The Physics of Soft and Biological Matter Conference, 14th – 16th April 2014

The Physics of Soft and Biological Matter conference organised by the IOP Biological Physics, IOP Liquids and Complex Fluids, IOP Molecular Physics, and IOP Polymer Physics Groups will be held on 14–16 April 2014 at Homerton College, Cambridge, UK.

This conference will bring together the broad and diverse community interested in the physics of soft and biological matter, which includes liquids, liquid crystals, polymers, colloids, membranes, interfaces, cellular biophysics, and biological macromolecules. The programme will span a number of key cross-cutting themes, including self-assembly and patterning, rheology, biomimetics, non-equilibrium phenomena, as well as molecular imaging, optical methods and spectroscopies, which are all relevant to the wide range of length- and time-scales present in these fascinating systems.

Important deadlines

Abstract submission deadline: 20th January 2014
Early registration deadline: 10th March 2014
Registration deadline: 4th April 2014

Confirmed Invited Speakers

  • Kari Dalnoki-Veress (McMaster University, Canada) “Capillary-driven flow in thin polymer films”
  • Dennis Discher (University of Pennsylvania, USA) “Scaling laws of polymer membranes: from synthetics to nuclear envelopes and mechanotransduction”
  • Suzanne Fielding (Durham University, UK) “Hydrodynamics and phase behaviour of active suspensions”
  • David Klenerman (University of Cambridge, UK) “Single molecule studies of protein aggregation”
  • David Pine (New York University, USA) Self-assembly of patchy colloids”
  • Kathleen Stebe (University of Pennsylvania, USA) “Particles at complex interfaces”
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Top 10 most-read Soft Matter articles – Q2 2013

This month sees the following articles in Soft Matter that are in the top ten most accessed from April – June:

Substitutional impurity-induced vitrification in microgel crystals 
Ruben Higler, Jeroen Appel and Joris Sprakel    
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 5372-5379 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM50471A 

Interactions between cells or proteins and surfaces exhibiting extreme wettabilities
Wenlong Song and João F. Mano 
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 2985-2999 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM27739A 

Engineering shape: the novel geometries of colloidal self-assembly
Stefano Sacanna, David J. Pine and Gi-Ra Yi 
Soft Matter, 2013, Advance Article 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM50500F 

Reflections on graduate education in soft matter 
Tom C. Lubensky    
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 4948-4950
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM90027D 

Self-assembly of organic luminophores with gelation-enhanced emission characteristics 
Zujin Zhao, Jacky W. Y. Lam and Ben Zhong Tang  
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 4564-4579 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM27969C 

A simple route to fluids with photo-switchable viscosities based on a reversible transition between vesicles and wormlike micelles 
Hyuntaek Oh, Aimee M. Ketner, Romina Heymann, Ellina Kesselman, Dganit Danino, Daniel E. Falvey and Srinivasa R. Raghavan 
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 5025-5033 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM00070B 

Cross-linked supramolecular polymer networks with responsive and elastic gel properties via host–guest complexation: controlled release of squaraine dyes 
Fei Zeng, Yun Shen and Chuan-Feng Chen    
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 4875-4882 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM50529D 

A novel one-pot approach towards dynamically cross-linked hydrogels 
Shereen Tan, Anton Blencowe, Katharina Ladewig and Greg G. Qiao 
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 5239-5250
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM50638J 

Bacteria–surface interactions 
Hannah H. Tuson and Douglas B. Weibel    
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 4368-4380 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM27705D 

Directed motion of elongated active polymers
Mew-Bing Wan and YongSeok Jho 
Soft Matter, 2013,9, 3255-3261 
DOI: 10.1039/C3SM27851D 

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

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

To keep up-to-date with all the latest research, sign up for the Soft Matter e-Alert or RSS feeds or follow Soft Matter on Twitter or Facebook

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Emerging Investigators Themed Issue published

The 2013 Soft Matter Emerging Investigators themed issue has been published. This issue highlights some of the current up-and-coming researchers in soft matter science and showcases the research that is making them leading investigators in the field. Liz Dunn and Michael Rubinstein, Chair of the Editorial Board, introduce the issue in their editorial. The full issue can be found here.

