Polymer gel provides focus

An injectable nanocomposite gel for replacing the eye lens could eliminate the need for complicated cataract surgery, say Japanese and Danish researchers.

The nanocomposite fills the capsular bag left in the eye after the lens has been removed and sets into a gel at body temperature

The nanocomposite fills the capsular bag left in the eye after the lens has been removed and sets into a gel at body temperature

Cataracts are caused by optical defects of the natural lens that develop with age and can lead to increasingly blurred vision and blindness. Currently, plastic lenses can be used to surgically replace the natural lens but they are not a perfect replacement, for example they tend to be monofocal, limiting the eye’s ability to focus outside a set range. They are also not a proper fit, which can cause problems such as misalignment.

Read the full article in Chemistry World

Organic–inorganic nanocomposite gels as an in situ gelation biomaterial for injectable accommodative intraocular lens
Masahiko Annaka, Kell Mortensen, Toyoaki Matsuura, Masaya Ito, Katsunori Nochioka and Nahoko Ogata
Soft Matter, 2012, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25534K

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Top 10 most-read Soft Matter articles in April

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

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 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM06999G  

Multilayer vesicles, tubes, various porous structures and organo gels through the solvent-assisted self-assembly of two modified tripeptides and their different applications 
Pradyot Koley and Animesh Pramanik  
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5364-5374 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25205H  

Design and properties of supramolecular polymer gels
 
Atsushi Noro, Mikihiro Hayashi and Yushu Matsushita 
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 2416-2429 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25144B  

Can Janus particles give thermodynamically stable Pickering emulsions? 
Robert Aveyard  
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5233-5240 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM07230K  

Sonication induced peptide-appended bolaamphiphile hydrogels for in situ generation and catalytic activity of Pt nanoparticles 
Indrajit Maity, Dnyaneshwar B. Rasale and Apurba K. Das  
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5301-5308 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25126D 

Acid-responsive organogel mediated by arene–perfluoroarene and hydrogen bonding interactions 
Huixian Wu, Ben-Bo Ni, Chong Wang, Feng Zhai and Yuguo Ma 
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5486-5492 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM07281E  

Tunable plasmonic nanostructures from noble metal nanoparticles and stimuli-responsive polymers 
Ihor Tokarev and Sergiy Minko  
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5980-5987 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25069A 

Extreme wettability and tunable adhesion: biomimicking beyond nature? 
Xinjie Liu, Yongmin Liang, Feng Zhou and Weimin Liu  
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 2070-2086 
DOI: 10.1039/C1SM07003G  
 
Alignment of perpendicular lamellae in block copolymer thin films by shearing 
Saswati Pujari, Michael A. Keaton, Paul M. Chaikin and Richard A. Register  
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5358-5363 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25270H  

Facile preparation of coating fluorescent hollow mesoporous silica nanoparticles with pH-sensitive amphiphilic diblock copolymer for controlled drug release and cell imaging 
Xiao Mei, Dongyun Chen, Najun Li, Qingfeng Xu, Jianfeng Ge, Hua Li, Baixia Yang, Yujie Xu and Jianmei Lu  
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5309-5316 
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM07320J  

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

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Oscillatory settling in wormlike-micelle solutions

The authors of this Hot paper model a steel ball falling freely through a solution of entangled wormlike-micelles. In non-Newtonian fluids such as this, objects are known to settle unsteadily. They report for the first time that spheres larger than a critical size undergo unsteady motion and show sustained, repeated bursts of oscillations superposed on a constant baseline velocity.

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Oscillatory settling in wormlike-micelle solutions: bursts and a long time scale
Nitin Kumar,  Sayantan Majumdar,  Aditya Sood,  Rama Govindarajan,  Sriram Ramaswamy and A. K. Sood
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 4310-4313, DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25077B

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Targeting organs with therapeutic carbon monoxide

Prolonged CO release for peptide-based gel compared to soluble peptide

Prolonged CO release for peptide-based gel compared to soluble peptide

Scientists in the US have created a gel that can be used to deliver therapeutic carbon monoxide gas to selected organs in the body.  

