Hot Paper: Surface and bulk flow of a molecular glass former

Read for free until 3 May>

There is a growing interest in studying mobilitiy at the surface of low molecular weight glass formers. This Hot Paper describes nanoparticle embedding studies in the molecular glass former 1,3-bis-(1-naphthyl)-5-(2-naphthyl)benzene. By measuring both surface and bulk dynamics, the researchers provide a quantitative measure for the enhancement of surface dynamics relative to the bulk.

Comparing surface and bulk flow of a molecular glass former
C. R. Daley,  Z. Fakhraai,  M. D. Ediger and J. A. Forrest
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 2206-2212
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM06826E

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Conference: 31st IUBS General Assembly and Conference on Biological Sciences and Bioindustry Suzhou, China, 5-9 July 2012

Soft Matter will be awarding a poster prize at The International Union of Biological Sciences (IUBS) is holding its 31st General Assembly (GA) and Conference on Biological Sciences and Bioindustry. This meeting will be held 5th – 9th July 2012, in Suzhou, China. The theme of the conference is “Promoting Biological Sciences for a Better Life”.

Over 100 international scientists will deliver presentations on their research including plenary speeches by: Giorgio Bernardi (Italy), Zhonghe Zhou (China) and Nils Chr. Senseth (Norway).

You can find details about the conference program about registration on the conference website: http://iubs.csp.escience.cn

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Hot Paper: Patchy colloidal particles

Read for free until 3 May>>

Researchers investigate the thermodynamics and percolation regimes of model binary mixtures of patchy colloidal particles in this Hot Paer. Up to four percolated strucuters at low temperature were found. Modelling such as this is of interest for tailoring the self-assembly of colloids into functional structures.

patchy colloids

Bicontinuous and mixed gels in binary mixtures of patchy colloidal particles
Daniel de las Heras,  José Maria Tavares and Margarida M. Telo da Gama
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 1785-1794
DOI: 10.1039/C1SM06948A

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Focus on: Ferrofluids and ferromagnetic soft matter

Read some of our recently published work on ferrofluids and ferromagnetic soft matter. All free to download for a limited time.

Review Article:
Magnetorheological fluids: a review
Juan de Vicente,  Daniel J. Klingenberg and Roque Hidalgo-Alvarez
Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 3701-3710, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01221A

Full Papers:
Enhanced hardening of soft self-assembled copolymer gels under homogeneous magnetic fields
Haining An,  Stephen J. Picken and Eduardo Mendes
Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 4497-4503, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00216J

Growth mechanism of nanostructured superparamagnetic rods obtained by electrostatic co-assembly
M. Yan,  J. Fresnais and J.-F. Berret
Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 1997-2005, DOI: 10.1039/B919992F

Magnetic sensitivity of a dispersion of aggregated ferromagnetic carbon nanotubes in liquid crystals
Oleksandr Buluy,  Sergej Nepijko,  Victor Reshetnyak,  Elena Ouskova,  Victor Zadorozhnii,  Albrecht Leonhardt,  Manfred Ritschel,  Gerd Schönhense and Yuriy Reznikov
Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 644-649, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00131G

Templated self-assembly in three dimensions using magnetic levitation
Filip Ilievski,  Katherine A. Mirica,  Audrey K. Ellerbee and George M. Whitesides
Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 9113-9118, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05962A

Ferrofluids with shifted dipoles: ground state structures
Sofia Kantorovich,  Rudolf Weeber,  Juan J. Cerda and Christian Holm
Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 5217-5227, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05186E

Non-linear response of dipolar colloidal gels to external fields
Patrick Ilg and Emanuela Del Gado
Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 163-171, DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00592D

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Registration is now open for Soft Matter Approaches to Structured Foods: Faraday Discussion 158

Registration is now open for Soft Matter Approaches to Structured Foods: Faraday Discussion 158

Food materials are unusual as soft matter. They are highly complex, operating on multiple length scales and phases and structured via multiple externally applied fields.

To join a discussion with top experts in the field make sure you register now, and take advantage of the best prices:

•    Early bird discount – £50 saving on the standard fee

•    Member rate – available to RSC members

•    Student rate – available to undergraduates and postgraduates on a
      full time course

•    Bursaries – a limited number offered to students and younger members of the RSC in
      the early stages of their career – worth £150

Taking part in a Faraday Discussion is a great way to get your research work better known. You can also have your own poster abstract space at the meeting, so submit yours now.

Registration is quick and simple via our online booking system, so act today to be able to exchange views with food scientists and non-food experts from the soft matter community.

Dr Ruud van der Sman and the rest of the Scientific Committee look forward to welcoming you to Wageningen in July 2012

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Soft Matter papered featured by the BBC

A recently published Soft Matter paper has been featured on the BBC website: ‘Avalanche research aids search for tastier ice cream’.

Avalanche experts were consulted for a study on how ice cream’s structure changes when it is stored in a household freezer. The structure within the ice cream is important for the taste of the food.

Read the original research here:
3D-characterization of three-phase systems using X-ray tomography: tracking the microstructural evolution in ice cream
B. R. Pinzer ,  A. Medebach ,  H. J. Limbach ,  C. Dubois ,  M. Stampanoni and M. Schneebeli
Soft Matter, 2012, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C2SM00034B

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Hot Paper: Time-composition equivalence

Read for free until 25 April>>

Time–temperature rheological equivalence is an important concepts with regard to the viscoelastic behavior of polymers. In this Hot Paper, the generality of an analogous relationship, time–composition equivalence, in several series of ternary block copolymer/cosolvent systems at ambient temperature was explored. In particular, triblock copolymers solvated with a miscible mixture of midblock-selective solvents which yield physical gels were studied.