The Emerging Investigators themed issue features over 60 Communications, Papers, Reviews and Highlights, including:

Reviews:
Cell confinement: putting the squeeze on the nucleus
Marie Versaevel, Maryam Riaz, Thomas Grevesse and Sylvain Gabriele

Self-assembly of nanoparticles adsorbed on fluid and elastic membranes
Anđela Šarić and Angelo Cacciuto

Emerging Areas:
The influence of shape anisotropy on the microstructure of magnetic dipolar particles
Sofia Kantorovich, Elena Pyanzina and Francesco Sciortino  

Highlights:
Electrochemical biocomputing: a new class of molecular-electronic logic devices
Yongmei Jia, Ruixue Duan, Fan Hong, Boya Wang, Nannan Liu and Fan Xia  

Papers:
Do hierarchical structures assemble best via hierarchical pathways?
Thomas K. Haxton and Stephen Whitelam

Myosin II does it all: assembly, remodeling, and disassembly of actin networks are governed by myosin II activity
Yaron Ideses, Adar Sonn-Segev, Yael Roichman and Anne Bernheim-Groswasser

Frustration and packing in curved-filament assemblies: from isometric to isomorphic bundles
Gregory M. Grason

To keep up-to-date with all the latest research, sign-up to our RSS feed or Table of contents alert.

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8th International Dendrimer Symposium – Poster Prize Winners

Polymer Chemistry and Soft Matter was delighted to award two Poster Prizes at 8th International Dendrimer Symposium held in Madrid, Spain on 23rd – 27th June. The winners were:

Polymer Chemistry Award: Poster 44
M.A. VAN DONGEN (University of Michigan, USA)
Generationnaly pure PAMAM dendrimers as precisely controlled structural building blocks.

Soft Matter Award: Poster 40
Joona MIKKILA (Finland)
Dendrimers mediated formation of inclusion body mimicking virus paracrystals.

Each winner received an RSC Poster Prize certificate as well as 1 year electronic subscription to the journal.

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July’s hot papers

Phase behavior of rigid, amphiphilic star polymers
Christian Koch, Athanassios Z. Panagiotopoulos, Federica Lo Verso and Christos N. Likos

 



Topological defects, surface geometry and cohesive energy of twisted filament bundles
Isaac R. Bruss and Gregory M. Grason


Ultrastretchable, cyclable and recyclable 1- and 2-dimensional conductors based on physically cross-linked thermoplastic elastomer gels
Kenneth P. Mineart, Yiliang Lin, Sharvil C. Desai, Arjun S. Krishnan, Richard J. Spontak and Michael D. Dickey

These papers are free to read until 27th August!


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Flat-pack structures build themselves

Scientists in the US have developed flat pack structures that can autonomously assemble into three-dimensional shapes on application of an electrical current. Unlike traditional three-dimensional assembly techniques, which require sophisticated printers to reach the final product, this approach uses heat triggered shape memory polymers.

Three-dimensional structures normally come pre-assembled or equipment needs to be transported to create them in situ. Now, along with his colleagues, Samuel Felton, from Harvard University, has demonstrated that by printing shape memory polymers (SMP) onto laser-cut joints with conductive coatings, the assembly process can be separated entirely from the original printing.

Initiation of the SMP transformation is central to Felton’s technique. A SMP is printed in a deformed, flat state and aligned with a resistive circuit over a scored substrate, in this case, paper. An electric current is then run through the circuit and joule heating activates the phase transformation of the shape memory polymer back into its original shape and folds the paper. As this combination is electrically triggered, it allows both simultaneous and sequential folding of complicated shapes.

Felton explains that the most challenging aspect of the work was creating the precisely aligned composite as the approach relies upon separately cut layers that are then joined using a mixture of pins and silicone tape. As alignment is performed when manufacturing the flat structure, the end product is, as was the aim, ‘accessible for everyone.’

Jinsong Leng, an expert in smart materials at Harbin Institute of Technology, China, agrees: ‘shape memory composites play an enormous role in self-folding structures formed by remote and automated assembly. The approach could significantly accelerate the advancement of promising applications in 3D structure fabrication techniques.’

Self-folding with shape memory composites
Samuel M. Felton, Michael T. Tolley, ByungHyun Shin, Cagdas D. Onal, Erik D. Demaine, Daniela Rus and Robert J. Wood
Soft Matter, 2013, Advance Article

This feature was written by Charlie Quigg and was originally published online in Chemistry World.

