Themed Issue on Bridging the gap between hard and soft colloids

Soft Matter is planning to produce a themed issue on Bridging the gap between hard and soft colloids in 2012. Please e-mail the editorial office, softmatter-rsc@rsc.org,  if you would like to contribute an article.

The Guest Editors of the issue are Professors Dimitris Vlassopoulos (University of Crete, Greece) and Michel Cloitre (ESPCI, France).

With the emergence of soft matter as an important interdisciplinary field of science, combining distinct hallmarks of different systems has become an outstanding challenge. Colloidal hard spheres and polymeric coils represent the two limiting cases of soft matter behaviour with unique, different features: characteristic size, order, origin of stress, confinement. Modern macromolecular chemistry has opened the route for designing and synthesizing soft colloids which encompass properties of both, and hence bridge the gap between hard spheres and polymers. A non-exhaustive list of examples includes end-grafted nanoparticles, block copolymer micelles, multiarm star polymers, microgels, vesicles. Understanding the structure and dynamics of such soft colloids, which are thus very diverse, represents a fascinating challenge for statistical and condensed-matter physics, materials science, biophysics as well as for the industrial applications. Some key questions of fundamental interest concern the nature of the glass and jamming transitions in soft colloids, the rheological behaviour of the glassy suspensions, the effect of solvent, slow dynamics and aging, the role of particle shape and the design of new tailored architectures.

The deadline for the receipt of manuscripts for this themed issue is
3rd October 2011
 

Manuscripts can be submitted using the RSC’s on-line submissions service. Please clearly mark that the manuscript is submitted for the themed issue on Bridging the gap between hard and soft colloids.

Please would you inform the editorial office by e-mail at softmatter-rsc@rsc.org as soon as possible if you plan to submit to the issue and whether your contribution will be original research or a review-type article. We would like to have a list of authors who intend to contribute as soon as possible.

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Soft Matter Lectureship Award winner announced

We would like to congratulate Professor Michael J. Solomon, winner of the 2011 Soft Matter Lectureship, an annual award to honour a younger scientist who has made a significant contribution to the soft matter field.

Michael J. Solomon is Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University of Michigan Ann Arbor.  Solomon’s research addresses questions about the structure and function of soft matter.  His group has developed methods in confocal microscopy to understand how colloids, anisotropic particles and bacteria biofilms assemble into structures such as gels and crystals, and how these structures respond to forces due to shear flow, centrifugation and electric fields.

As the award winner, Professor Solomon will be presenting lectures at three up-coming conferences to be confirmed shortly.

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Top ten of all time

In the last two blogs, I reviewed the top ten most cited papers in Soft Matter. Now I want to move on to the most cited articles in Soft Matter of all time (well, since 2005 when the journal was founded).

The top ten articles (as determined by ISI Web of Knowledge) are listed below. Their subject matter is diverse and ranges from why materials wrinkle and buckle, to the self-assembly of Janus particles, to a new experimental technique to measure the yield stress of fluids. However, despite this diversity, one topic clearly stands out in the top ten: superhydrophobicity. The top two spots are occupied by reviews on water repellency and superhydrophobic surfaces. Progress on superhydrophobic development by Roach, Shirtcliffe and Newton featured in an earlier blog and was also one of the most read articles in Soft Matter during 2010. A discussion on the measurement of contact angles also features in the top ten.

At number 1… On water repellency by Mathilde Callies and David Quéré is a review article looking at the physical mechanisms responsible for water repellency. It includes a discussion of switchable wettability and the dynamic properties of droplets on superhydrophobic surfaces. However, it is the questions that the authors pose, which are perhaps most interesting.

The authors start by stating that measurement of a single contact angle is not sufficient to characterise the wettability of a surface. A single contact angle does not give any information about how that droplet sits on the surface; is it the Cassie-Baxter or the Wenzel state? It also doesn’t provide any information on the ‘stickiness’ of the surface. To fully characterise a material contact angle hysteresis measurements must be carried out.

Quéré and Callies suggest that in addition to contact angle hysteresis, three complementary measurements should be made to answer the following questions: (1) What is the maximum radius a drop can have before it will roll off a surface inclined at a given angle? (2) What is the critical pressure required to change a droplet from being in the Cassie-Baxter state to being in the Wenzel state? (3) What is the threshold velocity, below which an impacting droplet will stick to the surface rather than bouncing off? The authors believe that this data would allow different surfaces to be more reliably compared.

