bor-Sen Chiou, Delilah F. Wood, Gloria DeGrande-Hoffman, Gregory M. Glenn and George John titled: Molecular gels-based controlled release devices for pheromones (Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 864-867). The communication demonstrates the usefulness of molecular gels for the controlled release of pheromones, which could find applications in the agricultural industry.

Outside back cover for Soft Matter issue 3Cybotaxis dominates the nematic phase of bent-core mesogens: a small-angle diffuse X-ray diffraction study by Oriano Francescangeli, Francesco Vita, Claudio Ferrero, Theo Dingemans and Edward T. Samulski (Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 895-901) is highlighted on the inside front cover.

The back cover showcases the work of Jeong-A Yang, Hyemin Kim, Kitae Park and Sei Kwang Hahn and their communication Molecular design of hyaluronic acid hydrogel networks for long-term controlled delivery of human growth hormone. (Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 868-870)

You can read the full issue here.

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Top Ten most-read Soft Matter articles in December

The latest top ten most downloaded Soft Matter articles

See the most-read papers of December 2010 here:

Laura J. Cote, Jaemyung Kim, Zhen Zhang, Cheng Sun and Jiaxing Huang, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 6096-6101
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00667J
 
Yuhan Lee, Hyun Jung Chung, Sangho Yeo, Cheol-Hee Ahn, Haeshin Lee, Phillip B. Messersmith and Tae Gwan Park, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 977-983
DOI: 10.1039/B919944F
 
Xuyan Yang, Yin-Yin Tong, Zi-Chen Li and Dehai Liang, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00257G
 
Ammathnadu S. Achalkumar, Richard J. Bushby and Stephen D. Evans, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 6036-6051
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00030B
 
Oliver Bäumchen and Karin Jacobs, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 6028-6035
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00078G
 
Lingxiang Jiang, Yu Peng, Yun Yan and Jianbin Huang, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00917B
 
Alfredo González-Pérez, Valeria Castelletto, Ian W. Hamley and Pablo Taboada, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00711K
 
Monojoy Goswami, Bobby G. Sumpter, Tianzi Huang, Jamie M. Messman, Samuel P. Gido, A. I. Isaacs-Sodeye and Jimmy W. Mays, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 6146-6154
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00733A
 
Hyun-Kwan Yang, A. Evren Özçam, Kirill Efimenko and Jan Genzer, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00928H
 
Andreas Bernet, Marina Behr and Hans-Werner Schmidt, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00456A

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RSC Prizes and Awards – only 11 days left to nominate!

Do you know someone who has made a significant contribution to advancing the chemical sciences?

Our Prizes and Awards recognise achievements by individuals, teams and organisations in advancing the chemical sciences. Winners receive up to £5000 and a medal or inscribed memento.
Showcase inspiring science and gain the recognition deserved – Nominate yourself or a colleague. 

Nomination categories include:

Analytical Chemistry
Biosciences
Education
Environment, Sustainability & Energy
Industry & Technology
Inorganic Chemistry
Materials Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Physical Chemistry

Nominations close 31 January 2011

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Soft Matter Article Highlighted in Chemistry World

Sticky hydrogels make resilient wound dressings

An adhesive material made from a hydrogel filled with nanoparticles could lead to wound dressings that won’t fall off when you sweat. It could even be used to deliver drugs through skin, claim French scientists.

Traditional wound dressings lose their ability to stick to skin in the presence of water – a major component of sweat – shortening their lifespan. Now, scientists led by Bruno Grassl from the University of Pau and Pays de l’Adour have developed adhesive materials based on hydrogels to overcome this problem. Hydrogels contain a large quantity of water already, which allows them to tolerate the additional water from sweat; however, their mechanical properties, such as elasticity, are often poor. Interested to know more? Read the full article for free in Chemistry World here.
 

Sticky hydrogels

Nadia Baït, Bruno Grassl, Christophe Derail and Ahmed Benaboura, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01123A (Advance Article)

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Happy New Year!

Happy New Year to all our readers, authors and referees! Here in the Cambridge office, the Soft Matter Editorial team is looking forward to 2011. We have some excellent themed issues coming up, so keep an eye out. I will be attending various conferences throughout the year so let me know if you would like to meet for a chat.

I would also like to congratulate Professor Martien Cohen Stuart, Chairman of the Soft Matter Editorial Board, who has recently received one of the prestigious Advanced Grants from the European Research Council (ERC), for work on novel protein polymers and their properties as soft materials. Congratulations, Martien!

Professor Martien Cohen Stuart

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