To keep up-to-date with all the latest research, sign-up to our RSS feed or Table of contents alert.

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Julia Yeomans elected to FRS

It was with great pleasure that we learnt that regular Soft Matter author Professor Julia Yeomans has recently been elected to the Fellowship of the Royal Society.

Professor Yeomans is a theoretical and computational physicist working on statistical physics, hydrodynamics, soft condensed matter and biological physics. Among her current research interests are microswimmers, active systems, liquid crystals and drop dynamics. She holds an ERC Advanced Grant ‘Microflow in Complex Environments’.

Julia obtained her MA in Physics and DPhil in Theoretical Physics from the University of Oxford. She spent two years as a post doc at Cornell University, USA, in the group of Michael Fisher and then returned to the UK, to a Lectureship at the University of Southampton. Shortly thereafter she joined the Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics at Oxford. She is currently Professor of Physics at Oxford, a member of the Oxford Centre for Soft and Biological Matter, and Pauline Chan Fellow, St Hilda’s College.

Earlier this year, Julia was also awarded the EPJE Pierre Gilles De Gennes Lecture Prize, for her contribution to the study of the dynamical behaviour of complex and active liquids in confined geometries. She said of winning the prize: ‘I am delighted by this award. It is recognition for the wonderful students, post-docs and colleagues from all over the world that I have had the privilege and pleasure of working with.’

Recent Soft Matter publications by Julia Yeomans include:

Modelling unidirectional liquid spreading on slanted microposts
Andrea Cavalli, Matthew L. Blow and Julia M. Yeomans
Soft Matter, 2013, Advance Article

Length-dependent translocation of polymers through nanochannels
R. Ledesma-Aguilar, T. Sakaue and J. M. Yeomans
Soft Matter, 2012,8, 1884-1892

Hydrodynamic synchronization at low Reynolds number
Ramin Golestanian, Julia M. Yeomans and Nariya Uchida
Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 3074-3082

To keep up-to-date with all the latest research, sign-up to our RSS feed or Table of contents alert.

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What happens when I poke it? Interview with Eric Furst in Chemistry World

Eric M. Furst winner of the 2013 Soft Matter LectureshipSoft Matter lectureship award winner Eric Furst talks to Chemistry World writer Jennifer Newton.

Who or what inspired you to become a scientist in the first place?
It was in my blood – I came from a family of engineers so I was exposed at a very early age to science and engineering. I was almost pre-destined in that sense. As a kid, I was inspired by visits to the air and space museum as well as the Space Program here in the US. I even had a picture of the Space Shuttle Columbia over my bed.

Your research is focused on soft matter. What attracted you to that field?
It happened when I was an undergraduate at Carnegie Mellon University, where there was a tremendous group of faculty, including Bob Tilton who I worked with directly. They had a wonderful program on colloids and polymers and that’s when I really got hooked. I started to study polymer adsorption and interfaces and read a lot in the literature about polymer thermodynamics. It’s an area with engineering applications, something that I am obviously interested in. The physical chemistry of the systems is so neat and profound. I also really enjoyed the more fundamental side to it.
I then went on to do a PhD at Stanford University, working with Alice Gast, and that was her area. It has always been a subject that a lot of engineers work on, especially in the US, but it is also a fertile ground of chemists, physicists and materials scientists and I really like that multi-disciplinary aspect of the soft matter community.

You’ve been awarded the 2013 Soft Matter lectureship. How does that feel?
It’s tremendous. It’s amazing recognition and I’m honoured by it. When you look at the names associated with the award, many of whom I know personally, they’re great young leaders in the field. I’ve found the soft matter area to be my intellectual home and I’m really excited to have that sort of exposure.

What do you class as your most important contribution to the soft matter field?
I can tell you about my favourite contributions. One of them has been microrheology. This is an area that actually dates back almost 100 years with people looking at Brownian motion, including Einstein. About 20 years ago now, Dave Weitz and Tom Mason had the idea that you can use this motion to learn about the rheology of materials and the rheology of systems. I think we’ve made some really nice contributions to that in terms of the gelation of biomaterials. Along with my collaborators, we’ve been able to show how microrheology can be used to screen materials to get an understanding of their physical properties and their rheology. It has a gorgeous engineering aspect to it and it fits nicely into the ideas that people have for screening materials and creating libraries of materials. There is some beautiful underlying physics in the problem too.
Another contribution we’ve made is to do with the directed self-assembly of materials. How can we get things like nanoparticles or colloids to self-assemble into unique structures? There is a tremendous amount of work going on in this area right now. And we’ve been able to show how fields can be useful to direct self-assembly.