Factors affecting time–composition equivalence in ternary block  copolymer/cosolvent systems
Arjun S. Krishnan and Richard J. Spontak
Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 1334-1343
DOI: 10.1039/C1SM06672B

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Conference: Physics of Cells 2nd – 8th September 2012

We are pleased to announce that Soft Matter will be awarding poster prizes at De Gennes Days on Physics of Cells – from Soft to Living Matter, to be held 2nd – 8th September 2012, in Hyères, France.

The meeting will consist of the Advanced School on Cellular Biophysics and the 2nd Conference in the EMBO Series on Cell Biophysics. Both the school and the conference will cover topics from various aspects of cell and tissue biophysics including cell mechanics, membranes, adhesion, mechanosensing, morphogenesis, transcription, and motility. Participation of young and emerging scientists is highly encouraged.

For more information, please visit www.physcell2012.com.

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Roll up, roll up!

Scientists in India – inspired by research on making water run uphill – have developed a technique that enables a polymer cylinder to not only autonomously climb an incline but carry a weight with it.

There are a number of different approaches towards limbless locomotion, but they focus on using mechanical or chemical pulses to drive a body forwards. Researchers from the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur have taken another approach: rolling.

Polymer cylinder dragging a screw

A sequence of images captured at 0, 1.43 and 2.87 seconds (top to bottom) showing a 4mg polymer cylinder dragging a 18mg screw across a horizontal surface

The team, led by Animangsu Ghatak, used the swelling interactions of an elastomeric cylinder and a solvent to drive the cylinder forward. When the solvent is released, it spreads along the cylinder and swells at the contact points, particularly at the ends. This pushes the centre of mass forward and the rest of the cylinder moves to keep up via a rolling motion, which drags solvent with it. Because of this rolling motion, dry polymer is brought into contact with the solvent and swells in turn. The saturated polymer is exposed to the air and the solvent evaporates, forming a swelling-evaporation-de-swelling mechanism and enabling autonomous movement as long as the solvent lasts.

The most unusual aspect of the system, Ghatak explains, ‘is that gravity can be used to increase the asymmetric effect and thus the resultant increase in velocity’. By increasing the incline, ‘the solvent tends to accumulate more in the rear side of the cylinder than in the front and as a result, the asymmetric effect becomes more pronounced and the cylinder bends more’. This greater bend not only increases the velocity but creates enough torque for the cylinder to carry a dead weight with it.

Mark Geoghegan, from the University of Sheffield, UK, points out that although this technique will not scale up to the macro-scale, the field of self-powered locomotion is still very young. ‘This is an exciting area of research and one expects the benefits to be reaped only years in the future,’ he says.

Both Geoghegan and Ghatak can also see more immediate uses for the technology – despite the early days – and highlight potential roles in sensing or soft robotic components.

Read the original Chemistry World article, or watch the supplementary video

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Don’t forget Soft Matter Principles of Microfluidics Themed Issue: Submission deadline 21th April

Soft Matter is publishing a themed issue on the ‘Soft Matter Principles of Microfluidics’ with Professor Lydéric Bocquet (University of Lyon, France), Professor Todd Squires (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA) and Professor Annie Colin (Rhodia-Bordeaux1-CNRS, Bordeaux, France) acting as the guest editors.

Microfluidics has provided powerful experimental capabilities for the study of soft matter, and enabled experiments in this field that had previously been impossible.  Viewing clean-room microfabrication  facilities as an advanced machine shop — where your device literally emerges from your design — microfluidics enables unprecedented control over experimental conditions, such as flow types and rates in an experiment, the ability to heat and cool rapidly, to watch systems equilibrate or evolve physically or chemically, and to design an experiment to specifically isolate a particular scientific process or question. Furthermore, the small scale of microfluidic experiments enables systematic sweeps of many experimental systems, while consuming very little sample. Benefiting from fast thermal exchanges and a perfect control of residence time, microfluidics has provided new routes to process and tailor soft materials whose fabrication had been out of reach until only recently. Like the cell phone in your pocket, microfluidics has become an essential tool in most soft matter labs. It is therefore a proper time to draw a state-of-the-art picture of the intimate connections which have developed between soft matter and microfluidics: this is the aim of this themed issue Soft Matter: principles of microfluidics. By bringing together contributions from the various domains where ‘microfluidics meet soft matter’, we will obtain an impressionist view of the possibilities offered by microfluidics in soft matter and imagine the new avenues of this rapidly evolving field.

All manuscripts will be handled by the Soft Matter Editorial office and refereed in accordance to the standard procedures of the journal, and in this respect invited articles will be treated in the same way as regular submissions to the journal.

 The deadline for the receipt of manuscripts for this themed issue is: 21th April 2012

Manuscripts can be submitted using the RSC’s on-line submissions service. Please contact to the editorial office if you are interested in contributing to this issue. All contributions should state in the covering letter and “comments to editors” section during submission that the manuscript is submitted for the themed issue on Soft Matter Principles of Microfluidics.

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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