CO has a role in the body as a biological signalling molecule (as a neurotransmitter and a blood vessel relaxant, for example) and its delivery to tissues for therapeutic use for conditions such as cardiovascular disease and organ transplantation is done by inhalation therapy. This technique is risky, though, as overexposure to CO in this way can be poisonous, and the CO cannot be targeted to any organs other than the lungs.

More recently, small molecule CO-releasing molecules (CORMs) have been developed as an injectable targeted delivery method. However, the molecules – commonly used metal carbonyls, and the more recent polymeric micelles – have short half-lives and are not retained in tissues, which limits their use.

Samuel Stupp from Northwestern University, and colleagues, who previously developed self-assembling peptide-based materials to deliver another biological signalling molecule – NO – have now turned their attention to the problem of delivering CO. His team combined a peptide amphiphile (PA) designed to self assemble into a fibrous gel with a ruthenium carbonyl complex similar to a known CORM. They reacted the resulting compound with sodium methoxide to generate the CO-releasing PA. The PA self-assembled into nanofibres 8.2nm in diameter.

The CO release performance of the soluble PA gave a similar half-life to known CORMs.  The PA was, however, designed to form a gel, which was achieved by adding CaCl2 to the solution. ‘Gel formation slowed down CO release dramatically, from a half-life of 2.1 min for the soluble peptide to 17.8 min after gelation,’ says Stupp. This prolonged release could significantly improve the utility of CO therapy.

‘This work will add to the regenerative medicine toolbox by enabling researchers to modulate biological signalling through the delivery of a very simple diatomic gas,’ says Stupp.

Bing Xu, an expert in bionanomaterials for drug delivery from Brandeis University, US, says that the system’s future development could lead to a material that significantly outperforms current CORMs. ‘The demonstration of the delivery of therapeutic CO expands the horizon of PA applications,’ he adds.

A peptide-based material for therapeutic carbon monoxide delivery
John B. Matson, Matthew J. Webber, Vibha K. Tamboli, Benjamin Weber and Samuel I. Stupp
Soft Matter, 2012, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM25785H

Read the original Chemistry World article here.

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Active soft matter

What does softness do for life? According to Zhigang Suo, Havard University, for life the important feature of soft materials is that they are easily deformable. In the human body the deformation of soft materials enables the heart to beat, the vocal folds to produce sound and the eye to focus. In all these examples, a stimulus is applied to the soft material and a large reversible deformation occurs. This deformation in turns provides a function.

Soft active materials are not only important in life, but also have technological relevance for example in adaptive optics, self-regulated fluidics and soft robotics. Suo is interested in how mechanics, chemistry and electrostatics all work together to generate large deformations in soft materials. In soft dielectrics actuation can be readily observed by applying a voltage across the membrane, causing the thickness to reduce and the area to expand. In polymers, strains of up to 30% are easily achieved using this method.

To get higher deformations two limitations need to be overcome; electrical breakdown and electromechanical instability. An electromechanical instability is observed in compliant dielectrics such as elastomers, when the applied voltage causes the material to thin down excessively, amplifying the electric field. This is known as a snap-though instability and often occurs prior to electrical breakdown. Suo has shown, however, that if this electromechanical instability can be overcome, and the elastomer reaches a stable state without breakdown occurring, giant voltage-induced deformations of over 1000% are achievable.

Suo’s theory shows that the instability can be eliminated when pre-stretched or short-chain polymers, where the elastic strain is sufficiently low, are used. The elastomer is compliant at low deformations and stiffens rapidly as it is slowly stretched. This stiffening averts the rapid excessive deformation that would otherwise cause the material to fail. The elastomer survives the instability and reaches a steady state without breakdown occurring. Suo and his collaborators have used these ideas to carefully design and tailor the properties of soft materials realising area expansions of 1692%.

For more information see:

Keplinger et al., Harnessing snap-through instability in soft dielectrics to achieve giant voltage-triggered deformation, Soft Matter, 8,  285-288, 2012.

Lu et al., Dielectric elastomer actuators under equal-biaxial forces, uniaxial forces, and uniaxial constraint of stiff fibers, Soft Matter, 8, 6167-6173, 2012.