The paper concludes with the statement that many questions remain unanswered regarding water repellent surfaces, in particular with respect to optimisation of the surfaces. The following are a selection of the questions that the authors pose: How does superhydrophobicity vary as a function of surface texture? How can we optimise a given material or design? Can special designs be used to get special properties? What is the maximum texture size/density required to promote water repellency? How can we make self-cleaning water repellent materials more robust?

On water repellency was published in the first issue of Soft Matter back in 2005. The citations show a huge development in the understanding of superhydrophobic surfaces over the last six years. There has been an explosion in the number of different water repellent surfaces and structures that can be fabricated. These include triangular polyimide pillars, hierarchical bio-fibres, chemically roughened aluminium, copper and zinc, structured teflon and silicone nanofilaments to name but a few. Surfaces have been designed allowing for tuneable adhesion of water (see for example Lai et al. and Di Mundo et al.). Yeh, Chen and Chang have studied how pillar size and spacing changes the wetting properties of the surface. They show that surface coverage and surface roughness strongly influence the hysteresis behaviour. Robustness of the surfaces has also been improved through material choice and pattern design.

With 220 citations to On water repellency I could keep going and going on the developments in the field. This selection shows that while a number of points raised by Quéré and Callies have been addressed (at least partially) over the last six years, some remain unanswered.

Top ten of all time:

*Citation numbers taken on the 15th June 2011.

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Hot Articles: Temperature sensitive triblocks and Double-hydrophilic Diblocks plus Synthetic surgical sealants

Follow the links below to read these papers for FREE until July 17….

triblock copolymerTriblock copolymers: Temperature-sensitive polymer aqueous solutions showing sol-to-gel transition with temperature increase have drug delivery, tissue engineering and post-operative applications. Sequence control of the triblock copolymers studied here was observed to influence the different transitions from alpha-helix to random coils, cylindrical bundles or spherical micelles at different temperatures. Soo Hyun Park, Bo Gyu Choi, Hyo Jung Moon, So-Hye Cho and Byeongmoon Jeong, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05505D.

Double-hydrophilic block copolymers: The formed diblock copolymers undergo unusual aqueous (micro)phase separation of binary mixtures of two biocompatible hydrophilic homopolymers. This is one of the few reports on block copolymer self-assembly in aqueous solution. Adam Blanazs, Nicholas J. Warren, Andrew L. Lewis, Steven P. Armes and Anthony J. Ryan, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05771E.

surgical sealantSoft tissue sealants: A new family of copolymers were derived from poly(glycerol sebacate) and lactic acid and when used in surgical sealants exhibited significantly higher adhesive strengths than fibrin sealants or synthetic PleuraSeal(TM) for wound dressing. The materials also had improved cytocompatibility. Qizhi Chen, Shuling Liang and George A. Thouas, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05350G.

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Soft Matter Issue 12 is out now!

You can read the full issue here…

 

The paper featured on the outside front cover is ‘Origin of the superior adhesive performance of mushroom-shaped microstructured surfaces’ by G. Carbone, E. Pierro and S. N. Gorb. The inside front cover features work by Y. L. Sun, N. K. Mani, D. Baigl, T. Gisler, A. P. Schröder and C. M.l Marques: ‘Photocontrol of end-grafted lambda-phage DNA’ .

Showcasing work from the University of Basel, Switzerland, in collaboration with the University of Antwerp, Belgium- ‘A surprising system: polymeric nanoreactors containing a mimic with dual-enzyme activity’ by V. Balasubramanian, O. Onaca, M. Ezhevskaya, S. Van Doorslaer, B. Sivasankaran and C. G. Palivan. 

Also included in the issue is an Emerging Area article:
Liquid marbles: principles and applications by Glen McHale and Michael I. Newton

And the following reviews: 

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Soft Matter makes the news!

Gel fixes back problemsSoft Matter article on a gel that can fix back aches has been reported in the Daily Mail and the Telegraph. The work by Dr Brian Saunders and Professor Tony Freemont at the University of Manchester, involves the injection of a  liquid containing microgel particles into the spine where the sponge-like particles expand to form a strong, load-bearing material.

Read the original paper for FREE here!