What do you imagine will be the next big breakthrough in your field?
Along the lines of directed self-assembly, a major breakthrough will be when we get predictive capabilities. Materials chemists have been extremely creative at making particles with different shapes and with different directing interactions. Right now we are sitting on a cusp where we have an enormous library. To make the leap to manufacturing to make real materials that are functional would have huge benefits. Self-assembled nanomaterials are very scalable and would become very low-cost. It’s a very enabling type of technological advance. Things like the Materials Genome Initiative and increases in computational power are giving us a tool box to make those advances.

Is there a particular question you are trying to answer in your lab at the moment?
Not exactly. One of things I love about soft matter is that I can be as unfocused as I want!
We do want to better understand directed self-assembly. I think we’re at the tip of the iceberg for finding the building blocks and pathways that lead to certain structures.
We’re also really interested in protein therapeutics and that just shows the breadth of the problems you can tackle with soft matter research. For years, my research group has focussed on rheology – the flow of materials – and with that comes microrheology, which is a really enabling method to study the stability and the viscosity of protein solutions. With protein therapeutics emerging in the market place we could help develop upstream processes to identify proteins and the best way to manufacture them. We have a project with industry on protein therapeutics that is a little more directed to engineering applications and actually getting things to market.

What’s your favourite piece of equipment in your lab?
It’s got to be the laser tweezers we’ve been using for the past 12 years. Picking things up with light never gets old. It’s one of those wacky things. We’ve used them in complex fluids to pull things apart and glue things together. Microscopy is an important technique for soft matter but to be able to go in and prod things – that adds an extra dimension. You can see what it looks like but what happens when I poke it?

Have you got a favourite material that you like to work with?
Colloids. Colloidal suspensions are so unique. They’re building blocks, they’re little rheometers, so many of the things we use on a day-to-day basis have a colloidal component.

What advice do you have for young scientists?
Look for opportunities. Look for the people who are going to mentor you. Watch what they do and remember that. Students and young people need to figure out what they’re excited about. Get in laboratories, discover things and ask questions.

Can you tell us a little known fact about yourself?
I really enjoyed being a radio DJ in my undergraduate and graduate days. Music has always been a tremendous part of my life. Breaking boundaries in music is a lot like science. You’re always asking, “what don’t I know?”

The interview with Eric Furst was first published in Chemistry World.
http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/2013/06/interview-eric-furst-soft-matter-rheology

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June’s hot papers

These papers are HOT as recommended by referees. All are free to read for 4 weeks!

Review Article: Topology of nematic liquid crystal colloids confined to two dimensions
Uroš Tkalec and Igor Muševič


Precise determination of the Poisson ratio in soft materials with 2D digital image correlation
Robyn H. Pritchard, Pascal Lava, Dimitri Debruyne and Eugene M. Terentjev


Elasticity of flexible polymers under cylindrical confinement: appreciating the blob scaling regime in computer simulations
Juin Kim, Chanil Jeon, Hawoong Jeong, Youngkyun Jung and Bae-Yeun Ha 

 

These hot papers are free to read until 23rd July!


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Conference Physics of Complex Colloids – Soft Matter Poster Prize Winners

The Soft Matter best poster prize committee (Prof. Daan Frenkel, University of Cambridge, UK; Prof. Gerhard Kahl, Technische Universitaet Wien, Austria; and Prof. Christos N. Likos, Universitaet Wien, Austria) awarded the prizes at the Conference Physics of Complex Colloids in Ljubljana on 14th – 18th March 2013:
Matthew Blow – Flexoelectric and order-electric switching between nematic wetting morphologies
Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal

Vera de Oliveira Batista – A lattice-Boltzmann study of semi-permeable colloids
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

Ioana Vladescu – Micro-swimmers confined to a sphere
The University of Edinburgh, UK

Each student received a Soft Matter Poster Prize certificate as well as 1 year electronic subscription to the journal.

(1st image) Matthew Blow, (2nd image) Vera de Oliveira Batista, (3rd image) Ioana Vladescu

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