Zhao and Suo, Theory of Dielectric Elastomers Capable of Giant Deformation of Actuation, Phys. Rev. Lett., 104, 178302, 2010.

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Surface wrinkling in soft materials

Soft materials are very susceptible to surface instabilities, which can lead to wrinkiling, folding and creasing. These deformations and morphological instabilities are usually in response to environmental stimuli, and this stimulus-responsiveness makes them promising candidates for applications as intelligent materials. This hot review documents recent progress into the investigtation of surface wrinkling of soft materials, such as gels and biological tissues. 

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Mechanics of morphological instabilities and surface wrinkling in soft materials: a review
Bo Li ,  Yan-Ping Cao,  Xi-Qiao Feng and Huajian Gao
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 5728-5745, DOI: 10.1039/C2SM00011C

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Impacting the mechanical properties of elastomers re-inforced with fillers

Using solid fillers in an elastomeric matrix is a well-known method for improving the mechanical properties of elastomers. In this hot paper a silica-filled model elastomer was used to study the interparticle connections between the filler particles. It was found that the distance between the particles is a crucial parameter in the mechanics of materials, and was compared to the  range of polymer dynamics modification within the system.

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Solid particles in an elastomer matrix: impact of colloid dispersion and polymer mobility modification on the mechanical properties
Aurélie Papon,  Hélène Montes,  François Lequeux,  Julian Oberdisse,  Kay Saalwächter and Laurent Guy
Soft Matter, 2012,8, 4090-4096, DOI: 10.1039/C2SM06885K

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Focus on: Superhydrophobic surfaces

Soft Matter & Journal of Materials ChemistrySuperhydrophobic surfaces can cause water to roll off leaving little or no liquid behind and even pick-up and remove small dirt particles resting on the surface; however, despite the  progress made, there is still an opportunity fabricate these surfaces using simpler and cheaper methods, to maximise roll-off, or to introduction additional functional properties. Here we’ve brought together a selection of articles covering the preparation of superhydrophobic surfaces and coatings, their chemical and physical properties, and the origin of the superhydrophobic effect.

Review
Hydrophilic and superhydrophilic surfaces and materials
Jaroslaw Drelich ,  Emil Chibowski ,  Dennis Desheng Meng and Konrad Terpilowski
Soft Matter, 2011,7, 9804-9828

Highlight
Immersed superhydrophobic surfaces: Gas exchange, slip and drag reduction properties
Glen McHale ,  Michael I. Newton and Neil J. Shirtcliffe
Soft Matter, 2010,6, 714-719

Opinion
Characterization of superhydrophobic behavior: effect of vibrational energy
W. Li ,  Y. P. Diao ,  H. L. Zhang ,  G. C. Wang ,  S. Q. Lu ,  X. J. Dong ,  H. B. Dong and Q. L. Sun
Soft Matter, 2009,5, 2833-2835

Click here to see all the articles

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Reviews in Soft Matter

Emerging Areas, Highlights, Opinions, Reviews and Tutorial Reviews in Soft Matter

Soft MatterSoft Matter publishes five different types of review-style article: Emerging Areas, Highlights, Opinions, Reviews and Tutorial Reviews. We’ve created an easy search to show examples of each of the different article types. Please click on the links below to see the recent reviews published in Soft Matter.

Review-style articles:

  • Highlight
  • Review Article
  • Emerging Area
  • Opinion
  • Tutorial Review
  • Guidelines for writing review articles can be found here: http://www.rsc.org/Publishing/Journals/sm/review_guidelines.asp

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    Disclinations and the morphology of deformable fluid interfaces

    This Hot Paper describes the use of a Monte Carlo model to explore the spectrum of vesicle shapes engendered by an in-plane nematic field. The study of these complex morphologies can lead to further understanding of cellular organelles, such as the endoplasmic reticulum the Golgi and the mitochondria. In addition, the disclination dynamics on deformable surfaces can also be studied.

    Read for free for a limited time:

    Role of disclinations in determining the morphology of deformable fluid interfaces
    N. Ramakrishnan ,  John H. Ipsen and P. B. Sunil Kumar
    Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 3058-3061, DOI: 10.1039/C2SM07384F

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