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Hot Articles: Microorigami–drug nanocarriers–porous media

 

microorigamiRead these Hot Articles for free until 8 July…

Tutorial review on soft microorigami: Polymer films which are able to fold and form 3D microstructures are important for optical materials, tissue engineering scaffolds and electronic devices. This review focuses on polymer-based systems and their fabrication, design and applicability for biotechnology. Leonid Ionov, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05476G

Nanocapsules for sustained drug release: The fabricated stable drug delivery systems for podrug nanocarriersorly water-soluble drugs exhibited a narrow size distribution, which makes them potential candidates for nanocarriers in cancer therapy. Surfactant structure was compared with nanocapsule stability and the number of polyelectrolyte layers required to create exetremely long-term sustained release of active molecules determined. Urszula Bazylińska, Renata Skrzela, Krzysztof Szczepanowicz, Piotr Warszyński and Kazimiera A. Wilk, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05395G

Improved mechanical properties for macroporous polymers: Highly permeable macroporous polymers were synthesised from a Pickering-MIPE template. The mechanical properties were much improved compared to porous media synthesised using conventional high internal phase emulsion (HIPE) templates. Vivian O. Ikem, Angelika Menner and Alexander Bismarck, Soft Matter, 2011, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05272A

porous media

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Soft Matter Issue 11, 2011, out now!

Soft Matter issue 11 is out now!

You can read the full issue here…

 Issue 11

The paper featured on the outside front cover is ‘Self-consistent field theory for diblock copolymers grafted to a sphere’ by Bart Vorselaars, Jaeup U. Kim, Tanya L. Chantawansri, Glenn H. Fredrickson and Mark W. Matsen. The inside front cover highlights work by Hüseyin Burak Eral, Jolet de Ruiter, Riëlle de Ruiter, Jung Min Oh, Ciro Semprebon, Martin Brinkmann and Frieder Mugele: ‘Drops on functional fibers: from barrels to clamshells and back’.

Bin Su, Shutao Wang, Yanlin Song and Lei Jiang highlight their recent work on ‘Utilizing superhydrophilic materials to manipulate oil droplets arbitrarily in water‘ on the back cover of the issue. 

The following review articles are included in the issue:

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Soft Matter article highlighted in ChemistryWorld

Ionic liquid advance over saline-based lenses

Ionic liquids are the key to observing improved performance and wider temperature ranges for variable focus lenses over conventional saline alternatives, report scientists in China.

Electrowetting-based variable focus liquid lenses (EVFLL) have been used in mobile phones, barcode readers and other optical equipment, in which the conductive liquid inside the lenses is currently limited to saline. In applications such as these, saline can only work in a narrow temperature range as it may evaporate or freeze in extreme temperatures. The lenses also need to operate in a wide spectral range, but again saline is restrictive here as it becomes opaque in the near infrared region – not ideal for optical devices… Read the rest of the article here… 

Or for the original paper read here: Xiaodong Hu, Shiguo Zhang, Chao Qu, Qinghua Zhang, Liujin Lu, Xiangyuan Ma, Xiaoping Zhang and Youquan Deng, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article, DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05585B

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Top Ten most-read Soft Matter articles in April

The latest top ten most downloaded Soft Matter articles

 See the most-read papers of April 2011 here:

 

Self-assembly of amphiphilic peptides

I. W. Hamley, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 4122-4138
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01218A

Polymer composites with smart optical properties

Andrea Pucci, Ranieri Bizzarri and Giacomo Ruggeri, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 3689-3700
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01038C

Stimulus responsive nanogels for drug delivery

Liusheng Zha, Brittany Banik and Frank Alexis, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01307B

Suppressing the coffee stain effect: how to control colloidal self-assembly in evaporating drops using electrowetting

H. B. Eral, D. Mampallil Augustine, M. H. G. Duits and F. Mugele, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 4954-4958
DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05183K

Morphology of polymer-based bulk heterojunction films for organic photovoltaics

Matthias A. Ruderer and Peter Müller-Buschbaum, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01502D

Cubic crystals from cubic colloids

Laura Rossi, Stefano Sacanna, William T. M. Irvine, Paul M. Chaikin, David J. Pine and Albert P. Philipse, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 4139-4142
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01246G

Janus interface materials: superhydrophobic air/solid interface and superoleophobic water/solid interface inspired by a lotus leaf

Qunfeng Cheng, Mingzhu Li, Yongmei Zheng, Bin Su, Shutao Wang and Lei Jiang, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05452J

Stimulus responsive core-shell nanoparticles: synthesis and applications of polymer based aqueous systems

Olivier J. Cayre, Nelly Chagneux and Simon Biggs, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 2211-2234
DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01072C

Liquid marbles: principles and applications

Glen McHale and Michael I. Newton, Soft Matter, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05066D

Self-assembled aggregates of dendritic-linear copolymers: vesicles and microspheres

Jiwen Wu, Hui Tang and Peiyi Wu, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 4166-416
DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05085K

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